q3 Jn 1:15►
John 20:11-23
Summary for John 20:11-13: 20:11-13 a Although two ... angels appeared inside the tomb, the riddle of Jesus’ disappearance remained unsolved (see Luke 24:4 b).• why are you crying? Sorrow was not the appropriate response in this moment.
Summary for John 20:14-15: 20:14-15 c Jesus, whom Mary mistook for the gardener, repeated the angel’s question and added, Who are you looking for? Jesus’ question was to provoke Mary’s thinking: At this point Mary was looking for the body of Jesus, but she was about to meet the living Christ.
20:16 d When Jesus called Mary by name, she recognized him immediately (see 10:3-4 e).
20:17 f Mary thought that with the resurrection, Jesus would resume normal relations with his disciples. She was trying to cling to the joy she discovered in her resurrected Lord. But his fellowship with her would come in a new form (20:22 g). Jesus had not yet ascended to complete his return to the Father, but the process was underway. Before his final departure, he would give the Holy Spirit (20:22 h; see 14:15-21 i, 26 j; 15:26-27 k; 16:5-15 l).
20:18 m Mary was the first eyewitness to see the Lord following his resurrection. She not only saw him, she heard him and touched him (see 1 Jn 1:1-4 n). This great privilege was given to a woman whose broken life had experienced healing (Luke 8:2 o). In Jewish culture this was astounding; a woman could not even be a witness in court. No Jew in this period would make up such a story.
20:19 p meeting behind locked doors: The disciples feared prosecution for following Jesus.
• Peace be with you: This was a standard Jewish greeting (see also 3 Jn 1:15 q), but Jesus was doing more than just greeting his disciples: he was offering the Messiah’s peace (see Isa 9:6 r; 52:7 s) and delivering the gift of his Kingdom (see John 14:27 t; 16:33 u).
20:20 v The reality of Jesus’ resurrection was quite clear. Jesus showed them the wounds from the nails and the spear. He did not feign death but conquered it. He was no phantom but a real man with a real body. He had been dead but was now alive. Jesus was fully human both in life (1:14 w) and in his resurrection.
20:21 x I am sending you: God had sent Jesus into the world to establish his Kingdom, and now Jesus was sending his disciples to carry on his mission. Christ’s emissaries carry the truth of Jesus’ words to the world (cp. 17:18 y).
20:22 z Jesus commissioned the disciples and then empowered them with the Holy Spirit. The Spirit had not been given previously because Jesus had not yet been glorified (7:39 aa). The glorified Jesus, resplendent in his resurrected body, poured the Spirit on his followers. This gift fulfilled many promises that the Spirit would be sent (14:16 ab, 26 ac; 15:26 ad; 16:7 ae, 13 af). It foreshadows the arrival of the Spirit’s empowering presence at Pentecost (Acts 1:4-5 ag; 2:1-47 ah).
20:23 ai If you forgive anyone’s sins: The ongoing work of Christ’s followers parallels the work of Christ. Christ’s followers do not distribute and withdraw God’s forgiveness on a whim, but they follow Jesus’ prompting through the Spirit (15:5 aj), just as Jesus obeyed his Father (14:31 ak).
Copyright information for
TNotes