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{"id":6903,"verse_id":"JHN.17.3","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"JHN","chapter":17,"verse":3,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"2","reference":"17.3","text":"This is eternal life. The author here defines eternal life for the readers, although it is worked into the prayer in such a way that many interpreters do not regard it as another of the authors parenthetical comments. It is not just unending life in the sense of prolonged duration. Rather it is a quality of life, with its quality derived from a relationship with God. Having eternal life is here defined as being in relationship with the Father, the one true God, and Jesus Christ whom the Father sent. Christ ( Χριστός , Cristos ) is not characteristically attached to Jesus name in Johns Gospel; it occurs elsewhere primarily as a title and is used with Jesus name only in 1:17 . But that is connected to its use here: The statement here in 17:3 enables us to correlate the statement made in 1:18 of the prologue, that Jesus has fully revealed what God is like, with Jesus statement in 10:10 that he has come that people might have life, and have it abundantly. These two purposes are really one, according to 17:3 , because (abundant) eternal life is defined as knowing (being in relationship with) the Father and the Son. The only way to gain this eternal life, that is, to obtain this knowledge of the Father, is through the Son (cf. 14:6 ). Although some have pointed to the use of know ( γινώσκω , ginwskw ) here as evidence of Gnostic influence in the Fourth Gospel, there is a crucial difference: For John this knowledge is not intellectual, but relational. It involves being in relationship.","source_note_position":2,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/John%2017%3A3/2"}
{"id":6904,"verse_id":"JHN.17.12","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"JHN","chapter":17,"verse":12,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"6","reference":"17.12","text":"A possible allusion to Ps 41:9 or Prov 24:22 LXX. The exact passage is not specified here, but in John 13:18 , Ps 41:9 is explicitly quoted by Jesus with reference to the traitor, suggesting that this is the passage to which Jesus refers here. The previous mention of Ps 41:9 in John 13:18 probably explains why the author felt no need for an explanatory parenthetical note here. It is also possible that the passage referred to here is Prov 24:22 LXX, where in the Greek text the phrase “son of destruction” appears.","source_note_position":6,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/John%2017%3A12/6"}
{"id":6905,"verse_id":"JHN.17.18","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"JHN","chapter":17,"verse":18,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"1","reference":"17.18","text":"Jesus now compared the mission on which he was sending the disciples to his own mission into the world , on which he was sent by the Father. As the Father sent Jesus into the world (cf. 3:17 ), so Jesus now sends the disciples into the world to continue his mission after his departure. The nature of this prayer for the disciples as a consecratory prayer is now emerging: Jesus was setting them apart for the work he had called them to do. They were, in a sense, being commissioned.","source_note_position":1,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/John%2017%3A18/1"}