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12 I tell you the solemn truth,[a] the person who believes in me will perform[b] the miraculous deeds[c] that I am doing,[d] and will perform[e] greater deeds[f] than these, because I am going to the Father.

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Footnotes

  1. John 14:12 tn Grk “Truly, truly, I say to you.”
  2. John 14:12 tn Or “will do.”
  3. John 14:12 tn Grk “the works.”
  4. John 14:12 tn Or “that I do.”sn See the note on miraculous deeds in v. 11.
  5. John 14:12 tn Or “will do.”
  6. John 14:12 tn Grk “greater works.”sn What are the greater deeds that Jesus speaks of, and how is this related to his going to the Father? It is clear from both John 7:39 and 16:7 that the Holy Spirit will not come until Jesus has departed. After Pentecost and the coming of the Spirit to indwell believers in a permanent relationship, believers would be empowered to perform even greater deeds than those Jesus did during his earthly ministry. When the early chapters of Acts are examined, it is clear that, from a numerical standpoint, the deeds of Peter and the other Apostles surpassed those of Jesus in a single day (the day of Pentecost). On that day more were added to the church than had become followers of Jesus during the entire three years of his earthly ministry. And the message went forth not just in Judea, Samaria, and Galilee, but to the farthest parts of the known world. This understanding of what Jesus meant by “greater deeds” is more probable than a reference to “more spectacular miracles.” Certainly miraculous deeds were performed by the apostles as recounted in Acts, but these do not appear to have surpassed the works of Jesus himself in either degree or number.