Lux Domini
I and my Father are one.

What does John 10:30 mean?

All who have any thing to say to Christ, may find him in the temple. Christ would make us to believe; we make ourselves doubt.

Key themes

LoveFaithTruthIncarnation

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Keep this verse inside John 10:30-31 and alongside a few nearby related passages.

Commentary on John 10:30

I and my Father are one. I and my Father are one - The word translated "one" is not in the masculine, but in the neuter gender. It expresses union, but not the precise nature of the union. It may express any union, and the particular kind intended is to be inferred from the connection. In the previous verse he had said that he and his Father were united in the same object that is, in redeeming and preserving his people. It was this that gave occasion for this remark. Many interpreters have understood this as referring to union of design and of plan. The words may bear this construction.

Context in John 10

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John 10 belongs to the middle movement of the book, especially the section often described as conflict and witness. John presents Jesus in contemplative, symbolic, and theological richness as the Word, Lamb, Light, Bread, Shepherd, Resurrection, Way, Vine, and Son. Read this chapter with the wider themes of incarnation, life, and light in view so the individual verses keep their proper weight.

incarnationlifelightwitness

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Bible verses about love

A guided collection of passages on God’s love, neighbor-love, steadfast covenant love, and the shape of love in Christian life.

Bible verses about faith

Passages on trusting God, receiving Christ, persevering without sight, and the relation between faith and lived obedience.

Bible verses about truth

Passages on the nature of truth, honesty, deception, the word of God as truth, and Jesus' claim to be the truth.