John Chapter 3 verse 35 Holy Bible

ASV John 3:35

The Father loveth the Son, and hath given all things into his hand.
read chapter 3 in ASV

BBE John 3:35

The Father has love for the Son and has put all things into his hands.
read chapter 3 in BBE

DARBY John 3:35

The Father loves the Son, and has given all things [to be] in his hand.
read chapter 3 in DARBY

KJV John 3:35

The Father loveth the Son, and hath given all things into his hand.
read chapter 3 in KJV

WBT John 3:35


read chapter 3 in WBT

WEB John 3:35

The Father loves the Son, and has given all things into his hand.
read chapter 3 in WEB

YLT John 3:35

the Father doth love the Son, and all things hath given into his hand;
read chapter 3 in YLT

John 3 : 35 Bible Verse Songs

Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerses 35, 36. - These fired verses certainly have the ring of the Gospel as a whole, and correspond with the fulness of Christological teaching, with which the words of Christ abound, as well as the Epistle of John; yet there is no exact parallel in the later revelation, From whom could such a statement come with greater power than from him who heard the Divine voice from heaven saying, "This is my beloved Son: hear him"? The Berleb. Bible (quoted by Hengstenberg) adds, to the great words, the Father loveth the Son, "as I sufficiently learned from the voice at the Jordan" - and hath given all things into his hand. The "all things" may he taken by us in their widest sense (cf. Matthew 11:27) - "all ἐξουσία in heaven and earth" (Matthew 28:18; cf. 1 Corinthians 15:27; Revelation 1:18); and the power of determining the final condition of all souls, suggested in ver. 36. But we may conceive a less extended horizon limiting the vision of the Baptist: all things belonging to the kingdom of God, to the progress and consummation of it in the world. John need not be supposed to have swept onward into the eternal future, but mainly to have been thinking of the mutual relations of the forerunner and the Christ. The Son will determine the place of his herald and of his disciple. There is no limit expressed. He who had these matters entrusted to him might easily be supposed to have "all things in his hand." He rested the less upon the greater.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(35) The Father loveth the Son.--Comp. Note on Matthew 11:27, which is remarkable as an instance of what we call distinctly Johannine thought and diction in the earlier Gospels. We shall meet the words again in John 5:20.