18. No man taketh it from me, but I lay it down myself: I have power to
lay it down, and I have power to take it again--It is impossible for
language more plainly and emphatically to express the
absolute voluntariness of Christ's death, such a voluntariness as it
would be manifest presumption in any mere creature to affirm of his
own death. It is beyond all doubt the language of One who was conscious
that His life was His own (which no creature's is), and therefore
His to surrender or retain at will. Here lay the glory of His
sacrifice, that it was purely voluntary. The claim of "power to take
it again" is no less important, as showing that His resurrection, though
ascribed to the Father, in the sense we shall presently see, was
nevertheless His own assertion of His own right to life as soon as
the purposes of His voluntary death were accomplished.
This commandment--to "lay down His--life, that He might take it again."
have I received of my Father--So that Christ died at once by "command"
of His Father, and by such a voluntary obedience to that command as has
made Him (so to speak) infinitely dear to the Father. The necessity of
Christ's death, in the light of these profound sayings, must be
manifest to all but the superficial student.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible