Jesus is referring to the Holy Spirit.
Look also at these verses in John
Joh 7:37 On the last and most important day of the festival Jesus stood up and said in a loud voice, "Whoever is thirsty should come to me, and
Joh 7:38 whoever believes in me should drink. As the scripture says, 'Streams of life-giving water will pour out from his side.' "
Joh 7:39 Jesus said this about the Spirit, which those who believed in him were going to receive. At that time the Spirit had not yet been given, because Jesus had not been raised to glory.
In the books Mattew, Mark, Luke, and John. John mainly talks about who and what Jesus did in his life. I personaly recomend reading it. =)
John 4: tells us the story of Jesus and the Samaritan woman at the well. In verse 10 Jesus tells the woman He could give her the "living water."
Matthew, Mark, and John for sure wrote about Him. Then Luke was believed to be written by Luke but told by Simon (Peter) because Simon was illiterate. In Luke it talks about experience about Simon with Jesus many times which hints that Simon wrote it. And John talks about the experience he had with Jesus many times in his book John.
There are many rivers in the Bible, but the important ones are the rivers of living water flowing out of our bellies to a thirsty world, as Jesus said in John 3.38. Yes, my God and Jesus my Lord and saviour uses these rivers of living water today.
Jesus's baptist was John. Jesus came to the Jordan River and John spilled water on his head. It says that the moment the water spilled on Jesus's head, the gates of Heaven opened.
You would have to ask a rabbi this question; but generally, a rabbi preaches about the Old Testament and the Jew's religion, and as such they cannot believe in Jesus, as the Apostle John says when he talks about them in John 12.39 & 40
Elizabeth! It talks about that in Luke 1:5 through Luke 1:57
Matthew, Mark, Luke and John tells the story of Jesus and his love. Corinthians talks a lot about love. Song of Soloman talks about a husband/wife thing.
------------------------ John's Gospel talks of a 'disciple whom Jesus loved' but does not identify that disciple. The second-century Church Fathers noticed that whenever the book talks about the disciple, it does not mention John and, on this evidence alone, decided that this disciple must therefore be John. Like all the New Testament Gospels, John's Gospel was written anonymously, but the Church Fathers came to the conclusion that the author must be the 'disciple whom Jesus loved' and, since they had decided this disciple to be John, the Gospel author was the disciple John. The second century reasoning was merely conjecture and is not accepted by modern biblical scholars. If the 'disciple whom Jesus loved' was closest to Jesus, we still do not know who that disciple was.
John 2
They were both written. They are both firsthand accounts by men who were there.
Yes. This was the first miracle Jesus did and can be read about in John 2:1-9.