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John 8:46 — King James Version← Study notes

Which of you convinceth me of sin? And if I say the truth, why do ye not believe me?


John 8:46Greek Interlinear

Greek · John 8:4616 words
GreekMeaning
τίςtis
WhichpronounG5100
ἐξex
ofprepositionG1537
ὑμῶνhymōn
youpronounG4771
ἐλέγχειelenchei
convictsverbG1651
μεme
mepronounG1473
περὶperi
concerningprepositionG4012
ἁμαρτίαςhamartias
sin?nounG266
εἰei
IfwordG1487
ἀλήθειανalētheian
the truthnounG225
λέγωlegō
I speakverbG3004
διὰdia
because ofprepositionG1223
τίti
whypronounG5100
ὑμεῖςhymeis
you yourselvespronounG4771
οὐou
notadverbG3756
πιστεύετέpisteuete
do believeverbG4100
μοιmoi
Me?pronounG1473
Greek text from the SBL Greek New Testament (SBLGNT). Transliteration follows SBL Academic conventions.

Church Fathers on John 8:46

Our Lord, having already cut off the Jews from relationship to Abraham, overthrows now this far greater claim, to call God their Father, You are of your father the devil.

Chrysostom · 4th century

Here we must guard against the heresy of the Manicheans, who hold a certain original nature of evil, and a nation of darkness with princes at their head, whence the devil derives his existence. And thence they say our flesh is produced; and in this way interpret our Lord’s speech, You are of your father the devil: viz. to mean that they were by nature evil, drawing their origin from the opposite seed of darkness.

Augustine · 4th century

And this seems to be the same mistake, as if one said, that an eye which saw right was different in kind from an eye which saw wrong. For just as in these there is no difference of kind, only one of them for some reason sees wrong; so, in the other case, whether a man receives a doctrine, or whether he does not, he is of the same nature.

Origen · 3rd century
Read all 21 entries in the readerCatena Aurea · St. Thomas Aquinas, tr. J. H. Newman · public domain
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