· Translation: KJV

John 17:10All things that are mine are yours, and yours are mine, and I am glorified in them.

The setting

Jerusalem, ~30 AD. Jesus declares the unity between Father and Son, explaining how believers participate in divine glory...

The emotion here: profound joy in divine unity

The original word

doxazō (δοξάζω) — to make glorious, to honor, to manifest divine radiance through someone

Why it matters

This mutual sharing between Father and Son was considered blasphemy by Jewish leaders

Read with care

What most readers miss in John 17:10

Jesus says He is GLORIFIED IN THEM — believers actually bring glory to Jesus

Common misconceptionPeople think this is just about Jesus and the Father sharing everything. But Jesus says 'I am glorified IN THEM' — meaning ordinary believers actually add to Christ's glory. You're not just saved; you're part of how Jesus shines.

Bible Genome reading

John 17:10 — Bible Genome reading

SpeakerJesus
Eragospel
Primary emotionworship
Literary typeprayer
MarkPrayer

Emotional genome

Comfort power70%
Quotability80%
Memorability80%
Crisis relevance45%
Standalone65%
Themes:unityglory

In context

No verse stands alone.

Read the conversation around it.

Open John 17

John 17:10 comes from the book of John, written during the gospel period. These words are attributed to Jesus. The dominant emotion in this verse is worship, with a comfort power of 70% and a tone that is celebratory. It belongs to the prayer genre of biblical literature. Key themes include unity, glory. Notable phrases: all things mine are yours; I am glorified in them. This verse is a prayer.

Your reflection

What does John 17:10 mean to you, today?

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