John Chapter 14 verse 19 Holy Bible

ASV John 14:19

Yet a little while, and the world beholdeth me no more; but ye behold me: because I live, ye shall live also.
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BBE John 14:19

A little time longer, and the world will see me no more; but you will see me; and you will be living because I am living.
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DARBY John 14:19

Yet a little and the world sees me no longer; but ye see me; because I live ye also shall live.
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KJV John 14:19

Yet a little while, and the world seeth me no more; but ye see me: because I live, ye shall live also.
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WBT John 14:19


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WEB John 14:19

Yet a little while, and the world will see me no more; but you will see me. Because I live, you will live also.
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YLT John 14:19

yet a little, and the world doth no more behold me, and ye behold me, because I live, and ye shall live;
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John 14 : 19 Bible Verse Songs

Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 19. - Yet a little while - a few hours only - and the world - which cannot take from you (or even appreciate or receive) the Holy Spirit - beholdeth me no more. Their power of beholding me will be gone by their own act, they will have cursed and driven me away with the hellish cry, "Crucify him!" they will have slain and buried me out of their sight; but, notwithstanding this, you, by my coming to you in the power of the Spirit, will veritably behold me. Even more than this, because I live though I die, ye shall live also, in your intense spiritual apperception of my continuity of life, of which you will have ocular and spiritual guarantee. Jesus here passed over the concrete fact of the Resurrection, to return to it afterwards. We know that the resurrection of his body and his victory over death became (1) the condition of his sending the Spirit, (2) the proof of his being the living One whom death could not hold, and (3) the ground of the higher appreciation of the relation they sustained to him. But he fixed their attention on his continuous life (in spite of death), and their consequent life under the shadow of his Divine protection, without specifically mentioning the Resurrection, of which he had (in synoptic narrative) given them explicit but misapprehended prophecies. This version seems to be preferable to making the last clause ὅτι, etc., a reason of the θεωρεῖτέ με - a view advocated as possible by Meyer and Luthardt; or than the view which limits the ὅτι ζῶ to the θεωρεῖτέ: "Ye see me because I live, and as a consequence of this vision ye shall live also."

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(19) Yet a little while.--Comp. John 13:33; John 16:16.But ye see me--i.e., in the spiritual presence of the Paraclete. The words may indeed have their first fulfilment in the appearances of the forty days (comp. Acts 10:41), but these appearances were themselves steps in the education which was leading the disciples from a trust in the physical to a trust in the spiritual presence. (Comp. John 20:17.) To the world the grave seemed the closing scene. They saw Him no more; they thought of Him as dead. To the believers who had the power to see Him He appeared as living, and in very deed was more truly with them and in them than He had been before.Because I live, ye shall live also.--Better, for I live, and ye shall live. Our Lord speaks of His own life in the present. It is the essential life of which He is Himself the Source, and which is not affected by the physical death through which He is about to pass. They also who believe in Him shall have even here this principle of life, which in them too shall be affected by no change, but shall develop into the fulness of the life hereafter. Because He lives, and because they too shall live, therefore shall they see Him and realise His presence when the world seeth Him no more.