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Jesus spoke of forgiveness and of love a great deal.
Yes it was John. Because of the words of Jesus were not fully understood when he spoke with Peter. Which is often the case today when the words of Jesus are shared.
I think, by reading the Bible and gathering the real words that Jesus spoke and share this with others.
If you consider that Jesus is the Word of God who spoke the Father's words in the Bible, then one could say that Jesus has and is ministering to the whole world. Few, if any nation has not heard His words.
It is believed that Jesus spoke seven phrases while he was on the cross. These phrases are known as the "Seven Last Words of Jesus." They include "Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do" and "Father, into your hands, I commend my spirit."
There is no record in the Bible of what language Jesus spoke. However, he was a meek and lowly man, and so it is doubtful if he ever spoke any language from another country. However, we can all be grateful that his words have been translated and preserved for us in our own languages.
This was the evening when three major things happened to Jesus. 1. He washed his disiples' feet - a very humble task - as an example that, when he had gone, they were to serve each other with love just as he had loved them. 2. He had the last supper with them. This supper was the Passover Meal - a meal at which Jews remembered the covenant (agreement) God had made with them when they were released from captivity in Egypt. At the supper, he passed round the bread, which he said was his body, to be broken for the whole world when his crucifixion came, and the cup of win, which he said was his blood, shed for everyone for the forgiveness of sins. Ths was to mark God's NEW covenant, and that, whenever we ate or drank in this way we were to remember Jesus and what he did for us. This is the basis of the Holy Communion service in a Christian Church (sometimes called the Eucharist, Lord's supper or Mass) 3. He was arrested after being betrayed by Judas Iscariot. During the rest of the night and through the night up to Good Friday, he stood trial under the High Priest, Herod, and Pontious Pilate, before being crucified on the Friday morning. Nowadays, on Maundy Thursday, the queen of England, as a mark of humility doesn't wash her feet (!) but instead always presents commemorative purses containing money (now more symbolic than valuable) to a selection of people representing the poor and needy. The word Maundy is derived from the Latin mandatum from the phrase "Mandatum novum do vobis ut diligatis invicem sicut dilexi vos" ("A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you"), the statement by Jesus in the Gospel of John 13:34) by which Jesus explained to the Apostles the significance of his action of washing their feet.
The red letters in some editions of the Bible represent when Jesus spoke. If you notice it is only used in the New Testament, especially in the four gospels (although He also spoke in Acts).
In the Bible, or in His whole life? Obviously the second is impossible to know, and the first you can look up on a Bible website, but it depends what version you are looking at. The most accurate would have to be a Bible in the same language that Jesus spoke. That would have been Hebrew and Aramaic.
Although the gospels quote the words of Jesus in precise detail, we do not really know if they reflect anything Jesus really said. The Jesus Seminar concluded that just 18 per cent of sayings and stories about Jesus to be authentic, but critics such as Robert M. Price regard even this figure as overly optimistic.
Jesus' words were recorded in Greek because Greek was the lingua franca of the Eastern Mediterranean at the time. It was a widely spoken language, making it a practical choice for spreading the message of Jesus to a diverse audience. It is believed that Jesus spoke Aramaic, a Semitic language closely related to Hebrew, which was the common language of the Jewish people in Judea during that period.
And when Jesus had cried with a loud voice, he said, Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit: and having said thus, he gave up the ghost [Luke 24:36]