Isaiah 53:10-12, Part 1

This study originated in another essay: “I plan to look at all the differences between the Masoretic text and the Septuagint here.”  (My take on Isaiah 53:10a can be found there.)  I decided to give Isaiah 53:10-12 its own thread when I felt rushed and unwilling to spend the time it deserved as an aside in another thread.

Masoretic Text

Septuagint
Isaiah 53:10b (Tanakh) Table Isaiah 53:10b (NET) Isaiah 53:10b (NETS)

Isaiah 53:10b (Elpenor English)

when thou shalt make his soul an offering for sin, once restitution is made, If you offer for sin, If ye can give an offering for sin,

A note (28) in the NET after the line—once restitution is made—reads:

The meaning of this line is uncertain. It reads literally, “if you/she makes, a reparation offering, his life.” The verb תָּשִׂים (tasim) could be second masculine singular, in which case it would have to be addressed to the servant or to God. However, the servant is only addressed once in this servant song (see 52:14a), and God either speaks or is spoken about in this servant song; he is never addressed. Furthermore, the idea of God himself making a reparation offering is odd. If the verb is taken as third feminine singular, then the feminine noun נֶפֶשׁ (nefesh) at the end of the line is the likely subject. In this case one can take the suffixed form of the noun as equivalent to a pronoun and translate, “if he [literally, “his life”] makes a reparation offering.”

“Furthermore, the idea of God himself making a reparation offering is odd,” practically leapt off the page at me.  Assuming the NET translators considered וַֽיהֹוָ֞ה (yehôvâh) here[1] as the Father and taking Jesus literally—The Father and I are one[2]—I ask, who but יְהֹוָה (yehôvâh) could make a meaningful “reparation offering”?  For it is impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sins.[3]  The writer of Hebrews explained (Hebrews 9:22-26 NET):

Indeed according to the law almost everything was purified with blood, and without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness.  So it was necessary for the sketches of the things in heaven to be purified with these sacrifices, but the heavenly things themselves required better sacrifices than these.  For Christ[4] did not enter a sanctuary made with hands—the representation of the true sanctuary—but into heaven itself, and he appears now in God’s presence for us [Table].  And he did not enter to offer himself again and again, the way the high priest enters the sanctuary year after year with blood that is not his own, for then he would have had to suffer again and again since the foundation of the world.  But now[5] he has appeared once for all at the consummation of the ages to put away sin[6] by his sacrifice [Table].

Who wrote the letter to the Hebrews?  It seems important now to explain what I’m thinking since I can’t calculate how much affect that speculation has on my interpretation.

Matthew 22:34-40 (NET) Mark 12:28-31 (NET)
Now one of the experts in the law came and heard them debating.
Now when the Pharisees heard that [Jesus] had silenced the Sadducees, they assembled together.
When he saw that Jesus answered them well,
And one of them, an expert in religious law, asked him a question to test him:[7] he asked him,
“Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?” “Which commandment is the most important of all?”
Jesus said[8] to him, Jesus answered,
“The most important is: ‘Listen, Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one [Table].
“‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.’ Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength’ [Table].
This is the first and greatest commandment [Table].
The second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ The second is: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’
All the law and the prophets depend on these two commandments” [Table].
There is no other commandment greater than these” [Table].

If I had read Matthew’s account only I would have thought this unnamed Pharisee tried to entrap Jesus in his words.  Mark pointed out that he saw that Jesus answered [the Sadducees] well.  This insight makes me suspect that the unnamed Pharisee became known to Mark or Peter at some later time.  At that particular moment he may have hoped his brother Pharisees perceived his question as a test (πειράζων, a form of πειράζω) but I wonder if, secretly, it was more like what John described: Dear friends, do not believe every spirit, but test (δοκιμάζετε, a form of δοκιμάζω) the spirits to determine if they are from God, because many false prophets have gone out into the world.[9]

Mark’s Gospel narrative continued (Mark 12:32-34a NET):

The expert in the law said to him, “That is true, Teacher; you are right to say that he is one, and there is no one else besides him.  And to love him with all your heart, with all your mind, and with all your strength and to love your neighbor as yourself is more important than all burnt offerings and sacrifices”[10] [Table].  When Jesus saw that he had answered thoughtfully, he said to him, “You are not far from the kingdom of God.”

Jesus’ affirmation along with this unnamed Pharisee’s desire for a love [that] is the fulfillment of the law[11] causes me to think he stood in the background among the other disciples as Jesus, after his resurrection, taught them what became the content of the letter to the Hebrews.  Though I quoted Paul, I don’t think this unnamed Pharisee was Saul.  The Pharisee who became the Apostle Paul was off doing his own thing, advancing in Judaism beyond many of [his] contemporaries in [his] nation, and was extremely zealous for the traditions of [his] ancestors.[12]

I think the Eleven plus Matthias (Acts 1:15-26) struggled mentally to force Jesus’ death and resurrection into their hypothesis of a political revolutionary who would free Israel from Roman domination.  Jesus’ teaching washed over them, virtually unheard and unheeded.  It was too technical, too religious, perhaps even too “heretical” to fully sink in.

This is not to say that the unnamed Pharisee was untroubled by Jesus’ teaching.  But I think that he was not a zealot in any sense of the word.  He was more patient, more thoughtful, more attuned to these particular technicalities and more willing to entertain Jesus’ notions, though he, too, would need time and the indwelling Holy Spirit to fully embrace them.

Sometime prior to the stoning of Stephen (Acts 7:54-8:3) this unnamed Pharisee recalled Jesus’ teaching as a solution to signs of defection he witnessed among his brothers, and he wrote it down.  I don’t know if he showed it to anyone or not.  To the apostles in Jerusalem, seeing themselves primarily as a Jewish reform movement (Acts 21:18-24), it may have seemed too radical, like pouring fuel on a smoldering fire (Acts 21:26-31).

I imagine this unnamed Pharisee standing again in the background at the Jerusalem Council.  He sensed a kindred spirit in Paul and handed him a copy, perhaps his only copy, of the manuscript of the letter to the Hebrews.  John could have confirmed its contents as Jesus’ teaching if Paul had asked.  I don’t know how Paul might have reacted.

He seemed content with the results of the Jerusalem Council initially: As [he and Timothy] went through the towns, they passed on the decrees that had been decided on by the apostles and elders in Jerusalem for the Gentile believers to obey.[13]

After Paul journeyed through Athens and Corinth, however, perhaps during the affliction that happened to [him] in the province of Asia,[14] I think Jesus’ teaching in the unnamed Pharisee’s writing known as Hebrews percolated, along with his recent experience and the Holy Spirit’s answers to the things that had troubled him (Romans 9-11), into that masterful Gospel commentary known today as Paul’s Letter to the Romans.  That unnamed Pharisee’s account of Jesus’ teaching had a much better opportunity for widespread circulation in Paul’s traveling library of scrolls and parchments.

This is all conjecture on my part, more like a screenwriter or an actor developing a backstory.  I share it here because I promised I would and because it may have some influence on my interpretation of Hebrews.

I searched all the occurrences of אָשָׁם֙ (ʼâshâm), translated offering for sin (Tanakh, KJV) and restitution (NET), and made the following table of those with identical consonants (no prefixes or suffixes) to see how the rabbis translated each of them in the Septuagint.

Reference Hebrew – Chabad.org Tanakh NET Septuagint BLB Septuagint Elpenor
Isaiah 53:10 אָשָׁם֙ an offering for sin restitution περὶ ἁμαρτίας περὶ ἁμαρτίας
Genesis 26:10 אָשָֽׁם guiltiness guilt ἄγνοιαν, a form of ἄγνοια ἄγνοιαν, a form of ἄγνοια
Leviticus 5:19 אָשָׁ֖ם a guilt-offering a guilt offering n/a n/a
Leviticus 7:5 אָשָׁ֖ם a guilt-offering a guilt offering πλημμελείας, a form of πλημμέλεια πλημμελείας, a form of πλημμέλεια
Leviticus 14:21 אָשָׁ֛ם a guilt-offering a guilt offering ἐπλημμέλησεν, a form of πλημμελέω ἐπλημμέλησεν, a form of πλημμελέω
Leviticus 19:21 אָשָֽׁם a guilt-offering a guilt-offering πλημμελείας, a form of πλημμέλεια πλημμελείας, a form of πλημμέλεια
1 Samuel (Kings) 6:3 אָשָׁ֑ם a guilt-offering a guilt offering ἀποδιδόντες a form of ἀποδίδωμι ἀποδιδόντες a form of ἀποδίδωμι
1 Samuel (Kings) 6:8 אָשָׁ֔ם a guilt-offering a guilt offering ἀποδώσετετῆς βασάνου ἀποδώσετετῆς βασάνου
1 Samuel (Kings) 6:17 אָשָׁ֖ם a guilt-offering a guilt offering ἀπέδωκαν…τῆς βασάνου ἀπέδωκαν…τῆς βασάνου
2 Kings 12:16 (4 Kings 12:17) אָשָׁם֙ forfeit reparation offerings περὶ ἁμαρτίας περὶ ἁμαρτίας
Proverbs 14:9 אָשָׁ֑ם sin reparation ὀφειλήσουσιν καθαρισμόν ὀφειλήσουσι καθαρισμόν
Jeremiah 51:5 (28:5) אָשָׁ֔ם sin guilt ἀδικίας, a form of ἀδικία ἀδικίας, a form of ἀδικία

Only 2 Kings 12:16 (4 Kings 12:17) matched the vowel points with the occurrence in Isaiah 53:10.  Both were translated περὶ ἁμαρτίας (for sin).  A table of the homograph אָשַׁ֥ם (ʼâsham) yielded no additional vowel point matches.

Reference Hebrew – Chabad.org Tanakh NET Septuagint BLB Septuagint Elpenor
Leviticus 5:19 אָשֹׁ֥ם is certainly was surely ἐπλημμέλησεν ἐπλημμέλησε
אָשַׁ֖ם guilty guilty πλημμέλησιν πλημμελείᾳ
Numbers 5:7 אָשַׁ֥ם he hath been guilty he wronged ἐπλημμέλησεν ἐπλημμέλησεν

The exercise persuaded me that אָשָׁם֙ (ʼâshâm) was the Hebrew word the rabbis intended to understand and translate in the Septuagint.  Then I searched all occurrences of תָּשִׂ֚ים (suwm), translated thou shalt make (Tanakh, KJV) and is made (NET), and made the following table of those with identical consonants (no prefixes or suffixes).

Reference Hebrew – Chabad.org Tanakh NET Septuagint BLB Septuagint Elpenor
Isaiah 53:10 תָּשִׂ֚ים thou shalt make is made δῶτε, a (2nd person plural) form of δίδωμι δῶτε, a (2nd person plural) form of δίδωμι
Genesis 6:16 תָּשִׂ֑ים shalt thou set Put ποιήσεις, a (2nd person singular) form of ποιέω ποιήσεις, a (2nd person singular) form of ποιέω
Genesis 44:2 תָּשִׂים֙ put put ἐμβάλατε, a (2nd person plural) form of ἐμβάλλω ἐμβάλετε, a (2nd person plural) form of ἐμβάλλω
Exodus 21:1 תָּשִׂ֖ים thou shalt set you will set παραθήσεις, a (2nd person singular) form of παρατίθημι παραθήσῃ, a (2nd person singular) form of παρατίθημι
Deuteronomy 17:15 תָּשִׂ֤ים thou shalt…set you must select καταστήσεις, a (2nd person singular) form of καθίστημι καταστήσεις, a (2nd person singular) form of καθίστημι
תָּשִׂ֤ים shalt thou set you must appoint καταστήσεις καταστήσεις
Deuteronomy 22:8 תָשִׂ֤ים thou bring being ποιήσεις ποιήσεις
1 Samuel (Kings) 10:19 תָּשִֹ֣ים set Appoint στήσεις, a (2nd person singular) form of ἵστημι καταστήσεις
1 Kings 20:34 (3 Kings 21:34) תָּשִֹ֨ים thou shalt make You may set up θήσεις, a (2nd person singular) form of τίθημι θήσεις, a (2nd person singular) form of τίθημι
Job 7:12 תָשִׂ֖ים thou settest you must put κατέταξας, a (2nd person singular) form of κατατάσσω κατέταξας, a (2nd person singular) form of κατατάσσω
Job 38:33 תָּשִׂ֖ים thou set you set up n/a n/a
Isaiah 41:15 תָּשִֽׂים and shalt make you will make θήσεις θήσεις
Ezekiel 21:20 (21:25) תָּשִׂ֔ים Appoint Mark out n/a n/a
Ezekiel 24:17 תָּשִׂ֣ים and put on and put n/a n/a

None of the other occurrences of תָּשִׂ֚ים (suwm) matched the vowel points exactly.  All were translated into Greek as 2nd person verbs, most were singular.  The plural exceptions were Isaiah 53:10 [Table] and Genesis 44:2.

Masoretic Text Septuagint
Genesis 44:2 (Tanakh) Genesis 44:2 (NET) Genesis 44:2 (NETS) Genesis 44:2 (Elpenor English)
And put (תָּשִׂים֙) my goblet, the silver goblet, in the sack’s mouth of the youngest, and his corn money.’  And he did according to the word that Joseph had spoken. Then put (suwm, תשׁים) my cup—the silver cup—in the mouth of the youngest one’s sack, along with the money for his grain.”  He did as Joseph instructed. and put (ἐμβάλατε) my silver cup into the bag of the younger one, with the price of his grain.”  And it happened according to the word of Joseph, just as he said. And put (ἐμβάλετε) my silver cup into the sack of the youngest, and the price of his corn.  And it was done according to the word of Joseph, as he said.

I don’t see any reason for a plural verb here but its existence gives me pause to consider the similar occurrence in Isaiah 53:10 as the translators’ interpretive choice.  Since “third [person] feminine singular” was another option cited in the NET note above I made a table of those occurrences as well.

Reference Hebrew – Chabad.org Tanakh NET Septuagint BLB Septuagint Elpenor
Exodus 2:3 וַתָּ֤שֶׂם put put ἐνέβαλεν, a (3rd person singular) form of ἐμβάλλω ἐνέβαλε, a (3rd person singular) form of ἐμβάλλω
וַתָּ֥שֶׂם laid set ἔθηκεν, a (3rd person singular) form of τίθημι ἔθηκεν, a (3rd person singular) form of τίθημι
1 Samuel (Kings) 25:18 וַתָּ֖שֶׂם and laid She loaded ἔθετο, a (3rd person singular) form of τίθημι ἔθετο, a (3rd person singular) form of τίθημι
2 Samuel (Kings) 13:19 וַתָּ֚שֶׂם and she laid She put ἐπέθηκεν, a (3rd person singular) form of ἐπιτίθημι ἐπέθηκε, a (3rd person singular) form of ἐπιτίθημι
2 Kings (4 Kings) 9:30 וַתָּ֨שֶׂם and she painted she put on ἐστιμίσατο, a (3rd person singular) form of στιμίζω ἐστιμίσατο, a (3rd person singular) form of στιμίζω
Esther 8:2 וַתָּ֧שֶׂם And…set And…designated κατέστησεν, a (3rd person singular) form of καθίστημι κατέστησεν, a (3rd person singular) form of καθίστημι
Job 13:27 וְתָ֘שֵׂ֚ם Thou puttest And you put ἔθου, a (2nd person singular) form of τίθημι ἔθου, a (2nd person singular) form of τίθημι

The final occurrence (Job 13:27), though its consonants were identical to the others, was clearly “second [person] masculine singular.”  And none of these was an exact match for the occurrence in Isaiah 53:10.  I noted one other form which was translated as forms of τίθημι in the Septuagint.

Reference Hebrew – Chabad.org Tanakh NET Septuagint BLB Septuagint Elpenor
1 Samuel (Kings) 9:20 תָּ֧שֶׂם set be θῇς, a (2nd person singular) form of τίθημι θῇς, a (2nd person singular) form of τίθημι
Psalm 66:9 (65:9) הַשָּׂ֣ם Which holdeth He preserves θεμένου, a (singular participle) form of τίθημι θεμένου, a (singular participle) form of τίθημι
Psalm 104:3 (103:3) הַשָּֽׂם who maketh He makes τιθεὶς, a (singular participle) form of τίθημι τιθεὶς, a (singular participle) form of τίθημι
Psalm 147:14 (147:3) הַשָּׂ֣ם He maketh He brings τιθεὶς τιθεὶς
Isaiah 63:11 הַשָּׂ֥ם he that put who placed θεὶς, a (singular participle) form of τίθημι θεὶς, a (singular participle) form of τίθημι

This exercise made me willing to consider that תָּשִׂ֚ים (suwm) might be original to Isaiah 53:10, the Hebrew word the rabbis intended to understand and translate in the Septuagint.  Paul, in his greeting to believers in Galatia, had also used a (singular) form of δίδωμι  (Galatians 1:3-5 NET):

Grace and peace to you from God the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ, who gave (δόντος, another form of δίδωμι) himself for our sins to rescue us from this present evil age according to the will of our God and Father [Table], to whom be glory forever and ever!  Amen.

Though I still need to consider נַפְשׁ֔וֹ (nephesh), translated his soul (Tannakh, KJV), I began to consider: if this—when thou shalt make his soul an offering for sin—is the more legitimate understanding of this clause, how did God make his soul an offering for sin?

What follows is a fictional explanation from The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis, offered as the intellectual equivalent of an appetizer, to get the mind warmed up to the taste and smell of this issue:

“It means,” said Aslan, “that though the Witch knew the Deep Magic, there is a magic deeper still which she did not know. Her knowledge goes back only to the dawn of time. But if she could have looked a little further back, into the stillness and the darkness before Time dawned, she would have read there a different incantation. She would have known that when a willing victim who had committed no treachery was killed in a traitor’s stead, the Table would crack and Death itself would start working backward.”[15]

The understanding that was part of my own socialization is perhaps best exemplified by an excerpt from “The Death of Christ,” a sermon delivered by Charles Haddon Spurgeon on January 24, 1858:

Understand, then, the sense in which Christ was made a sacrifice for sin. But here lies the glory of this matter. It was as a substitute for sin that he did actually and literally suffer punishment for the sin of all his elect. When I say this, I am not to be understood as using any figure whatever, but as saying actually what I mean. Man for his sin was condemned to eternal fire; when God took Christ to be the substitute, it is true, he did not send Christ into eternal fire, but he poured upon him grief so desperate, that it was a valid payment for even an eternity of fire. Man was condemned to live forever in hell. God did not send Christ forever into hell; but he put on Christ, punishment that was equivalent for that. Although he did not give Christ to drink the actual hells of believers, yet he gave him a quid pro quo—something that was equivalent thereunto. He took the cup of Christ’s agony, and he put in there, suffering, misery, and anguish such as only God can imagine or dream of, that was the exact equivalent for all the suffering, all the woe, and all the eternal tortures of every one that shall at last stand in heaven, bought with the blood of Christ.

Both of these explanations share a common theme: God made Christ “a sacrifice for sin” by conforming to something presumed to be innate to the created cosmos.  In C.S. Lewis’ fiction He conformed to the “deeper magic” and in Charles Spurgeon’s sermon He conformed to some idea of judicial or commercial equivalence:  “something that was equivalent” to “a valid payment for even an eternity of fire” since “Man was condemned to live forever in hell.”

I think God made Christ “a sacrifice for sin” by the truth, power and authority of his word.

God said, Let Christ be the offering for sin.  And God made Christ the offering for sin, and it was so (John 3:16 NET Table):

For this is the way God loved the world: He gave his one and only Son, so that everyone who believes in him will not perish but have eternal life.

God said, Let Christ be the offering for sin.  And it was so (John 11:49-53 NET):

Then one of them, Caiaphas, who was high priest that year, said, “You know nothing at all!  You do not realize that it is more to your advantage to have one man die for the people than for the whole nation to perish.”  (Now he did not say this on his own, but because he was high priest that year, he prophesied that Jesus was going to die for the Jewish nation [Table], and not for the Jewish nation only, but to gather together into one the children of God who are scattered.)  So from that day they planned together to kill him [Table].

God said, Let Christ be the offering for sin.  And it was so.  The Christ obeyed God his Father (John 10:17, 18 NET).

This is why the Father loves me—because I lay down my life, so that I may take it back again.  No one takes it away from me, but I lay it down of my own free will.  I have the authority to lay it down, and I have the authority to take it back again.  This commandment I received from my Father.”

Tables comparing Genesis 44:2 in the Tanakh, KJV and NET, and comparing Genesis 44:2 in the Septuagint (BLB and Elpenor), and a table comparing Matthew 22:35 in the NET and KJV follow.

Genesis 44:2 (Tanakh) Genesis 44:2 (KJV) Genesis 44:2 (NET)
And put my goblet, the silver goblet, in the sack’s mouth of the youngest, and his corn money.’  And he did according to the word that Joseph had spoken. And put my cup, the silver cup, in the sack’s mouth of the youngest, and his corn money.  And he did according to the word that Joseph had spoken. Then put my cup—the silver cup—in the mouth of the youngest one’s sack, along with the money for his grain.”  He did as Joseph instructed.
Genesis 44:2 (Septuagint BLB) Genesis 44:2 (Septuagint Elpenor)
καὶ τὸ κόνδυ μου τὸ ἀργυροῦν ἐμβάλατε εἰς τὸν μάρσιππον τοῦ νεωτέρου καὶ τὴν τιμὴν τοῦ σίτου αὐτοῦ ἐγενήθη δὲ κατὰ τὸ ῥῆμα Ιωσηφ καθὼς εἶπεν καὶ τὸ κόνδυ μου τὸ ἀργυροῦν ἐμβάλετε εἰς τὸν μάρσιππον τοῦ νεωτέρου καὶ τὴν τιμὴν τοῦ σίτου αὐτοῦ. ἐγενήθη δὲ κατὰ τὸ ρῆμα ᾿Ιωσήφ, καθὼς εἶπε
Genesis 44:2 (NETS) Genesis 44:2 (English Elpenor)
and put my silver cup into the bag of the younger one, with the price of his grain.”  And it happened according to the word of Joseph, just as he said. And put my silver cup into the sack of the youngest, and the price of his corn.  And it was done according to the word of Joseph, as he said.
Matthew 22:35 (NET) Matthew 22:35 (KJV)
And one of them, an expert in religious law, asked him a question to test him: Then one of them, which was a lawyer, asked him a question, tempting him, and saying,
NET Parallel Greek Stephanus Textus Receptus Byzantine Majority Text
καὶ ἐπηρώτησεν εἷς ἐξ αὐτῶν [νομικὸς] πειράζων αὐτόν και επηρωτησεν εις εξ αυτων νομικος πειραζων αυτον και λεγων και επηρωτησεν εις εξ αυτων νομικος πειραζων αυτον και λεγων

[1] Isaiah 53:10a

[2] John 10:30 (NET)

[3] Hebrews 10:4 (NET)

[4] The Stephanus Textus Receptus and Byzantine Majority Text had the article ο preceding Christ.  The NET parallel Greek text and NA28 did not.

[5] The NET parallel Greek text and NA28 had νυνὶ here, where the Stephanus Textus Receptus and Byzantine Majority Text had νυν.

[6] The NET parallel Greek text and NA28 had the article τῆς preceding sin.  The Stephanus Textus Receptus and Byzantine Majority Text did not.

[7] The Stephanus Textus Receptus and Byzantine Majority Text had και λεγων (KJV: and saying) here.  The NET parallel Greek text and NA28 did not.

[8] The Stephanus Textus Receptus had ιησους ειπεν here.  The Byzantine Majority Text had ιησους εφη.  The NET parallel Greek text and NA28 had simply ἔφη.

[9] 1 John 4:1 (NET)

[10] The Stephanus Textus Receptus had the article των preceding sacrifices.  The NET parallel Greek text, NA28 and Byzantine Majority Text did not.

[11] Romans 13:10b (NET)

[12] Galatians 1:14 (NET)

[13] Acts 16:4 (NET) Table

[14] 2 Corinthians 1:8a (NET)

[15] The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe, Spark Notes

He Takes Away, Part 3

In 1882 George Matheson wrote:

O Love, that wilt not let me go,

I rest my weary soul in Thee;
I give Thee back the life I owe,
That in Thine ocean depths its flow
May richer, fuller be.

I quote it here—especially “O Love, that wilt not let me go” —as the testimony of two witnesses.  One witness, the author of this verse, is the epitome of the righteous as I understand it, according to a comment on hymnal.net by Ana Lara, March 27, 2020.  George Matheson struggled to serve God against the undeserved evils of blindness and loneliness.  The other witness is a sinner who has struggled against almost every sin of the flesh and most sins of doubt and confusion.

I, that sinner, further affirm that God is patient, God is kind, He is not envious.  He does not brag, He is not puffed up.  He is not rude, He is not self-serving, He is not easily angered or resentful.  He is not glad about injustice, but rejoices in the truth.

The Bible is translated into English by committees of the righteous, not by committees of sinners.  I don’t have a lot of personal experience to know what it feels like to be the righteous.  I have Jesus’ word (Luke 15:11-32) that they may feel that God has treated them unfairly when He shows mercy to a sinner like me.

Everyone whom the Father gives me will come to me, Jesus said, and the one who comes to me I will never send away.[1]

I’m led to examine the Greek.

John 6:37

 NET Parallel Greek

Stephanus Textus Receptus

πᾶν ὃ δίδωσιν μοι ὁ πατὴρ πρὸς ἐμὲ ἥξει, καὶ τὸν ἐρχόμενον πρὸς |ἐμὲ| οὐ μὴ ἐκβάλω ἔξω παν ο διδωσιν μοι ο πατηρ προς εμε ηξει και τον ερχομενον προς με ου μη εκβαλω εξω

NET

KJV

Everyone whom the Father gives me will come to me, and the one who comes to me I will never send away. All that the Father giveth me shall come to me; and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out.

The Greek word translated Everyone (KJV: All) is πᾶν (a form of πᾶς).  It is listed as an adjective that may be in the nominative case or the accusative case, but stands as the subject of this clause in both translations.  It is singular and neuter while πᾶς is singular and masculine. But πᾶν (everyone or all) is limited and specified by what follows.

The next word is the relative pronoun , a singular neuter form of ὅς, translated whom in the NET signaling the translators’ choice of the accusative case over the nominative case.  The KJV translators’ choice, that, is more difficult to ferret out.  The verb δίδωσιν, a form of δίδωμι in the present tense, active voice and indicative mood follows this relative pronoun.  Jesus makes a factual statement here as opposed to proposing a hypothetical situation.

The personal pronoun μοι, a first person singular form of ἐγώ in the dative case follows the verb.  So I have: “Everyone whom [an as yet unspecified third person singular] gives me” or gives “to me.”  Then the giver is specified: πατὴρ, the Father, unequivocally in the nominative case.  “Everyone whom the Father gives me…”

The preposition πρὸς is next, followed by the personal pronoun ἐμὲ, the first person form of ἐγώ in the accusative case.  This signifies that ἐμὲ is the direct object of πρὸς, and that the meaning of πρὸς is selected from the following pool: “to; toward, in the direction of; beside; against; with; at; toward daybreak.”  So I have: “Everyone whom the Father gives me, to me…”

The verb ἥξει, a third person singular form of ἥκω, completes this clause.  It is in the future tense, active voice and indicative mood.  This remains a factual statement through and through: “Everyone whom the Father gives me, to me will come.”

Frankly, my knowledge of Greek is insufficient to see why—other than word order—this wasn’t translated: “the Father gives me everyone who will come to me.”  The grammarian in my head actually prefers it.  Of course my grammarian is still more familiar with American English than Koine Greek.  The logician in my head hears “everyone whom the Father gives me will come to me” and “the Father gives me everyone who will come to me” as logically equivalent, so long as I’m not confused by will.

The English word will in the NET doesn’t refer to any forms of the Greek verbs θέλω or βούλομαι (to will), or any forms of the nouns θέλημα or βουλή (the will).  It was simply half of the two word phrase, will come, the NET translators chose for the Greek verb ἥξει.  And though both verbs, δίδωσιν and ἥξει, are in the active voice, I hear no cause and effect between them here necessarily.

Yes, one could argue that, No one can come to me (ἐλθεῖν πρός με) unless the Father who sent me draws him,[2] adds a sense of cause and effect to this clause retrospectively.  But in context it’s not yet the point of this clause.  The logical equivalence of the one the Father gives Jesus with the one who will come to Jesus is really leaping off the page at me.

Imprisoned in time as I am, I’m unqualified to use this clause to judge another negatively.  In other words, I can’t say, it appears to me that you have not come to Jesus yet, therefore the Father has not given you to Jesus.  I may have a limited qualification to judge positively: It appears to me that you have come to Jesus, therefore the Father has given you to Jesus.  But it seems to me, as one who will stand before Jesus to give an account, that the best understanding of this clause is that anyone who appears to me to have come to, toward, in the direction of, beside, with, even against Jesus, should be recognized as at least potentially a precious gift of God the Father to God the Son.

The next clause begins with the conjunction καὶ.  This is followed by τὸν ἐρχόμενον.  Apparently, placing a definite article before a verb (a form of ἔρχομαι here) transforms it into something like a gerund, a verb functioning as a noun, “the coming one,” translated the one who comes (NET) or him that cometh (KJV).  Since τὸν and ἐρχόμενον are both in the accusative case, the one who comes is the direct object of this clause.

The prepositional phrase πρὸς |ἐμὲ| in the NET parallel Greek text or προς με in the Stephanus Textus Receptus follows ἐρχόμενον.  So I have: “and the one who comes to me…”

The negation which follows is οὐ μὴ.  It is nothing like a double negative in English.  Rather, it is an emphatic negation.  The verb it negates is ἐκβάλω, a 2nd aorist tense form of ἐκβάλλω in the active voice and subjunctive mood.   Though it is not the future tense ἐκβαλῶ, it was translated as a potential future event, I willsend away (NET) or I willcast out (KJV), relative to the time one comes to Jesus.

Here is Justin Alfred again on the emphatic negation of a future event in the aorist tense.[3]

However, when these two Greek negative particles are combined in the form of οὐ µή (ou mē) with reference to a future event, what results is an intensified form of the negative: “οὐ µή (ou mē) is the most decisive way of negativing something in the future.” Thayer adds, “The particles οὐ µή in combination augment the force of the negation, and signify not at all, in no wise, by no means; . . .”

However, when this combination is attached to an Aorist Subjunctive, what occurs is what has been termed the Subjunctive of Emphatic Negation. As was pointed out above, the Subjunctive Mood indicates the probability of an event, and the Aorist Tense emphasizes an action as simply occurring, without any specific reference to time, apart from the use of an adverbial modifier (e.g., that which would describe when, where, how much, or how often). Thus, when you have οὐ µή (ou mē) in combination with the Aorist Subjunctive, what occurs is the absolute and unequivocal denial of the probability of an event EVER OCCURING at any moment or time in the future.

The Greek word ἔξω, translated away (NET) or out (KJV), may be an adverb or a preposition.  I’ll assume that it’s an adverb here modifying ἐκβάλω, since no object of the preposition is present.  I don’t think it diminishes the power of the “Subjunctive of Emphatic Negation” as described by Mr. Alfred above.

The Father and I are one,[4] Jesus said: ἐγὼ καὶ ὁ πατὴρ ἕν ἐσμεν.

I’ve already encountered ἐγὼ καὶ ὁ πατὴρ, “I and the Father.”  The adjective ἕν (a form of εἷς) is the number one.  And ἐσμεν is a 1st person plural form of εἰμί in the present tense, active voice and indicative mood: “I and the Father one are.”  In other words, God the Father and God the Son exist as one God.  He is not divided against Himself.

So I have “the absolute and unequivocal denial of the probability” that one God will “EVER…at any moment or time in the future” send away the one who comes to Jesus, as a fact before I even come to the metaphor in John 15:1-8.  This fact must be the basis for any assumptions I make when translating that metaphor into English.

When Jesus said to his disciples, I am the vine; you are the branches,[5] he clarified the meaning of a metaphor.  He didn’t transform human beings into the branches of a vine.  Human beings they remained, fully capable of autonomous motion, with agile minds, easily bored, easily captivated by other people and other concepts than Jesus and his word.  Such a hypothetical human being “[is] not one remaining in [Jesus], [and is] like a branch [that] was thrown out and dried up, they gather them up and throw them into the fire, and it burns.”  This is a description of this hypothetical human being’s present condition, not a prophecy necessarily of this hypothetical human beings’ future.

On the contrary, Jesus’ point was: Remain in me, and I will remain in you.  Just as the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it remains in the vine, so neither can you unless you remain in me [Table]…The one who remains in me—and I in him—bears much fruit, because apart from me you can accomplish nothing,[6] as far as bearing the fruit of the Holy Spirit is concerned.

Don’t be fooled.  To other human beings imprisoned in time the human being not remaining in Jesus may appear exceptionally accomplished professionally, politically, academically, artistically, commercially, even, dare I say it, religiously as a “soul winner.”  But as far as the fruit of the Spirit of God is concerned, this one can accomplish nothing, “like a branch [that] was thrown out and dried up, they gather them up and throw them into the fire, and it burns.”

On the other hand, when Jesus spoke of “every branch in me that does not bear fruit,” He speaks of a human being in Jesus, captivated by Him and his word.  And here I’ll mix Jesus’ and Paul’s metaphors: This one participates in the richness of the olive root;[7] this one is continuously filled with God’s own love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.[8]  But what proceeds out of this one is not very loving, joyful, peaceful, patient, kind, good, faithful, gentle or self-controlled at present.

I’ll take me for an example, talking politics.  God help me I’m neither Democrat nor Republican but a bomb-throwing anarchist at heart.  And I in this area, even as a branch in Jesus that does not yet bear the fruit that is so generously supplied, can be assured that the gardener, God our Father, will lift us up, move us upward, raise us to a higher level, carry us along, bear with us, endure with us until He causes his fruit to emerge through us.

We can know this for certain by faith in Jesus Christ, who said takes away ain’t no option in Greek for an English translation of αἴρει in John 15:2 concerning the One true God regarding the one who remains in Jesus.  My Father is honored by this, Jesus said, that you bear much fruit and show that you are my disciples.[9]

A table comparing John 6:44 in the NET and KJV follow.

John 6:44 (NET)

John 6:44 (KJV)

No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him, and I will raise him up at the last day. No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him: and I will raise him up at the last day.

NET Parallel Greek

Stephanus Textus Receptus

Byzantine Majority Text

οὐδεὶς δύναται ἐλθεῖν πρός με ἐὰν μὴ ὁ πατὴρ ὁ πέμψας με ἑλκύσῃ αὐτόν, καγὼ ἀναστήσω αὐτὸν ἐν τῇ ἐσχάτῃ ἡμέρᾳ ουδεις δυναται ελθειν προς με εαν μη ο πατηρ ο πεμψας με ελκυση αυτον και εγω αναστησω αυτον τη εσχατη ημερα ουδεις δυναται ελθειν προς με εαν μη ο πατηρ ο πεμψας με ελκυση αυτον και εγω αναστησω αυτον εν τη εσχατη ημερα