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  1. CSB Jesus told them, "My time has not yet arrived, but your time is always at hand. NLT Jesus replied, 'Now is not the right time for me to go, but you can go anytime. KJV Then Jesus said unto them, My time is not yet come: but your time is alway ready.

  2. Dec 7, 2022 · Answer. Jesus timed elements of His ministry carefully, though people often seemed to challenge His timing. For example, very early in His ministry, Mary requested that Jesus perform a miracle at a wedding at Cana. Jesus responded by saying, “My hour has not yet come” ( John 2:4 ).

  3. Aug 14, 2014 · Therefore when Jesus said my "hour" has not yet come, he was referring to the preordained specific timing of God's plan. The Greek word hour, according to Strongs dictionary, literally means "a specific time".

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    • His Hour Has Comelink
    • Why “Maundy”?Link
    • Anguish in The Gardenlink
    • Never Beforelink
    • Anguish, For Joylink
    • Never Againlink
    • Our Joy to Echo Such Lovelink

    Even as early as John 2, when Jesus turned water to wine, he knew, “My hour has not yet come” (John 2:4). But he acknowledged his hourwould come. And it shaped him from the beginning. When he went up to Jerusalem privately for the Feast of Booths, he knew, “My time has not yet come” (John 7:6). Once he began to teach publicly, it wasn’t long before...

    In the English-speaking church, we have come to call this gut-wrenching night before Good Friday “Maundy Thursday.” Scholars suspect the word maundy comes from the Latin mandatum meaning command. It’s a reference to Jesus’s charge to his disciples, in that upper room, after washing their feet (John 13:1–20) and watching Judas depart (John 13:21–30)...

    When Jesus finished praying in the upper room, “he went out with his disciples across the brook Kidron, where there was a garden, which he and his disciples entered” (John 18:1). His hour had come, and this would be the garden of his agony. The first Adam felt no anguish in his garden, because he gave in so quickly, but Jesus knew that to resist th...

    He will be no mere victim. If he is to go as a lamb to this slaughter, he must go willingly. Freely, by his own eternal spirit, he must offer himself (Hebrews 9:14). If there ever was a holy panic, this is it. He begins to be “greatly distressed and troubled” (Mark 14:33). Fully human, he confesses, “My soul is very sorrowful, even to death” (Mark ...

    He knew that hell itself was coming. How then can he, as man, embrace it in all its horror? Earlier that very night, he had told his men what his hour would mean: anguish, for joy. In the garden, he still stands on the other side. And yet he speaks, in all the terror and torment, in all his sorrow and distress, feeling only enough joy to choose the...

    Never before had a human heart, mind, and will faced what Jesus did in that garden. And never again will God require it. His Son’s trip into Gethsemane is utterly unique from any garden of anguish into which God might lead us. Those who hate God will soon enough stand unshielded to face his omnipotent, righteous wrath. But they will never do so on ...

    Jesus’s garden will not be ours. His hour will not fall to us. But having been loved like this, how can we not love one another? How can we not, as the beneficiaries of Christ’s irreplaceable sacrifice, ache to empty our own selves for another’s good? Having tasted such fullness from him, how can we not gladly pour out to meet the needs of others? ...

  5. my time is not yet come; meaning, not the time of his death, or of his exaltation and glorification, or of the showing of himself forth unto the world; though all this was true; but of his going up to this feast; as appears from John 7:8;

  6. John 2:4. ESV And Jesus said to her, “Woman, what does this have to do with me? My hour has not yet come.”. NIV Woman, why do you involve me?'. Jesus replied.

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