John 14:18-19
Context14:18 “I will not abandon 1 you as orphans, 2 I will come to you. 3 14:19 In a little while 4 the world will not see me any longer, but you will see me; because I live, you will live too.
John 14:21
Context14:21 The person who has my commandments and obeys 5 them is the one who loves me. 6 The one 7 who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I will love him and will reveal 8 myself to him.”
John 14:23
Context14:23 Jesus replied, 9 “If anyone loves me, he will obey 10 my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come to him and take up residence with him. 11
1 tn Or “leave.”
2 tn The entire phrase “abandon you as orphans” could be understood as an idiom meaning, “leave you helpless.”
3 sn I will come to you. Jesus had spoken in 14:3 of going away and coming again to his disciples. There the reference was both to the parousia (the second coming of Christ) and to the postresurrection appearances of Jesus to the disciples. Here the postresurrection appearances are primarily in view, since Jesus speaks of the disciples “seeing” him after the world can “see” him no longer in the following verse. But many commentators have taken v. 18 as a reference to the coming of the Spirit, since this has been the topic of the preceding verses. Still, vv. 19-20 appear to contain references to Jesus’ appearances to the disciples after his resurrection. It may well be that another Johannine double meaning is found here, so that Jesus ‘returns’ to his disciples in one sense in his appearances to them after his resurrection, but in another sense he ‘returns’ in the person of the Holy Spirit to indwell them.
4 tn Grk “Yet a little while, and.”
5 tn Or “keeps.”
6 tn Grk “obeys them, that one is the one who loves me.”
7 tn Grk “And the one.” Here the conjunction καί (kai) has not been translated to improve the English style.
8 tn Or “will disclose.”
9 tn Grk “answered and said to him.”
10 tn Or “will keep.”
11 tn Grk “we will come to him and will make our dwelling place with him.” The context here is individual rather than corporate indwelling, so the masculine singular pronoun has been retained throughout v. 23. It is important to note, however, that the pronoun is used generically here and refers equally to men, women, and children.