Lite commentary
Jesus knows Judas will betray Him and Peter will deny Him, yet neither event falls outside the Father’s plan. In this dark hour, Jesus teaches that His disciples will be recognized above all by their love for one another, a love shaped by His own self-giving love.
Jesus begins by making clear that not everyone at the table belongs to Him in the same way. This continues the earlier point that not all the disciples were spiritually clean. When He says He knows those He has chosen, He is not denying Judas’s betrayal. He is showing that Judas’s action does not surprise Him or overturn His purpose. The betrayal fulfills Scripture, especially the pattern of Psalm 41:9, where a close companion who shared bread turns against the righteous sufferer. The point is not simply that Jesus is attacked by an enemy, but that He is betrayed by someone from within His own circle.
Jesus tells the disciples this beforehand so that when it happens their faith will not collapse. Instead, the event should confirm who He is. His words, “that you may believe that I am he,” carry great weight in John’s Gospel. Jesus is showing that He knows these events in advance and remains in full control of them. What might seem like a reason to stumble is meant to strengthen the disciples’ faith in His identity.
He then adds that whoever receives the one He sends receives Him, and whoever receives Him receives the Father. That matters here because the betrayal of one false disciple does not cancel the authority of those whom Jesus truly sends. The chain of mission still stands: the Father sent the Son, and the Son sends His true messengers.
At the same time, Jesus is not emotionally untouched by what is coming. John says He was deeply troubled in spirit. His sovereign knowledge does not mean cold detachment. He knows exactly what Judas will do, and He feels the grief of it. Then He states plainly that one of them will betray Him. The disciples are confused and distressed. Peter signals to the disciple whom Jesus loved to ask Jesus whom He means. Reclining close to Jesus, that disciple asks directly.
Jesus answers by identifying the betrayer through the dipped piece of bread and giving it to Judas. This seems to identify Judas to the beloved disciple through the private exchange, though apparently not to the group as a whole. The others still misunderstand what is happening. Because Judas kept the money bag, they assume Jesus may be sending him to buy something for the feast or to give money to the poor. So the sign identifies Judas, yet the meaning of it is not publicly understood at the table.
John then says that after Judas took the bread, Satan entered into him. Earlier John had already said that the idea of betrayal had been put into Judas’s heart. Here the evil deepens. But this does not remove Judas’s responsibility. John presents satanic influence and human guilt together. Judas is not excused. When Jesus tells him, “What you are about to do, do quickly,” He is not approving Judas’s sin. He is showing that even this dark act unfolds under His full awareness and within the appointed hour.
Judas leaves at once, and John adds, “And it was night.” This is more than a note about the time of day. In John, darkness often carries moral meaning. Judas goes out not only into the night outside, but into the darkness that matches his betrayal.
As soon as Judas is gone, Jesus says, “Now the Son of Man is glorified, and God is glorified in him.” That timing matters. Judas’s departure sets the final events of the cross in motion. In John, glorification is not limited to the resurrection or ascension. The suffering and death of Jesus are already part of that glorifying work. In the cross, the Son’s obedience and the Father’s saving purpose are displayed together. What looks like shame to the world is in fact the beginning of revealed glory.
Jesus then turns tenderly to the remaining disciples and calls them “Children.” He tells them He will be with them only a little longer. They will seek Him, but they cannot come where He is going right now. The immediate point is His coming departure and their inability to follow Him at this stage. Later they will understand more fully the meaning of His death, resurrection, and return to the Father.
In that setting Jesus gives what He calls a new commandment: they are to love one another. This command is not new because the Old Testament said nothing about love. It is new because Jesus now gives the measure and pattern of that love: “Just as I have loved you.” The standard is His own love, shown already in His humble service and soon to be displayed fully in His death. So this is not a call to mere friendliness or vague kindness. It is a call to a shared life shaped by Jesus’s sacrificial love.
Jesus then says that this mutual love will be the public mark of His disciples. “Everyone will know by this that you are my disciples—if you have love for one another.” Their identity is not chiefly proved by bold claims, status, or outward association, but by visible, lived love for each other. In the time of Jesus’s bodily absence, this love will mark out His people before the world.
Peter, however, focuses on where Jesus is going. Jesus answers that Peter cannot follow now, but will follow later. His present inability is temporary. Later, after failure and restoration, Peter will follow in the path of discipleship, and ultimately even in death.
Peter responds with bold confidence, insisting that he is ready to lay down his life for Jesus. But Jesus immediately exposes how weak untested zeal can be. Before the rooster crows, Peter will deny Him three times. Peter’s words sound noble, but Jesus shows that sincere affection and strong self-confidence are not the same as steadfast faithfulness under pressure.
So this passage holds several truths together. Jesus is fully aware of betrayal, departure, and denial. He remains in control and interprets these events according to Scripture and the Father’s purpose. Yet He is deeply troubled, not untouched. Judas’s betrayal shows that outward closeness to Jesus does not guarantee inward loyalty. Peter’s denial shows that even genuine disciples can fail badly when they trust their own strength. And in the middle of this dark hour, Jesus tells His followers what must define them after He is gone: they must love one another with the kind of love He has shown them.
Key truths
- Judas’s betrayal fulfills Scripture and does not take Jesus by surprise.
- Jesus foretells the betrayal so the disciples’ faith will be strengthened, not destroyed.
- Receiving those whom Jesus truly sends is tied to receiving Jesus and the Father.
- Satan’s involvement in Judas does not remove Judas’s moral responsibility.
- Judas’s departure into the night reflects both literal darkness and moral darkness.
- The cross itself begins the Son’s glorification in John’s Gospel.
- The new commandment is new in its standard: believers must love as Jesus loved them.
- Mutual love is the public mark of true discipleship.
- Peter’s bold promise is overturned by his coming denial, warning against self-confidence.
Warnings
- Do not use verse 18 mainly to argue a later doctrinal system while ignoring the immediate issue of betrayal within the apostolic circle.
- Do not reduce the new commandment to niceness; Jesus speaks of costly, self-giving love shaped by His own example and cross.
- Do not treat satanic influence as an excuse for Judas’s sin.
- Do not limit glorification here to resurrection alone; in this passage the passion itself begins that glorifying movement.
- Do not admire Peter’s bold words without hearing Jesus’s warning about his imminent denial.
Application
- When betrayal, scandal, or failure appears near the center of Christian community, believers should not conclude that Christ has lost control of His mission.
- Churches should ask whether their life together truly reflects the self-giving love of Christ, since that is the mark Jesus gave for His people.
- Outward closeness to Christian ministry, trusted roles, and spiritual privilege do not guarantee true faithfulness.
- Believers should distrust confident claims about what they would never do and instead walk in humble dependence on Christ.
- Those who are truly sent with the gospel should carry out their task seriously, knowing that receiving Christ’s true messengers is tied to receiving Christ and the Father.