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												Verse 1John 15:1. I am, &c. — Our Lord 
												having gone with his disciples 
												to the mount of Olives, employed 
												the remaining hours of his 
												ministry in delivering to them a 
												long and most excellent 
												discourse, recorded in this and 
												the following chapter. This 
												discourse he began with the 
												parable of the vine, taken 
												probably from the vines that 
												were growing around them on the 
												mount of Olives. In this parable 
												he shows them the excellence of 
												his religion, and the nature of 
												the relation in which they stood 
												to him by the profession 
												thereof. Moreover, he explains 
												to them the advantages which 
												would accrue to them from this 
												relation. I am the true vine — I 
												am to my church, and the real 
												members thereof, what the vine 
												is to its branches. As the 
												branches of the vine draw 
												nourishment from, and are made 
												fruitful by, their union with 
												the stock, and by the care of 
												the dresser, so my disciples are 
												made fruitful in all holiness 
												and righteousness by faith in 
												me, and in the truths and 
												promises of my gospel, and by 
												the influence of my Spirit. And 
												my Father is the husbandman — 
												Or, vine-dresser; he has planted 
												this vine, his providence 
												watches over it, and by him it 
												is dressed and cultivated, and 
												he views with peculiar delight 
												the growth and fertility of its 
												branches. In this passage our 
												Lord seems to allude to Psalms 
												80:8, &c.; Isaiah 5:3-7; where 
												the Jewish Church is represented 
												under the figure of a vine: and 
												God’s peculiar care thereof is 
												set forth by the care which a 
												husbandman takes of his 
												vineyard. Wherefore, by calling 
												himself, on this occasion, the 
												true vine, Jesus intimated, that 
												whereas the Jewish Church and 
												people had hitherto been the 
												peculiar care of God, they were 
												to be so no longer. From this 
												time forth, all such as became 
												real partakers of the Christian 
												religion, and who, perhaps, in 
												allusion to this parable, were 
												called by the apostle the body 
												of Christ, were to be the true 
												church of God, and the objects 
												of his care, whatever nation or 
												country they were of. See Dr. 
												Samuel Clarke, and Macknight.
 
 Verse 2
 John 15:2. Every branch in me — 
												True believers, who by faith 
												have an interest in, and union 
												with Christ, are the branches of 
												the vine here spoken of. Though, 
												as to the place of their abode, 
												their religious sentiments in 
												lesser matters, and their modes 
												of worship, they may be distant 
												from each other, yet they meet 
												in Christ, their root and stock, 
												and the centre of their unity. 
												That beareth not fruit — 
												Answerable to his advantages, 
												fruit suitable to the relation 
												in which he stands to me, and 
												the union which by faith he has 
												had with me: he whose faith in 
												me and my gospel does not work 
												or continue to work by love, and 
												whose love does not continue to 
												manifest itself by his 
												obedience; he who does not bring 
												forth, with constancy and 
												perseverance, the internal and 
												external fruits of the Spirit, 
												namely, all goodness, 
												righteousness, and truth, 
												Ephesians 5:9; he taketh away — 
												Such unfruitful branches the 
												vine-dresser cuts off in his 
												righteous judgment, and entirely 
												separates them from me, 
												depriving them of all the 
												advantages for fruitfulness, 
												which they derived, or might 
												have derived, from their 
												connection with me, and their 
												reception of my truth and grace. 
												And every branch that beareth 
												fruit, he purgeth it — Or 
												rather, pruneth it, cuts off 
												from it every thing superfluous, 
												and removes all the hinderances 
												of its fruitfulness. Thus God, 
												in the course of his providence, 
												by various sufferings in the 
												minds, bodies, families, 
												circumstances, and situations of 
												his people, and by his word, and 
												their faith therein, and 
												obedience thereto, (1 Peter 
												1:22;) and by the influence of 
												his Spirit, mortifies and 
												destroys what is still corrupt 
												in their affections and 
												dispositions, with what remains 
												in them of the carnal mind, and 
												prevents their bearing fruit to 
												perfection. That it may bring 
												forth more fruit — Than it 
												brought forth before, to God’s 
												greater glory, the greater 
												benefit of mankind, and their 
												own greater progress in holiness 
												here, and a fuller reward of 
												felicity and glory hereafter. 
												Dr. Campbell reads the verse, 
												Every barren branch in me he 
												loppeth off: every fruitful 
												branch he cleaneth, by pruning, 
												to render it more fruitful: 
												remarking upon it as follows: 
												“Critics have observed a verbal 
												allusion or paronomasia in this 
												verse. To the barren branch the 
												word αιρει, [he loppeth off,] is 
												applied; to the fruitful, 
												καθαιρει, [he cleaneth by 
												pruning.] It is not always 
												possible in a version to 
												preserve figures which depend 
												entirely on the sound, or on the 
												etymology of the words, though 
												sometimes they are not without 
												emphasis. This verse and the 
												following afford a remarkable 
												instance of this trope. As our 
												Lord himself is here represented 
												by the vine, his disciples are 
												represented by the branches. The 
												mention of the method which the 
												dresser takes with the fruitful 
												branches, in order to render 
												them more fruitful, and which he 
												expresses by the word καθαιρει, 
												leads him to take notice of the 
												state wherein the apostles, the 
												principal branches, were at that 
												time: ηδη υμεις καθαροι, &c., 
												now are ye clean, &c. It is 
												hardly possible not to consider 
												the καθαιρει, applied to the 
												branches, as giving occasion to 
												this remark, which immediately 
												follows it. Now, when the train 
												of the thoughts arises in any 
												degree from verbal allusions, it 
												is of some consequence to 
												preserve them, where it can be 
												easily effected in a 
												translation. It is for this 
												reason that I have translated 
												the word καθαιρει by a 
												circumlocution, and said 
												cleaneth by pruning. It is 
												evident, that καθαιρει, in this 
												application, means pruneth. But 
												to have said in English, simply, 
												pruneth, would have been to 
												throw away the allusion, and 
												make the thoughts appear more 
												abrupt in the version than they 
												do in the original; and to have 
												said cleaneth, without adding 
												any explanation, would have been 
												obscure, or rather improper.”
 
 Verses 3-6
 John 15:3-6. Now ye are clean — 
												All of you, to whom I now speak, 
												are made clean from the guilt 
												and power of sin through the 
												word which I have spoken unto 
												you, whose sanctifying influence 
												has operated on your hearts, and 
												which, when applied by the 
												Spirit, is the grand instrument 
												of purifying the soul. Abide in 
												me — By the continued exercise 
												of humble faith and love, 
												producing all holiness, by which 
												alone you can continue to be in 
												me; and I in you — And I will be 
												in you by my Spirit, to nourish 
												your piety and virtue, and 
												supply you, as from a living 
												root, with every necessary 
												grace. As — In the natural 
												world; the branch cannot bear 
												fruit of itself — But must 
												presently wither; except it 
												abide in the vine — Continue in 
												a state of union with it, and be 
												nourished by sap from thence; no 
												more can ye — Be able to produce 
												the fruits of genuine and 
												acceptable obedience; except ye 
												abide in me — And have the life 
												of grace maintained in you by a 
												vital union with me. I am the 
												vine — That is, the root and 
												stock of the vine of which I 
												speak; ye are only the branches 
												— And cannot flourish or 
												subsist, much less can you bear 
												fruit, without me. Our Lord, in 
												this whole passage, speaks of no 
												branches but such as are, or, at 
												least, were once, vitally united 
												to him by living faith. He that 
												abideth in me — By a real, 
												internal, and spiritual union, 
												begun and continued by faith; 
												and I in him — By my word and 
												Spirit, my truth and grace; the 
												same bringeth forth much fruit — 
												In holy dispositions, and 
												righteous, benevolent actions, 
												to the credit of his profession, 
												the comfort of his own soul, and 
												the edification of his fellow- 
												creatures; for without me — 
												χωρις εμου, separate from me, 
												and deprived of the influences 
												of my word and Spirit, (alluding 
												still to the vine and its 
												branches;) ye can do nothing — 
												Nothing truly and spiritually 
												good; can bear no fruit that 
												will be pleasing to God, or 
												profitable to yourselves. 
												Without the merit of Christ, we 
												can do nothing toward our 
												justification; and without the 
												Spirit of Christ, nothing toward 
												our sanctification. We have as 
												necessary and constant a 
												dependance upon the grace of the 
												Mediator for the whole of the 
												spiritual and the divine life, 
												as we have upon the providence 
												of the Creator for all the 
												actions of the natural life: as 
												to both, it is in and by the 
												divine power that we live, and 
												move, and have our being. If a 
												man abide not in me — By living, 
												loving, and obedient faith, as 
												well as by church communion, by 
												which last, separate from the 
												former, he may abide in Christ 
												all his life and be withered all 
												the time, and cast into the fire 
												at last; he is cast forth as a 
												branch — He is separated from 
												Christ, as a branch that is 
												barren is cut off from the tree 
												which it only encumbered; and is 
												withered — They that abide not 
												in Christ by a real and vital 
												union, though they may flourish 
												a while in a creditable and 
												plausible profession, yet in a 
												little time they wither and come 
												to nothing. Their abilities and 
												gifts wither, their zeal and 
												devotion wither; as do also 
												their credit and reputation, 
												their hopes and comforts. For 
												they that bear no fruit will 
												soon bear no leaves. How soon 
												was the fig-tree withered away 
												which Christ cursed! And men 
												gather them and cast them into 
												the fire, &c. — The loppings of 
												the vines, in those countries 
												where they are cultivated, are 
												carefully gathered up, and make 
												a considerable part of their 
												fuel; as if he had said, As men 
												gather up withered branches, 
												which have been cut off from the 
												tree on which they once grew, 
												and throw them into the fire, 
												where they are burned as a 
												worthless kind of wood, fit for 
												nothing but fuel; so, in like 
												manner, such will be the end of 
												those unhappy creatures. Satan’s 
												agents and emissaries will 
												insnare and make an easy prey of 
												them; for they that fall off 
												from Christ soon fall in with 
												sinners, are associated with 
												them, and employed in the 
												unfruitful works of darkness; so 
												that they become fit fuel for 
												the divine wrath, from which the 
												profession they formerly made 
												will not preserve them. And they 
												are burned — This follows of 
												course; but it is here added 
												very emphatically, and makes the 
												threatening very terrible. The 
												original expression, και καιεται, 
												is literally, and they are 
												burning; for they will not be 
												consumed in a moment, like 
												thorns under a pot; but burning 
												for ever in a fire, which not 
												only cannot be quenched, but 
												will never spend itself. Such, 
												reader, is the consequence of 
												apostatizing from Christ, or 
												ceasing to live by faith in him; 
												they draw back unto perdition, 
												Hebrews 10:38-39. Some interpret 
												men’s gathering them, of the 
												ministry of angels in the last 
												day, when they shall gather out 
												of Christ’s kingdom all things 
												that offend, and them which do 
												iniquity, and shall cast them 
												into a furnace of fire, as tares 
												are gathered and bound in 
												bundles to be burned.
 
 Verse 7
 John 15:7. If ye abide in me, 
												&c. — Our Lord having laid 
												before his disciples the awful 
												consequences of falling from 
												grace, now proceeds to point out 
												some of the peculiar advantages 
												which should accrue from a 
												contrary spirit and conduct; the 
												first of which is that all their 
												prayers should be heard and 
												answered. If ye abide in me — 
												Through a faith working by love; 
												and my words abide in you — 
												Practically and experimentally; 
												if you adhere steadfastly to the 
												doctrine which I have taught 
												you, firmly believing my 
												declarations, conscientiously 
												obeying my precepts, and 
												affectionately embracing and 
												relying on my promises; ye shall 
												ask what ye will, and it shall 
												be done unto you — Two things 
												are implied in this promise: 
												1st, That the true disciples of 
												Christ, who abide in him, and in 
												whom his word abides, as above 
												explained, will not ask any 
												thing but what is proper to be 
												done for them, and according to 
												the will of God, 1 John 5:14-15. 
												They will, especially, ask 
												spiritual blessings, which they 
												know it is his will they should 
												ask and receive; and will ask 
												them in the way which he hath 
												prescribed, namely, sincerely, 
												earnestly, importunately, and 
												perseveringly; and in the way of 
												repentance, faith, and new 
												obedience; and, in the name of 
												Christ, relying for the success 
												of their petitions on the 
												mediation of Christ, and the 
												mercy and promise of God through 
												him. And, with respect to 
												temporal blessings, they will 
												ask them conditionally, and with 
												entire resignation, desiring to 
												receive them only so far as God 
												foresees will be for their good 
												and his glory. 2d, That they 
												shall always have such an 
												interest in Christ’s sacrifice 
												and intercession, and in God’s 
												favour through him, that all 
												their prayers shall be accepted, 
												and their petitions granted in 
												the degree, time, and manner in 
												which they themselves desire 
												they should be granted, namely, 
												when and as far as God sees will 
												be for their good: which is all 
												they desire; for they would not 
												wish their requests to be 
												granted to their own hurt, the 
												hurt of others, or God’s 
												dishonour. Thus the desire of 
												the righteous shall be granted, 
												and God will fulfil the desire 
												of them that truly and 
												consistently fear him: he also 
												will hear their prayer, and will 
												save them, Proverbs 10:24; 
												Psalms 145:19. To this purpose 
												this apostle speaks, 1 John 
												5:14-15, If we ask any thing 
												according to his will he heareth 
												us, and we have the petitions 
												that we desired of him, and 
												whatsoever we ask we receive of 
												him, because we keep his 
												commandments, and do those 
												things that are pleasing in his 
												sight. Dr. Macknight, however, 
												and many other commentators, 
												suppose that whatever 
												encouragement this promise of 
												our Lord may give to pious 
												Christians, of all nations and 
												ages, to believe that their 
												sincere prayer shall be granted, 
												yet, that it was primarily 
												addressed to the apostles; and 
												that our Lord, having in the 
												preceding verses exhorted the 
												twelve, as disciples or private 
												Christians, proceeds now to give 
												them directions as apostles or 
												preachers, commissioned by him 
												to teach his religion to the 
												rest of mankind. They 
												accordingly paraphrase the 
												passage thus; If ye abide in me, 
												in the sincere profession and 
												practice of my religion; and my 
												words abide in you, if ye 
												faithfully teach mankind my 
												doctrines and precepts, 
												notwithstanding the difficulties 
												you may meet with in this work; 
												ye shall ask what ye will, &c., 
												ye may ask any miracle you 
												please, in confirmation of your 
												authority, and it shall be 
												granted unto you.
 
 Verse 8
 John 15:8. Herein is my Father 
												glorified, that ye bear much 
												fruit — “As the end for which my 
												Father has given the gospel 
												dispensation to men, is to make 
												them fruitful in holiness, you, 
												my apostles, by spreading the 
												true knowledge thereof through 
												the world, and by reforming 
												yourselves and others, will do 
												honour unto God’s wisdom and 
												goodness in bestowing this 
												dispensation upon you.” But as 
												the holiness of the apostles, 
												and the diligent discharge of 
												their duty in preaching the 
												gospel, would be to the glory of 
												God, in effecting, through his 
												grace, the conversion and 
												salvation of mankind; so, the 
												fruitfulness of all Christians, 
												in a lower and narrower sphere, 
												tends greatly to promote the 
												glory of God; for many, by 
												seeing their good works, are 
												brought to imitate the same, and 
												glorify their Father who is in 
												heaven, Matthew 5:16. So shall 
												ye be my disciples — Thus shall 
												you appear to all really to be 
												what you call yourselves, my 
												true disciples, and to act in a 
												way worthy of your character and 
												relation to me. Hereby shall you 
												both evidence your discipleship 
												and adorn it; and shall be owned 
												by me as my disciples in the 
												great day of final accounts, and 
												have the reward of disciples, a 
												share in the joy of your Lord. 
												Observe, reader, to be a 
												disciple of Christ, is both the 
												foundation and height of 
												Christianity.
 
 Verses 9-11
 John 15:9-11. As the Father hath 
												loved me — As certainly as he 
												hath loved me; and with that 
												kind of love wherewith he hath 
												loved me, namely, with a love of 
												approbation and delight, 
												constancy and perseverance; so 
												have I loved you — As truly, as 
												affectionately, as invariably: 
												continue ye in my love — Keep 
												your place in my affection: see 
												that ye do not forfeit that 
												invaluable blessing. How 
												needless was this caution, if it 
												were impossible for them not to 
												abide in his love. If ye keep my 
												commandments — If you carefully 
												perform all the things which I 
												have enjoined, both as my 
												apostles and as private 
												Christians; ye shall abide in my 
												love — You shall be always the 
												objects of it: on these terms, 
												and on no other, shall you 
												continue to possess my special 
												affection: even as I have kept 
												my Father’s commandments — Have 
												exactly performed all the duties 
												of my office, as Mediator, as 
												the Teacher, Redeemer and 
												Saviour of my church, their 
												lawgiver and example; and abide 
												in his love — Continue to be the 
												object of his infinite 
												complacency. These things have I 
												spoken unto you — Not to grieve 
												you by any intimation that I 
												suspect the sincerity of your 
												regards to me, but that you may 
												be fortified and animated 
												against all the temptations that 
												will assault you, and may 
												continue steadfast in your 
												attachment to my cause and 
												interest, and in your fidelity 
												to me your Master, and zeal and 
												diligence in serving me; that my 
												joy may remain in you — That my 
												complacency in you, as my 
												faithful friends, may still 
												continue; and that your joy 
												might be full — May be 
												maintained in its full height, 
												and may greatly increase; as it 
												certainly will, in proportion to 
												your fidelity, zeal, and 
												diligence in my service.
 
 Verse 12
 John 15:12. This is my 
												commandment — This I especially 
												enjoin you, whether as apostles 
												or private Christians; that ye 
												love one another — Cordially and 
												constantly; even, if it be 
												possible, with as great fervency 
												and constancy, as I have loved 
												you — So as to be ready to 
												sacrifice your lives for each 
												other, as I expose and give up 
												mine for you. It is remarkable, 
												that no one duty is more 
												frequently inculcated, or more 
												pathetically urged upon his 
												disciples, by our Lord, than 
												that of mutual love. This is my 
												commandment, he says, as if it 
												were the most necessary of all 
												the commandments. The reason 
												might be, 1st, That as under the 
												law, the prohibition of idolatry 
												was the commandment more 
												insisted on than any other, 
												because God foresaw the people 
												would be prone to that sin; so 
												Christ, foreseeing that the 
												Christian Church would be 
												addicted to uncharitable 
												contentions and divisions, 
												strife and animosity, thought 
												proper to lay the greatest 
												stress upon this precept. 2d, 
												Mutual love among Christians is 
												a duty which both includes many 
												other duties, and has a good 
												influence upon all: and to this 
												duty, Christ’s love to us all 
												should at once direct, animate, 
												and urge us; he having thereby 
												both shown us our duty in this 
												respect, and laid us under the 
												most powerful obligations to 
												perform it. Add to this, that 
												our Lord was thus earnest in 
												pressing his disciples to the 
												duty of mutual love, not only 
												because it was the great design 
												of his gospel to promote it, but 
												because this virtue exercised by 
												his apostles and first disciples 
												among themselves, and toward all 
												mankind, would be one great 
												means of making their preaching 
												successful; just as Christ’s 
												immense love to men will always 
												have a great influence in 
												drawing them to him.
 
 Verses 13-16
 John 15:13-16. Greater love — To 
												his friends, (of whom here he 
												only speaks,) hath no man than 
												this — That is, a greater degree 
												of love than this never existed 
												in the world; that a man lay 
												down his life for his friends — 
												That a man should be willing, 
												not only on some sudden alarm, 
												or in some extraordinary and 
												unexpected danger, to hazard his 
												life on their account; but on 
												the coolest deliberation, to 
												submit to lay it down for their 
												preservation and happiness. Ye 
												are my friends — Ye are the 
												friends for whom I will lay down 
												my life, and who shall certainly 
												share in the blessings which I 
												shall thereby procure for my 
												disciples; if ye do whatsoever I 
												command you — If you practically 
												acknowledge my authority, and 
												are so influenced by my love, as 
												to make conscience of obeying 
												all my commands. On this 
												condition, and not otherwise, 
												shall we be acknowledged by 
												Christ as his friends. Who then 
												dares assert that God’s love 
												does not at all depend on man’s 
												obedience? Henceforth I call you 
												not servants — Though the 
												distance that is between you and 
												me, and your obligations to obey 
												me, might have warranted me to 
												treat you as servants, and 
												particularly to conceal from you 
												my counsels and designs, I have 
												not acted toward you in that 
												manner; but I have called you 
												friends — I have treated you as 
												friends are wont to be treated; 
												for all things that I have heard 
												of my Father I have made known 
												unto you — I have all along 
												communicated to you the most 
												important of those gracious 
												counsels which my Father, as the 
												expression of his friendship, 
												imparted unto me; nay, I have 
												commissioned you to reveal them 
												to the world, and have made you 
												not only my friends, but my 
												assistants, in the great work of 
												saving the world. Ye have not 
												chosen me — You have not, as 
												principals in this affair, 
												adopted me your associate, but 
												I, the great author of the 
												gospel, have adopted you my 
												associates; and ordained — 
												Greek, και εθηκα, appointed you; 
												that ye should go and bring 
												forth fruit — That ye may go and 
												convert sinners; and that your 
												fruit should remain — Even to 
												the remotest generations; that 
												whatsoever ye shall ask, &c. — 
												The consequence of your going 
												and bearing fruit will be that 
												all your prayers will be heard 
												and answered.
 
 Verses 17-21
 John 15:17-21. These things I 
												command you, &c. — Again I would 
												remind you, that if you would 
												continue thus to be the objects 
												of these my Father’s gracious 
												regards, you must carefully 
												practise your duty to each 
												other, as well as to him; you 
												must continue to love one 
												another; and this you should the 
												rather do, as you will be the 
												mark of common hatred and 
												persecution. Yet, if the world 
												hate you — You will have no 
												reason to be offended or 
												surprised at it; for ye know 
												that it hated me — Mild and 
												benevolent as my conduct has 
												always been; before it hated you 
												— Before it discharged its venom 
												and malignity on you. If ye were 
												of the world — If your 
												dispositions and actions were 
												like those of the bulk of 
												mankind; or if your doctrines 
												and practices were conformable 
												to its customs and maxims; the 
												world would love its own — No 
												doubt you would meet with 
												general approbation, and be much 
												caressed; but because ye are not 
												of the world — Because your 
												desires and designs, your spirit 
												and conduct, are quite opposite 
												to theirs, and I have chosen you 
												out of the world — Have called 
												you not only to separate 
												yourselves from, but to oppose 
												its vices and follies, and even 
												to be leaders in that holy and 
												necessary opposition; therefore 
												the world hateth you — 
												Notwithstanding that the cause 
												in which you are engaged is most 
												honourable, and your lives most 
												useful and beneficent. And for 
												the very same reason must the 
												world in all ages hate those who 
												are not of the world. Remember 
												the word that I said unto you, 
												The servant, &c. — To reconcile 
												you to the persecutions you are 
												to meet with, you ought always 
												to bear in mind what I told you 
												on this subject the first time I 
												sent you out, (see Matthew 
												10:24,) that no servant can 
												expect to be better treated than 
												his master; and therefore, 
												seeing they have persecuted me, 
												they will naturally persecute 
												you. If they have kept my saying 
												— Have conformed themselves to 
												my doctrine; they will keep 
												yours also — Will be properly 
												influenced by it, and will walk 
												according to it; therefore, by 
												the reception my doctrine meets 
												with, you may judge how yours 
												will be relished. But all these 
												things will they do unto you — 
												All the opposition which they 
												will show to your persons and 
												ministry, will be exerted for my 
												name’s sake — Because of the 
												enmity which they have to me, 
												and the cause in which I am 
												engaged; because they know not 
												him that sent me — Because they 
												are not acquainted with the 
												nature and perfections of that 
												God to whom they boast so near a 
												relation, and who has sent me 
												into the world to declare and 
												establish a religion which 
												shocks their prejudices, and is 
												contrary to their carnal and 
												worldly spirit. And in all ages 
												and nations, they who know not 
												God will, for this cause, hate 
												and persecute those that do.
 
 Verse 22-23
 John 15:22-23. If I had not come 
												and spoken unto them — Thus 
												plainly; they had not had sin — 
												Their guilt would not have been 
												so great. “If I had not appeared 
												in person among them, according 
												to their own prophecies, and 
												proved my mission by arguments 
												which put it beyond all 
												reasonable possibility of doubt, 
												they would not have been so much 
												to blame for rejecting the 
												gospel.” But now they have no 
												cloak for their sin — But now 
												that all the things foretold by 
												Moses and the prophets are 
												fulfilled in me; that my gospel 
												is every way worthy of God; and 
												that my mission from God is 
												sufficiently proved by my 
												miracles; they have no plea 
												whatever to excuse their 
												unbelief. He that hateth me, 
												hateth my Father also — As if he 
												had said, This clearness of 
												evidence, wherewith my mission 
												is attended, makes the crime of 
												rejecting me equal to, if not 
												the same with, the crime of 
												rejecting God. Their hatred to 
												me implies also hatred to my 
												Father. “How much,” says Dr. 
												Doddridge, “is it to be wished, 
												that those who make light of 
												Christ, while they pretend a 
												great veneration for the Father, 
												would seriously attend to this 
												weighty admonition, lest haply 
												they be found even to fight 
												against God! Acts 5:39.”
 
 Verses 24-27
 John 15:24-27. If I had not done 
												among them, &c. — If I had 
												wrought no miracle at all among 
												them; nay, if I had not done 
												such extraordinary works as no 
												other man ever did, not even 
												their prophets, or Moses 
												himself; they had not had sin — 
												Any degree of sin comparable to 
												that which they are now under: 
												but now they have both seen, &c. 
												— But now, as they have rejected 
												my superior miracles, which they 
												have seen with their own eyes, 
												at the same time that they own 
												the evidence of those which 
												Moses wrought, of which they 
												have heard only by distant 
												report, they manifest such an 
												obstinate perverseness of 
												temper, that I may truly say, 
												they have both seen and hated 
												both me and my Father. For in my 
												miracles, which are greater than 
												any hitherto exhibited, they 
												have seen, or might have seen, 
												who I am; namely, the 
												only-begotten Son of God; and 
												who is my Father; for the glory 
												of all the divine perfections 
												shines forth in my miracles. 
												Nevertheless, they have rejected 
												me, who have performed these 
												miracles, and my Father 
												likewise, who sent me to perform 
												them; so that, shutting their 
												eyes against the light thus 
												shining on them, and hardening 
												their hearts against that 
												incontrovertible evidence of my 
												mission, which my mighty works 
												afford, it is evident they 
												reject me, not out of ignorance 
												and weakness, but out of wilful 
												hatred to me, and him that sent 
												me, and therefore are utterly 
												inexcusable. But this cometh to 
												pass — This is all permitted; 
												that the word might be fulfilled 
												— Or, in consequence of this 
												being permitted, the word is 
												fulfilled; see note on chap. 
												John 12:37-40; that is written 
												in the law — Or in their sacred 
												volume; (namely, Psalms 35:19;) 
												They hated me without a cause — 
												These very words, strictly 
												speaking, were spoken concerning 
												David, and are here applied to 
												the Messiah, both because David 
												was a type of him, and because 
												he was hated without a cause, 
												(see Isaiah 3:3-9; Daniel 9:26; 
												Zechariah 12:10,) as David was. 
												The meaning is, Be not surprised 
												that I, who am the Messiah, have 
												been rejected of the Jews. It 
												has happened according to the 
												prediction of their own 
												prophets. But when the Comforter 
												is come, &c. — But, “for your 
												encouragement I assure you, that 
												they will not always continue 
												thus obstinately bent against me 
												and my religion. When he, who is 
												to comfort you under all your 
												troubles by the aid he will 
												afford you, and who on that 
												account is justly styled the 
												Comforter; when he is come, whom 
												I will send you from the Father 
												— To remain always with you; 
												even the Spirit of truth — He 
												shall bear witness to me and to 
												my religion so effectually, that 
												many of the Jews shall be 
												converted.” — Macknight. We may 
												observe here, that the Spirit’s 
												coming, and being sent, by our 
												Lord, from the Father, to 
												testify of him, are personal 
												characters, and plainly 
												distinguish him from the Father 
												and the Son. And his title as 
												the Spirit of truth, together 
												with his proceeding from the 
												Father, can agree to none but a 
												divine person. And that he 
												proceeds from the Son as well as 
												from the Father, may be fairly 
												argued from his being called the 
												Spirit of Christ, 1 Peter 1:11; 
												and from his being said to be 
												sent by Christ from the Father, 
												as well as sent by the Father in 
												Christ’s name. And ye also — 
												Weak as you now appear, shall, 
												by his powerful assistance, bear 
												a courageous and convincing 
												testimony to me, because you 
												have been with me from the 
												beginning — Namely, of my 
												ministry, and therefore are the 
												best qualified to give an 
												account of my whole conduct; 
												which, the better it is known, 
												the more it will justify my 
												cause, and expose the wickedness 
												of those that rise up against 
												me. In other words, “In process 
												of time men’s eyes shall be 
												opened to discern the authority 
												of your testimony; and they 
												shall give credit to your 
												reports concerning me, because 
												they shall know that ye have 
												been my companions from the very 
												first, consequently eye and 
												ear-witnesses of all that I have 
												done and said: so that after a 
												while you shall testify 
												concerning me, and preach my 
												religion far more successfully 
												than it will be in your power to 
												do at the beginning.” See 
												Doddridge and Macknight.
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