It would come to them now with a fulness of sacred meaning. The very word used was that used when He said to them, “Take ( receive ye), eat this is My body” ( Matthew 26:26 Mark 14:22). ![]() His act was sacramental, and with the outer and visible sign there was the inward and spiritual grace. ![]() The meaning is that He then gave to them a sign, which was itself to faithful hearts as the firstfruits of that which was to come. It was the first step in that great moral change which passed over the disciples after the Crucifixion, and of which the day of Pentecost witnessed the accomplishment.Īnd saith unto them, Receive ye the Holy Ghost.-These words are not, on the one hand, to be understood as simply a promise of the future gift of the Holy Ghost, for they are a definite imperative, referring to the moment when they were spoken nor are they, on the other hand, to be taken as the promised advent of the Paraclete ( John 14:16 et seq.), for the gift of the Holy Ghost was not yet, because Jesus was not yet glorified ( John 7:39 John 16:7 et seq.). He writes as one who remembered how the influence of that moment on their future lives was a new spiritual creation, by which they were called, as it were, out of death into life. ![]() John uses to describe this act of the risen Lord the striking word which had been used to describe the act by which God breathed into man’s nostrils the breath of life. But to that world, which will hate, persecute, and kill them, as it had hated, persecuted, and killed Him, they are sent as He was sent they are to declare forgiveness, mercy, love, peace, as He had declared them, to every heart that does not harden itself against them and they are to find in His presence, as He had ever found in the Father’s presence, the support which will ever bring peace to their own hearts ( John 14:27).Īnd when he had said this, he breathed on them.-The word rendered “breathed” occurs nowhere else in the New Testament, but was familiar from its use in the Greek (LXX.) of Genesis 2:7. At this very moment they are assembled with shut doors, for fear of the Jews, who are triumphing over Him as dead. He and they stand also in the same relation to the world. He declares to them, and they in His name are to declare to the world, the fulness of the Father’s love, and the peace between man and God, witnessed to in His life and death. He stands in the same relation to the Father as that in which they stand to Him. He is the great Apostle ( Hebrews 3:1) they are ambassadors for Christ, to whom He commits the ministry of reconciliation ( 2Corinthians 5:18 et seq.). ![]() As spoken here to the disciples ‘they are the identification of them with Himself in His mediatorial work. Note on John 17:18, where the words occur in prayer to the Father. He is now about to withdraw the evidence of His presence from them, and does so with the customary “ Shalōm ” but with this He reminds them of the apostleship to which He has called them, gives them an earnest of the Presence which will never leave them, but always qualify them for it ( John 20:22), and places before them the greatness of the work to which He sends them ( John 20:23).Īs my (better, the) Father hath sent me, even so send I you.-Comp. John 14:27.) Other words had intervened, as we know from St. It is, however, more natural to understand the words in John 20:19 as those of greeting, and these as words of farewell. Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(21) Then said Jesus to them again, Peace be unto you.-These words may be here a solemn repetition of the greeting in John 20:19, by which our Lord’s own message of peace is immediately connected with that which the Apostles were to deliver to the world.
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