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John Calvin

John Calvin's Commentary on the Bible - John 17:9

Verse 9 9.I pray for them. Hitherto Christ has brought forward what might procure for the disciples favor with the Father. He now forms the prayer itself, in which he shows that he asks nothing but what is agreeable to the will of the Father, because he pleads with the Father in behalf of those only whom the Father himself willingly loves. He openly declares that he does not pray for the world, because he has no solicitude but about his own flock, which he received from the hand of the Father.... read more

Spence, H. D. M., etc.

The Pulpit Commentary - John 17:1-26

4. The high-priestly intercession . Audible communion of the Son with the Father . The prayer which now follows reveals, in the loftiest and sublimest form, the Divine humanity of the Son of man, and the fact that, in the consciousness of Jesus as the veritable Christ of God, there was actually blended the union of the Divine and human, and a perfect exercise of the prerogatives of both. The illimitable task which writers of the second century must have set themselves to... read more

Spence, H. D. M., etc.

The Pulpit Commentary - John 17:6-8

Here the Divine Intercessor turns from himself, and from the approaching glory of his own mediatorial Person and position, to meditate, for the advantage of his disciples, on what had already been done for them, in them, to them. He clothes these meditations in the form of a direct address to the eternal God, and makes the series of facts on which he dwells the groundwork of the prayer which follows for his disciples, as representative of all who, like them, have come into relations with... read more

Spence, H. D. M., etc.

The Pulpit Commentary - John 17:6-10

The Advocate and the clients. The High Priest now turns from himself to the special objects of his intercessory prayer. I. THE CALLING OF TEE CLIENTS . 1. They are separated from the world. Made a select and consecrated class, they are set apart from others in the prayer of the Lord. 2. They are the property of the Father. 3. They are the gift of the Father to his Son. The Father drew them with the bonds of love, and they became Christ's. II. THE MARKS OF... read more

Spence, H. D. M., etc.

The Pulpit Commentary - John 17:6-11

Our Lord's prayer for his disciples. As he had prayed for himself, he next prays for his disciples. I. CHRIST 'S MANIFESTATION OF THE FATHER TO HIS DISCIPLES . "I have manifested thy Name to the men which thou gavest me out of the world." 1. He only could make such a discovery of the Divine mind and will 2. Those who received the revelation were God ' s . "Thine they were:" (a) as his charge, (b) as his subjects, (c) as his apostles, (d) ... read more

Spence, H. D. M., etc.

The Pulpit Commentary - John 17:9

I —very emphatic— am praying for them (for this use of ἐρωτῶ see note, John 16:23 ). We must remember that this is perfectly consistent with the fact that, in the day of the spiritual manifestation to the disciples, when both the Father and Son came to them, the disciples would ask the Father for the gifts which his love to them was waiting to supply; and he, Christ himself, would hear them if they asked in his Name; and that then there would be no need that he should pray the Father... read more

Spence, H. D. M., etc.

The Pulpit Commentary - John 17:9-11

Jesus praying for his own. I. THE EXCLUSION . We have here a striking illustration of the definiteness of the prayers of Jesus. He knows exactly for whom he is praying, and what he wants for them. He defines them positively, and he defines them negatively. It is not enough for him to call them his own.' It must also be said why they are his own. If they belonged to the world, and had in them, unchecked and unmixed, the spirit of the world, they would not be his. This is a very... read more

Albert Barnes

Albert Barnes' Notes on the Whole Bible - John 17:8

The words - The doctrines. Christ often represented himself as instructed and sent to teach certain great truths to men. Those he taught, and no others. See the notes at John 5:30. read more

Albert Barnes

Albert Barnes' Notes on the Whole Bible - John 17:9-10

I pray for them - In view of their dangers and trials, he sought the protection and blessing of God on them. His prayer was always answered.Not for the world - The term world here, as elsewhere, refers to wicked, rebellious, vicious men. The meaning of this expression here seems to be this: Jesus is praying for his disciples. As a reason why God should bless them, he says that they were not of the world; that they had been taken out of the world; that they belonged unto God. The petition was... read more

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