John Chapter 16 verse 27 Holy Bible

ASV John 16:27

for the Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me, and have believed that I came forth from the Father.
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BBE John 16:27

For the Father himself gives his love to you, because you have given your love to me and have had faith that I came from God.
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DARBY John 16:27

for the Father himself has affection for you, because ye have had affection for me, and have believed that I came out from God.
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KJV John 16:27

For the Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me, and have believed that I came out from God.
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WBT John 16:27


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WEB John 16:27

for the Father himself loves you, because you have loved me, and have believed that I came forth from God.
read chapter 16 in WEB

YLT John 16:27

for the Father himself doth love you, because me ye have loved, and ye have believed that I from God came forth;
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 27. - For the Father himself loveth you (φιλεῖ), with love of a fatherly affection, such as mine to you, because ye have loved me (the perfect preterit, in the sense of the realized past in the present which shall then be), and have believed that I came forth from the side of (παρὰ) the Father. In their belief of this transcendent fact is the hope of the world. It was wrought in them by the strengthening pulses of a deepening love, and to this love God himself responds with a personal tender affection that encourages boundless prayer. The disciple and lover of Jesus, having Jesus in the heart, united to him by living faith, will find in Christ that there is a perpetual pledge of reciprocal love between the Father and himself. Christ will not (ἐρωτᾶν) ask the Father, because his entire position as Mediator establishes a continual appeal, is a perpetual ἔντευξις, a continuous drawing near and appeal to God on our account, a pledge and guarantee of our own fellowship with and access to the Father. Our English word "intercession," though apparently corresponding with the Latin and with the Greek word, does not now represent its original meaning. That meaning is by no means equivalent to the hind of prayer which is here excluded (Trench, 'Syn. N.T.,' § 51.).

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(27) For the Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me.--Comp. Notes on John 14:21; John 14:23. The introduction of the thought again here reminds us that, although in the fulness of the higher spiritual life there is communion between the Father and the human spirit, because the Father Himself ever loveth the heart which can receive His love, this power to receive the love of the Father is itself the result of loving the Son, who has revealed Him. Our Lord is leading them to the fuller truths of spiritual communion with God, and even tells them that this will be independent of mediation; but the very words which tell them that it will be independent of mediation, tell them that all depends upon His own mediation and the manifestation of the love of God in His own person.And have believed that I came out from God.--The reading is uncertain. Several of the better MSS. read, ". . . that I came forth from the Father." (Comp. the first words of the next verse and John 13:3.) The perfect tenses represent their love and faith as completed, and continuing in the present. It is striking that the order of the words makes faith' follow love. This order may be chosen to mark emphatically the connection between the Father's love for the disciples and their love for the Son; but it also suggests that their convictions were the result of having their hearts opened by love so that they received the truth.