35, 36. If he called them gods unto whom the word of God came . . .
Say ye of him whom the Father hath sanctified and sent into the world,
Thou blasphemest--The whole force of this reasoning, which has been
but in part seized by the commentators, lies in what is said of the two
parties compared. The comparison of Himself with mere men, divinely
commissioned, is intended to show (as NEANDER well expresses it) that
the idea of a communication of the Divine Majesty to human nature was by
no means foreign to the revelations of the Old Testament; but there is
also a contrast between Himself and all merely human representatives
of God--the one "sanctified by the Father and sent into the world";
the other, "to whom the word of God (merely) came," which is
expressly designed to prevent His being massed up with them as only one
of many human officials of God. It is never said of Christ that "the
word of the Lord came to Him"; whereas this is the well-known formula by
which the divine commission, even to the highest of mere men, is
expressed, as John the Baptist
(Lu 3:2).
The reason is that given by the Baptist himself (see on
Joh 3:31).
The contrast is between those "to whom the word of God came"--men of
the earth, earthy, who were merely privileged to get a divine
message to utter (if prophets), or a divine office to
discharge (if judges)--and "Him whom (not being of the earth at all)
the Father sanctified (or set apart), and sent into the
world," an expression never used of any merely human messenger
of God, and used only of Himself.
because, I said, I am the Son of God--It is worthy of special notice
that our Lord had not said, in so many words, that He was the Son of
God, on this occasion. But He had said what beyond doubt amounted to
it--namely, that He gave His sheep eternal life, and none could pluck
them out of His hand; that He had got them from His Father, in whose
hands, though given to Him, they still remained, and out of whose hand
none could pluck them; and that they were
the indefeasible property of both, inasmuch as "He and His Father
were one." Our Lord considers all this as just saying of Himself, "I am
the Son of God"--one nature with Him, yet mysteriously of Him. The parenthesis
(Joh 10:35),
"and the Scripture cannot be broken," referring to the terms used of
magistrates in the eighty-second Psalm, has an important bearing on the
authority of the living oracles. "The Scripture, as the
expressed will of the unchangeable God, is itself unchangeable and
indissoluble" [OLSHAUSEN]. (Compare
Mt 5:17).
JFB.
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