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Johannes 8:40

Men nu stån I efter att döda mig, en man som har sagt eder sanningen, såsom jag har hört den av Gud. Så handlade icke Abraham.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Abraham;   Jesus Continued;   Persecution;   Self-Righteousness;   The Topic Concordance - Jesus Christ;   Suffering;   Unbelief;   Understanding;  

Dictionaries:

- Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Abraham;   Ancestors;   John, gospel of;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Hear, Hearing;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Disciples;   Incarnation;   Jews in the New Testament;   Works;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Children (Sons) of God;   Devil;   Marriage;   Truth;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Abraham;   Children of God;   Consciousness;   Death of Christ;   Deceit, Deception, Guile;   Error;   Faith ;   Hearing;   Judging (by Men);   Prophet;   Revelation (2);   Truth (2);   Morrish Bible Dictionary - Father;   Martyr;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Heredity;   Jesus Christ (Part 2 of 2);   Person of Christ;  

Devotionals:

- Every Day Light - Devotion for November 21;  

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

now: John 8:37, Psalms 37:12, Psalms 37:32, Galatians 4:16, Galatians 4:29, 1 John 3:12-15, Revelation 12:4, Revelation 12:12, Revelation 12:13, Revelation 12:17

a man: John 8:26, John 8:38, John 8:56

this: Romans 4:12

Reciprocal: Proverbs 26:28 - lying Isaiah 48:2 - and stay Isaiah 57:3 - sons Matthew 3:9 - We Luke 4:29 - and thrust Luke 6:41 - but John 3:34 - he John 14:10 - words John 15:23 - General John 17:17 - word

Gill's Notes on the Bible

But now ye seek to kill me,.... A temper and disposition very foreign from that of Abraham's:

a man that hath told you the truth, which I have heard of God; to seek to kill a man is a very great crime, and punishable with death; to kill an innocent one, that had done no sin, who was pure, holy, harmless, and inoffensive to God and man, was an aggravation of the iniquity; and to kill a prophet, and one more than a prophet, who brought a revelation from God himself, and declared the whole truth of the Gospel, and particularly that of his divine, eternal sonship, which incensed them against him, and put them upon seeking to take away his life, still increased the sin.

This did not Abraham: the sense is not, that Abraham did not tell the truth he had heard of God; for he did instruct, and command his children after him, to walk in the ways of the Lord, which he had learned from him; but that Abraham did not reject any truth that was revealed unto him, and much less seek to take away the life of any person that brought it to him; and indeed not the life of any man that deserved not to die: and our Lord suggests, that if he had been on the spot now, he would not have done as these his posterity did, since he saw his day by faith, and rejoiced in the foresight of it, John 8:56. The Jew o makes an objection from these words against the deity of Christ;

"you see (says he) that Jesus declares concerning himself that he is not God, but man; and so says Paul concerning him, Romans 5:15; and so Jesus, in many places, calls himself the son of man: for do we find in any place that he calls himself God, as the Nazarenes believe.''

To which may be replied, that Jesus does not declare in these words, nor in any other place, that he is not God; he says no such thing; he only observes, that he was a man, as he really was: nor is his being man any contradiction to his being God; for he is both God and man; and so those that believe in him affirm: and though Christ does not in express terms call himself God, yet he owned himself to be the Son of God, Mark 14:61, and said such things of himself, as manifestly declared him to be God; and upon account of which the Jews concluded, that he not only made himself equal with God, but that he made himself God, John 5:17. Besides, he suffered himself to be called God by a disciple of his, which he would never have done, had he not been really and truly God, John 20:28; yea, he seems to call himself so, when being tempted by Satan, he observed to him what is written, "thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God", Matthew 4:7. The reason why he so often calls himself the son of man is, because it was more suitable to him in his state of humiliation; and indeed, there was no need for him to assert his deity in express words, since his works and miracles most clearly proved that he was God: and as for the Apostle Paul, though he sometimes speaks of him as a man, he also says of him, that he is God over all, blessed for ever; and calls him the great God, and our Saviour, and God manifest in the flesh, Romans 9:5.

o R. Isaac Chizzuk Emuna, par. 2. c. 48. p. 436. & par. 1. c. 10. p. 118.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

Ye seek to kill me - See John 8:37.

This did not Abraham - Or such things Abraham did not do. There are two things noted here in which they differed from Abraham:

1. In seeking to kill him, or in possessing a murderous and bloody purpose.

2. In rejecting the truth as God revealed it. Abraham was distinguished for love to man as well as God. He liberated the captives Genesis 14:14-16; was distinguished for hospitality to strangers Genesis 18:1-8; and received the revelations of God to him, however mysterious, or however trying their observance, Genesis 12:1-4; Genesis 15:4-6; Genesis 22:0. It was for these things that he is so much commended in the New Testament Romans 4:9; Romans 9:9; Galatians 3:6; and, as the Jews sought to kill Jesus instead of treating him hospitably and kindly, they showed that they had none of the spirit of Abraham.


 
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