The God Who Was in the Beginning
John
1:1-5
John
20:30-31
The
Gospel of St. John is the fourth book in the New Testament and the fourth gospel.
It was written by John presumably from John's perspective. As we understand, the
gospels are all about the good news and have different perspectives of the same
message from their different authors.
There
are several Johns in the New Testament. Whether
it is, John the brother of Jesus, or one of the Zebedee’s we do not know. We do have some clues who this John might be. In
John 21:20-22, the author says it was the disciple of Jesus who Jesus loved
much. We also know that this John is the same author of the three epistles of
John. Some scholars will dispute that this John is not the same author of
Revelation. It must also be noted that many
NT scholars ascribe the authorship of the gospels to different authors. Some of
these same scholars believe the authors were redactors who made edits to the
gospels for different reasons. For us believers, we accept that this is John's
gospel, and John the disciple was the author.
The
book was written for the Jewish communities who were Christians in Ephesus.
They were Jewish Christians who had converted in the first century. These Jews
were subject to ostracism and persecution from the Jews, so they were careful
with proclaiming their beliefs and affiliation with Jesus Christ.
Some
scholars argue that the Gospel of St. John was written before 70 AD. We know
that 70 AD was the time the Roman Empire destroyed the last temple and this is
a year that many Christians use as a reference point when dating early
Christian writings. Since the temple was destroyed in 70 AD, it seems strange
John did not mention anything about the temple. Others say the book was written
later at around 80 or 90 AD. We
do know that Paul had already been to Ephesus in 52
AD. We read this in Acts. Paul had established a Christian community in
Ephesus. This included Christians of the diaspora and new converts.
John
wrote the gospel so that Christians may hold onto their faith. He
wanted to persuade his audience to believe that Jesus is God. That the Word had
a preexistence. In Greek, Logos would be the word that John meant. They
believed Logos, reason, was involved in creation and everything was made from
Logos. The Greeks had the concept of Logos but was abstract and influenced by
Platonic thinking whereas Jesus was Logos made flesh. The word Logos was the
power to create everything out of nothing. Jesus was the channel of creation
and was God.
By
the word of the Lord the heavens were made, and by the breath of his mouth all
their host.
Psalms
33:6 ESV
The same Logos is resurrected and does come back as spirit, but as living, physical flesh to be with us.
On
the evening of that day, the first day of the week, the doors being locked
where the disciples were for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood among them
and said to them, "Peace be with you."
John
20:19 ESV
From John 1:1-5 and John
20:30-31. We understand three crucial points.
1.
Jesus is the creator
and is God.
2.
Jesus is real and
rose from the dead and is with us. He is dwelling amongst us all the time.
3.
Jesus will be an
abstract reality unless we put our faith in him. We have to believe and act in
faith.
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