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John 7:25 — King James Version← Study notes

Then said some of them of Jerusalem, Is not this he, whom they seek to kill?


John 7:25Greek Interlinear

Greek · John 7:2512 words
GreekMeaning
ἜλεγονElegon
Were sayingverbG3004
οὖνoun
thereforewordG3767
τινεςtines
somepronounG5100
ἐκek
ofprepositionG1537
τῶνtōn
thosearticleG3588
ἹεροσολυμιτῶνHierosolymitōn
of JerusalemnounG2415
ΟὐχOuch
NotparticleG3756
οὗτόςhoutos
thisdemonstrativeG3778
ἐστινestin
is heverbG1510
ὃνhon
whomrelative pronounG3739
ζητοῦσινzētousin
they seekverbG2212
ἀποκτεῖναιapokteinai
to kill?verbG615
Greek text from the SBL Greek New Testament (SBLGNT). Transliteration follows SBL Academic conventions.

Church Fathers on John 7:25

It was said above that our Lord went up to the feast secretly, not because He feared being taken, (for He had power to prevent it,) but to show figuratively, that even in the very feast which the Jews celebrated, He was hid, and that it was His mystery. Now however the power appears, which was thought timidity: He spoke publicly at the feast, in so much that the multitude marveled: They said some of them at Jerusalem, Is not this He, whom they seek to kill? but, lo, He speaks…

Augustine · 4th century

for there had been the greatest display of miracles, and there the people were in the worst state, seeing the strongest proofs of His divinity, and yet willing to give up all to the judgment of their corrupt rulers. Was it not a great miracle, that those who raged for His life, now that they had Him in their grasp, became on a sudden quiet?

Chrysostom · 4th century · The Evangelist adds, from Jerusalem

Every man, ever born in the flesh, is in a certain sense from God. How then could He say that they were ignorant who He was, and whence He was.? Because our Lord is here referring to His own peculiar birth from God, which they were ignorant of, because they did not know that He was the Son of God. His very saying then that they did not know whence He was, was telling them whence He was. If they, did not know whence He was, He could not be from nothing; for then there would be…

Hilary of Poitiers · 4th century
Read all 14 entries in the readerCatena Aurea · St. Thomas Aquinas, tr. J. H. Newman · public domain
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