
John 12
Paraphrased
By Dan Maines
Introduction
†
Jesus moves toward the final week, everything points to fulfillment
in that generation
† What looks like
rejection is actually the path to glory and judgment
†
The kingdom is revealed through humility, sacrifice, and timing
John
12:1
Jesus came to Bethany six days before Passover,
where Lazarus was, the one he raised from the dead
†
This places the timing right before the final Passover, the last
week
† Lazarus stands as living proof of
resurrection power already at work (John 11:43-44)
†
The fulfilled perspective shows life already breaking into that
age
John 12:2
They prepared a dinner for
him, Martha served, and Lazarus reclined with him
†
Fellowship shows acceptance by those who believed
†
Lazarus sitting there proves the miracle was undeniable
†
The contrast is set between belief and rejection
John
12:3
Mary took costly perfume and anointed Jesus' feet
and wiped them with her hair, the house was filled with the
fragrance
† This is preparation for burial
before it happens (John 12:7)
† The fragrance
points to the spreading testimony of Christ
†
Worship recognizes what others still refuse to see
John
12:4
Judas, one of his disciples, who was going to
betray him, said
† Judas is already
identified as the betrayer
† This shows the
corruption within Israel's leadership circle
†
The betrayal was part of the plan, not a surprise
John
12:5
Why was this perfume not sold and given to the
poor
† False concern hides selfish intent
†
This mirrors hypocritical leadership in Israel (Matthew 23:27-28)
†
Outward righteousness, inward corruption
John 12:6
He
said this not because he cared for the poor, but because he was a
thief
† The exposure of motive reveals the
heart
† Leadership in that system was driven
by gain
† Judgment was coming on that corrupt
system
John 12:7
Jesus said leave her
alone, she kept it for the day of my burial
†
Jesus confirms his death is imminent
† The
burial preparation is acknowledged before it happens
†
This ties directly to the fulfillment of prophecy
John
12:8
You always have the poor, but you do not always
have me
† His physical presence was
temporary
† The urgency of the moment is
emphasized
† The generation was about to lose
its opportunity
John 12:9
A large crowd
came, not only for Jesus but to see Lazarus
†
The miracle drew public attention
† Lazarus
became a living testimony
† This increased
pressure on leadership
John 12:10
The
chief priests planned to put Lazarus to death also
†
They attempt to destroy the evidence
† This
shows hardened unbelief
† Their actions
confirm their role in judgment
John 12:11
Because
many were believing in Jesus because of him
†
The miracle produced faith
† Truth spreads
even under opposition
† This is why
suppression intensified
John 12:12
The
next day the crowd heard Jesus was coming to Jerusalem
†
This is the final entry into the city
† The
timing fulfills prophecy
† The stage is set
for judgment
John 12:13
They took palm
branches and went out saying Hosanna, blessed is he who comes in the
name of the Lord
† Public acknowledgment of
Messiah
† This fulfills Psalm 118:26
†
The same crowd will later turn
John 12:14
Jesus
found a young donkey and sat on it
†
Fulfillment of Zechariah 9:9
† The King comes
in humility
† Not as a military
conqueror
John 12:15
Do not fear, daughter
of Zion, your King is coming
† Zion
represents Israel
† The promise is being
fulfilled in their sight
† Yet many still
missed it
John 12:16
The disciples did not
understand at first, but later remembered
†
Understanding came after fulfillment
† This
shows progressive revelation
† The events
confirmed the truth
John 12:17
The crowd
continued to testify about Lazarus
† Witness
spreads through testimony
† This builds the
case against unbelief
† Evidence was public
and undeniable
John 12:18
The crowd went
out because they heard of the sign
† Signs
drew people
† The miracles validated Jesus'
authority
† The response still divided
people
John 12:19
The Pharisees said the
world has gone after him
† They recognize the
influence growing
† Their fear drives
opposition
† This is the collapse of their
authority
John 12:20
Some Greeks came to
worship
† The nations begin to seek Christ
†
This shows inclusion beyond Israel
†
Fulfillment of the nations coming (Isaiah 49:6)
John
12:21
They asked Philip to see Jesus
†
The desire of the nations is evident
† Access
is being opened
† The old barriers are
fading
John 12:22
Philip told Andrew, and
they told Jesus
† The request reaches Jesus
†
This signals a turning point
† The hour is
about to be declared
John 12:23
Jesus said
the hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified
†
The timing is now
† Glory comes through
death
† This is fulfillment, not delay
John
12:24
Unless a grain dies, it remains alone, but if it
dies, it bears fruit
† Death produces life
†
This is the pattern of the kingdom
† The
cross leads to multiplication
John 12:25
He
who loves his life loses it, he who hates his life keeps it
†
True life requires surrender
† This applies
to that generation facing judgment
† Holding
to the old system meant loss
John 12:26
If
anyone serves me, he must follow me
†
Following means sharing in suffering
†
Service leads to honor from the Father
† This
is discipleship defined
John 12:27
Now my
soul is troubled, but for this purpose I came
†
Jesus acknowledges the weight
† Yet he
submits to the mission
† The cross was
intentional
John 12:28
Father glorify your
name, a voice came from heaven
† Divine
confirmation is given
† God declares
fulfillment
† This validates Jesus
publicly
John 12:29
The crowd thought it
thundered or an angel spoke
† They heard but
did not understand
† This reflects spiritual
blindness
† The message was missed
John
12:30
Jesus said this voice came for your sake
†
The sign was for them
† God gave confirmation
to that generation
† Yet many still
refused
John 12:31
Now judgment is upon
this world, the ruler will be cast out
†
Judgment is present, not future
† The system
of that age is ending
† This points to the
fall of Jerusalem
John 12:32
If I am
lifted up, I will draw all to myself
† The
cross becomes the means of drawing
† Not
limited to Israel
† The nations are
included
John 12:33
He was indicating the
kind of death he would die
† The lifting up
refers to crucifixion
† The method is
foretold
† Fulfillment is precise
John
12:34
The crowd questioned how the Son of Man could be
lifted up
† They misunderstood the Messiah
†
They expected a different kind of king
†
Their expectations blinded them
John 12:35
Walk
while you have the light, so darkness does not overtake you
†
Time was limited for that generation
† Light
was present in Christ
† Rejection leads to
darkness
John 12:36
Believe in the light,
so you may become sons of light
† Faith
produces transformation
† Identity changes
through belief
† This is the call before
judgment
John 12:37
Though he had done
many signs, they still did not believe
†
Evidence was abundant
† Unbelief was
willful
† This fulfills prophecy
John
12:38
Lord who has believed our message
†
Isaiah 53 is fulfilled
† The rejection was
foretold
† Their unbelief confirms
prophecy
John 12:39
They could not believe
because of Isaiah's words
† Hardening had
taken place
† Judgment includes blindness
†
This is covenant consequence
John 12:40
He
has blinded their eyes and hardened their heart
†
Spiritual blindness leads to judgment
† This
ties to Isaiah 6:9-10
† They saw but did not
perceive
John 12:41
Isaiah said this
because he saw his glory
† Jesus is
identified with divine glory
† This confirms
his identity
† The rejection was of God
himself
John 12:42
Many believed but
feared being put out of the synagogue
† Fear
of man over truth
† Social pressure
controlled belief
† This reflects leadership
control
John 12:43
They loved approval of
men more than God
† This exposes the heart
issue
† Approval replaced truth
†
This is why judgment came
John 12:44
Jesus
cried out, he who believes in me believes in him who sent me
†
Faith in Jesus is faith in the Father
† There
is no separation
† Rejecting Jesus is
rejecting God
John 12:45
He who sees me
sees the one who sent me
† Jesus reveals the
Father fully
† He is the visible expression
†
This removes all excuses
John 12:46
I have
come as light, so no one remains in darkness
†
Light is present now
† Darkness is a choice
†
The offer is immediate
John 12:47
If
anyone hears and does not keep, I do not judge him, I came to save
†
The purpose of his coming was salvation
†
Judgment comes through rejection
† The offer
precedes the consequence
John 12:48
The
word I spoke will judge him in the last day
†
Judgment is tied to his words
† The last day
refers to that covenant ending
† The standard
was already given
John 12:49
I did not
speak on my own, the Father commanded me
†
Jesus speaks divine authority
† His message
is not independent
† This confirms
reliability
John 12:50
His commandment is
eternal life
† Life comes through obedience
to his word
† The message itself gives life
†
This is the fulfilled reality
Historical References
†
Josephus records the growing unrest and rejection leading to
Jerusalem's destruction
† Eusebius notes the
fulfillment of Christ's warnings in that generation
†
Irenaeus affirms the prophetic fulfillment tied to Christ's coming
and rejection
How It Applies To Us Today
†
We don't wait for fulfillment, we live in it
†
The call is still to walk in the light while we have it
†
Faith isn't about signs now, it's about trusting what has already
been fulfilled
Q & A Appendix:
Q:
When was the judgment Jesus spoke about?
A: It
was in that generation leading up to Jerusalem's fall (Matthew
24:34)
Q: What does being lifted up mean?
A:
It refers to the crucifixion (John 12:33)
Q:
Why were people hardened?
A: It fulfilled
Isaiah's prophecy of judgment (Isaiah 6:9-10)
Q:
What is the last day?
A: The end of the old
covenant age (Hebrews 8:13)
Q: What does
walking in the light mean?
A: Living in the
truth revealed in Christ (1 John 1:7)
† This is the
fulfilled perspective we proclaim at Fulfilled Prophecies †
©
Fulfilled Prophecies - Dan Maines.
Source Index
†
John 12
† Josephus, Wars of the Jews
†
Irenaeus, Against Heresies
† Eusebius,
Ecclesiastical History
Links