John opens his Gospel proclaiming that Jesus is the Light of the world. Throughout His ministry Jesus, Himself, proclaimed He is the Light of the world, and used darkness and light to contrast reactions to Him.
After returning to Bethany on Sunday evening, Monday found Jesus once again on His way to Jerusalem. That day found Him cursing the fig tree and marked the beginning of intense clashes with the religious leaders as He cleansed the Temple and indicted them for turning God’s house of prayer into a den of thieves (see Mark 11:15–18).
Matthew, Mark, and Luke all record further teachings of Jesus that week, however, until the beginning of Passover a few days later, the last discourse John records is from that Monday.1

Jesus again predicted His death, and again proclaimed that He is the Light of the World.
In one day the crowd has gone from hailing Jesus as king, to questioning what He is saying. R. V. G. Tasker writes,
“The people who had been ready only a short time before to accept Jesus as a national king are unwilling to follow him as a crucified king. They pour scorn on His words about the ‘lifting up’ of the Son of man, for they see in them a reference to His crucifixion (34). This Son of man, whoever else He may be, cannot, they feel sure, be the Christ predicted in their Scriptures.
“…He makes a final appeal to them to recognize the Light while it is still shining in their midst…But they still disbelieve what He is saying about Himself…
“In the closing verses of chapter xii Jesus loudly and openly emphasizes once again the serious nature of unbelief. They are His last public words [in John] to His fellow-countrymen, ‘His own’ to whom He came and who for the most part have not received Him.”2
Look back and compare John 1:1–13, with these last verses of John 12.
Tasker goes on to say:
“To reject him, He solemnly reaffirms, is to turn one’s back upon the true light, and to go on living in doubt and with the certainty of dying unforgiven; it is to pass judgment upon oneself instead of accepting a Saviour who can take away all judgment.”3
If you have never read the gospel of John, this is a wonderful week to read it. In his last semester in college, early on Easter morning, my husband woke up and decided to read the Crucifixion and Resurrection accounts in the four Gospels. He began in Matthew and continued on. As he was reading John 20, he understood the gospel and believed in Jesus.
John tells us why he wrote his Gospel.
I invite you to read so that you also may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing you may have life in His name.

The Setting Sun in the Massapequa Preserve: SavidgeMichael. (CC BY-SA 4.0).
LSB: Legacy Standard Bible New Testament with Psalms and Proverbs (Steadfast Bibles, Irvine CA: 2021).
1A. T. Robertson in his A Harmony of the Gospels (157), and Robert L. Thomas and Stanley N. Gundry in their A Harmony of the Gospels (180) place John 12:20–50 on Monday. The timelines I linked to in The Events of Holy Week places it on Sunday, but I don’t know why.
2,3R. V. G. Tasker, The Gospel According to St. John (Wm. B. Erdmanns Publishing Company, Grand Rapids MI: 1960) 150–151, 151.
Copyright ©2021–2026 Iwana Carpenter