Volume 2 of Godet’s commentary on John covers the middle part of the Gospel. He provides detailed commentary on Jesus’ first miracle, his travels to Judea, Samaria, and Galilee, as well as the controversies in Jesus’ ministry. This volume concludes with commentary on the First Discourse and the Second Discourse in chapter ten.
“All indeed hear, but One alone has seen. Consequently, the result of the divine teaching can only be to lead men to Him who alone has direct knowledge of God, and can reveal Him to them.” (Page 240)
“how can His flesh be offered as food for the spiritual hunger of man! This Jesus explains by adding the new particular” (Page 242)
“The true God, the living Father, gives Himself to one alone, but in Him to all who feed upon this only One.” (Page 248)
“He had brought forward His person as a whole, and in an indefinite manner, as the object of faith;” (Page 242)
“the flesh is the food which positively imparts to him life” (Page 245)
Godet, in all his commentaries, shows a scholarly breadth of familiarity with the commentators who preceded him. Many of their interpretations are stated and refuted in order to present that which the author feels is the correct interpretation of the passage. One can in reading this work avail himself of a clear summary of the views of many various writers. The author was respected as a theologian, hence his work has depth, and was revered as a Greek scholar and exegete, and thus his work has accuracy.
[Frédéric Louis Godet] has many qualifications for his work. One of the most needful exists in an eminent degree—a hearty sympathy with the book he is expounding. He does not approach it from the outside, but the inside, having a heartfelt experience of the power of the blessedness of its truths.
—Talbot W. Chambers