You cannot understand John 6:63 by reading only John 6:63.
The verse arrives at the end of a long and turbulent scene, and its meaning depends entirely on everything that came before it.
A crowd has been fed, a teaching has been given, an offense has been taken, and a question has been raised that Jesus refuses to soften.
By the time verse 63 appears, the room has already begun to empty.
To follow what Jesus is saying, you have to follow the scene from the beginning.
Scene One: The Crowd That Followed the Bread
The chapter opens with five thousand people fed from five loaves and two fish.
The next morning, the same crowd crosses the lake looking for Jesus again.
Jesus reads the situation plainly in verse 26.
“Truly, truly, I say to you, you are seeking me, not because you saw signs, but because you ate your fill of the loaves.” (John 6:26, ESV)
They are following the bread, not the one who provided it.
Jesus does not indulge the appetite they came to satisfy.
He redirects it.
Do not labor for food that perishes, he says, but for food that endures to eternal life.
The crowd asks what they must do to perform God’s works.
Jesus gives an answer they do not expect: believe in the one God has sent.
Receive this: The crowd wanted a miracle worker who would keep them fed. Jesus wanted people who would receive him as something more than a meal provider. The tension in this chapter starts in that gap.
Scene Two: The Bread of Life Claim
Jesus makes a series of statements that escalate rapidly.
He declares himself the bread that came down from heaven.
He says that whoever comes to him will never hunger, and whoever believes in him will never thirst.
Then he goes further:
“I am the living bread that came down from heaven. If anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever. And the bread that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh.” (John 6:51, ESV)
The crowd reacts immediately.
They dispute among themselves about how he can give his flesh to eat.
BibleRef notes that the idea of flesh as the bread of life was meant to extend the analogy to include Jesus’s upcoming sacrificial death, not to introduce a new dietary requirement.
But the crowd hears a literal statement and stumbles over it.
Jesus does not retreat.
He presses the language even harder: unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you.
Understand this: Jesus deliberately escalates the difficulty of his language. He is not trying to make it easier for people to follow him. He is testing whether they will press past the surface of his words into what they actually mean.
Scene Three: The Disciples Grumble
The offense does not come only from the crowd.
John 6:60 records that many of his own disciples said: This is a hard saying, who can listen to it?
The Greek word for “hard” here is skleros, meaning harsh, rough, or difficult to accept.
They are not confused about the grammar of the statement.
They are offended by what they understand it to require.
Jesus knows they are grumbling.
His response is not to apologize or clarify by making the teaching gentler.
He asks: Does this offend you?
Then he asks a sharper question: what if you were to see the Son of Man ascending to where he was before?
He is pointing forward to the Ascension, the event that will make it unmistakably clear that he is not speaking of a physical body that can be consumed.
Note: Offense at Jesus’s words is not always a sign of misunderstanding. Sometimes it is a sign that the listener has understood exactly what is being required and is not willing to accept it.
Scene Four: The Verse Itself
Now verse 63 arrives.
“It is the Spirit who gives life; the flesh is no help at all. The words that I have spoken to you are spirit and life.” (John 6:63, ESV)
“The Spirit gives life; the flesh counts for nothing. The words I have spoken to you, they are full of the Spirit and life.” (John 6:63, NIV)
“The Spirit alone gives eternal life. Human effort accomplishes nothing. And the very words I have spoken to you are spirit and life.” (John 6:63, NLT)
Three translations expose three angles on the same statement.
What “The Flesh” Means Here
The word “flesh” in this verse does not refer to Jesus’s own physical body.
BibleRef notes that “the flesh” here means human nature in its own strength, the unaided capacity of a person to generate spiritual life through effort, reasoning, or physical action.
This is consistent with how John uses the word throughout his Gospel.
John 3:6 carries the same contrast: “That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.”
The flesh counts for nothing in the sense that human effort cannot produce eternal life, cannot generate faith, cannot birth what only God can create.
Bible Study Tools notes that this interpretation is consistent with Paul’s teaching in Romans 3:9–12, which establishes that no human being, left to their own nature, can produce righteousness or spiritual life.
What “The Spirit Gives Life” Means
The Spirit who gives life is the Holy Spirit, the divine agent who imparts what flesh cannot produce.
JourneyOnline observes that this is the same truth Jesus had already told Nicodemus in John 3:5: unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.
The Spirit does not assist human effort in producing spiritual life.
The Spirit produces it entirely.
What “Words That Are Spirit and Life” Means
Jesus closes the verse by identifying his own words as spirit and life.
Crosswalk notes that this is not a claim that his words are merely inspirational or poetically uplifting.
It is a claim that the teaching he has been delivering is the medium through which the Spirit produces life.
To receive his words is not an intellectual exercise.
It is the moment of spiritual life coming in.
Verse 63 is Jesus explaining his own method. He does not generate followers by appealing to appetite, as the bread-seeking crowd hoped. He gives words. The Spirit takes those words and creates life. The whole process bypasses human effort entirely.
Scene Five: The Ones Who Walk Away
Verse 66 follows verse 63 with one of the most sobering statements in the Gospels.
“After this many of his disciples turned back and no longer walked with him.”
The hard saying was too hard.
The demand to move past the literal and into the spiritual was a cost they were unwilling to pay.
Jesus turns to the Twelve and asks: Do you want to go away as well?
Peter answers with what may be the most honest confession in the chapter: “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.”
Peter does not say he fully understands.
He says there is nowhere else to go.
Understand: The crowd left because they wanted something Jesus refused to give them on their terms. The Twelve stayed not because they had solved the theological puzzle but because they had nowhere else to take their hunger.
What This Verse Means for Those Reading It Today
John 6:63 has two permanent applications.
It Explains Why Human Religion Fails
Every system that attempts to access God through ritual, effort, moral performance, or physical means eventually collapses under this verse.
The flesh profits nothing.
Not slightly.
Not insufficient without a supplement.
Nothing.
No amount of religious effort produces eternal life.
The Spirit alone gives it, and the Spirit gives it through the words Jesus has spoken.
It Explains How the Words of Scripture Work
When a person reads Scripture, and it changes them, that change is not the product of literary power or rhetorical skill.
It is the Spirit working through the words.
Bible Study Tools notes that the Gospel and its truths are the means by which the Spirit conveys illumination and life into human hearts.
The words are spirit and life, not because of the reader’s effort but because of the Spirit who makes them living and active.
Note: You cannot read your way into spiritual life. But the Spirit uses reading. He uses the words. He takes what is written and produces what only he can give. Your part is not to generate the life. Your part is not to stand in the way of the words.
A Prayer From John 6:63
Lord, I confess that I have tried to earn spiritual life through flesh and effort. Through discipline that turned into performance. Through knowledge that turned into pride. Through religious activity that quietly began to rely on itself.
But flesh profits nothing. You said so.
Give me what only the Spirit can give. Let these words be what You said they are: spirit and life. Not because I have received them well enough, but because You give what You promised.
In the name of Jesus, Amen.
Frequently Asked Questions About John 6:63
What does “the flesh profits nothing” mean in John 6:63?
It means human nature and human effort cannot produce spiritual or eternal life on their own. BibleRef explains that “the flesh” here refers to unaided human capacity, not Jesus’s own body. No amount of religious effort, moral performance, or physical action generates what only the Spirit of God can create.
Was Jesus referring to himself when he said, “the flesh profits nothing”?
No. BibleRef notes that Jesus uses “the flesh” without the possessive “my,” indicating a general principle rather than a statement about his own body. His earlier statements about eating his flesh and drinking his blood remain in full force; verse 63 corrects a literal physical misreading of those statements.
Why did so many disciples leave after John 6:63?
John 6:66 records that many turned back because the teaching was too hard. Bible Study Tools notes that they had followed Jesus for physical provision, not spiritual transformation. When Jesus refused to soften the demand, they chose to leave rather than press past a physical understanding of his words.
What is the connection between John 6:63 and the bread of life discourse?
Verse 63 is Jesus’s explanatory key to the whole discourse. He clarifies that his earlier words about flesh and blood are to be understood as spirit, not literal physical instructions. Crosswalk notes this confirms the bread of life teaching is a call to faith, not a sacramental prescription.
How does the Spirit give life according to John 6:63?
The Spirit gives life through the words of Jesus, which Jesus declares are “spirit and life.” JourneyOnline observes this is consistent with John 3:5, where new birth requires the Spirit. The Spirit produces eternal life through those words, not through human effort.
Passage and Commentary Notes
Carson, D. A. The Gospel According to John. Pillar New Testament Commentary. Eerdmans, 1991.
Köstenberger, Andreas J. John. Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament. Baker Academic, 2004.
What Does It Mean That the Flesh Profits Nothing? GotQuestions.org.
What Does John 6:63 Mean? BibleRef.com.
John 6:63 Commentary. Bible Study Tools.
John 6:63: The Spirit Gives Life. JourneyOnline.
The Bread of Life Discourse Explained. Crosswalk.
John 6 and the Flesh-Spirit Contrast. The Gospel Coalition.
Jesus’s Hard Sayings in John 6. Christianity.com.
Morris, Leon. The Gospel According to John. New International Commentary on the New Testament. Eerdmans, 1995.
