Verse explainer
Not a slogan for free inquiry in general — a promise to disciples who continue in Jesus' word, about freedom from the bondage of sin.
And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.
BSBThen you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.
The plain meaning
The verse is the second half of a two-verse promise. Verse 31 is the hinge: "If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed." Only then comes v. 32 — the truth and the freedom are downstream of that continuing. When the hearers push back that they were never in bondage (v. 33), Jesus clarifies in vv. 34–36: the bondage he means is to sin, and the freedom he offers is what only the Son can give. So the "truth" here is not a general philosophical principle; it is the teaching of Jesus himself, received and lived in. And the freedom is not political, intellectual, or economic — it is freedom from sin's guilt and dominion, which Adam Clarke and other commentators identify as the deepest bondage a person can be in.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Clarke reads "know the truth" as a constant, experiential knowledge — not merely intellectual assent — of the truth's power and efficacy working in the believer. He notes the Jewish maxim that only the man meditating on the law was truly free, and corrects it: real freedom is liberation from sin's guilt and influence through the Spirit of adoption, not legal study. The bondage of sin, he insists, is the most grievous bondage of all.
Gill anchors the verse in the contrast Jesus draws in vv. 34–36 between the servant who does not abide in the house forever and the Son who does. Freedom comes through the Son, not through lineage or self-effort. The truth that sets free is the truth as it is in Jesus — and the freedom it produces is sonship: a permanent standing in the household of God that no servant's tenure can match.
Henry observes that Jesus addresses disciples who are continuing in his word, and that the promise flows from that continuance. The knowledge of truth he has in view is a sanctifying, liberating knowledge — not mere head-knowledge — and the freedom promised is freedom from the slavery of corruption and the condemning power of the law, a freedom only Christ's truth can produce.
The word behind it
"Truth." From a-lanthano, literally "that which is not hidden" — reality as it actually is, fully disclosed. In John's Gospel the word carries a thick sense: Jesus calls himself "the truth" (14:6), and here the truth that liberates is inseparable from his person and teaching. Thayer's Lexicon notes the Johannine usage as the divine reality revealed in Christ, not merely propositional accuracy. That distinction collapses the secular misreading: the freedom Jesus promises is bound to who he is, not to the general pursuit of accurate information.
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