Jesus said, "I and the
father are one"

John 10:22-30 (NASB)
22 At that time the Feast of the Dedication took place at Jerusalem; 23 it
was winter, and Jesus was walking in the temple in the portico of Solomon. 24 The
Jews then gathered around Him, and were saying to Him, "How long will You keep us in
suspense? If You are the Christ, tell us plainly." 25 Jesus answered them,
"I told you, and you do not believe; the works that I do in My Fathers name,
these testify of Me. 26 "But you do not believe because you are not of My sheep.
27 "My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me; 28 and I
give eternal life to them, and they will never perish; and no one will snatch them out of
My hand. 29 "My Father, who has given [them] to Me, is greater than all; and no
one is able to snatch [them] out of the Fathers hand. 30 "I and the Father are one."
What do the experts say about verse
30: "I and the Father are one"?
W. A. Criswell, The
Believers Study Bible: "One" asserts not the identity (as a single
Person) but the essential unity of the Father and the Son. (Nashville: Thomas Nelson,
1997. ©1991, Criswell Center for Biblical Studies)
Jamieson, Fausset, Brown Commentary:
I and my Father are oneOur language admits not of the precision of the original
in this great saying. "Are" is in the masculine
gender"we (two persons) are"; while "one" is neuter"one
thing." Perhaps "one interest" expresses, as nearly as may be, the
purport of the saying. There seemed to be some contradiction between His saying they had
been given by His Father into His own hands, out of which they could not be
plucked, and then saying that none could pluck them out of His Fathers hands,
as if they had not been given out of them. "Neither have they," says He;
"though He has given them to Me, they are as much in His own almighty hands as
everthey cannot be, and when given to Me they are not, given away from
Himself, for HE AND I HAVE ALL IN COMMON." Thus it will be seen, that, though oneness
of essence is not the precise thing here affirmed, that truth is the basis of what
is affirmed, without which it would not be true. And Augustine was right in saying the
"We are" condemns the Sabellians (who denied the distinction of
Persons in the Godhead), while the "one" (as explained) condemns the Arians
(who denied the unity of their essence). (David Brown, D.D., "Commentary on John
10". "Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible.)
The New Treasury of Scripture
Knowledge: This oneness Jesus claimed with the Father must not be reduced to mere
oneness in "agreement, purpose and organization," equating this degree of
oneness with that of believers with the Father and the Son (Jn. 17:20-22), for if this is
all Christ asserted, he would not have been accused of blasphemy (ver. 33), for even the
Old Testament prophets had asserted as much (Is. 48:16). (Jerome H. Smith, editor, The New
Treasury of Scripture Knowledge, Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1997, © 1992 Jerome H. Smith.)
KJV Bible Commentary: I and
my Father are one. God the Father and God the Son are in agreement in the matter of the
believers eternal security. On the basis of this passage, no one should ever doubt
the eternal security of his salvation. Once a person is genuinely saved, he is saved
forever. (Jerry Fallwell, Executive editor, Edward E. Hinson, Michael Kroll Woodrow,
general editors, KJV Bible Commentary, Nashville, Thomas Nelson, 1997, © 1994)
Matthew Henrys Commentary:
Further to corroborate the security, that the sheep of Christ may have strong consolation,
he asserts the union of these two undertakers: "I and my Father are one, and
have jointly and severally undertaken for the protection of the saints and their
perfection." This denotes more than the harmony, and consent, and good understanding,
that were between the Father and the Son in the work of mans redemption. Every good
man is so far one with God as to concur with him; therefore it must be meant of the oneness
of the nature of Father and Son, that they are the same in substance, and equal in
power and glory. The fathers urged this both against the Sabellians, to prove the
distinction and plurality of the persons, that the Father and the Son are two, and against
the Arians, to prove the unity of the nature, that these two are one. If we should
altogether hold our peace concerning this sense of the words, even the stones which the
Jews took up to cast at him would speak it out, for the Jews understood him as hereby
making himself God (v. 33) and he did not deny it. He proves that none could pluck them
out of his hand because they could not pluck them out of the Fathers hand,
which had not been a conclusive argument if the Son had not had the same almighty power
with the Father, and consequently been one with him in essence and operation. (Matthew
Henry, Matthew Henrys Commentary on the Bible, Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers,
1997)
John Gills Exposition of the
Bible: I and [my] Father are one. Not in person, for the Father must be a distinct
person from the Son, and the Son a distinct person from the Father; and which is further
manifest, from the use of the verb plural, "I and [my] Father, we are one"; that
is, in nature and essence, and perfections, particularly in power; since Christ is
speaking of the impossibility of plucking any of the sheep, out of his own and his
Fathers hands; giving this as a reason for it, their unity of nature, and equality
of power; so that it must be as impracticable to pluck them out of his hands, as out of
his Fathers, because he is equal with God the Father, and the one God with him. The
Jew objects, that
if the sense of this
expression is, that the Father and the Son are one, as the Nazarenes understand and
believe it, it will be found that Jesus himself destroys this saying, as it is written in
(Mark 13:32), for saith Jesus, "that day and that hour, there is knoweth, not the
angels, nor the Son, but the Father only"; lo, these words show, that the Father and
the Son are not one, since the Son does not know what the Father knows. (Isaac Chizzuk
Emuna, par. 2. c. 50. p. 438, 439)
But it should be observed, that
Christ is both the Son of God, and the son of man, as the Christians believe; as he is the
Son of God, he lay in the bosom of his Father, and was privy to all his secrets, to all
his thoughts, purposes, and designs; and as such, he knew the day and hour of judgment,
being God omniscient; and in this respect is one with the Father, having the same
perfections of power, knowledge
but then as the son of man, he is not of the same
nature, and has not the same knowledge; his knowledge of things was derived, communicated,
and not infinite; and did not reach to all things at once, but was capable of being
increased, as it was: and it is with regard to him as the son of man, that Jesus speaks of
himself in (Mark 13:32); whereas he is here treating of his divine sonship, and almighty
power; wherefore considered in the relation of the Son of God, and as possessed of the
same perfections with God, he and his Father are one; though as man, he is different from
him, and knew not some things he did: so that there is no contradiction between the words
of Christ in one place, and in the other; nor is he chargeable with any blasphemy against
God, or any arrogance in himself, by assuming deity to himself; nor deserving of
punishment, even to be deprived of human life, as the Jew suggests; nor is what he
produces from a Socinian writer, of any moment, that these words do not necessarily
suppose, that the Father and the Son are of the same essence; since it may be said of two
men, that they are one, end yet are not the same man, but one is one man, and the other
another; for we do not say they are one and the same person, which does not follow from
their being of one and the same nature, but that they are one God, and two distinct
persons. (The New John Gills Exposition of the Entire Bible (Modernized and adapted
for the computer by Larry Pierce of Online Bible.) All Rights Reserved, Larry Pierce,
Winterbourne, Ontario.)
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