John 20:2 is the second verse of the twentieth chapter of the Gospel of John in the New Testament. Mary Magdalene has just discovered that the tomb of Jesus has been opened. In this verse she seeks out Peter and the "disciple whom Jesus loved" to tell them that Jesus' body has been removed.
Content
The English Standard Version translates this verse as:
Analysis
John probably refers to the angel's message in , where he has Mary inform Peter and the other disciple. Rudolf Schnackenburg notes that the double-barreled name Simon Peter is how the Gospel of John usually refers to Peter.
This is the third appearance of the Beloved Disciple in John, he also appears in and . The introduction of the Beloved Disciple leads to two starkly different views on the veracity of the passage and those that come later. To those who believe in the traditional view that the Beloved Disciple is the author of the Gospel it adds great weight to what comes next as it is the report of an eyewitness. Similarly, William Robertson Nicoll sees Mary as "breathless and anxious" when she meets the apostles. She refers to they, but she does not make clear who "they" are. Brooke Foss Westcott lists three possibilities:
- she might mean grave robbers: grave robbery was a problem in Palestine during this era, as a Roman first century edict condemning the practice makes clear, or
- they could also refer to the Jewish leaders who may have had a reason to take the body.
Some feel the "we don't know where they have put him" makes it possible that they refers to the grave keepers and that Jesus' body was merely shifted to another tomb. Raymond E. Brown notes that the verb tithenai, which is translated as laid/put, can also mean buried. However, if Mary was thinking the body had merely been shifted by workers it raises the question of why she is so concerned, and why Peter and the Beloved Disciple so quickly leave to investigate.
References
Sources
Further reading
- Barrett, C.K. The Gospel According to John, 2nd Edition, London: SPCK, 1978.
- Bruce, F.F., The Gospel According to John, Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1983.
- Leonard, W. "St. John", A Catholic Commentary on the Bible, B. Orchard ed. New York: Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1953.
- Wesley, John, The Wesleyan Bible Commentary, Ralph Earle ed. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1964.
External links
- John Calvin's commentary on John 20:1-9
- Commentary on John
- A comparison of different translations
