Smit, Peter-Ben A.2016-10-142016-07Smit, P-B 2016, 'The Gift of the Spirit in John 19:30? A Reconsideration of ...', Catholic Biblical Quarterly, vol. 78, no. 3, pp. 448-462.0008-7912http://hdl.handle.net/2263/57327Based on insights from the history of interpretation, a Synoptic comparison, linguistic considerations, and narrative observations, I argue that the unusual expression in John 19:30 indicates primarily that Jesus has completely died on the cross; it does not refer mainly to the gift of the Holy Spirit. For intratextual reasons, the reference to the spirit may also point proleptically to what unfolds in the last two chapters of the Gospel of John, but this should not be seen as the primary meaning of the expression found in John 19:30.enCatholic Biblical Association of AmericaGospel of JohnSpiritDeath of JesusPneumatologyHistory of interpretationCrucifixionInterpretation (Philosophy)Holy SpiritJesus ChristTheology articles SDG-04SDG-04: Quality educationTheology articles SDG-16SDG-16: Peace, justice and strong institutionsThe Gift of the Spirit in John 19:30? A Reconsideration of ...Article