INTRODUCTION TO THE GOSPEL OF JOHN Getting Acquainted Please read the Gospel of John through in one sitting, if possible. While the impact of that reading is still fresh, close the book and write out your thoughts on the following: - What have I learned about Jesus that I didn't know before? - What effect did the concentrated reading of the gospel have on my personal relationship with Jesus? - What aspects of the book did I notice for the first time? Read John 1:1-18 (the Prologue to the Gospel). Mark the key terms in the passage (hint: life, light, receive, believe, etc.). Read the rest of the gospel carefully, marking each reoccurrence of the key terms you found in the Prologue. At first glance the Gospel of John seems a model of simplicity.
But first glances can be deceiving.
Paul Minear
explains, "This Gospel is of such a character that study usually leads to progressively greater bewilderment.
Each verse,
superficially quite simple, conceals a highly complex thoughtstructure that resists efforts to absorb it.
As soon as a reader
becomes aware of one riddle, that one riddle leads to a dozen others, none easily solved." (Minear, 247) more than a simple story.
The Gospel of John is
It is a deep, theological masterpiece.
Study of this book can lead to a lifetime love-affair, not only with the book, but with the Jesus portrayed in it.
1
2 One Out of Four Most of us operate with a "Hollywood" version of the life of Jesus, a blend of details from all four gospels with quite a bit of popular tradition and culture thrown in.
There are, however,
not one, but four separate, inspired interpretations of Jesus' life.
The full significance of Jesus' life is greater than any
one person, even an inspired person, could recount.
Each of the
gospel writers selected events and teachings that underlined his unique personal and theological perspective about Jesus. Although there is only one gospel in principle, the Bible contains four different expressions of that gospel.
To mix the
four accounts together "Hollywood style" is to miss the insights that can be gained from a careful examination of each of these unique perspectives. The presence of four distinct gospels in the Bible encourages us to reject the idea that there is only one valid way to look at spiritual issues, or only one right way to think.
It warns us
against the shallow either/or dilemmas many people use when they discuss theology.
Human limitations are such that no theological
statement is absolutely perfect by itself, all attempts to describe Christ need some qualification and balance if they are to truly represent Him. When people differ on points of theology in a local church, therefore, it is not always advisable to determine which side is "right" and which side is "wrong."
Each may be seeing an aspect
of truth from a unique perspective, just as the gospel writers
3 did.
What we call heresy is not always error, it may just be
truth out of balance.
It is pointless to argue, for example,
whether being justified or being sanctified is more important. The example of the four gospels suggests that we affirm the truth on both sides and help the combatants find a richer balance together than either one could have attained alone (see Talbert, 25-26). John's Unique Picture of Jesus A careful comparison of the Gospel of John with Matthew, Mark, and Luke reveals a number of unique elements in John. (1) The Jesus of the Fourth Gospel is not the "lowly Jesus, meek and mild" of the Synoptics.
He is assertive (3:4;
4:17,18,48; 5:45-47; 7:6-9), combative (3:10-12; 5:39-40,42,44; 8:44), seems to enjoy the rough and tumble of debate (3:1-15; 8:31-47), and may even be sarcastic at times (9:41; 10:32). This picture of Jesus has been a precious discovery to me. For years I felt guilty that I didn't have the gentle, phlegmatic personality that everyone assumes Jesus had.
The unique window
on Jesus offered by a "son of thunder" (see Mark 3:17) helped me to see that Jesus was a complex personality of such depth that those close to him could portray Him in radically different ways while still being true to fact.
I have learned, as a result, to
stop trying to be someone I'm not and to work instead on enhancing the strengths and minimizing the weaknesses of my thunderous, choleric personality.
4 2) Most of the stories in John are not found in the other three gospels.
Particularly noteworthy are the extended one on
one encounters between Jesus and various characters in the gospel; Nicodemus (3:1-21), the Samaritan woman (4:4-42), the paralytic at Bethesda (5:1-15), the blind man (9:1-41), Pilate (18:28-19:16), and Peter (21:15-23). 3) In Matthew, Mark, and Luke you will find a number of "three-party dialogues" where Jesus is involved with two or more people at once, turning His attention back and forth between them (for example, Mark 2:1-10 and Luke 7:36-50).
In the Fourth
Gospel there are only two-way dialogues, one person leaves the scene or fades out of view before another becomes involved with Jesus (1:43-51; 4:28-38; 9:17-38; 11:17-32; 18:28-19:16). 4) Although parables play a major role in Jesus' ministry in Matthew, Mark and Luke, they are rare and by some definitions non-existent in the Gospel of John.
The closest you come to
parables in the Fourth Gospel are the allegories of the Good Shepherd (10:1-18) and the True Vine (15:1-8).
But these are not
true parables according to the pattern found in the other three gospels. 5) In Matthew, Mark, and Luke Jesus visits Jerusalem only once during His ministry, which is focused mainly on Galilee. John, however, Jesus repeatedly visits Jerusalem, and His ministry makes a much bigger impact on Jerusalem and Judea. Although these visits are not mentioned in the other three
In
5 gospels, they are implied in a couple of Jesus' statements (Matt 23:37; Luke 13:34). Author and Date The authorship of the gospel is deliberately left anonymous, probably because of the implication that the Holy Spirit is the true author (16:13-- the title "according to John" was added later).
There is, however, repeated mention of a beloved
disciple who authored the gospel (13:23,24; 19:35; 21:24).
Early
church tradition identifies this beloved disciple as John the son of Zebedee.
The tradition is supported by the fact that this
unnamed disciple was a frequent companion of Peter in the gospel (13:23,24; 20:1-9; 21:15-23), while John was Peter's companion in the early chapters of Acts (Acts 3:1,11; 4:13 cf. Gal. 2:9). The date of the Gospel is widely recognized to be at the end of the first century, John may even be the last book of the New Testament to be written (95-100 AD).
The occasion of writing is
the impending death of the beloved disciple (21:20-24). The Structure of the Gospel The gospel begins with a Prologue (1:1-18) and ends with an Epilogue (John 21).
John 1:19 through 12:50 focuses on Jesus'
ministry, while John 13:1 through 20:31 focuses on Jesus' death, burial, resurrection, and the events surrounding them. Another way to organize the gospel is to notice the various days on which Jesus' performs ministry.
For example, the events
recorded in 1:19-28 apparently took place on the same day.
The
6 passing to a new day is signaled by phrases such as "the next day" (1:29,35,43) and "the third day" (2:1) and "after the two days" (4:43).
When you add up these "days" in the Gospel you
discover that out of more than a thousand days of ministry, from Jesus' baptism to His ascension, only twenty nine contained events considered worthy of mention in the gospel. It is, therefore, clear that only a fraction of the story of Jesus is told in this gospel.
There is no attempt to be
exhaustive, as the writer himself admits (21:25). this narrow selection of material? writing.
What guides
The author's purpose in
What was that purpose? The Purpose of the Gospel
The purpose of the Fourth Gospel is openly stated in John 20:30-31.
The material in the gospel was selected "that you may
believe that Jesus is the Christ, the son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name."
Paul Minear, however,
believes that a deeper agenda lies beneath the surface of this statement.
He believes that the Fourth Gospel was published at
the transition point between the generation that knew Jesus personally and the second generation, who knew Him only through the testimony of others (Minear, 251-256). There is abundant evidence in the Fourth Gospel to support such a thesis.
In John 21:20-23 reference is made to a rumor
that "the disciple whom Jesus loved" would not die but would live until Jesus returned to earth.
John 21:23 quelled the rumor by
clarifying the statement of Jesus upon which the rumor was based.
7 The Fourth Gospel, therefore, was written in the context of the impending death of the beloved disciple, who was the last living link with those who had known Jesus in the flesh.
His death
threatened to plunge the second generation into confusion and uncertainty.
What would become of them without the guidance of
those who had known and talked to Jesus in person?
The purpose
of the Gospel was to persuade the second generation that the lack of a living apostle was no barrier to their Christian experience. The work of the gospel would continue without John. Notice that the gospel's statement of purpose (20:30,31) follows the "doubting Thomas" story of 20:24-29.
In verse 29
Jesus says, "because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed."
Thomas here
represents all of the disciples who have seen and handled Jesus, while Jesus' statement reaches out to those who have been denied that privilege.
Evidently seeing and personal contact are not
crucial to the development of faith. Verse 30 states that many signs were performed "in the presence of his disciples" yet were not written in the gospel. Verse 31 asserts that the things which were written in the gospel were selected because they had the capacity to produce the same faith that had occurred for the disciples.
The difference
between the disciples and the original readers of the gospel was that the disciples' faith was based on seeing, while that of their readers was not.
8 The purpose statement of 30-31, therefore, is to be understood in the light of the Thomas story. resurrected Christ and believes.
Thomas sees the
According to verses 19-25, the
disciples of verse 30 have already come to believe in the resurrected Christ.
In verse 29, however, the blessing is not
pronounced on the disciples, it is pronounced in third person on those who do not see the resurrected Christ yet come to believe. For the second generation (20:31) the response of belief comes in reaction to the written gospel itself.
Thus, the readers of the
gospel are contrasted not only with the disciples of verse 30 but with Thomas in verse 29. The earlier scenes at the tomb (20:1-18) serve the same purpose.
The beloved disciple is portrayed in chapter twenty as
the ideal representative of the second generation, because unlike Peter, Mary, and Thomas, he believed without seeing (20:8,9). The immediate purpose of the Fourth Gospel, therefore, was to persuade the second generation that they could function quite effectively as Christians in the absence of a living apostle. The generation that had only written gospels was not at a disadvantage compared with those who had had personal contact with Jesus or one of His disciples. The purpose of the Gospel surfaces in a number of ways throughout.
In John 17:2 Jesus asserts that He has the authority
to give eternal life to everyone that His Father gives Him. Later in the chapter it becomes clear that He has two distinct groups in mind.
One group is the disciples whom He has preserved
9 faithful with the exception of Judas (verse 12).
The other group
is made up of "those who believe through their message," namely the message of the disciples (verse 20).
Again there is the
distinction between those who believe on the basis of physical contact with Jesus and those who have not seen but believe because of the disciples' word. The second generation is alluded to also in the figure of the vine and the branches (15:1-7).
Jesus is the vine, his
disciples are the branches, the fruit they bear is the second generation, whose connection to Jesus is through the disciples only. It seems reasonable also to see the second generation in the story of the appearance of Jesus to seven of the disciples by the Sea of Galilee (21:1-14).
Without Jesus the disciples are
unsuccessful in their attempt to catch a few fish. direction, the harvest is enormous.
But at Jesus'
The story exhibits the same
pattern as the metaphor of the vine and the branches.
The
original readers of the Gospel would identify with the fish caught by the disciples.
Minear comments, "They would realize
that Jesus himself intended their conversion and that he would continue to be present to their community." (Minear, 256) Further hints of the second generation may include the "other sheep" of 10:16 and the fact that in the fourth gospel Jesus' disciples are normally enlisted by go-betweens rather than by Jesus personally (Minear, 256-258).
The Baptist sends two
disciples to Jesus (1:35-37), Andrew finds his brother Peter
10 (1:40-42), Philip calls Nathaniel (1:45-47), and the Samaritan woman hauls out her whole city (4:28-30).
By these repeated
means the author sends signals that a personal invitation from Jesus is not necessary for full discipleship. The Gospel of John was written to a new generation at a time of great transition.
What message did John intend to
deliver to that new generation?
I believe that his intended
message is clearly seen when one compares the miracles of Jesus in the Fourth Gospel with those in Matthew, Mark and Luke.
In
each of the other gospels Jesus repeatedly uses touch in the performance of His miracles (Matt 8:3-4; 8:14,15; 9:18-25; 9:29,30; 14:29-31; 20:34; Mark 1:29-31; 1:40-42; 5:21-43; 7:3135; 8:22-26; 9:25-27; Luke 4:40; 5:12,13; 7:14,15; 8:40-56; 13:13; 22:51).
But in the Gospel of John such touching is
remarkably absent. At the wedding in Cana (2:1-11) the water was turned into wine without any physical contact on Jesus' part.
The royal
official's son in Capernaum is healed by Jesus in Cana, some sixteen miles away from Capernaum (4:46-54)!
Jesus also fails to
touch the paralytic at the pool of Bethesda (5:1-15).
In chapter
nine he smears a little clay into the blind man's eyes, but the miracle does not take place until the man washes his eyes in the Pool of Siloam, more than a kilometer away (9:6,7).
In chapter
eleven Lazarus is called from the tomb, Jesus does not need to shake him or drag him out first.
The common denominator of all
these "signs" is the lack of physical contact in the performance
11 of the miracle.
Distance is evidently no barrier to the
reception of Jesus' blessings.
The second generation's lack of
personal contact with Jesus placed them at no disadvantage. It is also a fact that each of the above miracles is accomplished by the words of Jesus.
To the servants at the
wedding of Cana he says, "fill and draw" (2:7,8).
To the royal
official he says, "go, your son lives" (4:50).
To the paralytic
he says, "rise, take your bed and walk" (5:8).
To the blind man
he says, "go and wash" (9:7). (11:43).
To Lazarus he says, "come out"
In each case it is the words of Jesus that accomplish
his intention, not His physical touch. For the second generation, the message that comes through in these scenes is the power of Jesus' words to overcome barriers of space.
His word is as good as His touch!
powerful at a distance as it is close at hand.
His word is as Though only
ministered through a printed page, it still retains its power to save and to heal.
It is through that Word that the Holy Spirit
ministers to the needs of the second generation (14:26,27).
One
could actually argue from the Holy Spirit passages of John 14-16 that the presence of the Holy Spirit makes it an advantage to be physically separated from Jesus. It is no wonder that the Fourth Gospel is the favorite of so many!
It is the only gospel that is specifically addressed to
the second generation, to those who have had no physical contact with Jesus or with anyone who had such contact with Him. today share in the second generation's deficiency.
We
We too would
12 love to have the privilege of Thomas, whose faith was fully confirmed by sight.
We too would appreciate a face to face
relationship with Jesus.
In a spiritual sense, we are part of
that second generation.
This Gospel is written for us as well!
It presents Jesus for a new generation, every generation! What does this gospel say to our generation?
It tells us
that the seeming absence of God in our time is no barrier to the mighty working of Jesus through the Spirit. as His touch.
His Word is as good
All the benefits that were available through the
physical ministry of Jesus are now available through His word! The Gospel also teaches us how to gain those benefits.
In each
of the miracle stories, some human party had to act in order for the miracle to take place.
The servants had to pour water before
they could draw wine, the paralytic had to arise and gather his bedding, the blind man had to go to the Pool of Siloam and wash. The implicit message to the reader of the gospel is twofold.
(1) The reader must know the words of Jesus, and
discern their application to his or her particular situation. The careful study of this Gospel is the great living replacement for the face to face relationship that the disciples had with Jesus.
(2) The reader must carry out what Jesus commands.
The
power of Jesus through the Spirit accompanies actions in obedience to His words.
The Fourth Gospel was written so that
those who had not seen might believe (20:29-31).
It is by
reading and applying the Gospel that believers obtain the life that Jesus shared when He was physically on this earth.
13 Major Teachings of the Gospel (1) Jesus: the Ultimate Revelation of God. found everywhere in the Gospel.
This theme is
It is clear from the Prologue
that Jesus is eternal, (1:1,2), the companion of God (1:1,2,18), qualitatively equal with God (1:1), creator (1:3), and sustainer (1:4).
It is equally clear that this exalted Person came to
earth to reveal the glory of God's character (1:14-17;9-11). very person is the Word of God made flesh (1:1,14).
His
He is the
ultimate revelation on earth of life (1:4), truth (1:14,17), grace (1:14,16,17), and God Himself (1:18). This theme continues throughout the Gospel. walk with Jesus will see the heaven open (1:50-51).
Those who They see His
glory (2:11), the glory of One who came down from the Father (1:14; 16:27,28; 17:5).
Jesus had the unique ability to share
heavenly things with humanity because He came down from there (3:11-13; 6:32-35,46-51; 8:23; 13:3) and could testify to what He had seen and heard (3:31-34; 17:8).
He is the only human being
who ever modeled His behavior on direct observation of God's behavior (5:17-21; 8:38; 1:18). Jesus repeatedly emphasizes in the Gospel that His teaching comes directly from God the Father (7:16-18; 8:26,40; 12:49,50). 1:4,5,9-11).
He, therefore, is the Light of the world (8:12; 9:5; He also carries out the works that the Father would
do were He on earth in Jesus' place (9:3,4; 10:25,37-38).
To see
Jesus is to see the Father in action, but in human form (14:6-11; 17:26).
He does whatever the Father commands Him (14:31; 15:10).
14 He is Son of God, not in the sense of an inferior, but in the sense of One who is the very image of His Father (5:19-23; 10:30). (2) Salvation is Life.
G. R. Beasley-Murray points out
that the word "salvation" was rarely found on Jesus' lips (Gospel of Life, 1).
If we wish to know Jesus' teaching on that subject
we need to examine the terms He chose to use. and Luke the key term was "Kingdom of God."
In Matthew, Mark, To be saved is to
accept the rule of God in one's life (Matt 12:28; Mark 10:15; Luke 11:52; 17:20-21).
A thorough study of Jesus' use of the
"kingdom" concept can be found in George Eldon Ladd's massive Theology of the New Testament (pp. 45-134). In the Fourth Gospel, however, the concept of the kingdom is virtually absent (3:3,5; 18:36). John is "life."
The great salvation term in
Life was in the Word from the beginning (1:4).
The Word came down to this earth to give that life to humanity (1:14; 3:11-17).
Life, eternal life, is a present reality in
anyone who believes in Jesus (5:24-26).
Jesus is the bread of
life (6:35.51), the resurrection and the life (11:25), and the way, truth, and the life (14:6).
The reason He came to this
earth was to bring life, abundant life, through His words (10:10; 6:63,68).
The sub-title of this book: Jesus Gives Life to a New
Generation combines the themes of Jesus as the ultimate revelation of God and Jesus the life-giver with the purpose of the gospel, to make Jesus real to a new generation.
The purpose
15 of the gospel is that the reader would find life in relationship with Jesus (20:30-31). (3) The Glory and Exaltation of the Cross.
The two
previous themes are drawn together in John's portrayal of the meaning of the cross.
The glory of Jesus, the great revelation
of the character of God, takes place in ultimate measure in His sacrifice on the cross (12:23,24).
Nowhere is Jesus more
"uplifted" than on the cross (3:14,15; 8:28; 12:32).
It is the
hour of Jesus' "exaltation" on the cross that brings glory to the Father (12:27,28).
The cross of Jesus Christ is, therefore, the
clearest revelation of God. For John it is the death of Jesus on the cross that also provides life to the world (3:16).
One of the great ironies of
the Gospel of John is that life can only come through death (12:24,25).
The cross of Jesus, therefore, is the central event
of the Gospel's story.
It is the place where the major themes
come together. (4) The End is Here.
A rather remarkable theme of the
Fourth Gospel is its eschatology.
In Matthew, Mark, and Luke
there is considerable focus on the future hope of the believer, a hope that builds on the Old Testament hope (see Paulien, pp. ??).
But in John things which in the Old Testament are
characteristic of the ultimate End of the world are present realities in Christ.
The dead come to life not only at the
Second Coming (5:28-30), but in the spiritual response to the preaching of Christ (5:24-26).
Judgment is not only an End-time
16 reality (as in 12:48), it is meted out on the cross (12:31-32) and in the preaching of Christ (3:18-21; 5:24).
The End-time
Spirit is poured out as soon as Jesus is glorified on the cross (7:37-39). The importance of "present eschatology" in the Gospel is also underlined by its relative lack of emphasis on the future compared to the rest of the New Testament.
Although John is
clearly aware that Jesus taught about the End (5:28,29; 14:1-3), there is no sermon in his Gospel on future events and the second coming as one finds in Matthew 24-25, Mark 13, and Luke 21. There is no outline of future events such as one finds in 2 Thess 2:1-12 or the Book of Revelation.
The focus in the Fourth Gospel
is on the End-time significance of the life that Jesus makes available in the present. (5) The Ministry of the Holy Spirit.
Among the four
gospels, the Fourth is marked by a unique emphasis on the Spirit. Although in the early chapters of the Gospel, the Spirit is mentioned almost in passing (1:32-33; 3:5-8,34; 4:23,24; 6:63; 7:39), the fuller understanding of the role of the Spirit comes in the Farewell Discourse (John 14-16).
The Spirit is sent to
take on the role that Jesus played in behalf of His disciples while He was on earth. Jesus must go away, but He will not leave his disciples as orphans, He will come to them through the Spirit (14:16-18).
The
disciples lose Jesus, who is the Truth (14:6), but they gain the Spirit of Truth (14:17; 15:26; 16:13).
They lose the words from
17 the lips of Jesus, but they "hear" them again through the Spirit (14:26).
Like Jesus, the Spirit comes from the Father (3:34-35;
13:3 cf. 15:26), descends from heaven (3:13 cf. 1:32), and declares things to come (4:25,26 cf. 16:13).
It is, therefore,
clear that the Holy Spirit is the perfect replacement for Jesus during the time of His absence from the church.
It is through
the Holy Spirit that the power of Jesus' words brings life to a new generation.
18 Outline of the Gospel of John I. PROLOGUE: THE MISSION OF JESUS
(1:1-18)
II. THE EARTHLY MINISTRY OF JESUS (1:19 - 12:50) A. Beginning of Jesus' Ministry (1:19-51) 1) The Testimony of the Baptist (19-34) 2) The Baptist's Disciples Come to Jesus (35-51) B. From Cana to Cana (2:1 - 4:54) 1) First Miracle at Cana (2:1-11) 2) Events in Jerusalem (2:12-25) 3) Conversation with Nicodemus (3:1-21) 4) The Role of the Baptist (3:22-30) 5) The Role of Jesus (3:31-36) 6) Conversation with the Samaritan Woman (4:1-42) 7) Events at Jerusalem (4:43-45) 8) Second Miracle at Cana (4:46-54) C. Jesus and the Jewish Feasts (5:1 - 10:42) 1) The Pool of Bethesda (5:1-47) 2) The Passover Bread of Life (6:1-71) 3) Crisis at the Feast of Tabernacles (7:1 - 8:59) 4) The Man Born Blind (9:1-41) 5) The Good Shepherd (10:1-21) 6) The Feast of Dedication (10:22-39) 7) Conclusion to the Public Ministry (10:40-42) D. Jesus Moves Toward Death (11:1 - 12:50) 1) The Raising of Lazarus (11:1-44) 2) Plot to Kill Jesus (11:45-57) 3) The Anointing at Bethany (12:1-8) 4) The Triumphal Entry (12:9-19) 5) The Coming of Jesus "Hour" (12:20-36) E. Summation of Jesus' Ministry (12:37-50) III. THE DEATH AND RESURRECTION OF JESUS (13:1 - 20:31) A. The "Upper Room" (13:1 - 17:26) 1) The Foot Washing (13:1-30) 2) The Departure and Return of Jesus (13:31 - 14:31) 3) Jesus the True Vine (15:1-17) 4) The World's Hatred (15:18 - 16:5) 5) The Work of the Holy Spirit (16:5-16) 6) Grief Turns to Joy (16:17-33) 7) The Prayer of Dedication (17:1-26) B. The Death and Resurrection (18:1 - 20:31) 1) The Arrest of Jesus (18:1-12) 2) Trial before the High Priest (18:13-27) 3) Trial before Pilate (18:28 - 19:16a) 4) The Death and Burial of Jesus (19:16b-42) 5) The Resurrection of Jesus (20:1-29) 6) The Purpose of the Book (20:30,31) IV. EPILOGUE: THE MISSION OF THE DISCIPLES
(21:1-25)
19
For Further Reading Issues of Authorship, Date and Introduction: Carson, D. A.; Moo, Douglas J.; and Morris, Leon. Introduction to the New Testament, 135-179. Beasley-Murray, George R.
An
John, xxxii-xcii.
Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary, s.v. According to St. John," 5:891-894.
"The Gospel
Theology of the Fourth Gospel: Beasley-Murray, George R. Gospel of Life: Theology in the Fourth Gospel, all. Ladd, George Eldon. 308. Morris, Leon.
A Theology of the New Testament, 213-
New Testament Theology, 223-286.
The Purpose of the Gospel: Minear, Paul S. "The Audience of the Fourth Evangelist." In Interpreting the Gospels, 247-264. The Relationship of the Four Gospels: Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary, s.v. Fourfold Gospel Narrative," 5:190-234.
"The
CHAPTER 1 PROLOGUE: JESUS COMES DOWN TO EARTH John 1:1-18 I'll never forget the time, fifteen years ago, when I saw the Matterhorn, a spectacular mountain in Switzerland.
It was
eleven o'clock at night, and the full moon was brilliantly reflected on the mile-high, ice-covered pinnacle more than two miles above me.
Needless to say, whenever I think of Switzerland
today, my thoughts are colored by the impressions of that first encounter with surpassing beauty and grandeur. The Prologue to the Gospel of John has had a similar effect on me.
It sets the tone for everything else that happens in the
Gospel.
All the major themes of the rest of the Gospel are
introduced and shaped by the way they are encountered in the Prologue. Jesus is introduced as the Pre-Existent One (1:1, 2, cf. 8:58; 17:5).
He is God's Unique Son (1:14, 18, cf. 3:16, 18).
He is the Light of the World (1:4, 5, 9, cf. 8:12; 9:5).
He is
the author of life (1:4, cf. 5:26; 6:35, 63; 10:10; 11:25; 14:6). He manifests His glory (1:14, 16, cf. 2:11; 12:41; 17:5, 22, 24) in the face of unbelief (1:10, 11, cf. 12:41-43; 16:8-11).
But
in spite of the unbelief of many, others come to believe (1:12, 24
25 13, cf. 6:67-69; 12:31, 32; 17:6-19). In the Prologue, therefore, the themes of the Fourth Gospel are colored in light of the larger perspective of eternity. Though Jesus walks on earth as a human being with emotions and frailty, the reader has been trained by the Prologue to see in the human Jesus the Word who was intimate with God from eternity (1:1-3, 18).
It is, therefore, advisable that modern readers of
the Gospel of John give special attention to the details of the Prologue. GETTING INTO THE WORD John 1:1-18 Read John 1:1-18 through twice, then answer the following questions. 1.
2.
3. 4.
5.
6. 7. 8.
What does the Prologue to the Gospel tell us about Jesus? List the various qualities and actions of Jesus recounted there. Of these qualities and actions which, according to the text, seems to be the central, or most important characteristic of Jesus? Compare and contrast John 1:1-18 with Gen 1:1-3 and Heb 1:14. List the similarities and differences and write a paragraph or so detailing what you learn about the Prologue to the Gospel from the comparative study. Why do you think the Prologue begins in eternity instead of at the birth of Jesus? List the events in the career of Jesus (as described or hinted at in the Prologue) that lead Him from the Father's side (1:1) down to earth and then back to the Father's bosom (1:18). List those items in the Prologue that refer to the human side of the plan of salvation. What is the implication of each? Why do you think the human side of salvation plays a minor role in this passage? Explain your answer. Describe those who fail to comprehend the light (1:5,10,11). Describe those who do comprehend it (1:12-14,16). In a paragraph or two analyze the roles that John the Baptist and Moses play in relation to Jesus in this passage. Compare the message of John 1:1-18 with three other "early Christian hymns" in the NT; Phil 2:5-11, Col 1:15-20, and 1 Tim 3:16.
26 EXPLORING THE WORD Three aspects of the Prologue and its background make it clear that in the Bible God meets people where they are.
He
inspires ordinary human beings to write in the language, culture and concepts that would be familiar to their original readers. (1) John made use, for example, of an early Christian hymn to express his exalted insights into the nature and character of Jesus Christ.
(2) He also structured the Prologue in ways that
would make logical sense to a Jewish reader.
(3) And he gave
Jesus a title (the Word) that was far better known in the pagan Gentile world than such Jewish titles as Messiah or Son of Man. By these strategies John, under inspiration, created a Prologue that would speak powerfully to every reader of his day, whether Christian, Jewish or pagan.
We will examine these three
strategies in greater depth. The Structure of the Prologue Based on an Early Christian Hymn First of all, there is considerable evidence that major parts of the Prologue to the Fourth Gospel were drawn from an early Christian hymn.
John 1:1, 2, for example, although written
in Greek, displays the poetic parallelism so common to Hebrew poetry and song:
27 In the beginning and and In the beginning
was was was was
the Word the Word the Word this One
with God God with God
The hymn-like nature of the Prologue is further seen in the "stairstep parallelism" of verses 4 and 5. In him was life and that life was the light of men and the light shone in the darkness and the darkness did not . . . Verses 6 through 8, on the other hand, return to prose style, contrasting John the Baptist with Jesus.
Although it is
impossible to determine the exact boundaries of the hymn underlying the Prologue, verses 1-5, 9-11, 14, and 16-18 are clearly in poetic style, while the other verses seem designed to tie the hymn in with major themes of the Gospel such as the role of the Baptist (1:6-8, 15, cf. 1:19-36; 3:22-30; 5:33-35) and the centrality of believing to Christian experience (1:12, 13, cf. 2:11; 3:16; 4:48, 53, for example). reflected in the New Testament.
This is not the only hymn
At least three others are
probably the basis for the language in Phil 2:6-11, Col 1:15-20, and 1 Tim 3:16. Discovering these NT hymns leads to a very practical application.
Christians often feel isolated from Bible times,
thinking that the people were different from us, and that God, therefore, worked in much different ways than He does now.
The
reality is, however, that early Christians had a lot in common with us.
They too sang hymns and met for worship.
struggled to understand God's will for their lives.
They too John knew,
28 therefore, that it would help them understand his message if he used the language of a familiar hymn. A Carefully-Constructed Unity Regardless of the source from which John may have drawn his language, however, verses 1-18 as they now stand are a literary unity.
The structure of the finished Prologue provides a second
illustration of how God meets people where they are.
The
literary form common to Hebrew logic is called chiasm (from the Greek letter X [pronounced "key"]).
A person produces a chiasm
when they reason full-circle back to the beginning point of an argument.
The first point parallels the last point.
The second
point parallels the next to last point, and so on. The Prologue begins and ends with the Word in intimate relationship with the Father (God: 1, 18).
Next comes a
comparison and contrast between the role of the Word in the physical creation (3) and His role in the re-creation that comes by grace and truth (17).
The role of the Baptist is twice
mentioned at the appropriate counterpoints (6-8, 15).
When the
entire Prologue is carefully analyzed, therefore, a chiastic structure like the following emerges:
29 +)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))), * A. The Word with God (1:1,2) * B. His Role in Creation (1:3) * C. The Gift of Life and Light (1:4,5) * D. The Witness of the Baptist (1:6-8) * E. The Word Enters the World (1:9-11) * F. BELIEVERS BECOME CHILDREN OF GOD (1:12,13) * E. The Word Becomes Flesh (1:14) * D. The Witness of the Baptist (1:15) * C. The Gift of Grace (1:16) * B. His Role in Re-creation (1:17) * A. The Word with the Father (1:18) .))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))-
* * * * * * * * * * *
The arrow shape of the A-F-A outline above illustrates the "X"shaped nature of chiasm.
The direction of thought moves out from
the beginning to the climax at the center, then returns in reverse sequence back to the beginning.
The author of the
Gospel, therefore, communicates naturally in the style of Hebrew logic familiar to him and many of his readers. Since the key point of a chiasm usually comes at the center, it appears that the central theme of the Prologue is expressed in verses 12 and 13; those who receive the Word and believe in His name become "children of God."
Thus the focus of the Word's
coming into the world is a new creation, the creation of children of God.
This theme is expressed in other terms in the Gospel's
statement of purpose; those who read the Gospel and believe in Jesus have life in His name (20:30, 31). The Background of "the Word" The title of Jesus with which the Gospel opens is a third illustration of how God used John's experience and background to meet his audience where they are.
If John had approached his
Greek readers by saying, "Let me tell you about Jesus the
30 Messiah," they would have said, "Jesus, the what?" and would have felt little interest in the information.
If he had talked about
Jesus the Son of Man, he would also have interested mainly the Jews.
Instead, John chose a title for Jesus that would
communicate with power to the Greek mind and to those Jews who were influenced by the ideas of Greek philosophy (and there were many).
John called Jesus "the Word."
In the Greek Old Testament the Word (Greek: logos) of God creates, but is not a person; "By the word of the Lord were the heavens made . . . . he spoke and it came to be" (Ps 33:6, 9). The "word of the Lord" in this passage is to be taken literally as the powerful and creative expression of God's speech, not as a person who assisted in creation. In Prov 8:22-31, on the other hand, there is a person who stood at God's side from the beginning and was an active agent in creation, but that person is called Wisdom (Greek: sophia-- a female expression) not Word.
So the Old Testament contains
concepts that seem related to John's use of the Word but are not identical to it.
We must look elsewhere for a more exact
parallel. It is in the realm of Greek philosophy that John's use of the Word finds its explanation.
The great Greek philosopher
Plato (400 BC) had a very exalted idea of God. very negative view of reality as we know it.
But he also had a If the great God is
pure mind, and matter is basically evil (as Plato taught) how could the great God "dirty his hands" in the process of creating
31 and sustaining matter? called the Word.
Plato's solution was a personality he
Plato's Word was great enough to commune with
God as an equal, yet humble enough to get involved in the messiness of material things.
He served for Plato as an
intermediate God between the great God and His creation.
Later
Greek philosophers like Heraclitus and the Stoics expanded on Plato's ideas by identifying the Word as eternal, the creator and sustainer of the universe, and the source of all human reason and intelligence.
If all this sounds a whole lot like the New
Testament concept of Jesus, we should not be surprised when Ellen White declares that the "spirit of inspiration" was imparted to some of these great Gentile thinkers (White, Desire of Ages, 33). Around the time when Jesus walked on this earth, the great Jewish philosopher Philo sought to make Greek philosophy palatable to the Jews and the Old Testament palatable to the Greeks, so he functions as a bridge figure between Judaism and Greek philosophy.
It was Philo who saw a parallel between the
Jewish concept of Wisdom and the Greek concept of Word.
The
result was a Jewish Word-personality, which provided the essential background for John's use of the term Word. For Philo the Word was a "second God," the High Priest in the heavenly sanctuary, an intercessor with God, the lawgiver, the mediator of creation, the mediator of revelation, the sustainer of the universe, and the God of the Old Testament. Philo also called Him God's firstborn, His eldest son, the image of God, and the second Adam.
Anyone who knows anything about the
32 New Testament will immediately recognize that in Philo, God had prepared the human race for a personality just like Jesus.
When
John called Jesus "the Word," therefore, readers of the Gospel who had been influenced by Greek philosophy would have recognized the term as expressing everything they knew about Jesus. I am not suggesting that Philo "influenced" John to rewrite the story of Jesus in the image of Plato.
John, rather, was
using a similar tactic to that of Paul on Mars Hill.
In Acts
17:22-31 Paul tried to reach the philosophers of Athens by a sermon on the "unknown God which you worship" (17:23).
John, in
the Prologue to his gospel, is saying something like, "This Word, whom you worship, is the subject of my book.
Reading this book
will help you understand Him and serve Him better."
By this
method Greek readers would have been drawn to consider the Jesus of John's Gospel.
God meets people where they are.
As a result,
inspired writers have always been willing to adjust their expressions according to the needs of their audience.
It is the
content of the message that is inspired, not the form (White, Selected Messages, Book One, 21, 22). What can we learn from John's use of Word as a description of Jesus?
We should not expect people to appreciate the gospel
we preach unless we first make serious attempts to understand them and the way they think. rejected the gospel.
Secular people have not usually
In most cases they have never heard it,
even though they live in the midst of churches, televangelists, and bumper stickers that say "honk if you love Jesus."
Secular
33 people cannot appreciate the assertion "Jesus is the Answer" when they have no idea what the question is!
John's "Word strategy"
teaches us that we need to go the second mile if we wish to share the gospel with our secular neighbors and friends in the nineties.
In the words of Paul, it is only when we have "become
all things to all men" that we can expect to "win as many as possible." (1 Cor 9:19,22-- see Paulien, Present Truth in the Real World, 17-42) Exploring the Prologue in Detail John 1:1-3 opens the Gospel by recalling the creation story of Gen 1.
The phrase "in the beginning" repeats the very first
words of the Greek Old Testament (Gen 1:1).
The "was made" of
verse 3 translates the Greek word for creation used repeatedly in Gen 1.
The Word who was made flesh (John 1:14) is the One who
created all things.
So no one would miss the totality of his
point, John goes on to assert that not a single created being or object was made apart from the Word's action (1:3).
The Word is
the source of all that is created. John 1:1 is probably the clearest assertion of the deity of Jesus Christ in the New Testament.
It contains three brief but
profound statements which complement each other by correcting the misunderstandings which would arise if any one of the three were examined in isolation from the others (Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1026). In the beginning, when creation took place (John 1:1; Gen 1), the Word already was in continuous existence.
The Word's
34 eternity was not in the Father, however (in the sense that the Father was eternal and at some point produced Jesus), the second phrase ("The Word was with God") indicates that He was distinct from the Father from eternity.
He was God's intimate companion
(John 1:1, 2, 18), but the third statement ("the Word was God") makes clear that it was the intimacy of equals, not that of a superior with an inferior.
The Word shared fully in God's
nature, "what God was, the Word was" (1:1).
We are not,
therefore, dealing here with "Gods;" there is full and complete unity in the Godhead at the same time that there is intimate relationship among the personalities of the Godhead. The same Word that brought life and light to the universe at creation also sustains it by His life and light, even though the "darkness" doesn't acknowledge that fact (4, 5).
Without Jesus
there would be no rain, no sunshine, no air, no life.
The
amazing fact is, however, that this eternal One, this Divine One, this Creator of all things, this Sustainer of the universe has come into the world unknown, unrecognized, rejected even by His "very own," those who thought they were waiting for him (9-11). Verses 10 and 11 in the Prologue forecast Jesus' rejection by the Jewish leadership in the body of the Gospel (5:16-18; 7:32,45-52; 8:48-59; 9:13-34; 10:30-39; 11:45-57; 12:10,11; etc.). But the picture is not entirely dark.
At the chiastic
center of the Prologue comes the promise that whoever "received" (Greek aorist tense-- a point in past time) Him and "believes" (Greek present) in His name receives the right to become a child
35 of God (1:12).
This verse underlines the fact that there are two
aspects to getting right with God.
First, there is an initial
point of reception where one becomes a child of God.
Second, as
one continues to believe one remains in Christ, one retains the continual status as a child of God (cf. 6:35-59; 15:1-7) is no sense of "once saved always saved" here.
There
"Justification"
is an ongoing process that continues as long as a Christian lives in relationship with Christ. It is, therefore, critical to understand that this "new birth" is not achieved by human effort of any kind (1:13).
The
child of God does not come into existence "by blood," by natural descent from his or her parents.
He or she does not come into
existence by sexual activity in general, the "will of the flesh," or by the male initiative in particular, the "will of a man." Becoming a child of God is as much a miracle as the original act of creation (cf. 1-3).
And just as the original act of creation
must be sustained by the continual miracle of the Word's watchcare (4, 5), so the relationship of the child of God with Jesus involves ongoing belief resulting in an ongoing miracle of spiritual life (12).
From beginning to end Christian life is a
gift from God. The Prologue moves to a stirring conclusion in verses 14-18. Here the Divine Word (1-5) who came down (9-13) is described in terms of his earthly status.
Though the Word always "was" (1),
in verse 14 he "became," the same term used to describe the original creation in verse 3 and Gen 1:1.
The Word went from
36 being "with God" (John 1:1,2) to being "with us" (1:14). he "was God" (1) He "became flesh" (14).
Though
In this simple language
John articulates the full range of the Word's divine/human nature, what theologians call "Christology." THE NATURE OF THE WORD +))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))), * John 1:1,2 John 1:14 * ETERNAL TEMPORAL * * * "was" * "became" * "with God" * "with us" * "was God" * "became flesh" .)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))-
* * * * * *
John 1:14-18 also contains language which invites the knowledgeable reader to recall the Old Testament Sanctuary.
The
Word became flesh and "made his dwelling" among us and "we (John and the other disciples who followed Jesus while He was on earth) have seen his glory" (1:14).
"Made his dwelling" translates the
Greek word for "pitch his tent," a reminder of the tabernacle in the wilderness (Exod 25:8, 9).
The glory of Jesus which the
disciples saw recalls the glory of the Shekinah in that tabernacle (Exod 40:34, 35).
Even more remarkable is the fact
that in Hebrew the verb "to dwell" (shachan) comes from the same root as the word Shekinah, which designates the glorious presence of the Lord in the Sanctuary.
The "glory" and the "tent" are one
in Hebrew thinking! This allusion to the Old Testament Sanctuary explains the "grace in place of grace" (charin anti charitos-- "one blessing after another" in the NIV) of verse 16.
The Old Testament
37 Sanctuary was a marvelous source of grace and blessing.
But when
the Word became flesh, the Old Testament Sanctuary was eclipsed by an even greater source of blessing.
Jesus is a better
revelation of God than even the Sanctuary was, because in Jesus God dwelt directly in human flesh, and "we" could behold what was hidden behind curtains before. The message is repeated in another form in verse 17.
Jesus
offers a better revelation of God than even Moses, the ultimate revealer of God in the Old Testament, could offer.
The "law" was
given by Moses, but grace and truth came into being ("were created," cf. 3, 14) through Jesus Christ.
Moses could not save
his people, it was Joshua who brought them into the promised land.
So the law could not save Israel, it is the grace and
truth through Jesus that brings salvation (cf. 12, 13). In verse 18 Jesus is again contrasted with Moses. asserts, "No one has ever seen God."
John
In actual fact Moses did
see Him, but only the backside (Exod 33:18-23; 34:4-7).
In
contrast to Moses, however, Jesus is "at the Father's side," or more accurately "face to face." sees the Father face to face.
Since His ascension to heaven He Therefore, he is a greater
revelation of God than even Moses.
Jesus has "made him known,"
He has "exegeted" (exêgêsato-- John 1:18) the Father, He has spelled out in human terms what God is like.
The One who was
always "with God" (1:1,2), who is now again at the Father's side (18), this is the One who was made flesh and dwelt among us (14). What a revelation!
38 One final point is worthy of mention.
The phrase "at the
side" appears only twice in the Gospel, 1:18 (eis ton kolpon) and 13:23 ("reclining next," en tô kolpô).
Just as Jesus is at the
Father's side, so the beloved disciple, the one who wrote the book (21:20-24) reclined next to Jesus at the last supper.
The
connection between the Greek phrases is specific and deliberate. In this subtle way John not only tells us that Jesus is the greatest revelation of the Father, but also that he, the beloved disciple, offers the greatest revelation of Jesus.
John was the
disciple who entered most closely into Jesus' affections (see White, Acts of the Apostles, 539-545).
He was the only disciple
who came to Jesus at the cross, and, therefore, took Jesus's place in care for His mother Mary (19:25-27).
His Gospel,
therefore, is of unique and surpassing value as a revelation of Jesus. Summary of Major Themes in the Prologue Who Jesus Is In the Prologue the earthly life of Jesus, as described in the main body of the Gospel, is set in relation to eternity.
The
same Jesus who was born on this earth, grew up in a typical home, developed a circle of friends, ministered to the needs of others, and was eventually executed by an oppressive government, turns out to be the One who created the universe and everything in it. More mind-boggling yet, He has been God's equal and companion throughout eternity past.
39 The Prologue makes it immediately clear that the primary purpose of this gospel is to persuade the reader that a seemingly ordinary human being veiled in His flesh the personality of God Himself.
Without the Prologue many of the statements of Jesus in
the main body of the gospel would seem ridiculous and selfpromoting unless one was already a convinced Christian upon first encountering the book.
Some of Jesus' amazing claims follow: "I
and the Father are one" (10:30), "Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father" (14:9), and "before Abraham was born, I am!" (8:58). The Prologue makes it possible for the reader to understand and appreciate what Jesus says and does in the Gospel.
"These are
written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God." (20:31) A Superior Revelation If Jesus is everything that the Prologue to the Gospel of John claims then it follows that He must be the greatest revelation of God's character that earth has ever seen (cf. Heb 1:1,2).
Not only does He offer a clearer revelation of God than
you can find in nature or in the great world religions, He is also a clearer revelation of God than John the Baptist, Moses, or even the Old Testament sanctuary.
While this point may go
without saying where Christians today are concerned, John in his day was challenging the great alternatives to the message about Christ.
John the Baptist, Moses, and the Old Testament Sanctuary
were all good in their place, but compared to Jesus they are fit only to "decrease." (John 3:30)
40 Jesus is God's final Word to the human race.
While there
may be issues yet to settle before the universe is cleansed of sin, there will never on earth be a clearer revelation of God's character than that which is available in the life and death of Jesus Christ.
God's love, mercy, and justice, and His attitude
toward people and toward sin can be most clearly read in the doing and dying of Jesus.
For the author of the Fourth Gospel
one subject swallows up all others, Christ and Him crucified. This has great practical meaning. analogy (1:39).
Barclay offers a human
If we want to know what someone really thinks
and feels about something, and we can't approach them ourselves, we go, not to a mere acquaintance of that person, but to someone who has been an intimate friend of many years.
Only such an
intimate friend is fully able to interpret the actions and feelings of another.
What John is saying is that Jesus was so
much like God in mind, heart and being that in Him we can perfectly see what God is like. The Importance of Response If Jesus is truly "the Word made flesh" (1:14) then there can be no such thing as a casual response to the Gospel of John. If Jesus is the light of God's character shining brightly before the human race, then everyone who reads the Gospel is brought into judgment (3:18-21).
Will the reader believe the message
about Christ and receive it into his or her life?
Or will the
reader hide from the light and thereby be condemned (18)?
The
Gospel makes it clear that how one responds to the Word made
41 flesh is a life and death decision.
To believe is to immediately
pass over from death to life (5:24; 8:51; 11:25,26), abundant life (10:10), to turn away is to become blind (12:40; 9:39-41), sick (12:40), and subject to death (6:53). APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2. 3.
4.
5.
Does the Prologue's exalted description of who Jesus is make you feel more or less willing to entrust your eternal destiny to Him? Write out a prayer to God that describes how the Prologue makes you feel about Jesus. Can you think of analogies between natural birth and spiritual birth (cf. 12, 13)? How is life in a family like life in the church and vice versa? Law and grace (17) are both aspects of God's nature. How can a person keep these aspects of God's character in balance? Can you think of a time when your understanding of law and grace was out of balance? What were some of the practical consequences of that imbalance? To what extent have you allowed Jesus to "dwell" (14) in you? Is He locked outside the front door? Have you given Him a key so He can enter whenever He wants? Does He need to "call ahead" first? Would He be most at home in your kitchen, living room, bedroom, family room, or utility closet? What parts of your "house" are off-limits to Him? The Prologue to John's Gospel makes it clear that Jesus is both fully human and fully divine. How is it possible for Him to be both at the same time? Can you think of some ways that people tend to emphasize one aspect over the other? What difference does one's doctrine of Christ make in everyday life?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
Do a survey of as many translations of 1:1c, "and the Word was God," as you can. What does The SDA Bible Commentary say about this phrase? With a concordance find all the verses in the New Testament that use the word "God." How many of these apply to Jesus in some way? How many apply to some other "god." Is it appropriate to capitalize "God" in 1:1?
FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1.
On John 1:1 and the Deity of Christ see SDA Bible Commentary 5:897-898 and 5:911-919; Jameison, Fausset and Brown, 1026;
42
2. 3. 4. 5.
Beasley-Murray, John, 10-11; Dana and Mantey, 139-140, 148151; Brooks and Winbery, 72-73, 140. On the origins of the Logos concept see Beasley-Murray, John, 6-10; Schnackenburg, 1:481-493. On the major themes of the Prologue see Beasley-Murray, John, 16-17. For an excellent discussion of the chiastic structure of the Prologue see Culpepper, 1-31. For scholarly discussions of the early Christian hymn that John probably used to create the Prologue see Bultmann, 1418; Beasley-Murray, John, 3-4; Schnackenburg, 224-229.
CHAPTER 2 JESUS CALLS DISCIPLES John 1:19-51 The author of the Fourth Gospel knows that Jesus' personal history extends back into eternity (1:1) and that the earth would not be large enough to contain all the books that could be written about the career of Jesus (21:25).
He, therefore, is
quite willing to be selective about the events in Jesus' history that he brings to our attention (20:30, 31).
Only those
occasions that serve his theological purpose are included. leads to some striking omissions.
This
In the Gospel of John as in
the Gospel of Mark, for example, there is no description of Jesus' infancy or childhood, John 1:19-51 moves directly to the opening scenes of Jesus' public ministry. GETTING INTO THE WORD John 1:19-51 Please read John 1:19-51 twice through and then answer the following questions: 1.`
2.
The passage describes events that occurred over four different days. List the verses that announce each transition to another day. Try to outline the passage with these various days in mind. Compare this passage with the material about the Baptist in the Prologue (1:6-8,15). Make a list of the parallel expressions and ideas. 43
44 3.
4.
5.
6.
List the questions asked by the priests, Levites, and Pharisees in 1:19-28. What do you think these questions reveal about the reason why these individuals were sent to the Baptist? Describe the mission of John the Baptist as expressed in 1:19-36; 3:22-30; 5:37. Compare and contrast the Fourth Gospel's record of that mission with Matt 3:1-17; 11:2-19; Mark 1:2-11; 6:14-29; Luke 1-3; 7:17-35. Outline the elements all four gospels have in common, then list the unique aspects of the Baptist's role in the Fourth Gospel. What did the Baptist mean by the phrase "Lamb of God?" Collect as many Old Testament references to "lamb" as you can (using a concordance). Group the references you found into categories (Passover, Sanctuary, farm life, prophecy, etc.). Which of the categories comes closest to the Baptist's usage in John 1:29? Five people begin to follow Jesus in 1:35-51. Describe the circumstances of each encounter with particular emphasis on how Jesus reacted to each new disciple. How much about Jesus did each of the disciples know when they made their decision to follow Him?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The material in 1:19-51 is divided by references to the passage of time (29, 35, 43-- "the next day").
The events
described in the chapter occurred, therefore, on four successive days.
The narrative begins on the day when John the Baptist's
mission is clarified by his responses to the visitors from Jerusalem (19-28).
The focus is less on who the Baptist is than
on who he is not.
On the second day John points out Jesus to the
crowd and briefly describes His mission (29-34).
On the third
day, John encourages two specific disciples to leave him and follow Jesus (35-37).
After spending the afternoon and evening
with these two disciples, and perhaps with Peter (38-42), Jesus encounters Philip and Nathanael the following day (43-51). Another striking structural feature of this passage is its
45 relationship to the parts of the Prologue that talk about the role of John the Baptist.
The narratives of John 1:19-51
elaborate on the brief comments about the Baptist in the Prologue as follows: +))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))), * 7a = 19-50 The witness of John * 8a = 19-28 John is not "the Light" * 7b, 8b = 29-34 John witnesses about "the Light" * 7c = 35-50 Some believe John's witness * 15 = 30 "He who comes after me . . ." .)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))-
* * * * *
According to the Prologue, there are two important facts that the reader needs to know about the Baptist, one, he is not "the Light," and, two, his mission is to bear witness to the Light (1:6-8).
The Baptist bears witness to Jesus first in his
dialogue with the Jewish leaders (19-28), then before the people (29-34), and then to his own disciples (35ff.).
When the reader
has finished the first chapter of the Gospel, it is clear that Jesus is "the Light" of the Prologue and that the Baptist is not. The Background of the Passage The Role of the Baptist The most difficult statement any human being could make is, "He must become greater; I must become less" (3:30). statement cuts against the grain of human experience.
Such a Yet the
Baptist seems to say similar things routinely in the Fourth Gospel (cf. 1:27, 30).
You won't find such statements in
Matthew, Mark, and Luke, where the Baptist is a great and heroic figure.
Why is the Baptist's humility such an emphasis in the
46 Fourth Gospel?
A brief survey of Scripture and history proves
interesting. In Matthew, Mark, and Luke the Baptist is described as a "Voice crying in the wilderness" (Isa 40:3, cf. Matt 3:3; Mark 1:3; Luke 3:4), the Elijah of the End time (Mal 4:5, cf. Matt 11:14; 17:12; Mark 9:13; Luke 1:17; 9:19), and the Messenger who is to go before the Lord (Mal 3:1, cf. Matt 11:10; Mark 1:2; Luke 7:27).
In the Fourth Gospel, on the other hand, the Baptist
specifically denies that he is the Elijah and describes himself only as "the Voice" (1:21-23).
The Fourth Gospel, therefore,
minimizes titles for John and multiplies titles for Jesus (1:1, 8, 18, 29, 38, 41, 49, 51, etc.). humblest of terms.
John describes himself in the
"I am not worthy to untie the thong of his
sandals" (1:27), "He must become greater; I must become less" (3:30). From our perspective, the humility of John in the Fourth Gospel is a bright and shining example of the ideal Christian response to the infinite humiliation of Jesus in His incarnation and on the cross.
But the humiliation of the Baptist probably
had a different purpose for the author of the Gospel. Modern readers of the Gospel could get the impression that the Baptist appeared out of nowhere, baptized Jesus and then faded into the woodwork, never to be seen or heard from again. Historically, however, the Baptist and the movement of those who followed him seem to have been quite independent of Jesus.
Only
a few of the Baptist's disciples actually left him and followed
47 Jesus, at least initially (1:35-51 cf. Matt 11:2, 3).
The
Baptist continued to minister and draw crowds for some time after the baptism of Jesus (3:22-30).
In the book of Acts, the
personal history of Apollos in Alexandria (Acts 18:24-26) and the story of the twelve men of Ephesus (Acts 19:1-7) both suggest the continuing independence of the Baptist movement.
Even today, the
Mandaeans, located primarily in Southern Iraq, are a small group of people who trace their religious heritage back to the ministry of John the Baptist more than to Jesus or Mohammed. Many of those attracted to the Baptist in the wilderness, therefore, never gave their allegiance to Jesus but continued to follow the Baptist (see Brown, 1:lxvii-lxx).
At some point,
probably after the writing of Matthew, Mark and Luke, but before the writing of the Fourth Gospel, the Baptist movement seems to have become increasingly hostile to Christianity.
Since the
Baptist himself was martyred because of political involvement, the movement may have found common cause with the zealots and other revolutionaries during the war with Rome (67-70 AD, see White, Great Controversy, 17-36 for a description of that war). As was the case with most Jews in Palestine at that time, the followers of the Baptist would have resented the unwillingness of the Jewish Christians to make common cause against Rome. Knowing the gospel story as we do, it seems incredible that any follower of the Baptist would have failed to grasp the superiority of Jesus.
But there are historical and theological
reasons why many may have done so.
First of all, there was the
48 perception, not uncommon today as well, that when it comes to theology, earlier is usually better (Jesus appeals to this principle in Matt 19:3-9, for example). be preferred.
The "old paths" are to
Since the Baptist arrived before Jesus did, many
Jews would have assumed that the Baptist was greater than Jesus. A further reason why many might have regarded the Baptist as greater than Jesus was that the Jewish tradition of the time contained the belief that there would be not one, but two messiahs in the last days, a Messiah from the tribe of Judah, and a Messiah from the tribe of Levi (Russell, 304-323).
The Messiah
from out of Judah was to be a kingly Messiah, while the Messiah from the tribe of Levi was a priestly Messiah.
In the Old
Testament both kings and priests were anointed (Lev 8:1-13; 1 Sam 10:1; 16:1-13; 1 Kings 1:28-40, etc.)!
Therefore, the
expectation grew in some circles that the Messiah (Hebrew-"anointed one") could not be summed up in one person but would require at least two.
When John the Baptist (of the tribe of
Levi) and Jesus (of the tribe of Judah) appeared together, it is not surprising that people would assume that these traditions had found fulfillment in the relationship between John and Jesus. Contrary to the modern ascendancy of politics over religion, the authors of the Dead Sea Scrolls considered the priest to be greater than the king.
After all the High Priest Aaron took
office hundreds of years before the first king ever ruled over Israel.
Earlier is better!
Not only so, but it was priests who
anointed kings, and not the other way around!
Ancient Israel was
49 a theocracy ("ruled by God") and God was to be found in the temple, not in the king's palace. What kind of arguments could first-century Christians bring to bear against the Baptist theology?
For one thing, they would
point out that Jesus fulfills the role of both king (Matthew, Mark and Luke--"the kingdom of God") and priest (Hebrews) in one person.
The Old Testament forerunner of such a king-priest was
Melchizedek (Gen 14:18-20; Psalm 110, cf. Matt 22:41-45 and parallels in Mark and Luke; Acts 2:29-36; Heb 1:13; 5:6, 10; 6:20; 7:1-28 etc.), and to some extent, perhaps, also Moses, who exercised both priestly and kingly functions (Exod 24:3-8; 32:114, 31, 32; Deut 1:6-3:29; 1 Cor 10:2; Heb 3:2-5).
Christians
would also argue that earlier revelation is not necessarily better, the present revelation in Christ is actually superior to the old revelation (John 1:17, cf. Heb 1:1-3). But author of the Fourth Gospel does not approach the issue from these perspectives in 1:19-51.
In this Gospel, instead, the
concern is to explain why the Baptist came on the scene before Jesus did.
The Baptist arrived before Jesus not because he was
greater than Jesus (6-8!) but because it was his job to introduce Jesus to the nation (29-34). to prominence first.
This could only happen if he came
Earlier is not necessarily better.
Baptist was the forerunner, not the real thing. role, Jesus pre-existed the Baptist (1, 15, 30).
The
In his heavenly The message of
John is that those who rank the Baptist greater than Jesus disbelieve the testimony of the Baptist himself.
50 The Lamb of God A further issue related to the background of John 1:19-51 is the question of exactly what John meant by the "Lamb of God" who takes away the sin of the world (29).
There are a number of
possibilities within the Jewish background of the Gospel (see Brown, 1:58-63).
The Baptist could have been referring to the
idea of an apocalyptic, conquering lamb such as one finds in the Testament of Joseph (19:8, 9, see Charlesworth, 1:824) and in Rev 5 (cf. Rev 7:17; 17:14).
In that case he would be seeing Jesus
as the conquering Messiah who "takes away sin" by destroying sin and sinners at the end of the age (cf. Matt 3:11, 12; Luke 3:7, 9, 17).
Another possibility is a reference to the Passover lamb
of the Exodus (Exod 12:1-11, 21-28).
In that case the Baptist
would see in Jesus a new Moses, the redeemer of a new Israel from a new Egypt. A third possibility is the submissive lamb of Isa 53, modeled on the self-sacrifice of Isaac in Gen 22:10-13.
If the
Baptist had this in mind, the character and substitutionary death of Jesus would be particularly in view.
A fourth possibility is
the sanctuary lamb of the Mosaic law (Exod 29:38-42; Lev 5:5-7; Num 28:1-8).
In that case the focus would be on Jesus as the one
who carries out all that the OT sanctuary promised the believer. Each of these possibilities is worked out to some degree in the Gospel of John.
It is quite possible, therefore, that the
term Lamb of God is left deliberately ambiguous so that the reader will bring these multiple images into play.
If one of the
51 above is to be favored over the others, however, the Passover lamb would seem to be the most important to the author of the Gospel.
There is the strong sense in the Gospel that Jesus is a
new Moses (1:18; 5:45-47; 2:1-11-- turning water into wine just as Moses turned water into blood; 6:14, 31-- and providing bread from heaven as Moses provided manna in the wilderness, cf. Deut 18:15, 18).
John 19:31-37 explicitly relates Jesus' death on the
cross to the strictures regarding the death of the Passover Lamb (Exod 12:46; Num 9:12, see SDA Bible Commentary, 5:908). The Forty Days in the Desert In Matthew, Mark, and Luke Jesus goes into the desert for forty days immediately after his baptism and before calling disciples in Galilee (Matt 3:13-4:22; Mark 1:9-20; Luke 3:215:11).
In John, as we have seen, there is a reference to the
baptism of Jesus followed, within the next week, by the calling of five disciples and the wedding at Cana (cf. 2:1). happened to Jesus' forty days in the desert? the Gospel not know about them? them?
What
Did the author of
Does he deliberately ignore
Were Peter and Andrew called at the Jordan (1:35-42) or in
Galilee (Matt 4:18-22; Mark 1:14-20; Luke 5:1-11)? The best explanation for the forty days is that John 1:29-34 does not describe Jesus' baptism, but rather the Baptist's explanation of the significance of that baptism, called forth by the re-appearance of Jesus after the forty days.
Matthew, Mark,
and Luke record the actual baptism of Jesus followed by his stay and temptation in the desert, none of which is recorded in the
52 Fourth Gospel.
The Fourth Gospel picks up after Jesus' return
from the desert and describes the subsequent encounter between Jesus and the Baptist, the call of several disciples near the Jordan, and the wedding at Cana, none of which is recorded in Matthew, Mark or Luke (see White, Desire of Ages, 136-137). The double call, at the Jordan and by the Sea of Galilee, is probably to be explained in terms of part-time ministry for a year or two with the call in Galilee implying the call to leave fishing as an occupation and enter into full-time ministry with Jesus. (Note the comment, "they left their nets and followed him." Matt 4:20; Mark 1:18.)
Peter's exclamation, "Go away from
me, Lord; I am a sinful man," may even imply that some of the disciples experienced a period of apostasy from their original calling by the Jordan (Luke 5:8, see also White, Desire of Ages, 246-249). Exploring the Passage in Detail In John 1:19-28, the Baptist faces two interrogations, one from the "priests and Levites" sent by "the Jews" of Jerusalem (19-23) and the other from the "Pharisees" (24-28), presumably also sent by "the Jews."
In the Fourth Gospel the term "the
Jews" is often used not for the people as a whole (who are usually referred to as the "crowd"-- 6:22, 24; 7:12, 31, 32, 49; 11:42; 12:29, etc.) but for the leadership class in particular, the chief priests and the thought leaders of Jerusalem (2:18, 20; 5:16, 18; 7:1, 13; 9:18, 22, etc.).
In 1:19-23 these ambassadors
are anxious to find out if John the Baptist is the Messiah.
53 When the Baptist rejects the term Messiah (20-- "Christ" is the Greek equivalent of the Hebrew term Messiah) they ask if he is Elijah (Mal 4:5, 6) or "that prophet" (Deut 18:15-18), two other terms that the Jews of the times used to describe the Messiah.
While there is a sense in which the Baptist can be
described as Elijah (Matt 11:11-14; Mark 9:11-13; Luke 1:17), the point of John 1:20-21 is that he is not Messiah in anybody's terms.
There is only One who deserves that title.
In this
Gospel the Baptist is content to be a "voice in the desert" preparing the way for Another (1:23).
Just as highways are built
by leveling mountains and raising lowlands, so the way of the Messiah is to be prepared by leveling pride and raising the spiritual commitment of the people. The "Pharisees", then, question the Baptist's right to make radical religious changes if he is not, indeed, the Messiah himself (25).
You see, while Gentile converts were often
baptized at that time, the baptism of believing Jews was an unusual thing (there is evidence that the people who left us the "Dead Sea Scrolls" may have practiced some form of believer's baptism-- see Anchor Bible Dictionary, 1:583-584).
It was a
radical thing for John the Baptist to insist on the necessity of baptism for Jews, implying some inadequacy in their faith.
It
was expected that the Messiah would bring about great changes, but what right did the Baptist have to change things if he was not the Messiah?
He replied that baptism with water was the act
of a very minor person compared with the One who was to come.
54 Apparently the baptism of Jesus had not been an overwhelmingly dramatic event.
As the Baptist spoke, forty days
after the baptism of Jesus, Jesus could stand in the midst of the crowd and yet not be recognized for who He was (26, cf. White, Desire of Ages, 137).
But that was soon to change.
The One
coming after John the Baptist would be so great that John did not feel worthy to untie the thong of his sandals (27). The times in which the Baptist lived were the "good old days" for teachers.
Top-notch teachers were held in such high
regard that students were expected, so to speak, to wash their cars, mow their lawns and fix tasty meals upon request.
The
student, in other words, was expected to do the tasks of a slave in behalf of his teacher. "slavery."
But there were limits to this
To preserve the student's dignity within that
culture, one task was forbidden, he could not be required to tie or untie the thongs of the teacher's sandals. In the statement of 1:27, therefore, we see the incredible humility of the Baptist.
When he compared himself to the
greatness of Jesus, he felt that he was unworthy to perform even the one task that was forbidden to the disciples of the day. Jesus was so great that untying the thong of His sandal would be a greater honor than John felt that he deserved.
The reader of
the Prologue, of course, is fully aware of why such humility is appropriate in the presence of Jesus (1-5). The greatness of Jesus is seen in the fact that he preexisted the Baptist (29, 30).
The role of the Baptist is not to
55 assert any greatness for himself, his role is simply to point out who Jesus is (31). Baptist.
Even in this there is no glory for the
He did not recognize the greatness of Jesus on his own
(31, 33), it was a supernatural act of God that caused him to know who Jesus was (32-34).
Every part of this narrative (19-34)
is designed to highlight the greatness of Jesus in contrast to the claims that some might make in behalf of the Baptist. But although the role of the Baptist in John's Gospel is very humble, it is still crucial.
It is the Baptist that begins
turning disciples toward Jesus (35-37, cf. 3:26,30).
One of
these two disciples is named Andrew, the brother of Peter (1:40), the other is unnamed.
Since all other disciples of Jesus in the
chapter are named, it is easy to identify this unnamed disciple with the mysterious "disciple whom Jesus loved" (13:23; 19:26; 20:2; 21:2, 7, 20) who wrote the Gospel (21:24).
If the unnamed
disciple of 1:35-42 was truly recognized as the author of the book by the original readers, it would have given a great deal of punch to the Gospel's appeal to followers of the Baptist, "The Baptist would want you to do as I did, follow Jesus!" In 43-51 the attention turns to two new disciples of Jesus, Philip and Nathanael.
Philip plays a prominent role among the
disciples only in the Fourth Gospel (43-46; 6:5-8; 12:21, 22; 14:8-10).
In this passage his role is to bring Nathanael to
Jesus with the simple words, "Come and see" (1:46). common theme in the Gospel.
This is a
Nicodemus, the Samaritan woman, the
blind man of chapter 9, and Thomas all must see Jesus in order to
56 believe.
As a result it catches the reader by surprise that the
ultimate blessing is reserved for those who do not see (20:29). Although he is an honest man (1:47), Nathanael treats Philip's invitation with a great deal of skepticism, "Can anything good come out of Nazareth?" (46) to that comment. (21:2).
There is a background
Nathanael is from the town of Cana in Galilee
Although Cana's exact location is uncertain (see Anchor
Bible Dictionary, 1:827 for the most likely options), Cana and Nazareth were probably twin cities, about a kilometer apart from each other. There were three types of settlements in Galilee; overtly Gentile cities like Sepphoris, Jotapata and Tiberias (none of which Jesus is said to have visited), Jewish towns that were fairly observant of Jewish laws and customs, and Jewish towns that were fairly lax about their Jewishness.
It is reasonable to
suppose from Nathanael's comment that Cana was one of the observant towns and Nazareth one of the lax ones. A characteristic of Jesus that is repeatedly highlighted in the Gospel is his full knowledge of what is going on inside of other people.
He has already shown insight into the character of
a stranger by nicknaming the impetuous Simon "Rocky" (the meaning of the Greek nickname "Peter"-- 1:42).
Twice in the present
narrative Jesus reveals His intimate knowledge of Nathanael as well (47-49).
He declares him to be a "true Israelite" (47) who
will see the angels of God ascending and descending a heavenly ladder (51) just as the original Israelite, Jacob, did (Gen
57 28:12-17, cf. 32:28).
He then confirms his insight into
Nathanael's life by telling him what he was doing before Philip met him (John 1:48).
When Nathanael recognizes the character of
the One speaking with him he acknowledges Jesus as both Son of God and King of Israel (1:49). There are two significant points of difference, however, between Nathanael and Jacob.
The original Israelite was a man of
deceit (Gen 27:35), Nathanael is devoid of deceit (John 1:47). The original Israelite caught a vision of Yahweh at the top of the heavenly ladder (Gen 28:12,13), Nathanael, on the other hand, was to see a "vision" of Jesus at the bottom of the ladder (John 1:51).
In the Gospel of John, therefore, the true Israelite is
not one who can trace physical descent back to Jacob, the true Israelite is one who knows who Jesus is and believes in Him.
The
Yahweh at the top of the heavenly ladder has come down to earth and is being recognized by those with eyes to see. The Major Themes of the Passage Witness The key theme of 1:19-51 is witness.
In the first part of
the passage, the Baptist offers his witness to Jesus.
By the end
of the passage, the disciples of Jesus, Andrew, Philip, and finally Nathanael begin to bear witness to Him as well.
In this
passage we see, therefore, the transition from the witness of the Baptist to the witness of Jesus' disciples.
It is on the latter
witness that the power of the gospel continues to change lives
58 today.
In fact, the only witnessing that truly matters is
witnessing about Jesus.
To share the Sabbath, the prophecies, or
the state of the dead with others is not witnessing unless that doctrine brings Jesus into clearer focus. The theme of witness receives major treatment again in 5:3147.
There the witness of the Baptist, the Father, the
Scriptures, and Moses all come together with a common voice, declaring that Jesus is exactly who He claims to be.
The
"witness of Jesus" is also a major theme in the Book of Revelation (Rev 1:2, 9; 12:17; 19:10, etc.), where the churches are called to witness as well (Rev 2:13; 6:9-11; 12:11). Throughout the Fourth Gospel Jesus' identity and character are on trial before the readers of the Gospel.
Witness after witness
confirms the testimony of the Prologue while various characters question and reject that testimony until at length Jesus undergoes a final trial.
How will the characters in the story,
and ultimately the reader of the Gospel respond to this testimony?
Will Jesus be accepted or rejected?
The issue is not to be taken lightly.
John 12:47-50 offers
an ironic reversal of the theme of trial and witness.
In the
judgment at the last day the same words of witness which call readers of the Gospel to faith in Jesus will stand in testimony against those who rejected Him (12:48).
Though on the surface
Jesus' identity and character are on trial in the Fourth Gospel, it is ultimately the reader of the Gospel who is on trial.
As
readers pronounce judgment on Jesus, they also pronounce judgment
59 on themselves. A Lesson from the Baptist Movement There may be an important lesson in the continuing existence of the "Baptist movement" in the first century and beyond.
There
is no question that John the Baptist was ordained by God with a heavenly mission. movement.
It was God who raised up the Baptist and his
But even though God is involved in the founding of a
movement, that same movement can later turn against Him and against His true people.
No matter how close our relationship
with God as individuals or as a corporate body, therefore, we need constant humility and self-awareness.
Because of human
frailty and sinfulness, personal and corporate apostasy is an unending threat.
Unless a movement continually advances in the
light of God's revelation, it will tend to fall away from faithfulness.
To live in continual self-criticism and repentance
is the only safe course of action. The Significance of Baptism There are many texts in the New Testament that mention or interpret baptism.
John 1:29-34 zeros in on a single aspect of
the significance of baptism.
According to this passage, the
purpose of the baptism of Jesus was to reveal His identity to Israel (1:31, 33).
Through baptism the identity of Jesus as the
Messiah was established.
So it is with Christians.
through baptism that identities are established.
It is
In baptism the
Christian identifies with Christ in his death, burial, and
60 resurrection (Rom 6:3,4).
In so doing the Christian takes on a
new identity and a new life in Christ (Rom 6:1-14).
Old things
have passed away, all things have become new (2 Cor 5:17). Baptism rightly understood, therefore, can have great power to change lives.
Old habits, addictions, and family dysfunctions
once made up our identity and may continue to do so.
In Christ,
however, we can establish a new identity, a new history.
The
cells of one's body, and one's family and friends may fight against the new identity.
The battle is usually quite severe.
long road of counseling and support may be necessary.
A
But
through Christ there is power in baptism to take hold of a new identity and to chart a course that will ultimately change everything. Jesus Knows Jesus knows all about Nathanael, even though they have never met (John 1:47-49). (1:40-42).
He knows all about Simon Peter as well
It is characteristic of this Gospel that Jesus is
fully aware of what is inside other human beings and that He adjusts His reactions to them accordingly (2:23-25).
His
knowledge of Nicodemus' inner need causes Him to confront with holy directness (3:1-12, see also White, Desire of Ages, 168173).
On the other hand, his knowledge of the woman at the well
(4:10, 17, 18) allows Him to playfully tolerate a conversation that wanders all over the map while gradually bringing her to conviction (10-29, see also White, Desire of Ages, 187, 188). The message of the Gospel is that Jesus knows all about us
61 and yet comes with loving concern and acceptance.
We are often
reluctant to confess our sins to others because we fear how they will respond.
Such fear is unnecessary with Jesus.
He already
knows all about us, there is no reason to be hesitant in coming to Him and telling Him the truth about ourselves.
Since intimate
relationships require openness on both sides, it is our reluctance to be honest with Him that is the primary barrier to intimate relationship with Him.
In the presence of Jesus our
defenses can come down and the true self be safely revealed.
Why
wait even a moment longer to enjoy the liberation such openness with Jesus can bring? The True Israel Finally, John 1:19-51 clarifies a point hinted at in the Prologue and developed in the Gospel; the true Israelite is the one who believes in Jesus (1:47, 51).
Genuine descent is not to
be reckoned in physical terms, but spiritually, through believing (12,13).
It is those who are born of water and of the Spirit who
enter the kingdom that Jesus establishes (3:5-8, cf. 8:31-47). The one thing that matters above all others is relationship with Jesus.
Without such a relationship good deeds, tithe-paying,
Sabbath-keeping, and even witnessing serve little purpose. APPLYING THE WORD 1.
John the Baptist had a clear and specific sense of the mission and purpose of his life (1:19-34; 3:30). Do you have a similar sense of God's will for you? For your occupation? For your relationships? For your role in your local church? Did the Baptist have such a clear sense of purpose because he was a prophet, or can anyone have a
62 2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
similar sense of certainty if they commit themselves to God? Do you sometimes feel like the Jewish visitors from Jerusalem who wanted to know about the Baptist, while he only cared that they know about Jesus (1:19-28)? Do you care more about local church politics or theological debates than about knowing Jesus personally? Is it more fun to debate the merits of various pastors and elders than it is to worship God and bask in His presence? If John the Baptist felt inadequate even to be Christ's slave (27), does that have any implications for your personal relationship with Christ? Do you find it easy to humbly tune your heart and life to His direction? Or do you find it easier to tell Him what you want, to treat Him as if He were your slave? Describe the circumstances in which you first made a full commitment to follow Jesus. What were your motives for following Him at that time? How have your motives changed since then? How has your knowledge of Jesus grown? Which of the disciples of Jesus was most like you; John, Peter, Andrew, Philip, or Nathanael? Was there an Andrew or Philip in your life, someone who helped you come to Jesus? What significance did baptism play in your commitment to Jesus? If you could visit Jesus in His home (38, 39) what would you be most interested to find out? The kinds of books He reads? His favorite TV show? How He treats his friends? What kinds of food He eats? How He behaves when He is out of the public eye? How do you feel about the idea that Jesus knows all about you through and through (47, 48)? Do you feel more comfortable with others when you can pretend to be something you're not? Are you truly willing to allow Jesus to know you intimately and to reveal to you the defects of character that He wants to cleanse and make whole?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
By means of an exhaustive concordance like Strong's or Young's study every text in the NT that talks about baptism. Make a list of the full variety of ways in which the significance of baptism is described in the NT? Is the Gospel of John the only place in the NT where the meaning of baptism is described in terms of establishing identities? What does this study contribute to your understanding of the role of John the Baptist? What do Matthew, Mark, and Luke do theologically with the baptism of Jesus?
FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1.
For general notes on John 1:19-51 see SDA Bible Commentary, 5:905-911.
63 2. 3. 4. 5.
On the role of the Baptist in the Gospel of John see Brown, 1:lxvii-lxx. See also "Mandaeism" in the Anchor Bible Dictionary, 4:500-502. On the backgrounds to the "Lamb of God" concept see Brown, 1:58-63. On the titles of Jesus in John 1 see Schnackenburg, 1:507514. See also White, Desire of Ages, 132-143.
CHAPTER 3 THE DISCIPLES BELIEVE JOHN 2:1-11 The Gospel of John strikes the reader as a model of simplicity.
This chapter is no exception.
It reads as a simple
story about a wedding feast where the wine ran out long before the end.
Jesus, reluctantly at first, acts to save the couple
from humiliation.
Thus, the story can be read as a simple and
charming affirmation of the institution of marriage. But as is usually the case with this Gospel, the surfacelevel simplicity quickly gives way to a highly complex thoughtstructure that challenges every effort to fully absorb it.
The
reader becomes aware that little details in the story point to vast, underlying structures of a deep theological masterpiece. With careful contemplation, the story reveals depths that challenge the magnificence of the Prologue. GETTING INTO THE WORD John 2:1-11 Please read John 2:1-11 through several times and then answer the following questions: 1.
Jesus was on a mission to save the whole world. If anyone could legitimately say that they had no time to waste on small talk it was Jesus. Write out a paragraph or two 64
65
2.
3. 4.
5. 6.
explaining why you think Jesus went to this wedding. What role did His attendance play in His overall mission? At what point in the story does it become evident that this is not simply a charming little story but that there are deeper theological dynamics involved? The initial comment of Mary? The reply of Jesus? The mention of the size and purpose of the water pots? The miracle itself? The comment in verse 11? Explain your answer. List whatever elements you can find in the story which build on the themes established in the first chapter of the Gospel. On the basis of this story alone, try to describe the relationship between Jesus and His mother. Now read John 19:25-27. Does the later incident change your impression of the relationship between Jesus and His mother? Read Matt 13:53-58. What is implied in the comments that Jesus' family and friends were "offended" by him, and that he had no honor in His own house? See also Mark 3:31-35. Do the size and function of the water pots have anything to do with the deeper meaning of this story? Explain your answer. In what way does the quantity and quality of the wine demonstrate the glory of Jesus (2:11)?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The reference to the third day (2:1) ties this passage to the preceding narratives with their series of "next days" (1:29, 35, 43).
The "third day" is probably reckoned from the day of
Philip's call in 1:43, 44.
The four days of John 1 and the three
days of John 2:1 make up a week of seven days.
According to the
Mishnah (a second century compilation of the traditions of the rabbis), the wedding of a virgin was supposed to take place on a Wednesday (mKetuboth 1:1, cf. Danby, 245).
If tradition was
followed in this particular wedding, Jesus began His journey to Galilee (1:43) on Monday morning and John's encounter with Jesus at the Jordan took place on the Sabbath (35-37, see Brown, 1:97, 98).
This "week" began at the close of Jesus' forty days in the
66 desert. The narrative of the wedding at Cana completes the calling of the disciples, in that the miracle of turning the water into wine brought them to full belief (2:11).
They were beginning to
see the "greater things" that Jesus had promised Nathanael (1:50, 51).
But the narrative of the wedding at Cana also introduces a
new section in the Gospel which runs through chapter four. +)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))), * A) First Miracle at Cana (2:1-11) * B) Temple in Jerusalem (2:12-25) * C) Discourse with Nicodemus (3:1-21) * D) The Baptist (3:22-30) * D) Jesus (3:31-36) * C) Discourse with the Samaritan Woman (4:1-42) * B) Events in Jerusalem (4:43-45) * A) Second Miracle at Cana (4:46-54) .))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))-
* * * * * * * *
The reference to a second "sign" in Cana (4:54) brings the series of narratives full circle and binds off this section as a separate unit.
Since the narrative of the wedding at Cana
completes the narrative of chapter 1, yet is bound to the material in chapters 2:12 - 4:54, it functions as a major turning point in the Gospel. The theme of chapters 2 to 4 is replacement. have passed away and the new has come.
Old things
Jesus replaces the waters
of Judaism (2:6) with the wine of His blood (7-10). the temple of Judaism with His body (19-22).
He replaces
In the Nicodemus
story, Jesus replaces the miracle of physical birth with a spiritual birth from above (3:3-6).
And in the story of the
woman at the well, Jesus replaces Jacob with Himself (4:12), physical water with spiritual (7-10) and worship at Jerusalem
67 with spiritual worship (21-24).
This section of the Gospel of
John argues by implication for the superiority of faith in Jesus to all other ways of life and forms of religion.
Those who met
Jesus came to see the "greater things" that He had promised his disciples (1:50, 51). The material in John 2:1-11 can be subdivided as follows: +)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))), * 1-3a-- The Basic Situation * 3b-5-- Dialogue Between Jesus and His Mother * 6-8-The Miracle Itself * 9, 10-- Attestation of the Miracle * 11-The Author's Commentary .))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))-
* * * * *
The Background of the Passage A number of items from the OT and the contemporary background help to illuminate aspects of John 2:1-11.
An
abundance of wine, for example, was a characteristic of OT passages that describe the future kingdom God would inaugurate in the last days (Isa 25:6; Jer 31:12; Amos 9:13, 14).
Jesus'
provision of exceptional wine at the wedding banquet is, therefore, an example of how John's Gospel portrays the understanding that the end-time expectation of the OT was fulfilled in Jesus (see chapter 6). The water pots (holding 20-30 gallons) were of unusual size in the ancient world.
John may have remarked on the size of the
pots to chide the Jews for their obsession with ritual purification.
Fresh water was difficult to come by in most parts
of the ancient world, so the details of the story are quite remarkable.
68 The story of turning water into wine also reminds readers of transformation stories in the OT.
Moses turned water into blood
as one of the plagues on ancient Egypt (Exod 7:14-24).
Elisha
transformed the bitter water of Jericho into water that was sweet to the taste and useful again (2 Kings 2:19-22).
A particularly
interesting parallel to the miracle at Cana may be 2 Kings 3:1225, also in the experience of Elisha.
A number of kings visit
Elisha looking for a word from the Lord.
His response was like
that of Jesus to His mother, "What do we have to do with each other?"
But he agreed to work with them anyway.
At his advice
water miraculously appeared and was thought to be blood by the enemy (2 Kings 3:22, 23).
By this means Israel won a great
victory over Moab. A contemporary issue is also addressed by knowledge of the background to this wedding story.
Many people wonder if Jesus'
turning water into wine has implication for the issue of how Christians should relate to the use of alcohol.
There is nothing
in John 2:1-11 or its background, however, that requires the wine Jesus made to be fermented.
For one thing, the word for wine in
this passage (oinos) is neutral in the Greek.
It can refer to
unfermented grape juice, or it can refer to fermented wine.
The
terminology of the passage does not in any way help to settle the issue. Neither would the presence of grape juice be totally contrary to expectation.
For one thing, if the wedding took
place in the Fall (when the baptism of Jesus took place a month
69 or so previous) it was the time of grape harvest in Palestine, so fresh juice might have been available.
But even if it were not
available, excellent methods of preservation were known at the time.
For example, grape juice could be boiled down into a
jelly.
This would be pressed into a clay pot until all the air
was removed.
Then a thin layer of olive oil across the top would
preserve the contents for months or even years.
At a later date,
the preserves could be mixed with water for use.
The end result
would be unfermented.
If reconstituted juice made up the bulk of
what had been served previous to this at the wedding, Jesus production of fresh juice from the vine would have been worthy of the kind of notice given in the passage (see White, Desire of Ages, 149). The way Christians should relate to the use of alcohol, therefore, should not be settled one way or the other on the basis of this passage.
There are, however, abundant scientific,
social, and spiritual reasons for refraining entirely from alcohol.
Ellen White outlines some of these reasons in
Testimonies for the Church, 5:354-361. Exploring the Passage in Detail The fact that Jesus, His mother, and his disciples were invited to the wedding suggests that it was the wedding of a relative of Jesus (cf. White, Desire of Ages, 146).
A third-
century tradition held that John, the beloved disciple was the son of Salome, Mary's sister. first cousins.
This would make John and Jesus
This tradition has led some scholars to the
70 conclusion that this was John's own wedding or at least that of a relative of his (see Brown, 1:98).
Mary's role at the wedding,
in any case, seems to correspond to that of a matron of honor, who may have helped with the catering of the feast.
Thus, she
may have taken the shortage as a matter of personal responsibility. If the wine supply was dependant on the generosity of guests (Brown, 1:102), Mary's remark to Jesus (2:3) may have been by way of rebuke to Him and his disciples for not bringing their fair share.
Such a situation would have placed both Jesus and His
mother in a delicate predicament from which she evidently sought to extricate them by encouraging Jesus to use his special powers. The term "woman" with which Jesus addressed His mother was not necessarily disrespectful.
In the writings of Josephus
(Antiquities 17:74) a much loved wife was called "woman" by her husband.
In the Gospel of John, Jesus encounters His mother only
twice, and both times uses this term (2:4; 19:25-27). Although the term "woman" may not have been disrespectful, Jesus clearly differed with His mother in this instance.
She
wanted to push Him to do the kinds of things that a popular Messiah would do.
Jesus, on the other hand, was aware that His
agenda was not set by His mother, or anyone else, but by His Father.
To have fulfilled her request in the way she had hoped
might have damaged His cause.
There would come a time when such
actions might become appropriate, but Jesus' "hour" had not yet come (2:4).
Instead He fulfilled her request in a way that
71 glorified his mission and resulted in the appropriate kind of belief in Him (11).
If Jesus handled His mother somewhat roughly
here, it is because He recognized in her words and actions the tempting work of Satan, seeking to alter the timetable of Jesus' actions (White, Desire of Ages, 147). The text notes that the water is turned to wine in the waterpots of Judaism (6).
During the time of the Exodus, Moses
turned the water in the waterpots of Egypt into blood.
The
parallels between the actions of Moses and the actions of Jesus are worked out in considerable detail in John's Gospel (see Major Themes section). It is interesting that the caterer had no idea where the good wine had come from (9).
He functions as a representative of
the kind of Judaism that failed to recognize the mighty and present working of God in Jesus.
The idea that the good wine had
been withheld "until now" (10) also corresponds with the message of John's Gospel.
The miracle of Jesus at the wedding of Cana
announced that the great eschatological outpouring of God's blessings had come in the person of Jesus.
Thus, this miracle
was called a "sign" (11). In the OT "signs" were mighty acts which certified that a prophet was the genuine bearer of God's word (Exod 3:12; 4:1-9; 1 Sam 10:1-9).
The miracles of Jesus also served to authenticate
His mission.
But in the Gospel of John they served a further
purpose.
They functioned like parables of the kingdom.
The wine
that Jesus brought to the wedding feast at Cana symbolized the
72 great eschatological and spiritual blessings that were available to humanity in the person of Jesus.
Through the miracle of
turning water into wine, Jesus' character and mission shone out more clearly, His "glory" was seen, and as a result, the disciples believed in Him (John 2:11).
When miracles, therefore,
caused people to see the "glory" of Jesus, they served to produce faith.
When the miracles were seen as ends in themselves (2:3-5,
23-25; 6:26), they could become stumbling blocks to true faith in Him. The Major Themes of the Passage "They Have no Wine" On the surface this is a charming story about a poor couple who runs out of wine at their wedding feast, much to their embarrassment and to the embarrassment of others.
The noble
visitor rescues them from their embarrassment with a miraculous act that astounds even the chief caterer of the feast.
But the
story is not told in this Gospel as a pleasant and innocuous interlude.
It has serious implications for the theology of the
Gospel's author. The main and most obvious theological point in this passage is the role of wine as a symbolic portrayal of the barrenness of Judaism without Its Messiah.
In the huge purification pots
(2:6), John sees Judaism's obsessive concern for matters of relative unimportance. wine" (3).
The indictment is pointed, "They have no
And when the good wine finally shows up, the head
73 caterer doesn't even know where the good wine came from (9).
He
even complains that they have not operated according to custom in which the earlier is supposed to be better (10)! The head caterer, therefore, represents "Jesus' own" (1:11) to whom He came, but who neither knew Him (10) nor received Him (11).
While Judaism was concerned with water for washing, Jesus
offered them good wine, and even when they sensed that such spiritual "wine" was present, they did not recognize that it came from Him (5:11-13; 9:13-17, 24).
Likewise, Nicodemus showed his
ignorance of the working of the Holy Spirit that Jesus had set in motion (3:8, 9). For John the replacement of water with wine represented that Jesus offered "something better" than Judaism.
He was a
replacement for the washings, the temple, the feasts, and the regulations of the Jewish system.
All that the Jewish worshipper
sought for in washings, temple, and feast could be found in abundance in Jesus.
The wine in particular represented the blood
of Jesus, which offers the only ultimate path to eternal life. In the wine of Jesus the OT promise of a glorious end-time kingdom was beginning to be fulfilled in Jesus' day.
By
extension today, the Gospel of John calls on everyone to find in Jesus the ultimate replacement of all substitutes for real life. The Hour of Jesus Jesus did not wish to grant Mary's request because His "hour" had not yet come (2:4).
In the Gospel of John the hour of
Jesus is especially associated with the hour of Jesus' arrest,
74 trial, and death.
Until that hour came no was had the ability to
arrest Him (7:30; 8:20; 13:1; 17:1 cf. 18:1ff.).
In 12:23, on
the other hand, the hour of Jesus is the hour of His "glorification."
At first glance this might appear to contradict
the other passages, but verse 24 makes it clear that the hour of Jesus' glorification is also the hour of his suffering and death. The connection between the hour and the glory of Jesus is first seen in the narrative of the wedding at Cana (2:4, 11).
This
suggests that the first miracle at Cana in some way foreshadowed the cross in John's thinking. The Glory of Jesus In what way did the cross glorify Jesus, according to the Gospel of John?
This is best answered in 12:37-41.
In this
passage John asserts that Isaiah saw the glory of Jesus (41).
In
the process he offered two quotations from Isaiah, one from the suffering servant passage of Isa 53 (John 12:38), and the other from the prophet's commission in Isa 6 (John 12:40).
In Isa
6:1ff. the prophet saw Yahweh high and exalted on His throne.
In
Isa 53:8-12, he saw the suffering servant who dies in behalf of "many."
If, as John believes, Isaiah saw the glory of Jesus in
Isa 6, then Jesus must be the Yahweh of the OT, bearing in His person the divine glory and prerogatives.
But if Isaiah also saw
the glory of Jesus in Isa 53 that glory is manifest not only in the divine splendor seen on the throne, but also in the divine character that was revealed on the cross. For John the cross is clearly the central matter.
The
75 essence of this Gospel, as we have seen from the Prologue, is that Jesus is the greatest and the clearest revelation of God that has ever been brought to earth (1:1, 14).
While the
Prologue does not highlight the cross (an outside possibility is the "did not receive Him" of verse 11), the cross becomes the ultimate and clearest manifestation of the divine character in the main body of the Gospel.
Although John does not spell out
every detail of this revelation, the cross is certainly the clearest manifestation of the justice of God in all His hatred for sin and its consequences in those He loves.
At the cross and
in the resurrection there is also an incredible manifestation of the great mercy of God in Christ toward sinners. This fuller sense of the glory of Jesus is most clearly manifested in John's Gospel.
The author of the book, the beloved
disciple, was the only disciple to be found at the cross.
He
alone had seen the ultimate glory, and therefore his witness to Jesus had the greatest authority. Cana and the Cross There seems, therefore, to be a special connection between the narrative of the wedding at Cana and the narrative of the cross.
The wedding takes place on the "third day" as does the
resurrection of Jesus.
In 2:1-11 the hour and the glory of Jesus
are tied together, something that only happens elsewhere in the context of the cross itself (12:23, 24; 17:1, 5).
Only in 2:4
and 19:26 (part of the narrative of the cross) does the mother of Jesus appear, and both times Jesus calls her "woman."
Wine is
76 also associated with the blood of Christ in the Lord's Supper. There are a remarkable number of connections, therefore, between the wedding at Cana and the cross in the Gospel of John. The sign Jesus performed at the wedding feast of Cana was a foretaste of the ultimate sign which He performed in submitting to suffering and death.
In 2:11 the disciples' response to that
sign not only foreshadowed their future response to the cross (20:8, 24-29) but also the response of all who would come to believe in Jesus through their word (17:20; 20:30, 31). Exodus Typology As mentioned earlier, when Jesus turned water into wine in the water pots of Cana, it would be difficult not to see a parallel to the action of Moses in turning water into blood in the waterpots of Egypt (Exod 7:19).
There is no question that
the comparison between Moses and Jesus is a major theme in the Gospel as a whole (1:17; 3:14; 5:45-47; 6:30-33; 9:28, 29).
But
the comparison is far more comprehensive than could be detected by the mere reading of passages where Moses is named. There are seven specific miracles mentioned in the main body of the Gospel (2:1-11; 4:46-54; 5:2-9; 6:1-15; 6:16-21; 9:1-39; 11:38-44, the Epilogue also contains a miracle-- 21:1-11).
The
wedding miracle points us to the reality that each of the seven miracles in the Gospel of John corresponds to one of the plagues of Egypt.
Jesus turned water into wine (John 2:1-11), Moses
turned water into blood (Exod 7:14-24).
Jesus gave a child life
(John 4:46-54), Moses afflicted the domestic animals of Egypt
77 with death (Exod 9:1-7).
Jesus brought physical healing to the
paralytic (John 5:2-9), Moses afflicted the Egyptians with sores (Exod 9:8-12).
Jesus calmed a storm (John 6:16-21), Moses
created one (Exod 9:13-35).
Jesus produced bread in the
wilderness (John 6:1-15), just as Moses produced the manna from heaven for the Israelites (John 6:30-33; Exod 16:4, 15; Neh 9:15) and sent locusts to eat up the bread of the Egyptians (Exod 10:120).
Jesus brought light to the blind man (John 9:1-41), Moses
brought darkness to Egypt (Exod 10:21-29).
Jesus raised Lazarus
from the dead (John 11:38-44), Moses slew the first-born sons of Egypt (Exod 11:1 - 12:32).
A further explicit parallel is the
reference to Jesus on the cross as the Passover Lamb (John 19:36 cf. Exod 12:1-11, 21-28). While some of the above parallels are more tenuous than others, there seems to be a clear intention on the part of John to see a common pattern between the activities of Jesus and the actions of Moses. Gospel of John?
Why are these strong parallels present in the The miracles and the death of Jesus combined
tell the story of a New Exodus from a new bondage (cf. the Greek of Luke 9:31).
The story of the Exodus was to become instructive
for the new Israel that God was putting together in Christ. There are striking reversals in this new experience of the Exodus, however.
The role of Pharaoh is taken over in John's
Gospel by Moses, whose writings and authority are used by those who reject Jesus.
Thus the Jews in the Gospel become the
counterparts of the Egyptians!
Like Pharaoh and the Egyptians,
78 the Jews in the Gospel receive the signs of Jesus' authority, but reject His claims, and seek to destroy Him as the Egyptians sought to destroy the Israelites. When Moses is properly used, on the other hand, he leads people to Jesus (5:45-47), and those who are led to Jesus become a New Israel (1:47-51).
Thus, the events of Jesus' life in the
Gospel of John are like the events of a New Exodus leading both to the establishment of a New Israel and the rejection of the old one.
The signs which Jesus does (including the cross) become the
dividing point between those who are gathering to Jesus as the New Israel, and those who in rejecting His signs cling to the old ways (12:42, 43). The parallels between Jesus and Moses are even more astounding when one takes the full testimony of the four gospels into account.
Like Moses, Jesus is threatened at birth by a
hostile king who ends up killing all the babies but the one he really wants to destroy (Matt 2:16-18). glory of God (John 1:17, 18). days (Matt 4:2; Luke 4:2).
Like Moses He saw the
Like Moses He fasted for forty
He appointed 70 disciples (Luke 10:1)
and 12 apostles (Matt 10:1-4; Mark 3:13-19; Luke 6:12-16). gave the new law from a high mountain (Matt 5-7).
He
He fed a
multitude in the desert (Matt 14:13-21; Mark 6:30-44; Luke 9:1017; John 6:1-15).
He was lifted up on the cross as Moses raised
up the bronze serpent in the wilderness (John 3:14).
And He came
out of Egypt (Matt 2:13-15, 19-23) just as Moses and the Israelites did.
79 In addition to providing a language with which to tell the story of Jesus more fully, the parallels between Jesus and Moses are instructive for a further reason which we have mentioned in chapter 1.
Jesus is the greatest revelation of God this earth
has ever seen.
As such the parallels with Moses and other
aspects of OT faith serve to highlight the superiority of Jesus over against all other paths to God.
While Moses turned water
into blood to authenticate his authority with Pharaoh and the Egyptians, Jesus performed a similar miracle to authenticate a far greater authority among the Jews.
While Moses delivered his
people from a mere earthly bondage, Jesus delivers his from death to abundant life (John 3:16; 5:24; 10:10). APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2.
3.
4.
If you were allowed to choose one miracle to get you started in a new ministry for God, what kind of miracle do you think would make a significant impact on secular people today? Bringing true peace to the Middle East or the former Yugoslavia? Paying off the national debt? Raising someone from the dead? Predicting future events? List as many modern equivalents to the miracles of Jesus as you can and select the one that you would choose if you had the opportunity. Think of the rejoicing that must have accompanied Jesus' gift of good wine. Are you rejoicing in the "good wine" of the gospel today? Or has your appreciation for Christ diminished in recent months and/or years? What things in your life make it more difficult to keep the sense of Christ's blessings fresh in your mind? Running out of wine at an ancient wedding feast was embarrassing and humiliating. It broke a basic law of hospitality. Jesus reached out, therefore, to meet a heartfelt need. Make a list of the most heartfelt needs you can think of among family, neighbors and friends. Which of these needs could God use you to fill? Which of them is most urgent? Where would be the best place to begin? Ultimately Mary submitted to let Jesus resolve the problem in whatever way He might choose (2:5). Are there areas of your life that need to be submitted to His will and control?
80 RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
2.
Looking up the word "water" in an exhaustive concordance, see how many OT stories you can find in which water is transformed in one way or another. Write out a list of these stories and note which of them seem most closely parallel to the story of how Jesus transformed water into wine. In this chapter we noted that there are strong parallels between the plagues of the Exodus and the seven miracles of Jesus in the Gospel of John. With these seven miracles in mind, read carefully the story of Elisha in 2 Kings 2-9 and 13. Are there similar parallels between the miracles of Elisha and the miracles of Jesus in the Gospel of John? What might be the theological implication(s) of such parallels?
FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1. 2. 3.
4.
On the glory of Jesus see Brown 1:503. On the hour of Jesus see Brown 1:517-518. On the implications of Jesus' miracle for the Christian attitude toward alcohol see Bacchiocchi, 137-144. While Evans does not deal with the wedding miracle he offers another Adventist perspective on the larger Biblical questions. See also White, Desire of Ages, 144-153.
CHAPTER 4 A QUESTIONING DISCIPLE JOHN 2:12 - 3:21 After an unspecified period of time in Galilee, probably about four to six months (2:12), Jesus travels to Jerusalem to take part in the Passover feast.
While He is there He cleanses
the temple (13-22), a sign that draws a great deal of attention to Him, but not to His delight (23-25).
Nicodemus, a Pharisee
and a member of the Jewish ruling council, decides to do some investigating in the night hours to see what kind of man could do the kinds of things that Jesus was doing (3:1-21).
He was left
speechless by what he heard (10-21). According to the Gospel's chronology, the interview with Nicodemus occurred late in the evening of the same day in which Jesus' cleansed the temple.
Thus all the material in this
chapter of the book happened on the same day and is inherently related, as we will see.
81
82 THE CLEANSING OF THE TEMPLE GETTING INTO THE WORD John 2:13-22 Read John 2:13-22 twice and then do the following: 1.
2. 3.
4.
Make copies of the four versions of the story of Jesus' cleansing the temple and compare them (Matt 21:12-17; Mark 11:15-19; Luke 19:45-48; John 2:13-22). What are the major similarities and differences? Note at what stage of Jesus' public ministry each account takes place. Do you think that Jesus actually cleansed the temple more than once, or that the various writers placed the story according to their theological purpose? Explain your answer in a paragraph or two. Compare 2:13-22 with Psalm 69. Make a list of all the items of similarity you can find. Write out the purpose that you think Jesus had in quoting from this OT chapter. Compare 2:13-22 with John 6:22-35. Again make a list of all the items of similarity you can find. Do you think that the author of the Gospel was drawing a similar lesson from both passages? Explain your answer. Compare 2:22 with 2:11. Is the faith of the disciples similar or different in the two passages? Why could certain things only be understood and believed after the death and resurrection of Jesus?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage In a remarkable divergence from Matthew, Mark, and Luke, John places the cleansing of the temple at the beginning of Jesus' ministry rather than just before the crucifixion (cf. Matt 21:12, 13; Mark 11:15-17; Luke 19:45, 46).
This raises the
question of whether there were two cleansings of the temple, one at the beginning and one at the end of Jesus' public ministry, or just one.
And if there was just one cleansing, did John or did
the other three place it in its actual historical location? Evidence can be cited in favor of all three positions.
The
83 cleansing of the temple is clearly related to the death and resurrection of Christ (John 2:19, 21 cf. Matt 26:61; 27:40; Mark 14:58; 15:29).
It was an act calculated to inspire the fury of
the ruling classes within Judaism.
As such it would most likely
be the event that precipitates His arrest, trial, and execution of Jesus, and so comes naturally at the end of His career as Matthew, Mark and Luke have it.
But as we will see in the next
section, the date of the cleansing recorded in John 2:13-22 fits in well with the earlier portion of Jesus' public ministry. Since both accounts of the cleansing of the temple seem to fit into the appropriate historical picture, it is quite possible that Jesus actually cleansed the temple twice.
The emphasis of
the earlier act, according to John, is the theme of replacement; Jesus replaces the temple and its sacrifices with His own body (2:19-21).
The later act, as recorded in Matthew, Mark, and
Luke, precipitates the arrest and death of Jesus. The structure of 2:13-22 is fairly straightforward, but there does seem to be a parallel between verses 14-17 and verses 18-22.
The first section is concerned with what Jesus did, the
second with the authority behind His actions (Talbert, Reading John, 96-98).
Note the following diagram:
+))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))), * 14, 15 Action of Jesus 18 Action of Jesus * 16 Words of Jesus 19 Words of Jesus * 20, 21 Misunderstanding * 17 Disciples remember 22 Disciples remember .)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))-
* * * *
84 The Background of the Passage In John 2:20 "the Jews" assert that the temple had been under construction for forty-six years at the time in which they were speaking.
The construction of the temple was an ongoing
project that would not be completed until AD 63, just seven years before its destruction.
The rebuilding of the temple was begun
in the 18th year of the reign of Herod the Great (Herod's 18th year overlapped with parts of 20 and 19 BC).
Adding forty-six
years to Herod's 18th year (Spring of 19 BC) brings one to the Spring of 28 AD (there was no "zero year") about six months after the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist (in the 15th year of Tiberius--Luke 3:1-- the Fall of AD 27).
Thus, the incidental
reference in this account ("this temple has been under construction for forty-six years") confirms the historical accuracy of placing it at exactly this stage of Jesus' public ministry. According to Josephus, the Jewish historian of the late first century, the selling in the temple began at some point in the reign of Caiaphas as High Priest (18-36 AD-- see Bruce, 64, 65).
The priests profited greatly from the traffic in the
temple, to disrupt it was an act calculated to earn their animosity. The Jews expected that when the Messiah would come, he would restore the temple by replacing the old house with a new one that would equal the glory of Solomon's temple or even exceed it like the temple of Ezekiel 40-48 (1 Enoch 89, 90).
In the Jewish
85 apocalyptic books 4 Ezra and 2 Baruch (written some time after the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70), therefore, the destruction of the temple in AD 70 was explained as part of the necessary preparation for the coming of the Messiah.
Since the
old temple had been destroyed, it was hoped that the new one would soon be on the way.
In the light of expectations such as
these, the cleansing of the temple by Jesus would be understood as an act that carried along with it the claim to Messiahship. Exploring the Passage in Detail The place in the temple where Jesus found the cattle, sheep, doves, and money-changers (2:14) was the Court of the Gentiles. So the trafficking in the temple not only was detrimental to reverence, it also excluded the Gentiles from appreciating the one part of the temple where their presence was welcome. Although John does not record any protest of this exclusion, it is noted in Mark 11:17 where Jesus says, "My house will be called a house of prayer for all nations."
In John the emphasis is
placed not on the exclusion of the Gentiles, but on Jesus' zeal for the purity of God's house (2:17).
In casting out those who
were defiling the temple (2:15, 16) Jesus was establishing the eschatological order prophesied in Zech 14:20, 21 when the temple and all that is in it would be holy.
The cleansing of the temple
was an end time act of the Messiah. In John 2:17 Jesus quotes Psalm 69, "Zeal for your house consumes me."
The reference is a little opaque at first glance,
but a closer look brings greater clarity.
The Psalmist is a
86 stranger to his own brothers (Ps 69:8, cf. John 2:12).
He faces
the insults of those who don't share his zeal for the temple (Ps 69:9, 11, 12 cf. John 2:18, 20).
Thus Ps 69 and John 2:13-22
contain multiple parallels to each other.
But only one phrase is
directly quoted. The quotation in 2:17 illustrates a general principle of the way NT writers quote the OT.
C. H. Dodd, a noted NT scholar, was
the first to notice that NT writers use brief portions of the OT, not as proof texts in themselves, but as pointers to the larger context in which they are found (Dodd, According to the Scriptures.
In other words, when a NT writer quotes the OT, it
is always wise to consider the larger context of the OT quotation to see if it sheds light on the role the quotation plays in the NT context in which it is featured. Jesus' experience, therefore, is parallel to the experience of the Psalmist, David.
They both manifested zeal for the temple
in the face of great opposition, from within their own family as well as from the general public.
Jesus' experience as the "son
of David" is understood in John to fulfill the experience of King David in his longing to institute the proper worship of God in ancient Jerusalem.
The cause of the death of Jesus would be His
zeal for the proper worship of God. John 2:18 parallels 6:30.
In both cases the people ask for
a sign immediately after He has just performed one!
Jesus
replies to the request with the comment, "Destroy this temple, and I will raise it again in three days" (2:19).
Since He was
87 speaking here about the temple of his body (21), it is clear in this comment that He was offering them the greatest of all His signs, His own suffering and death (cf. 8:28).
Jesus refuses to
justify His actions on the basis of raw power, as His hearers expect.
He appeals instead to His death and resurrection as the
grounds for His authority on earth (cf. 3:13-16). In 2:19 Jesus spoke of the destruction of the temple in the second person, "(You) destroy this temple."
Implied in this
comment was that the Jews were the ones who were destroying the temple, not Jesus (cf. White, Desire of Ages, 165).
As in so
many parts of this Gospel, there is a double meaning involved here.
Through their disobedience to God, well illustrated in the
trafficking in the temple, they were responsible for the destruction of this magnificent building in AD 70 (a past event from the perspective of the time in which the Gospel was written).
But at an even deeper level, they would also be
responsible for the death of Jesus, the true eschatological temple of God!
In this passage Jesus replaces the temple,
therefore, with His body.
When they would destroy His body, He
would raise it up again in three days (2:21-- at the resurrection). The concluding verse of this section (22) reminds the reader of the conclusion of the previous section (11). important difference.
But there is an
In verse 11 the belief is immediate.
The
disciples see the glory of Jesus manifested when He changed the water into wine and they believe as a result.
But in verse 22,
88 the disciples who observe the incident in the temple only come to believe after Jesus is raised from the dead and they remember His comment about the temple of His body. John implies in this verse that there were two levels or stages in the development of the disciples' faith in Jesus.
The
first level was seen during His lifetime, when they believed as a result of the signs which He did.
But the deeper level of belief
would only occur after His death and resurrection, the last and greatest of His signs, after the Holy Spirit had been poured out upon them (7:39).
Then they would come to believe on the basis
of the words of Jesus and on the basis of the Scriptures which foretold His ministry.
This interplay between a lesser faith
that is based only on signs, and a greater faith that is based on the word is the explicit subject of the brief section which follows 2:22 (23-25). The Major Themes of the Passage Replacement of the temple The replacement theme of the wedding narrative is here continued.
Jesus drives the sacrificial animals out of the
temple and replaces them with His own body.
He has replaced the
whole system of sanctuary and sacrifice with His own person.
All
that the Torah, the feast days, and the sacrifices had promised to the believer was now available in the person of Christ (cf. 1:17; 1 Cor 1:30).
This, of course, is essentially the same
message that was delivered by the author of Hebrews.
The old
89 things were instituted by God and they were very good, but in Jesus, something even better has come (Heb 1:1-4; 3:1-6; 8:6; 9:11). Jesus, therefore, is the temple of the New Israel which He brought into existence through His life, death, and resurrection. The temple today is not a material presence in its own right, the temple exists only in the personal presence of Jesus.
Because
the temple in the NT era is wherever Jesus is, temple language can be extended to three further realities. Since Jesus now resides at the right hand of God in heaven there is a greater and more perfect tabernacle or temple in heaven (Heb 8:1, 2, 5-- there appears to be no distinction between the term tabernacle and temple as applied to heaven, cf. Rev 15:5-8). According to the NT, however, Jesus not only resides in heaven, through the Holy Spirit He also resides in the church on earth, it is, after all, his body (1 Cor 12:27; Eph 2:14-16; 4:12-16).
The believers as a corporate body can, therefore, be
described as living stones who are built up into a spiritual temple with Christ Himself being the cornerstone (1 Peter 2:4-8; Eph 2:19-22; 1 Cor 3:17; 2 Cor 6:16). There is a third extension of the temple motif in the NT. Christ also resides in the bodies of believers through the Holy Spirit (Col 1:28).
It is, therefore, appropriate to speak of
physical human bodies as temples of the Holy Spirit (1 Cor 6:19, 20).
Because Jesus is understood as the temple of the New Age
90 which He has inaugurated in His life and death, it is also possible to speak of temples in heaven, in the church, and in the bodies of believers on account of His ongoing ministry of intercession for them. The Lord's Supper One of the most remarkable features of the Gospel of John is the total lack of explicit reference to the last supper which Jesus had with His disciples just before the cross.
In the place
where that would have occurred there is a narrative of the footwashing (13:1-17), an event that goes unmentioned in Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
This absence of the Lord's supper narrative has
caused many scholars to seek more cryptic references to the supper and/or its theology. Many scholars, therefore, have suggested that John 2 is just such a cryptic reference.
As we have seen, there are many
connections between the wedding narrative of 2:1-11 and the cross.
In 13-22 Jesus replaces the temple and its sacrificial
animals with His own body, another connection with the cross. The wine of Cana reminds the reader of the blood of Jesus, which replaces the washings of Judaism, the temple here reminds of the body of Jesus which was broken ("destroy this temple").
Early in
this gospel, then, John makes the knowledgeable reader aware that he knows about the last supper and the theology which motivated it, but that he will not repeat the narrative that others have so thoroughly described, his method will be one of allusion and subtle inference, rewarding the diligent student with rich mines
91 of spiritual insight.
JESUS KNOWS EVERYONE GETTING INTO THE WORD John 2:23-25 Read John 2:23-25 through twice, and then answer the following questions: 1. 2.
Why do you think that Jesus doesn't entrust Himself to these believers? What relationship do you think this passage has with the stories that precede and follow? In a paragraph or two, what do you think Jesus' ability to read minds and hearts tells us about Him?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage John 2:23-25 is an excellent example of duodirectionality, a Johannine literary technique in which a passage looks both ways at once.
We have observed this technique already in the wedding
narrative of 2:1-11.
The wedding at Cana brings many of the
themes of 1:19-51 to a conclusion at the same time that it introduces the replacement theme of John, chapters 2-4. The scene of 2:23-25 clearly builds on the temple cleansing of 13-22.
Jesus is in Jerusalem at the time of the Passover
Feast (23, cf. 13), and is doing things that get the attention of the people who have come to that feast (cf. 4:43-45).
At the
same time the themes of inadequate belief (2:23, 24) and Jesus' full knowledge of what lies within other people (24, 25) are at the heart of the Nicodemus narrative that follows (3:1-21).
92 The Background of the Passage The rabbis taught that there were seven things totally hidden from human knowledge and, therefore, were reserved for God alone to know; the day of death, the day of consolation, the depths of judgment, one's reward, the time of the restoration of the kingdom of David, the time when the guilty kingdom (Rome) would be destroyed, and what is within another (Mekilta Exodus 15:32 [59b], described in Beasley Murray, John, 47). With the possible exception of "the depths of judgment" all but one of the above concern knowledge of the future, which is clearly hidden from human sight unless God should choose to reveal it.
The one clear mark of divine knowledge in the present
is knowing what is inside another human being.
In the comment of
2:24, 25, therefore, John is claiming for Jesus prerogatives that in Jewish thought belong to God alone.
If Jesus could read what
is within other human beings He must truly be the Word who was from the beginning, created all things, and then became flesh and dwelt among us (1:1-5, 14)! The Passage in Detail At the time of the Passover Feast, when Jesus drove the money-changers and the sacrificial animals out of the temple, many people began to believe in him on account of the signs (plural) which He did.
In the popular mind a "sign" was an
astonishing event, a deed of power. is a much deeper meaning.
But in John's Gospel there
Signs in the Fourth Gospel reveal
things about the nature and the character of Jesus.
They open up
93 to the reader what Jesus was like and thereby reveal what God is like (Barclay, 1:119). But the faith that arose on account of the signs which Jesus did was only partial faith.
Jesus did not "entrust himself to
them," because he could read the motives and intents of their inner beings.
He did not need anyone's help to understand other
people, that knowledge was His by nature.
Thus, he could read
the character of the people at the Passover Feast, a feat he also performed with Peter (1:40-42; 21:15-19), Nathanael (1:47-50), His mother (2:4), Nicodemus (3:3, 10), the Samaritan woman (4:1618), Judas (6:70; 13:18-30), and His opponents (7:19, 25; 8:3944). The Major Themes of the Passage Superficial Faith This passage underscores a theme which we noticed in the previous passage; there are various levels of faith.
The
disciples had saving faith in Jesus after He turned the water into wine at Cana (2:11).
But deeper and more lasting faith
awaited the death and resurrection of Jesus, and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit (2:22; 7:39).
There is, in this passage, a
third level of faith that is brought into view.
It is inadequate
or superficial faith that is based only on miracles and does not bring anyone into saving relationship with Jesus. John 2:23-25 asserts that Jesus knew all about human nature. He knew that many believers had only superficial faith in Him. Many of those who "believed" in Him after the cleansing of the
94 temple would later cry, "Crucify him!
Crucify him!"
It is easy
to believe when everyone around you believes the same way, but such belief is often proved inadequate when it isn't popular to follow Christ. People often think that if they could see miracles they would have more faith.
But the reality is that miracles are no
cure-all for superficial faith. true faith.
They may even get in the way of
All that the people at the Passover Feast could see
was a wonder-worker, the miracles seemed to hinder their coming to a true appreciation of the spiritual work that He sought to accomplish in the world.
This may explain the relative lack of
miracles in the world today.
In the secular context miracles
might do more spiritual harm than good (Matt 13:58).
The answer
to the second generation's needs lies not in the spectacular, but in careful attention to the words of Scripture. Jesus Knows There is a bright side to Jesus' knowledge of human nature. If Jesus knows all about us, He knows how to build up our faith. He knows how to enable us to learn about Him.
He knows how to
enable us to work effectively for Him within the context of our daily lives.
He can provide all the answers we need (though not
always the answers we want!). Even more important, although Jesus knows all there is to know about us, He still accepts us. everlasting love.
He loves us with an
One reason we are afraid to confess our sins
to others is that we fear how they will react.
We fear that if
95 they know something bad about us they won't love us anymore.
But
there is no reason not to come to Jesus and confess our sins to Him.
He already knows all about us.
Confession doesn't inform
him (He needs no testimony from us-- 2:25!) about anything. Confession is for us. about ourselves. same.
Confession is learning to tell the truth
He knows us intimately, yet loves us just the
There is no reason not to come to him.
JESUS AND NICODEMUS GETTING INTO THE WORD John 3:1-21 Read John 3:1-21 through at least two times and then answer the following questions: 1.
2. 3.
4.
What can you learn about the character and status of Nicodemus from this passage? List all that you learn on a piece of paper. Compare what you find with 7:45-52 and 19:38-42, and add to your list as needed. Was Nicodemus really a timid man? Would he be a good neighbor today? Is there anything in this passage that supports the idea that the "water" of 3:5 is a reference to baptism? List the evidence you find, if any. Does Jesus continue speaking to Nicodemus right up to verse 21 or does the author of the Gospel take over? At what point would you think Jesus interview with Nicodemus ends and the commentary on it takes over? At what point in the passage does Jesus move from the second person ("you") to third person ("he" "whoever")? Does that knowledge help to answer the previous question? According to this passage, how does a person become "born again" (or born from above)? Write out your answer.
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The word in 3:1 translated "now" (de) indicates that the
96 Nicodemus story continues the theme of the previous passage (2:23-25).
In using the first person plural when he comes to
Jesus ("We know . . ."-- 3:2), Nicodemus acts as a spokesperson for those with inadequate faith based on the signs that Jesus did.
He serves as an illustration (acted parable), therefore, of
the kind of partial faith that John warned about in 2:23-25. Jesus knows what Nicodemus has come for but He doesn't commit Himself to Nicodemus.
Instead He seeks to open to Nicodemus the
real lack in his life and its solution. The Passage in Detail The name Nicodemus means "leader of the people" in Greek. Nicodemus was undoubtedly a pious man, an example of the very best that Judaism could offer.
He was a Pharisee, which means
that he took the Scriptures and his faith very seriously.
He was
a member of the Sanhedrin, the Jewish ruling council, and quite well educated (Jesus calls him "the" teacher of Israel-- 3:10). He was quite wealthy (19:39) and relatively fearless (7:45-52; 19:38-42) whether or not a certain timidity might have caused him to choose the night hours for an interview with Jesus (3:2).
All
in all he would not have made a bad neighbor. The fact that he was a Pharisee, and that Jesus immediately engaged him in regard to the significance of water to spiritual life (5) makes one wonder if Nicodemus had been part of the Pharisaic delegation that questioned the Baptist in 1:24-28. so, he must have been anticipating the possibility that the coming of the Messiah was at hand.
Having observed Jesus'
If
97 cleansing of the temple (White, Desire of Ages, 168), he had to find out exactly what Jesus was up to. That his motives for coming were not exactly pure is clear from verse 2.
Nicodemus came "by night."
Now there are three
ways to express time in Greek; one can speak of time as a specific event, one can speak of it as a period of time, and one can speak of a qualitative use; time can be used as a pointer to meaning, a pointer to a higher spiritual or philosophical reality.
The genitive case in which the reference of 3:2 is
found indicates the third type of expression.
The author of the
Gospel is not concerned with the time of day when Nicodemus comes, or how long the interview with Jesus lasts (the first two types of expression), but with how Nicodemus comes, his spiritual condition.
He comes in darkness of soul because he does not yet
know Jesus and accept Him fully.
But although he is in darkness
he does the right thing, in coming to Jesus he moves from darkness to light (1:4-5, 3:19-21; 8:12; 9:5).
This is the
opposite of Judas, who goes from light into darkness (13:30). A major issue in this passage is the meaning of water in 3:5.
Is this the water of baptism as many have taught, or is it
something else?
The rabbis taught that babies were made out of
the water in the mother's uterus.
The water that pours out at
time of birth is the residue that is left over from the development process.
If Jesus had this kind of water in mind he
would be saying in verse 5, "To get into the kingdom of God you need to be born twice, once physically by your birth mother, and
98 the second time spiritually by the Holy Spirit." There are further arguments in favor of this interpretation. Until the time of John the Baptist only Gentile proselytes were baptized, Jews generally did not feel the need to be baptized, so one could question whether Nicodemus could possibly have understood Jesus to be talking about baptism.
In 2:6, also,
water represented the literalism and earthliness of the Judaism that Jesus sought to replace.
To understand the water of 3:5 to
be birth water, therefore, would continue the replacement theme begun in John 2. A further, and seemingly decisive argument arises from the consistent contrast between physical and spiritual in 3:3-7. Jesus speaks of being "born from above" (3, 7). about the womb (4).
Nicodemus talks
Jesus contrasts flesh and spirit (6), before
repeating the call to be born from above (7).
If the water of
verse 5 has to do with the water of physical birth it corresponds neatly to the emphasis on "flesh" in verse 6: +)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))), * Physical Spiritual * v.3 born from above * v.4 womb * v.5 water spirit * v.6 flesh spirit * v.7 born from above .))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))-
* * * * * *
But strong arguments can also be made for a reference to baptism.
Although baptism of Jews was a new thing, if Nicodemus
had been part of the delegation of Pharisees that questioned John the Baptist (1:24-28) he might easily have grasped that Jesus was saying, "You need to be baptized (whether by John or one of my
99 disciples [3:22, 23; 4:1, 2]) not only in water but also in the Spirit" (3:5).
Water and Spirit are closely related in Jesus'
teaching in 4:10-14, 23-24 and 7:37-39.
Cleansing in water and
by the spirit were also live concepts in the background of firstcentury Judaism (Ezek 36:25-27; 1 QS 3:6-9).
The cleansing of
Israel in water and spirit was to precede the coming of the Messiah (Ps Sol 18:5, 6).
And the concept of being "born from
above" is related to the baptism of John in 3:22-36.
So it is
consistent with the context to see in Jesus' statement a reference to baptism both by water and by Spirit. Which is to be preferred? context.
Both make sense in the original
Without further clarification from the author himself
it may be best to see Jesus' reference to water as a Johannine double-meaning, left deliberately ambiguous so as to engage the reader in deeper thought. In either case the startling concept that Jesus communicates to Nicodemus is that the kingdom of God is not entered by being born into a particular race or nation, it is a matter of personal decision.
To enter it one must make a spiritual commitment to a
new birth, a changed life (cf. White, Desire of Ages, 172).
The
change is not effected by human effort, however, it comes by the work of the Spirit which cannot be fully comprehended yet is real (3:8) Nicodemus asks how such a transformation can possibly take place (9).
Jesus replies that the answer to Nicodemus' question
will not be obtained by human means, even if a human could ascend
100 to heaven (11-13).
The answer will only come from One whose
essential nature belongs in heaven and has come down as the Son of Man to disclose the realities of heaven (13). In verses 14-15 that One answers Nicodemus' question (cf. White, Desire of Ages, 174, 175).
The key to the new birth is
the lifting up the Son of Man (cf. 7:39).
It is the cross that
makes the new birth possible, not human effort (cf. 1:12, 13). It is interesting that the Pharisees did not believe in a suffering and dying Messiah.
In 3:14, 15, therefore, Jesus tells
Nicodemus the one thing that Pharisees needed to know in order to enter the Kingdom of God. Jesus compares the cross to the serpent which Moses lifted up in the wilderness (14, 15, cf. Num 21:4-9). comparison.
It is an apt
In both cases the remedy was provided by God and
looked strikingly like the disease. conspicuously displayed.
In both cases the remedy was
In both cases it was by looking to the
remedy that the cure could be wrought.
In both cases the remedy
was a stumbling block to human reason.
And in both cases the
consequences of disobedience were the same.
The cross is a life
and death matter to human beings. It is difficult to know who is speaking in John 3:16-21, Jesus or the author of the Gospel. person up to 3:12.
Jesus speaks in the second
But beginning with verse 13 there is a shift
to the third person and the topic becomes more and more remote from the subject of Jesus' dialogue with Nicodemus.
Somewhere
between verses 13-17 there seems to be a shift from Jesus
101 speaking with Nicodemus to the author of the Gospel addressing the reader.
Since the style of John and the style of Jesus are
the same in this Gospel, it is not possible to detect exactly where the shift takes place, probably between verses 15 and 16. In John 3:16, possibly the best-loved verse in all the Bible, there is a special word translated "one and only" in the NIV and "only begotten" in the KJV (monogenê).
Many have felt
that the word implied that Jesus was "generated," born, or created at some point in the past.
If so, He would not be the
eternal bearer of life, unborrowed and underived (White, Evangelism, 704). It is interesting that in the Greek Bible the word monogenês is applied to only two people, Isaac and Jesus (cf. Gen 22:2, 12; Heb 11:17-19).
Isaac was not Abraham's "one and only son" in a
physical sense, Abraham had seven other sons (Gen 16:15, 16; 25:1, 2).
Isaac was distinguished not by physical descent from
Abraham, but because he was Abraham's "unique" son, he was the son of the promise (Gen 12:18).
Through him God intended to
bless all the nations (Gen 12:1-3).
So the Greek term monogenês
(literally "one of a kind") points to the unique role of Isaac and Jesus in God's plan to bless all the nations, it is not concerned with the issue of physical birth or generation from the Father. John 3:16 deserves to be beloved for it contains in a nutshell many of the major themes of the Gospel of John. highlights the love of God, a major theme of the farewell
It
102 discourse after the foot-washing (13:34; 14:21, 23; 16:27).
It
portrays that love as universal, God loved the world, not the planet but the whole world of human beings (see Brown, 1:508510).
God's love is not earned, it comes as a gift in the person
of His Son.
And to everyone who believes (faith is always a verb
in the Gospel of John, never a noun as in Paul's letters) in the Son comes the gift of eternal life, and the removal of condemnation (3:17). But while the gift is free it awaits response. even think of turning down such a free gift? most people would.
Why?
Who would
The reality is,
Because accepting the gift means coming
clean about all the dirty little realities of one's personal life.
Many people do not want their lives exposed to the Light
because they are afraid of what will be revealed (19, 20). Sinful human nature causes us to run from reality.
And the same
people who avoid the Light usually feel threatened when others around them come to the Light, because contact with believers brings further risk of exposure to the Light.
That is why the
impulse toward unbelief so readily results in persecution. How is it that Jesus did not come into the world to condemn the world (17) and yet his coming brings people into condemnation (18)?
Condemnation is not the purpose of Jesus' mission to the
world, His purpose is to save.
But since both salvation and
destruction are possible for human beings, and since faith in Jesus is the only way to salvation, the call of faith always brings judgment in its wake.
To refuse the gift of life is to
103 choose the judgment of death.
Judgment is not the purpose of
Jesus' mission but it is one of the results. The Major Themes of the Passage The Triune Godhead There seems to be a subtle Trinitarian emphasis in the narrative of the questioning disciple, Nicodemus. first of the work of the Holy Spirit (3-8).
Jesus speaks
Then he zeros in on
His own part in the plan of salvation, to come down to earth and be lifted up so that all who believe in Him might have eternal life (11-15).
Then the passage closes with a look at the role of
the Father, who gave His only Son to save the perishing and works on earth through the works of those who come to the Light (1621). Whosoever Believes It is a most intriguing point that faith is always a verb in the Gospel of John (usually translated "believe"), while it is always a noun in the letters of Paul (usually translated "faith").
Although the English words differ, there is no
difference in the meaning of the original (the word root pist), only in the way the words function in the sentence.
Verbs,
especially in the present tense in the Greek, tend to emphasize continuous action.
Faith as a verb is not static, it is not a
one-time thing, it is ongoing and continuous, it is action oriented.
As a verb, faith always has an object, you need to
have faith in something or someone.
In the Gospel of John,
104 believing is directed primarily to Jesus, the one who came down and was uplifted on the cross (1:12; 3:13-16; 7:39; 9:35-38; 14:1; 20:31).
In a secondary sense, believers are called to
believe in the Scriptures and in Jesus' words (2:22; 5:47). There are a number of related terms in the Gospel, "receive Him," "come to Him," follow Him," and "abide in Him."
Each of these
captures at least a portion of the nuances implied in the verb "to believe." This believing is a universal principle in the Gospel of John.
Whoever believes does not perish but has eternal life.
This universal principle is beautifully illustrated by the stories of John 3 and 4. Jew,
In Nicodemus, the wealthy and pious
In the poor and adulterous Samaritan woman, and in the
Gentile (possibly) nobleman of 4:46-54 we see the full spectrum of "whosoever."
No one is to be excluded from the gift of God in
Christ. APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2.
3.
There is a difference between uncontrolled rage and righteous indignation. When is it appropriate to be angry about things that are going on in the church? In the lives of family, co-workers, and friends? Is there spiritual danger in exercising righteous indignation? Does Jesus' example permit us to use violence at times against wrongdoing? How do you think Jesus would respond if he came upon a bank robbery in progress? A woman being raped? A racially-motivated riot? A rock concert or a bingo game in a church? If you compare your spiritual life with the rooms in a house, which room do you think Jesus would most like to clean up? Your reading room? Your dining room (what you eat)? Your recreation room? Your family room (your intimate relationships)? Your bedroom? Your workshop (your use of talents, etc.)? Would you welcome or resist such a clean-up at this time?
105 4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Originally the sellers in the temple were placed there as a service to help Jews from far away. How is it that useful practices deteriorate into rackets? Are there areas of your life and/or church that have deteriorated or need rethinking? Is your life and/or church cluttered with activities that have outlived their usefulness or even become harmful to spiritual life? To what degree is it possible for Christians today to have the kind of discernment of others' thoughts, motivations, and feelings that Jesus had? Can you think of any ways to develop our ability to recognize God's leadings and impressions in our lives? How can believers gain a clearer insight into the deceitfulness of their own hearts? Nicodemus' interest in Jesus was aroused by the cleansing of the temple episode. What was it that first aroused your interest in Jesus? Why did it arouse your interest? Have your interests changed? How has that affected your relationship with Jesus? Why are people so afraid to expose their lives to Jesus when there is so much to be gained? Are there areas of your life that you don't want anyone to know about? What are they? Have you ever tried to hide these defects from God? In what kind of setting are you willing to confess your sins to others and to God? How can the church help to create such settings?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
2.
Using the tools available in the SDA Bible Commentary and SDA Bible Dictionary, learn all you can about the temple, its construction, its history, and its architectural layout. Using a concordance, find all the Biblical descriptions of temple, tabernacle, sanctuary, etc. Write out everything that you learn which affects in some way your understanding of this passage. With a concordance look up all the words in the NT related to "faith" or "believing." Notice how these words function as nouns or as verbs in a sentence. Try to group these various usages into categories. Write out the further insights you gain about the importance of believing in the Gospel of John.
FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1. 2. 3.
For a detailed account of the conditions of life in and around Jerusalem in the time of Jesus, see Jeremias. For a detailed description of the temple in Jerusalem and its history see the SDA Bible Dictionary, 1069-1080. For more information on the life of Nicodemus see The Anchor
106 4. 5.
Bible Dictionary, 5:1104-1106. On the concept of "signs" in the Gospel of John see Schnackenburg, 1:515-528. See also White, Desire of Ages, 154-177.
CHAPTER 5 OUTSIDERS BECOME DISCIPLES JOHN 4:1-54 After His visit to Jerusalem Jesus spends some time by the Jordan near the place where John the Baptist was continuing his prophetic work (3:22-24).
The author of the Gospel takes
advantage of the situation to once more underline the humility of the Baptist and the consummate superiority of Jesus (25-30).
In
verses 31-36 the author comments that the Father gives a better testimony to Jesus than the Baptist, implying that the Baptist's work was no longer needed. When the Pharisees took too keen an interest in His work, Jesus decided to head off toward Galilee (4:1-3).
At noon He
stopped to rest by a well near the Samaritan town of Sychar (46).
The disciples left Him, presumably to find lunch in town
(27, 31).
Jesus' encounter with the woman at the well has been
told and retold through the centuries (7-30). After spending several days in Sychar, Jesus continued His journey on to Galilee.
The superficial faith of the Galileans
(43-45) is illustrated by the story of a father, a royal official, who has come a considerable way to seek healing for his son (46-54).
Jesus reads his inner life, confronts his unbelief, 107
108
sends him away a believer, and demonstrates that his ability to do great signs is not in any way limited by distance. A QUESTIONABLE DISCIPLE GETTING INTO THE WORD John 4:1-42 Please read 4:1-42 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
3.
4.
In the story of the woman at the well, she moves from totally ignoring a stranger to whole-hearted acceptance of the Messiah. Write out in your own words the substance of each of her responses to Jesus and try to describe how each response enlightens your understanding of her attitude toward Jesus at that stage of the interview. List everything you can find in the passage that helps you understand the theology, history and attitudes of the Samaritans, especially in relation to the Jews. What kind of picture did the woman have of the Messiah? Do you think Jesus agreed with her view of what the Messiah would be like? Why? Does 2 Kings 17 help you to understand the problems between the Jews and the Samaritans? The Samaritan view of the Messiah was largely based on Deut 18:15-18. What does that passage suggest the Samaritan Messiah would be like? Compare this story with the story of Nicodemus. One is about a man, the other is about a woman. One comes in the middle of the night, the other at hand noon. How many points of contrast between the two stories can you list on paper? What do you think is the author's purpose in highlighting these contrasts? Given the social barriers between Jews and Samaritans, what significance do you see in Jesus' treatment of the woman and in the fact that He was willing to stay in town for two whole days? Based on their reactions in the story, describe how you think the disciples felt about Jesus' behavior?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The narrative describes a woman whose understanding of Jesus
109 rapidly increases. ignores Him (7).
At first she see only a thirsty man and she Then she realizes that He is a Jew and she
instantly dislikes Him (8-10).
Then she figures out that He must
be a rabbi, so she begins to heckle Him (11, 12).
She then comes
to the conviction that He must be a prophet and she develops an appreciation for Him (19, 20).
She finally realizes that He is
the Messiah and she comes to adore Him (25-30, 42).
I have often
wondered if the path this woman took to Jesus isn't fairly typical of the path secular people today take in the process of finding Jesus. At what time of year did this event take place?
It is not
clear from the statement in 4:35 whether the fields around the well were ready for harvest or whether it was still four months from harvest.
Harvest time was May/June, four months previous
would be January.
If the time was January, it was ten months
after the Passover of John 2, and the unnamed feast of John 5 was another Passover.
More likely it was a couple of months after
the cleansing of the temple, and the feast of John 5 was one of the Fall feasts (Trumpets, Atonement, Tabernacles). The Background of the Passage Samaritan History and Theology The Samaritans had good arguments for the antiquity of their religion and its superiority to the Jewish faith.
Jacob's well
(4:5, 6) was about 250 feet from ancient Shechem, a town that lay in the valley between Mount Gerizim and Mount Ebal.
The town of
Shechem was the most important center of ancient Israelite
110 worship.
According to Gen 12:6 Shechem was the first place
Abraham went to when he entered the land that God was leading him to.
Shechem was the place that Jacob went to when he returned
from Mesopotamia to Palestine (Gen 33:18-20).
Israel's first
convocation for worship in Canaan after the Exodus took place on Mounts Gerizim and Ebal, on either side of the valley of Shechem (Deut 11:29-32; 27:1-13; Josh 8:30-35). "Mount of Blessing" (11:29; 27:12).
Mount Gerizim became the
The Samaritans were not
crazy to think that Mount Gerizim was a holy mountain.
Shechem
was also the place where the body of Joseph was buried after the Exodus (Josh 24:32). It is interesting to note that during the conquest of Canaan Joshua faced no opposition in the center of the country, the great battles were fought in the south and in the north (Josh 1011; 13:1-7).
In fact the convocation mentioned previously (Josh
8:30-35) was held in the center of the country at a time when Israel had conquered only two towns in the southeast, Jericho and Ai.
Archaeology has discovered in Shechem an altar earlier than
the Exodus inscribed to the "Baal of the Covenant" (Baal is another
way to say "Lord" in Hebrew-- which is related to
Canaanite).
It is, therefore, quite possible that Jacob left
many Yahweh worshippers behind him in the central part of Canaan when he moved with his family to Egypt (cf. Gen 34:24; 46:1-7). So it is abundantly clear from the sacred Jewish texts that the Samaritans' claim to the antiquity of their faith was correct, at least in part.
Jerusalem only became the center of
111 Israelite worship in the time of David, around 1000 BC.
At the
time when Jerusalem was made the location of the temple, Shechem had been the primary center of worship for the children of Abraham for nearly 1000 years.
If one reads the Samaritan
Pentateuch (the Samaritan version of the five books of Moses), the case becomes even more impressive.
The Samaritan Pentateuch,
for example, adds to Gen 12:6 that Shechem is "the land of Moriah, where Abraham sacrificed Isaac" (cf. Gen 22:2).
For
Samaritans, Abraham did not sacrifice Isaac on the site of the Jewish temple in Jerusalem, but on Mount Gerizim.
The Samaritan
Pentateuch also replaced the name Ebal with Gerizim in Deut 27:4, heightening the importance of the mountain which would later contain the Samaritan temple. The above tradition no doubt helped provide a basis for the ten northern tribes of Israel to reject worship at Jerusalem after the time of Solomon (1 Kings 12:25-30).
After all the
temple had only been in existence for about thirty years. Earlier is better. the north.
The truly ancient sites for worship were in
Why should they go down to Jerusalem?
The hybrid worship of northern Israel continued to the time of the Babylonian Exile.
Although many other peoples were mixed
in with the remnants of northern Israel, they too were trained in the ancient Hebrew faith (2 Kings 17:24-28).
The mixed faith of
the Samaritans (2 Kings 17:41) was also quite typical of the apostate worship in Judea before the Exile (2 Kings 21:1-15; 23:26, 27).
In fact, confused, idolatrous versions of Yahweh
112 worship were already quite common during the time of the Judges (Jdg 17-19). Many of the Judeans never went into Babylonian Exile. thousands who did go actually functioned as hostages.
The
Under the
ministry of people like Daniel, Ezekiel, and Ezra the exiles in Babylon reformed their faith and removed the idolatrous elements that had been so typical before the Exile.
When they returned to
Palestine, therefore, they treated the local people as foreigners because their religion did not reflect the reforms that had been instituted in Babylon.
The Samaritans were no doubt stunned by
this, since they felt that they reflected the true "faith of the fathers."
After more than a hundred years the Samaritans gave up
trying to work with the Jews and built their own temple on Mount Gerizim (around 330 BC). The resulting polarization was not helped when a Jewish leader (John Hyrcanus-- Koester, 248) destroyed the temple at the top of Mount Gerizim some two hundred years after it was built. As a result, the two groups of people generally refused to have anything to do with each other.
The hatred had become so great
that by the time of Jesus Jews felt that Samaritans defiled everything they touched.
It was a remarkable thing for a Jew
even to speak to a Samaritan.
Jesus entered into this prejudice-
filled atmosphere to make a statement about the universality of God's love to "whoever" (John 3:16) believes. The Samaritans were as enamored of Moses as the Jews, perhaps even more so.
But their theology of Moses is especially
113 interesting when viewed in the light of the Gospel of John.
The
Samaritans called Moses the Great Prophet, the one who was able to see God (and, therefore, reveal Him).
He was God's mediator
to Israel and an intercessor with God in their behalf. the lawgiver, and the "savior of Israel." Mount Sinai. Moses."
He was
He was transfigured on
The Samaritans had a saying, "Believe in God and in
They called him the Word and the Light.
They even
taught that Moses had somehow participated in the creation of the world.
And they also believed that he would return at the end as
the Messiah (Taheb in their terms).
The many parallels between
the faith of the Samaritans in Moses and the Jesus of the Gospel of John make it clear that the Gospel was carefully designed to appeal to Samaritans (among others, of course) to forsake their old ways and turn to Jesus as the true and ultimate revelation of God (see O'Brien, 89-100, 108-116). Encounters at Wells A further background to John 4 lies in the OT encounters at wells involving such prominent figures as Isaac, Jacob, and Moses.
In each story the leading character meets his future wife
at a well (Isaac in the person of his representative). case it is in a foreign land.
In each
In each case the woman leaves
after the encounter to rush home and tell her father. case the family comes out to greet the patriarch.
In each
And in each
case the woman comes to receive the man as her lord (Hebrew for both husband and master).
The parallels between these OT stories
and John 4 are, I think, too obvious to detail.
114 The Passage in Detail In John 4:4 it is said that Jesus "had to go" through Samaria.
This was certainly not a geographical necessity.
Although the shortest way to Galilee from Judea lay through Samaria, other routes were generally chosen by traveling Jews. In this case the necessity lay in the plan of God (cf. 3:14-- the Son of Man "must be lifted up").
His meeting with the woman at
the well was God-ordained. The time was about the sixth hour, noon.
This is the same
time of day as His later condemnation to the cross where He also expressed thirst (19:14, 28).
It was not the usual time for
fetching water at wells in Palestine.
Women preferred the cooler
hours after sunrise and before sunset.
The time may, therefore,
indicate that the woman was an outcast in her own town, because of her marital status (4:17, 18). The woman, therefore, had three strikes against her developing a relationship with Jesus right from the start.
She
was a woman in a public place, she was a member of a hated race, and she was living in sin. caught speaking to her.
No respectable Jewish man would be
But Jesus took the risk to reach across
all the barriers in order to provide for her the living water that He had come to give to whoever would be willing to believe. Ellen White notes that although the woman was in the personal presence of the Messiah, she saw no more than a thirsty traveler, wayworn and dusty (White, Desire of Ages, 184). Although part of the first generation of Christians, she gained
115 nothing special from her relationship with Jesus in the flesh. Her ignorance along with that of so many others who encounter Jesus in the Gospel encourages readers who have no such physical contact, and therefore struggle to believe.
Jesus' word is what
convinced the woman that He was the Messiah.
His word is as good
as His touch to the second generation as well. The encounter took place at a well.
Water is, of course,
most appreciated where it is most scarce, and it is relatively scarce in Palestine (4:7).
To speak of "living water" at Jacob's
well was most appropriate.
Living water is a way of speaking
about water that stays fresh because it is flowing.
In two
places in the OT water and the Spirit are clearly associated (Isa 44:3; Ezek 36:25, 26).
The rabbis often repeated this
association (Barclay 1:154), so it would be natural for readers of the Gospel to understand Jesus to be referring to the Spirit here, even though the word is not used. The reason people who received Jesus' living water would never thirst again is because they would carry the source of supply with them in the person of the Holy Spirit.
Through the
indwelling of the Holy Spirit Jesus provides the secret of enduring energy and satisfaction in this life (Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1033).
The one who has the Spirit is not subject to
the spiritual limitations of life as it was lived before.
He or
she has partaken of the waters of the age to come. Jesus uses her expression of interest in the living water (4:15) to confront her with the realities of her sordid life (16-
116 18).
This scene is a good illustration of themes we have
explored in the previous chapter of this book.
Jesus knows all
about her (2:23-25) and He exposes her evil deeds (3:20).
It is
His intimate knowledge of what is inside others that is often the most convincing witness of who He is (cf. 1:47-49, Talbert, Reading John, 114). For her this was the crucial moment of judgment (cf. 3:1821).
How would she respond?
Would she confess her sins and
receive Him, or would she retreat into the obscurity out of which she came?
She tried to buy time to think by changing the subject
(4:19, 20), but soon confessed and accepted Jesus (29, 42). According to the law, Jews were limited to three legitimate marriages in one lifetime.
She had married five plus!
This
story may reflect a subtle Jewish critique of Samaritan history and religion.
According to 2 Kings 17:24ff. the Samaritans
originated in five pagan cities, each with its own god.
They
left these cities and their gods to come to Palestine and worship Yahweh.
It could be said, therefore, that the Samaritans had had
five husbands (pagan gods) and the God that they now had (Yahweh) they were not truly married to! While John often speaks of "the Jews" in a derogatory sense in this Gospel, he is clearly not anti-Semitic.
His inclusion of
4:22 shows his appreciation of the fact that God had chosen the Jews to be the ones from whom the Messiah, Jesus, would come. Although God's plan would transcend the Jews, it was not to function without them playing a central role.
The Samaritans did
117 not know what they worshipped, because they had no revealed authority for their temple on Mount Gerizim, the Jews did have such authority for Jerusalem. John 4:23, 24 recalls the cleansing of the temple episode, Jesus has come to earth to restore the proper worship of God. The worship Jesus was talking about would not be limited to Jews and/or Samaritans, it would be universal. favors one people over another.
A localized temple
Worship in spirit is universal,
it is not tied to any geographical locality or any particular people.
The location of worship is not nearly as important as
the attitude of the worshipper in Jesus' new order.
It is not so
much where we worship that counts, but how we worship.
God is
present everywhere and can, therefore, be worshipped anywhere. The openness with which Jesus confesses his Messiahship to the woman is breathtakingly unique to all four gospels. Apparently the Samaritan community is a place where Jesus is comfortable to reveal Himself openly. military and political Messiah. suffering and dying Messiah.
The Jews expected a
They denied the concept of a
For Jesus to assert Himself as
Messiah among the Jews could only result in massive and total misunderstanding. The Samaritans, on the other hand, knew something right about the Messiah.
Since the Samaritans acknowledged only the
five books of Moses as Scripture, their main text for the Messiah was Deut 18:15-18, he would be a prophet like Moses.
From this
they drew that the Messiah would be a reformer who would teach
118 them a better way of worship.
Jesus reinforced the Samaritan's
correct picture of the Messiah by revealing Himself openly to them in a way that He never did among the Jews (4:23-25). The lesson for Seventh-day Adventist readers is quite pointed.
A people may have a corner on revelation (Ellen White)
and know exactly what they are about, yet may miss out on God's next great revelation because the way they adhere to past revelation makes them less open to the new work that God wants to do in changing times (cf. 5:39, 40).
People who have an
abundance of revelation seem to find it easy to pick and choose what they want to follow, whether intentionally or not.
People
with little revelation may at times be more focused in the simplicity of their understanding. The woman goes back to town to share the news about Jesus while the disciples question His openness to speak with her (4:27-38).
Jesus makes them aware for the first time that the
harvest has come, and that the harvest field is not to be limited to Jews, but even now a great harvest of Samaritans is on its way out of town (4:35-39, cf. 10:16; 12:20-22).
Jesus graciously
consents to their request that He stay in the town of "Drunkenness" (the meaning of Sychar) for two days! critics must have joked about that!
How Jesus'
But how precious is the
lesson of God's care for the despised and the outcast! Samaritans are not like the Jews of Jerusalem.
These
Like Nicodemus,
they come to Jesus to see for themselves, but unlike Nicodemus, they need no signs, they are happy to believe because of His
119 words alone (4:41, 42). The Major Themes of the Passage Surface Themes There are three key themes that lie on the surface of this charming story.
The first is the theme of living water, which is
to be developed further in 7:37-39.
The personal infilling of
the Holy Spirit leads to the experience pointed to by the second theme, the true worship of God.
The third theme of the story is
that mission is now being opened to those outside of normative Judaism.
No longer is ethnicity and geography a barrier to
communion with God.
By means of the Holy Spirit's universal
presence, the mission of God is now a universal one, as had been originally promised to Abraham (Gen 12:1-3). Whosoever Will May Come This universal theme was first hinted at in the "whosoever believes" of John 3:16.
The striking contrasts between the
Samaritan woman and Nicodemus underline the theme. contrasted, of course, as a man and a woman. Jew, she was a despised Samaritan.
They are
Further, he was a
He was rich (19:39), she was
poor (or she wouldn't be fetching her own water).
He was highly
educated ("the" teacher of Israel), she was illiterate (a woman in first-century Palestine!). an adulteress.
He was pious, a Pharisee, she was
He was highly respected, she was despised, even
by her own Samaritan neighbors. left anonymous.
He had a great name, she was
He lived in the holy city, Jerusalem, she lived
120 in the town of "Drunkenness." Yet in spite of her disadvantages and shortcomings the Samaritan woman was much quicker to understand and believe. Nicodemus came to Jesus in the middle of the night, she came to Jesus at high noon.
In Nicodemus and the Samaritan woman we see
the opposite extremes of "whoever," no matter who you are, no matter what you have done; no matter where you have been or how you have been treated, Jesus' arms are open to you if you are willing to come.
In the gospel there is no more male or female,
no more slave or free, no more Jew or Gentile, no more black or white (Gal 3:28, 29; Eph 2:11-22).
How can anyone claim to
understand the gospel and fail to grasp its glorious lack of prejudice toward people of any heritage and background?
If Jesus
were physically present today would He be found in our schools and churches, or would He be found in the bars, the prisons, and the hospices, among the oppressed and those with AIDS?
I'm not
sure I want to know the answer. Acted Parables Although the Gospel of John is essentially devoid of parables, its author uses the stories of the Gospel as acted parables of deeper truths.
The characters, therefore, often
become representatives of larger communities.
The Baptist
represents his movement which ought to decline in the face of the greater mission of Jesus.
Nicodemus represents the Pharisees at
their best, very earnest, very learned, yet lacking in what is most needed.
The Samaritan woman, on the other hand, does not so
121 much represent her fellow Samaritans as she does all those who have true belief in Jesus.
Like Nathaniel and the blind man of
John 9 she is a true Israelite (1:47). Cross Connections This whole section of the Gospel (John 2-4), is filled with a number of parallels to the experience of Jesus on the cross. We have noticed a number of connections to the cross in the story of the wedding at Cana (2:1-11).
Then Jesus speaks of destroying
the temple of His body and raising it up in three days (2:19-21). In the story of Nicodemus, He foretells His own "lifting up" (3:14, 15).
Now in the story of the woman at the well, Jesus
expresses thirst at the sixth hour of the day (4:6, 7, cf. 19:14, 28).
After that he stays with the Samaritans until the third
day, the same amount of time He spent in the tomb (19:42; 20:1). The author of the Gospel has not left the story of the cross for the end.
All along he is making the reader thirsty for the water
that can only be found as one approaches the foot of the cross.
A HALF-HEARTED DISCIPLE GETTING INTO THE WORD John 4:43-54 Please read 4:43-54 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
What is it that motivates the people in Galilee to welcome Jesus back? How does their attitude compare to that of the Samaritans in this chapter and the Jews of Jerusalem in John 2:23-25? How do you explain the contrast between the way Jesus is
122 3.
welcomed by the people and His comments in verses 44 and 48? What does the miraculous sign of 4:46-54 teach us about Jesus? Write out your answer in a paragraph or two.
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The narrative of the royal official whose son is sick completes the cycle that began with the wedding at Cana. again Jesus performs a great sign in Cana (4:46, 54).
Once
In the
parallels to this story (Matt 8:5-13 and Luke 7:1-10) the man who comes to Jesus is a Gentile, but the differences between the accounts in Matthew and Luke and that of John are so great that there may be two completely different incidents behind these accounts (cf. White, Desire of Ages, 196-200, 315-320). The official in this account is probably in the service of Herod.
If he is a Gentile (but see White, Desire of Ages, 196)
the story also completes the "whosoever cycle" that can be seen so strikingly when you compare and contrast the interviews with Nicodemus and the Samaritan woman.
A Pharisee (3:1-21), a
Samaritan (4:7-42), and a Gentile (4:46-54) all come to Jesus. But although this story is clearly tied to the wedding of Cana and the cycle of events that begins there, there is also a "duodirectional" relationship with the next chapter, which begins the section I have entitled "Jesus Gives Life to Those Who Believe" (John 5-12).
In this story, as in the story of the
paralytic at the pool (5:1-15), Jesus gives life to one who was as good as dead.
123 The Passage in Detail John 4:43-45 is a strange passage.
Jesus approaches Galilee
mindful of the fact that a prophet has no honor in His own country (44). Him (45).
Yet the response of the Galileans is to welcome
The solution to the dilemma lies in the reference to
what Jesus had done in Jerusalem at the Passover Feast (45). Evidently these Galileans were just like the Judeans who had developed a superficial faith based on signs.
The point of
Jesus' comment in verse 44 is that enthusiasm for Him that is based on miracles only is no honor.
The only true worship is
that based on spirit and truth. A royal official comes from Capernaum to see Jesus in Cana, a distance of some sixteen miles.
He desires that Jesus would
heal his son (in Matthew and Luke, the sick one is a servant to the centurion rather than a son).
Jesus confronts him rather
roughly, "Unless you people see miraculous signs and wonders, you will never believe" (48). of 4:44, 45.
This comment confirms the impression
Jesus sees in the Galileans a people who are awed
by miracles and spectacular works, but they are slow to believe in His words.
As with Nicodemus, Jesus knew that to break people
out of patterns of denial sometimes requires straight talk. The official realizes that his mission is in trouble and begs Jesus once more to hurry down to Capernaum before his son dies (49). go.
All the man receives from Jesus is the word, "You may
Your son will live."
No other assurance or action is given.
Will the man's faith rise up to grasp the naked word, or will he
124 demand physical evidence before he will believe? This interchange offers a foretaste of Jesus' encounter with Thomas toward the end of the Gospel (20:29).
While the intent of
signs is to build faith, a faith that is nourished only by signs is not the blessed faith that Jesus' has come to encourage.
The
very awesomeness of the miraculous act can blind the eye of faith to the revelation of who Jesus is that is contained in the miracle.
True Christian faith is based primarily on the words of
Jesus. The man takes Jesus at His word. believe.
He has come to truly
His belief is evidenced in the way he went home after
the encounter with Jesus.
He met Jesus at the seventh hour-- one
o'clock in the afternoon (4:52, 53).
If he had moved in haste he
could have arrived back in Capernaum that night (White, Desire of Ages, 199).
Instead he takes the scenic route.
flowers and stops to talk. Jesus.
He smells the
He has become a man of faith in
The family sends servants out to look for him (51).
It
is on the next day that he finds out that his son was healed at the exact moment in which Jesus' spoke the word.
The miracle of
Jesus blends with the word of Jesus to confirm the faith of that father, and result in the entire household coming to faith in Jesus. The Major Themes of the Passage This story reinforces the basic purpose of the Gospel of John, a double message to the second generation of Christians around the time of the death of the beloved disciple (see
125 Introduction).
The first message to the second generation pf
Christians is that Jesus is as capable at a distance as He would be if He were physically present.
The second generation is not
at a disadvantage over against those who knew and walked with Jesus. The second message to the second generation is that it is the word of Jesus that is the source of power.
It is by studying
the words of the Gospel of John that people gain all the blessings that Jesus would pour out upon them.
The written word
is as powerful as the physcial presence of Jesus.
His word is as
good as His touch. The official's behavior in the story provides an excellent illustration of how to deal with everyday problems. acknowledge that you have a problem. difficult part for some people. Jesus. met.
First,
That can be the most
Second, take the problem to
Third, receive from Him the word that your need has been How does one do that when Jesus is not physically present?
By study of His word in the Scriptures. His touch.
If you know His word you have the best key to solve
the problems of life. receive in the Word. people.
His word is as good as
Fourth, speak and act the answer you That is the most difficult part for many
When you have asked for something that He has clearly
promised to those who believe, it is time to live and act on the assumption that He will come through as He has promised.
It
isn't enough to say that Jesus can take care of the problems of life, we need to act as if He can.
126 APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2.
3.
4.
What social, ethnic, sexual, and religious barriers do you find it difficult to overcome in your relationships with other people? Based on this story, how do you think Jesus would relate to each of these types of people? Jesus' encounter with the woman was not an accident, but was in response to the plan of God for Jesus' life. Do you think that your first encounter with Jesus was accidental or was it clearly part of God's plan? Review the evidence that supports your conviction. Jesus patiently endured the woman's repeated attempts to change the subject and avoid the confrontation which He had initiated. How important is it to give people time to process a challenge to accept Christ or a teaching of the Bible? Can you think of times when you needed extra time to think things through before making a decision? How does one know when to push, as Jesus did with Nicodemus, and when to back off, as Jesus often did with the woman at the well? When you bring problems to God do you tend to leave them in His care or do you allow yourself to continue worrying and complaining about them? Can you think of times when you trusted God and He did exactly what the Scriptures promised?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
Compare John 4:46-54 with the parallels in Matt 8:5-13 and Luke 7:1-10. List the major differences between the accounts. Do you think that the three stories contain different versions of the same event? Or is the story in John based on an entirely different event? Explain your answer.
FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1. 2. 3.
For more information on the Samaritans see SDA Bible Dictionary, 948-950; The Anchor Bible Dictionary, 5:940-947. For more background on Jewish and Samaritan concepts of the Messiah, see O'Brien; The Anchor Bible Dictionary, 4:777788. See also White, Desire of Ages, 183-200.
CHAPTER 6 LIFE TO THE PARALYZED JOHN 5:1-47 Virtually anyone who has had significant contact with Christianity has heard of the wedding at Cana, the night visit with Nicodemus, the woman at the well, and the raising of Lazarus from the dead.
Nearly as well known is the story of the
paralyzed man by the Pool of Bethesda.
Jesus heals a man sick
for 38 years on the Sabbath day, incurring the wrath of the ruling council of the Jews.
When called into question, He gives
a lengthy and stirring defense of His right to give life on the Sabbath day. GETTING INTO THE WORD John 5:1-47 Please read 5:1-47 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
3.
What verse in the Bethesda story gives us a picture of how the man became sick in the first place? Compare this story with the other "healings" in the Gospel (4:46-54; 9:1-38; 11:1-44). Write out what you learn about the causes of sickness and death. How did the Jews respond to the healing? What specific charges to they bring against Him? Why do you think that Jesus deliberately provoked them by doing this miracle on the Sabbath day instead of some other day? Describe the various ways that Jesus is equal with His Father, according to this chapter. List the terms that are 127
128
4.
5.
used to describe the kind of relationship He and the Father have, and the actions that they carry out in common. Which of these terms are used also in the Prologue to the Gospel (1:1-18)? If you are studying this book as part of a group have someone in the group put themselves in Jesus' place and read 5:24-30 pompously as though the words of the passage were asserting things about him or her personally. How does such a reading make you feel about that person? Does the reading help you better understand why the Jews reacted so violently against Jesus? Make a list of everything and everyone who offers a testimony in favor of Jesus in this chapter. Which of these witnesses does Jesus seem to consider the most important? Why do you think so?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage This narrative comes at the beginning of a new section of the Gospel of John, which continues through chapter 12.
The main
emphasis of the whole section is on the fact that Jesus is the life-giving Word of God.
A secondary emphasis is on the
replacement of Jewish feasts.
The Passover is replaced by the
Bread of Life which comes down out of heaven (John 6).
Jesus
replaces the water and light of the Feast of Tabernacles (John 79).
The feast that celebrates the dedication of the temple is
replaced by His consecration from the Father (10:22-39).
In
essence, Jesus, the Life-Giver, replaces all other sources of life, being the only one that truly meets our need (10:10). John 5 divides easily into three parts.
The first part (1-
18) contains the story of the healing by the Pool of Bethesda (19), the reaction to the healing by the Jews (9-18) and Jesus' brief response (17).
The last two parts of the chapter (19-30;
129 31-47) are written up as a monologue of Jesus in response to the charges of the Jewish authorities.
In the second part of the
chapter (19-30) Jesus asserts the prerogatives of the godhead. He is equal with God (23, cf. 17, 18), He is able to give eternal life (21, 24), He is the source of life (26), and He is the Author of judgment (22, 27, 30).
The Jews were not satisfied
with Jesus' witness to Himself so in the last part of the chapter (31-47) Jesus recites a list of other witnesses who support Him in His assertions, John the Baptist (33-35), His works (36), the Father (37, 38), the Scriptures (39, 40), and Moses (45-47). The Background of the Passage The feast mentioned in 5:1 is not named.
If the encounter
with the Samaritans took place at the time of wheat harvest (May/June), and Jesus then spent some time in Galilee, it is likely that this feast is one of the fall feasts (Trumpets, Atonement, and Tabernacles).
One of the peculiarities of the
Gospel of John is that whenever a feast is mentioned, the major characteristics of Jesus described in the narrative tend to correspond to the major characteristics of the feast.
For
example, whenever Passover is mentioned, it is in the context of the cross and/or the Lord's Supper (implicit in the case of the latter-- 2:13, 19-21; 6:4, 11, 51-58; 13:1-17; 18:1 - 19:42). Jesus also applies the major themes of the Feast of Tabernacles, water and light, to Himself (7:37-39; 8:12; 9:5).
It is likely,
therefore, that if we can determine the main characteristics that Jesus claims for Himself in chapter 5 we can determine which of
130 the Jewish feasts fits the mold. The main themes of chapter 5 seem to be life-giving creation (17, 21, 24-26, 28-29) and judgment (22, 24, 27, 29-30-- verses 31-47 concern "testimony" which is legal terminology).
Creation
and judgment were the main themes of the Feast of Trumpets, on the first day of the seventh Jewish month, the Jewish New Year's Day.
So it is likely that the feast of John 5 is the Feast of
Trumpets, a time of solemn preparation for the ultimate day of judgment on the tenth day of the month, the Day of Atonement.
The Pool of Bethesda has recently been unearthed by the archaeologists of Jerusalem. complex.
It lay just north of the temple
It was laid out in an uneven rectangle (trapezoid) 165-
220 feet wide and 315 feet long, hewn entirely out of rock (cf. Talbert, Reading John, 121).
The pool was surrounded by
colonnades on all four sides, and was divided into two parts by a colonnade in the center, confirming the Biblical record that the pool had five colonnades (John 5:2).
The pool was fed below
ground by an intermittent stream which may explain the troubling of the waters from time to time.
It probably attracted a wide
mixture of people, all hoping to be healed of their ailments. The Passage in Detail There is disagreement among the early manuscripts of the Gospel of John on a couple of major points in story of the Pool of Bethesda.
First of all, the name of the pool is uncertain
(see Brown, 1:206-207; Beasley-Murray, John, 70).
The most
131 common name among the earliest manuscripts is Bethsaida, but that probably resulted from confusion with the Galilean city of the same name (1:44).
The other two options are clearly attempts to
render difficult Hebrew or Aramaic names in Greek.
Scholars lean
toward Bethesda (House of Mercy) which may be John's choice because of the symbolic meaning; Jesus shows mercy to the man who sought for it in the "House of Mercy."
The name would then be
supportive of the replacement theme that is so prominent in this Gospel.
Jesus replaces the Jewish House of Mercy with Himself.
Jesus showed mercy where it was supposed to have been.
What the
man sought in Judaism he found in Jesus. The second disagreement in the manuscripts has to do with verse 4 in the KJV, which is not found at all in the earliest centuries of the manuscript tradition.
The verse is rendered in
the margin of the NIV as "From time to time an angel of the Lord would come down and stir up the waters.
The first one into the
pool after each such disturbance would be cured of whatever disease he had."
While this verse may reflect a popular
tradition about the pool, its theology is most disturbing.
It
portrays an arbitrary God who rewards the strong and penalizes the weak, who heals at random.
I find it most interesting,
therefore, that Ellen White expresses doubt about the verse even though her Bible did not (White, Desire of Ages, 201). The man had been an invalid for 38 years, nearly a lifetime in those days (5:5). help to him.
The great center of healing had been no
He had been totally abandoned (7).
The system had
132 nothing more to offer him, yet he clung to it for lack of other options.
In fact, Jesus seems to have specifically selected him
because he was the most pitiful of all the cases available.
This
story is an acted parable illustrating the truth of verse 21, that Jesus can give life to anyone He wishes to, there are no limits to His life-giving power. The healing, of course, took place on a Sabbath (10), and intentionally so on the part of Jesus, which comes as no surprise to anyone familiar the Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
It seems that
whenever Jesus takes the initiative in healing someone, the healing comes on the Sabbath (cf. 9:1-7, 14; Matt 12:9-14; Mark 1:21-28; 3:1-6; Luke 6:6-11; 13:10-17; 14:1-6).
Jesus availed
Himself of every opportunity to do good, particularly on the Sabbath. The confrontation with the Jews indicates that the healed invalid was pretty dense mentally (5:10-15).
Although it was
obvious that the Jews had hostile intent toward Jesus, the man still reported back to them when he found out who it was had healed him!
This kind of denseness, however, is par for the
course in the Gospel of John.
The head caterer at the wedding
feast "didn't know" where the good wine had come from.
The Jews
at the temple misunderstood the intent of Jesus' statement on destroying the temple and raising it up in three days. didn't know how someone could be born again. know" who it was who had healed him.
Nicodemus
Now the man "didn't
The message that comes
through repeatedly is that human knowledge apart from Christ is
133 truly ignorance.
By contrast, Jesus once again proves that He
knows what is inside others, He warns the man not to continue in the sin that caused his affliction in the first place (14). In response to the complaints of the Jews regarding His supposed violation of the Sabbath, Jesus argues that He is simply acting the same way His Father acts (17).
Like God Jesus is
working for the benefit of humanity on the Sabbath day. According to Jewish writers of the time, God's works on the Sabbath day can be detected in births, deaths, sunshine, rain and the continued flowing of rivers (Barclay, 1:183).
Jesus is
simply claiming the same privileges on the Sabbath that God has. Both He and His Father are active in doing good on the Sabbath day (Talbert, Reading John, 123, 124).
The Jews understand by
His comments that he is claiming equality with God (18).
The
issue of Jesus' relationship with God is dealt with in depth in 19-48.
Jesus elaborates on the Sabbath question in 7:19-24.
He
further elaborates on His relationship with God in 8:12-30 and 10:25-39. The incident at the pool provokes the first demonstration of open and active hostility against Jesus on the part of "the Jews."
Here the hostility is manifested in debate.
they attempt to arrest Him. they can kill Him.
In John 7
In John 11 they begin to plot how
The two reasons given for their hostility in
verses 16, 18 are the nature of Jesus' activities on the Sabbath day, and His claims about His relationship with God. staggering claims they are (19-30)!
And truly
134 Verses 19 and 30 are very similar and act as an envelope marking off this section from what precedes and what follows. Jesus demonstrates that He is doing the same work as His Father, the work of giving life (20-21, 26, 28-29) and the work of judging (22, 27, 30).
By doing what His Father says on this
earth He not only shows what the Father is like, He demonstrates the truth of His own claim to divinity (19-23).
He does not
leave anyone the option of believing in the Father while ignoring His claims about Himself (23).
The Father Himself will accept no
honor that is not also accorded to His Son.
No one comes to the
Father except through Jesus (14:6-9). There are a number of incredible statements in verse 24.
It
asserts that while the final judgment of earth's history may come "at the last day" (12:47, 48), the verdict of that judgment has already passed on those who hear Jesus' words and believe in the One who sent Him.
It is now possible for people to pass over
from death to life, to become aware of the verdict of the final judgment and to enter into the experience of eternal life.
Both
eternal life and judgment have entered into the present tense in the preaching of Jesus!
In fact, verse 25 goes so far as to
describe this coming to life as a resurrection of those who are essentially dead spiritually.
People who are sick and depressed,
whose condition of life is poor, who do not have a living relationship with God are spiritually dead.
In His ministry
Jesus raised just such individuals to the experience of a life more abundant than they could ever have imagined (10:10).
135 In verses 28-30 the exercise of Jesus' powers of judgment and giving life move from the present tense ("has now come") to the future ("a time is coming").
The day will come when those
who are physically dead in their graves will hear His voice, and they will come out to the total experience of eternal life, including the physical.
Not only can Jesus resurrect those who
live with a very poor existence, He can resurrect those who have no existence at all.
His powers of life giving and judgment are
now exercised through the preaching of the gospel.
But the day
will come when His voice will penetrate the graves of all who have ever lived, including both the evil and the good (29).
The
assurance here is that if the literally and physically dead answer when Jesus calls, how much more will the spiritually dead respond in newness of life to the gospel!
"He who opens his
heart to the Spirit of Christ becomes a partaker of that mighty power which shall bring forth his body from the grave" (White, Desire of Ages, 210). The notion that there will be a universal resurrection of the dead, including both good and evil, is a remarkable one. Jesus in John 5:29 clearly alludes to the apocalyptic prophecy of Dan 12:2 where such a universal resurrection hope is first articulated.
Paul affirms before the Roman Governor Felix (Acts
24:15) that the concept of universal resurrection is part of normative Judaism.
It is clear that those who believe in Jesus
will one day be raised to experience eternal life.
But those who
have rejected Him will also be raised from the dead to face the
136 sentence of God and to acknowledge that His sentence is just (Phil 2:9-11). There is a serious warning in this statement.
Many believe
that they can ignore the claims of God in this life, live well while on this earth, and eventually retire into the silence of a final resting place.
But Jesus does not permit unbelievers to
think that death is the end of it all.
Beyond death lies the
judgment where an account must be given for all the deeds that have been done in this life, with an appropriate reward to be meted out (cf. 2 Cor 5:10; Rev 11:18; 20:7-15; 22:12).
Sinners
arise "from death to death" (Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1037). The inevitability of judgment is both good news and bad news.
It is bad news for those who wish to trifle with the
claims of Christ, and who wish to behave as they please without ever having to give account for their actions. is also good news. action of life.
But the judgment
It indicates that there is meaning in every
Nothing is overlooked.
The little kindnesses,
the forgotten deeds of mercy are all recorded in eternity as significant, they are not forgotten in the ultimate scheme of things.
Even a cup of cold water given to a child receives a
corresponding sentence of reward in the judgment (cf. Matt 10:42).
The message of the judgment is "You matter to God, and
everything you do matters to God, your life is meaningful and significant."
This message is one of the most effective of all
in helping secular people to see that becoming a Christian is worthwhile.
137 But although Jesus' words in 5:19-30 are powerful and eloquent they would ring false in the mouth of every other human being who ever lived.
So it is not surprising that the Jews
questioned Jesus' testimony about Himself.
Jesus acknowledges
that uncorroborated testimony about oneself is inadequate (31). One of the fundamental principles of Judaism is that truth can only be established in the mouths of at least two witnesses (Deut 19:15, cf. Rev 11:3-13).
So Jesus adds to His own testimony the
testimony of John the Baptist, His works, His Father, and the Scriptures, doubling the minimum testimony needed to establish truthfulness within Judaism (John 5:31-40). In what sense could Jesus legitimately say that the Jews had the witness of the Father?
He probably had in mind the unseen
witness of God in the human heart (cf. 1 John 5:9, 10).
When
confronted with Jesus human beings have a strong sense of inner conviction that the claims of Jesus are true.
Unless this
conviction is resisted, because following Jesus would cause loss of status (John 12:42, 43) or require the surrender of cherished sins (3:18-21), it leads to confession.
Jesus implies here that
the Jewish leaders were resisting what they knew in their hearts was the witness of the Father (cf. 7:17). When the Jews resist the testimony of Jesus' witnesses (43, 44, cf. 8:13-14), He calls forth the ultimate witness within Judaism, Moses.
Moses had served as an intercessor with God in
behalf of Israel (Exod 32:7-14).
But in the mouth of Jesus,
Moses is transformed into a judge (45-47).
The words of Moses
138 will condemn those who reject Jesus, because Moses wrote about Jesus and prepared the way for Him.
Jesus closes with the
parting shot, "Since you do not believe what (Moses) wrote, how are you going to believe what I say?" With this encounter the battle is joined between Jesus and "the Jews," a battle which continues in the Gospel until Jesus is arrested, suffers, and dies on the cross.
In the hostility of
these Jews John sees the hostility of all who reject the gospel. The Major Themes of the Passage Replacement Theme We have noticed repeatedly that one of the major themes in the Gospel of John is the theme of replacement. been no exception.
This chapter has
In Jesus, the life-giving judge we have seen
the ultimate replacement for the Feast of Trumpets.
All that the
Feast promised those who attended is now available in Christ through the words which are recorded in the Fourth Gospel. The healing at the pool also seems to be a part of the replacement theme.
A major institution in Jerusalem fails in its
purpose to provide mercy and healing.
But while the waters of
Judaism could not heal, in fact were helpless in the face of a life-long invalid, Jesus heals.
All that the Pool of Bethesda
promised to the man is provided in Christ and only in Christ. The irony of this situation is heightened even more if we suppose that the original readers might have seen a connection between the 38 years that the man was paralyzed and the 38 years that Israel wandered in the wilderness (Exod 16:35, cf. Num 14:33-35--
139 40 years total time in the wilderness minus the time spent at Sinai at the beginning of the journey and the preparation for the conquest at the end of the journey from Egypt to Canaan). The Eschatology of John The Gospel of John seems to have little interest in the future end of the world, instead it asserts that what others view as a future reality has become a present reality in the work of Christ.
This present, or realized eschatology only becomes
evident in the light of the Gospel's background so a brief discussion of that background is necessary here. Throughout the OT it was recognized that present existence was a falling away from an ideal existence back in the Garden of Eden.
The hope that such an ideal existence would one day be
restored is expressed in a number of different ways in the OT, but it is always seen as future.
In that future restoration of
God's kingdom, there would be eternal life (Dan 12:2), final judgment (Dan 7:9-14), resurrection from the dead (Isa 26:19; Dan 12:2), intimate communion with God (Jer 31:33), the full knowledge and understanding of God (Jer 31:34), and the outpouring of the Spirit upon all flesh (Joel 2:28, 29).
With
the close of the OT the hope of restoration continued in the apocalyptic writings of Judaism up to and beyond the firstcentury of the Christian era. But in the NT, there comes a change.
The conviction is
expressed that in Christ the future has in some sense become a present reality.
The things which, in OT and later Jewish
140 expectation, were confined to the future had become current realities in the person of Christ.
In Christ life, judgment,
resurrection, communion with and knowledge of God, and the experience of the Holy Spirit had become living realities of Christian faith.
But the present eschatology of the NT never
resulted in a denial of the future, it was like a down payment on even greater things that were yet to come (cf. Eph 1:14). In Matthew, Mark, and Luke both the present and the future kingdom of God are central in the teachings of Jesus.
The book
of Revelation, on the other hand, puts its primary emphasis on the future kingdom to be established at the return of Christ.
It
is in the Gospel of John that the present realities of Christian eschatology find an almost exclusive emphasis.
And nowhere is
this present eschatology more thoroughly expressed than in John 5:24, 25.
In the Fourth Gospel eternal life is a present reality
for those who believe in Jesus (1:4, 5; 5:24, 25).
This is true
also of the final judgment, which becomes real in the person of Jesus and in the preaching of the gospel (3:18-21; 5:24, 25). Resurrection also becomes a present reality in the words of Jesus (5:24, 25), powerfully illustrated in the raising of Lazarus from the dead (11:1-44).
Not only is full communion with God restored
in Christ (14:21-23), but as the Logos come down (1:1-5, 14) He offers the full knowledge of God that was promised at the end (1:18; 14:9).
And when Jesus would be lifted up, the fullness of
the Holy Spirit would be poured out on those who believe in Jesus (7:39).
141 In the Gospel of John, therefore, the language of end-time expectation is repeatedly used to describe the realities of God's kingdom which were brought in through Christ.
To quote Raymond
Brown (1:cxvii), "If one points to OT passages that seem to imply a coming of God in glory, the Prologue answers (1:14), 'We have seen his glory.'
If one asks where is the judgment that marks
God's final intervention, John iii 19 answers, 'Now the judgment is this: the light has come into the world.'"
The future
expectation of Judaism has become a present reality in Christ. This is not to say, as some scholars have asserted, that John knows nothing of a future eschatology.
In John 5:28, 29 he
speaks directly of future resurrection and judgment.
In John
14:1-3 Jesus speaks about his future return to His disciples after a sojourn in heaven.
And in a number of places he uses the
phrase "at the last day" as a clear reference to realities that are still future from the Christian perspective (John 6:39, 40, 44, 54; 12:48).
So while John is quite comfortable with both the
now and the not yet of NT eschatology, he has chosen in the Gospel to place the primary emphasis on present or realized eschatology in Christ and the gospel. The Judgment is Now Seventh-day Adventists tend to think of the final judgment as an exclusively end-time event, but in the Gospel of John the judgment is far broader than that, it comes in three distinct phases.
Judgment takes place at the cross (12:31, 32) and in the
preaching of the gospel (3:18-21; 5:24, 25) as well as at the end
142 (5:27-30; 12:48). "Now is the time for the judgment of this world," Jesus declares (12:31).
He is referring to a judgment related to His
lifting up on the cross (32).
That judgment at the cross would
accomplish at least two things, the "driving out" of the "prince of this world" Satan-- verse 31), and the drawing of "all men" to Jesus (32). The teachings of Paul offer further information about this judgment at the cross.
In Rom 8:3 Paul says that at the cross
God condemned sin in sinful man by sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful man in order for Him to be a sin offering. And in Acts 13:32, 33, Paul asserts that all the promises that God made to "our fathers" were fulfilled to the human race when God raised Jesus from the dead.
By combining what we learn from
these texts it is possible to gain a fairly clear picture of what judgment at the cross was all about. At the cross God judged the entire human race in the person of Christ.
He came in "the likeness of sinful man" (Rom 8:3).
At the cross all the sins of the world were piled up inside the body of Jesus (1 Pet 2:24). was called into session.
As Christ hung on the cross judgment
As God looked down on Jesus He saw the
entire human race hanging there in the person of its Creator, full of sin in all its heinous character.
At the cross God
poured out His judgment on human sin in the person of His Son. Every sin that had ever been committed or ever could be committed was fully and finally condemned in the person of Christ.
The
143 human race was judged guilty and condemned to death in the death of Christ (Rom 8:3).
At the cross Satan lost his claim to the
human race on account of human sin (John 12:31). that sin in the person of His Son.
God dealt with
The judgment then adjourned
for about 36 hours, having finished the first part of its work. The judgment was reconvened on the morning of the first day of the week.
God looked down on Jesus once more.
He saw there
perfect humanity, like a lamb without fault or blemish.
The One
who "knew no sin" (2 Cor 5:21), who could not be proven guilty of sin (John 8:46) again represented the whole human race in His person.
As God looked down on sinless humanity, He judged it
worthy of life and an eternity in His presence. that judgment and raised Jesus from the dead.
He then acted on In so doing He
pronounced blessing on the whole human race (Acts 13:32, 33). All the promises of God were now activated for every human being who is in relationship with Jesus (2 Cor 1:20).
While sinful
humanity was condemned at the cross in Christ, sinless humanity was redeemed and given life at the resurrection of Jesus. The judgment at the cross, therefore, concerns every human being who ever lived (John 12:32).
You and I were judged at the
cross in the person of our representative. in His person.
Our sin was condemned
His condemnation was also ours.
But His
righteousness was assured to us when God raised Him from the dead.
Jesus was declared righteous in all His works.
justification was also ours.
And His
In the cross and resurrection of
Christ all humanity was brought into judgment, both positively
144 and negatively. The second phase of judgment, according to John, is judgment in the preaching of the gospel.
This second phase of judgment is
in direct relation to the first.
In the preaching of the gospel
people are called to decide how they will respond to the judgment at the cross.
Whenever Christ and His cross are presented to
human beings, they are called into judgment (3:14-21).
Light
shines in the darkness, and everyone is obliged to respond, either positively or negatively (19-21). are at stake (5:24, 25).
Life and death issues
This judgment is a present reality
whenever the gospel is preached (3:18). Judgment "at the pulpit" is a sobering thought.
Every week,
as people gather for worship, judgment takes place in the preaching of the gospel.
Every person in the congregation is
either drawn closer to Christ or driven further away. no middle road.
There is
What a responsibility for the preacher!
It
would be better for that congregation if no sermon were preached than to listen to a half-hearted or half-baked sermon.
No one
can be brought to an awareness of the judgment that took place on the cross without realizing that they must respond to that judgment one way or another.
They choose to identify either with
the sinful humanity that was destroyed on the cross or the sinless humanity that was uplifted at the resurrection.
And in
pronouncing judgment on Christ, they pronounce judgment on themselves.
They choose either life or death, light or darkness.
It would be better not to preach at all, than to moralize or be
145 flippant when souls are hanging in the balance. But judgment in the preaching of the gospel is not the end of the matter for John. 30; 12:48).
There is also judgment at the end (5:27-
That judgment does not, however, deviate from the
two earlier phases of the judgment. those judgments.
It affirms and validates
At the end we will not be judged in any other
way than the judgment we have pronounced on ourselves in our response to the preaching of the gospel (12:48).
The words of
life that we have rejected now will come back to haunt us then (5:45).
The words of life that we have embraced now will come
back to raise us up to abundant and eternal life (5:29).
The
final judgment is not to be feared by those who are in Christ now.
The cross is sufficient to atone for sin and earn eternal
life.
Those who are found in Christ now and who remain in Him
now will be found in Him also at the last day. APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2. 3.
4.
Can you think of ways that people today try to be healed physically and spiritually apart from Christ? What roles do psychology and prayer respectively play in the process of healing from mental illnesses and the wounds of the past? Why do you think so few people today experience dramatic healings like the man at the pool did? How would you respond to someone who felt that all sickness is a result of sin? Jesus violated man-made strictures on Sabbath-keeping to heal a man. The Pharisees were more concerned with petty rules than with the health and welfare of a human being. To what degree are your personal rules for living God-made or man-made? Do they help you to minister to people or do they often become stumbling blocks in the way of ministry? How can Christians learn to balance Christian joy and seriousness? How does John's concept of eschatology affect this balance? How can people maintain a sense that eternal life is a present reality in a world that is full of suffering and decay?
146 5.
Describe some of the "witnesses" in your life who have helped you to know Jesus. To what degree is your perception of Jesus shaped by the attitudes of the believers that you know and admire? How would your life be different if you didn't know these people?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
2.
With an exhaustive concordance look up all the instances in the NT where words like judgment, judging, and judge are used. Which of these refer to the end-time judgment? Which seem to have present or ongoing significance in every age? Which are associated with the cross? What do you learn about the Gospel of John from this process? Using Bible Dictionaries, Encyclopedias, and any books or journals on archaelogy you can find learn all you can about recent discoveries related to the Pool of Bethesda.
FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1.
2. 3.
For more information on the scholarly discussion regarding the relationship of the eschatology of the Gospel of John to the eschatology of the Bible as whole see Brown, 1:cxv-cxxi; Schnackenburg, 2:426-437. On the eschatology of the OT and how the NT builds on it see chapters 3-6 of Paulien, What the Bible Says About the EndTime. See also White, Desire of Ages, 201-213.
CHAPTER 7 THE BREAD OF LIFE JOHN 6:1-71 Jesus returns to Galilee and experiences all of John 6 over a period of two days.
First He feeds the 5000, with the result
that the people want to make Him king (1-15).
After withdrawing
from the crowd and His disciples, Jesus then comes to the disciples in their boat that night by walking on the water of the Sea of Galilee (16-21).
The next day in the Synagogue of
Capernaum he engages the crowd in dialogue over the relative merits of the bread He and Moses had delivered to the people (2235).
This gave Him the opportunity to deliver his famous "bread
of life" sermon in which He describes His mission in terms of feeding people spiritually (35-59).
The chapter concludes with a
serious attrition among Jesus' disciples until only the twelve remain with Him (60-71). THE FEEDING OF THE 5000 GETTING INTO THE WORD John 6:1-15 Please read 6:1-15 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 147
148 1. 2.
3.
List all the events in the Gospel of John that are described as taking place in Galilee (there are surprisingly few). Why do you think the average person in the crowd that day was following Jesus? What kind of person did they think Jesus was? Describe what you think Jesus felt like as He became aware of these reactions to Him. Based on what you know of the origins of the Passover Feast (Exod 12), write out a short paragraph on the effect that the nearness of the Passover Feast might have had on the expectations of the people as described in this passage.
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage Jesus is back in Galilee, which is relatively uncommon in the Gospel of John.
In fact, only the wedding at Cana (2:1-11),
the healing of the royal official's son (4:46-54), the episodes in chapter 21, and the events of John 6 take place in Galilee. Most of the Gospel, unlike Matthew, Mark, and Luke, takes place in Jerusalem and the surrounding areas. The Background of the Passage The events of John 6 happen at a time when the Jewish Passover Feast is near (6:4), which no doubt explains the size of the crowd in that deserted place (White, Desire of Ages, 364). In the Gospel of John, whenever the Passover is mentioned there are allusions to either the Lord's Supper or the cross (sometimes both, cf. White, Desire of Ages, 389).
There is, naturally, an
abundance of Exodus imagery in the chapter.
The story of the
miraculous feeding of the crowd is no exception to the above. The story reminds the reader of Israel in the wilderness. 11, for example, Moses is faced with a great crowd in the
In Num
149 wilderness, who are complaining about the lack of food.
Just as
Jesus did in John 6:5, Moses questions how it will be possible to feed all these people (Num 11:13).
This is one of many allusions
that tie John 6 strongly to the Exodus accounts of the OT. The Passage in Detail The story takes place across the Sea of Galilee from Tiberias (and Capernaum-- 6:1).
A great crowd is following Jesus
because He has been healing the sick (2).
So He finds a natural
pulpit up on a hillside and sits down with His disciples (3), the wording of verse 3 reminds one very strongly of the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew (Matt 5:1, cf. Matt 5-7). Philip and Andrew, who speak with Jesus here (John 6:5-9), are among the most active of the disciples in Gospel of John, all the more striking since there is no mention of John, who is among the most active in Matthew, Mark, and Luke (as mentioned earlier, John is probably to be equated with the beloved disciple in this Gospel [13:23, 24; 19:35; 21:24]).
Philip is the logical one for
Jesus to speak to about the problem, since he was from Bethsaida (1:44) a town which was not far from the place where they were. By asking about a human solution to the problem, Jesus highlights the supernatural aspect of the miracle He is about to do.
As far
we know there is no spiritual or symbolic significance in the numbers found in this story (5000, 200, 5, and 2), these are merely factual recollections. There are strong allusions in this story to the institution of the Lord's Supper, an event that is left out of this Gospel.
150 Jesus "took the bread," blessed it (eucharistêsas in Greek from which the English language drew the word Eucharist), and distributed it to the congregation (6:11).
The specific Greek
language chosen recalls directly the language of the Lord's Supper in other parts of the NT (especially Luke 22:19 and 1 Cor 11:23, 24). This is the only Gospel where the story closes with Jesus' command that the leftover fragments be gathered up, so that nothing would be wasted (John 6:12, 13).
The result of this
event is that the people begin to think that they are seeing the prophet like Moses that had been predicted in the Book of Deuteronomy (John 6:14, cf. Deut 18:15-18).
The discussion
turned to the idea of forcing Jesus to become their king, whereupon He withdrew from their presence (John 6:15). The Major Themes of the Passage The Eucharistic Bread The Eucharistic and Exodus language in which the story is written prepares the reader for what is to follow in John 6, especially verses 30-59.
Since John does not include an account
of the Lord's Supper, he makes up for the deficit with an exquisite theology of the Lord's Supper here in chapter 6.
The
true meaning of the Passover is to be found in Jesus and in the Supper that only He can provide (Talbert, Reading John, 132). Chapter 6, therefore, continues the theme that Jesus is replacing Judaism, a theme that we noticed very strongly in chapters 2
151 (replacing the waters of purification and the temple), 4 (replacing Samaritan faith and Jerusalem) and 5 (replacing the waters of Bethesda). It is interesting, however, that John's allusions to the Lord's Supper are found in the context of picnic lunches, this one on a hillside, the other on a beach (John 21:1-14).
In a
sense the communion service, the dinner table and a picnic are all alike.
The presence of Jesus cannot be confined to church
buildings where the "right" style of worship services are performed.
For those who walk with Jesus every meal becomes a
sacrament (White, Desire of Ages, 660, 661; Barclay, 1:225, 226). The Prophet Like Moses Jesus' action of feeding the crowd in the wilderness reminded them of Moses' prophecy that a prophet like him would arise (6:14; Deut 18:15-18).
But Moses instructed them that when
that prophet would come, they were to "listen to him," for God would put His own words into the mouth of that prophet, and he would instruct the people as to what God wanted them to do (Deut 18:15, 18).
Moses made it clear that the word of that prophet
was the important thing, not his miracles.
The irony of the
whole matter is that in the context of the prophecy in Deuteronomy the people had asked the Lord not to scare them any more with miraculous actions, or with thunderous words (Deut 18:16).
They wanted to hear the Lord's instructions in a more
subdued manner.
Now that the promised prophet has come, they are
not interested in his words, they only see the miracles.
They
152 want to make Him king, no doubt in the hope that He can drive out the Romans by His miraculous powers and give them easy and prosperous lives.
WALKING ON THE WATER GETTING INTO THE WORD John 6:16-21 Please read 6:16-21 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
Carefully compare the account in John with Matt 14:22-27 and Mark 6:45-52. On a piece of paper list all the parallels between John and either of the other two accounts. Then list all the points in John's account that differ from the others, including omissions. What unique point do you think John is making? Why? Read through the entire Gospel and underline every saying of Jesus that uses the expression, "I am" or "it is I." See if you can group these sayings into different categories of use. Do you think some of these statements relate to Exod 3:14, 15?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Background of the Passage The Sea of Galilee is 650 feet below sea level, 150 feet deep and surrounded by hills.
This physical setting can cause
sudden windstorms that create enormously high waves in spite of the relatively small size of the lake. Ps 77:16-20 describes the Exodus in the language of God's presence on a stormy sea.
So the story of Jesus' walking on the
water (John 6:16-21) contributes to the overall Exodus and Passover theme of the whole chapter.
153 Jesus accomplishes the same kinds of deeds as were done by the God of the Exodus.
The God of the OT is even described in
Job 9:8 as treading "on the waves of the sea" (cf. Prov 30:4). To people schooled in the OT, therefore, Jesus' ability to walk on water and to control wind and wave was a powerful affirmation of His divinity. The Passage in Detail The narrative is fairly straightforward and does not call for much detailed comment.
It is interesting that John is the
only one who brings out the detail that as a result of the feeding of the 5000 there was a movement afoot to make Jesus their king (6:15).
On the other hand, John leaves out the detail
that Jesus forced the disciples to get into the boat and head out to sea (Matt 14:22; Mark 6:45, cf. John 6:17, 18).
The two items
seem to explain each other. No doubt the disciples participated in the excitement that surrounded the crowd's consideration of making Jesus' king.
To
forestall such an event, Jesus sends the disciples off and disperses the crowd (also Matt 14:22 and Mark 6:45).
Taking the
two accounts together causes both to make sense. Although the disciples are afraid, they don't look to Jesus to be of any help, in spite of the mighty works He had done. When Jesus does appear they are unprepared for His presence and help.
Faith is a mind-set that expects God to be there in every
aspect of life.
It is the ultimate antidote to fear.
The second
generation of Christians would see in this story encouragement to
154 expect the presence and help of Jesus even when they felt all alone and forsaken by God.
His word is as good as His presence.
The specific form of speech that Jesus used to address His disciples in the boat, however, ("It is I"-- egô eimi in Greek) is one of the major theological turning points in the Gospel.
It
will attract considerable attention in the next section. The Major Themes of the Passage An Acted Parable In ancient mythology, the unruly sea was the domain of chaos and evil, filled with sea serpents and other fearful creatures. Jesus proves Himself to be in full control of the unruly elements of this earth. The little boat filled with disciples of Jesus on the unruly sea symbolized the church in the world, tossed about and feeling deserted, often, in desperation, trying to take things into its own hands (John 6:19).
This story encourages the church to
realize that Jesus is in control of the forces of this earth. Although not always perceived at the time, He comes when His people are in distress. Many times our lives seem totally out of control, like a boat tossed about on an unruly sea.
It is good to know that
Jesus is in control even when things seem out of control. make the best out of every situation, even our mistakes.
He can He can
also make the best out of the mistakes of others that affect our lives.
When we have done all that we can do, it is a healthy
155 thing to rest secure in God's control over the things we cannot control.
On the other hand, unhealthy human thinking and feeling
perceives God to be distant when He is near and is fearful when He has provided reason to rejoice! The Great "I AM" One of the peculiarities of the Gospel of John is Jesus' repeated use of a formula applied to Yahweh in the OT, "I AM" (Greek: egô eimi).
This emphatic Greek formula, always in the
mouth of Jesus, is used in three ways in the Gospel.
(1) It is
used for self-identification on the human level (6:20; 4:26). The disciples are terrified when they see Jesus approaching, He says, "Don't worry, it's just me" (6:20-- egô eimi).
He is
identifying himself in contrast to other human beings. used for self-identification at the divine level.
(2) It is
Jesus uses "I
AM" with predicates that describe His divine qualities ("I am the Bread of Life," "I am the Good Shepherd"). absolute sense.
(3) It is used in the
He just says "I AM" in an obvious claim to be
like the Yahweh of the OT.
To fully understand this phrase in
the Gospel of John, it is necessary to briefly note the OT background to Jesus' use of the phrase. The divine "I AM" statements of the OT also function in three ways, somewhat different from the above.
(1) Some of the I
AM statements in the OT reveal Yahweh's nature (Exod 3:14; 6:2, 3).
He is ever present to meet His people's need.
(2) I AM
statements are also used to reveal the uniqueness of Yahweh. is the only Savior, the only genuine God (Isa 43:10, 11).
He
There
156 is no other God like Him, who makes known the end from the beginning, He is the only One who can truly foretell the future (Isa 46:9, 10).
(3) I AM statements are also used as an
expression of the mighty works of future salvation that Yahweh will do in the age to come. In the Gospel of John the predicate use of the I AM statements (#2) builds on the third use in the OT.
In the Gospel
the predicate I AM statements become expressions of what Jesus has to offer.
The future salvation that was promised by Yahweh
is fulfilled in the present in Christ. (John 6:33-58).
He is the Bread of Life
He is the Light of the World (8:12; 9:5).
the Door of the sheep and the Good Shepherd (10:7-18). Resurrection and the Life (11:25, 26). and the Life (14:6).
He is
He is the
He is the Way, the Truth,
He is the True Vine (15:1-8).
future in the OT is made present in Christ.
What was
In the predicate I
AM statements we see another expression of the Johannine concept of realized or present eschatology.
To be in relationship with
Jesus is to have the abundance of the future kingdom now by faith. The absolute I AM statements in the Gospel of John (#3) build on the OT I AM statements that reveal Yahweh's nature (#1) and uniqueness (#2).
Jesus manifests the nature and all the
qualities of the OT Yahweh.
He is truly God made flesh.
evident by His knowledge of the future.
This is
He tells things before
they happen so that when they happen people will believe that "I AM" (John 13:19, cf. Isa 46:9, 10).
Jesus' divinity is evident
157 in His knowledge of the future. Belief in Jesus' divinity is essential for salvation.
Those
who do not believe in the I AM (Jesus) will die in their sins (John 8:24, cf. Isa 43:10, 11).
If Jesus' knowledge of the
future is not evidence enough, His divinity will be evident when they "have lifted up the Son of Man" (John 8:28).
The cross and
the resurrection will testify mightily to who Jesus is. Jesus also used the I AM formula to declare what was already evident in the Prologue to the Gospel of John, He pre-existed throughout eternity as a divine being.
He is the Great I AM, who
was before Abraham (John 8:58, cf. Exod 3:14). In the I AM formulas of the Fourth Gospel Jesus is revealed as the Yahweh of the OT.
He is fully and truly God in the
highest sense even as He walks the earth in human flesh. existed throughout eternity (John 8:58).
He pre-
He can deliver the
promised glories of the OT future kingdom to those who believe in Him now (predicate I AM statements). essential for salvation (8:24).
Belief in His divinity is
This will become evident in the
fulfillment of His predictions and particularly at the cross and the resurrection (13:19; 8:28). As a pastor visiting with Jehovah's Witnesses I had frequent opportunity to work with people who questioned the divinity of Jesus.
They had pre-planned answers for all the classic texts
that point to the divinity of Jesus, such as John 1:1; 8:58; Rom 9:5; and Titus 2:13.
Their special Bible translation also
altered crucial texts like John 1:3 and Col 1:16, 17.
But one
158 evidence that could never be refuted was the fact that throughout the NT, and particularly in the Gospel of John, the writers of the NT applied qualities and actions to Jesus that in the OT were only considered appropriate for Jehovah God in the highest sense. These kinds of applications flow so naturally and so frequently from the pens of NT writers that there can be no doubt that they held Jesus in the highest possible regard.
They wanted everyone
to honor Jesus in the same way that they honor the Father (John 5:23).
JESUS THE BREAD OF LIFE GETTING INTO THE WORD John 6:22-59 Please read 6:22-59 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
3. 4.
List the reasons in John 6 why the people continued to follow Jesus. Then list their reactions to Jesus' sayings and document the change in their attitudes from those expressed in 14, 15 to those expressed in 54-56. Compare this passage with Exod 16 and Num 21. Compare and contrast the bread of life that Jesus offers with the manna given by Moses in the wilderness. Describe in a paragraph or two the main point that you think Jesus is making in this section. In what ways is the bread He offers greater than the manna? What does Jesus mean by eating His flesh and drinking His blood? Write out how you think Jesus would express the same idea today? Take a piece of paper and draw a line down the middle. On one side list all the statements in this passage that imply that coming to Jesus is God's work. On the other side list those that imply that coming to Jesus is a personal choice. Which of the two themes seems more important to you? Why?
EXPLORING THE WORD
159 The Structure of the Passage Since the setting for all of John 6 is the Feast of Passover, we should continue to expect echoes of the Eucharist and the cross along with allusions to the Exodus.
In fact some
scholars believe that in the sermon recorded here Jesus is interpreting the Scriptures of the Passover liturgy in the Jewish Synagogues (see Brown, 1:277-280).
In this passage Jesus also
takes up the significance of the feeding miracle in 6:1-15.
He
moves from physical bread to spiritual bread, just as he moved from physical water to spiritual water in John 4. Jesus joined His disciples in a boat on the Sea of Galilee and sailed to the other side of the lake (6:16-21).
The crowd on
the opposite shore searched for Jesus and, helped by some people who had sailed over from Tiberias, crossed the lake and found Him in the synagogue of Capernaum, where all the preaching and the dialogue of the rest of the chapter takes place (22-25, 59). The Background of the Passage A strong background to John 6:22-59 is the Exodus tradition where God feeds the children of Israel with the manna in the wilderness (Exod 16; Num 21).
The manna first arrived on the
fifteenth day of the second month (Exod 16:1).
While Passover
actually occurs on the fifteenth day of the first month, the second-month date functions as a "backup" Passover.
Those who,
for whatever reason, are unable to celebrate the Passover at the usual time are encouraged to celebrate it on the fifteenth day of
160 the second month instead.
So the arrival of the manna became
associated with the Passover even though it first came a month after Israel left Egypt. The manna ended on a Passover eve just before Israel entered the promised land (Josh 5:10-12).
Therefore, the tradition arose
within Judaism that the Messiah would come on Passover, and that along with His coming the manna would begin to fall again (Midrash Qoheleth 1:9).
So when Jesus feeds the 5000 just before
Passover it should not surprise anyone that the crowd might begin to speculate whether He was the Messiah, and whether He was about to do an even greater miracle; feed everyone all the time by restoring the manna.
Since Passover was near (John 6:4), they
were expecting the manna to fall any day, in fact challenged Jesus to perform just what they were expecting (6:30-34). The Passage in Detail After much searching the crowd which had been miraculously fed the day before found Jesus in the synagogue at Capernaum (6:22-25, 59).
But their search is not for spiritual food, they
are relating to Jesus at a crass and material level (26).
They
weren't interested in the meaning of the miracle, they just wanted to see more miracles (cf. 2).
Jesus tries to direct their
eyes in the direction of spiritual things, the food that endures to eternal life (27).
The crowd seems to catch a glimpse of what
Jesus is talking about, they ask about the proper way to perform the works that God requires (28).
They have moved a bit beyond
the material level, but not to genuine faith in Jesus yet.
161 Jesus moves directly to the point.
The work that God
approves of, the only work that ultimately matters, is to believe in Jesus (29, cf. 14:6). all acceptable obedience.
Belief in Jesus is the prerequisite to We don't satisfy God by the work that
we do, we satisfy God by the One in whom we believe.
All growth
in pleasing God is based on accepting Jesus's claims about Himself. The crowd's response to Jesus' directness is not promising. They ask for a sign miraculous enough that they can believe in Him (6:30).
Why do they ask for a miraculous sign when He has
already given them a staggering one in the feeding of the 5000 (men plus women and children-- 6:10)? only a taste.
They saw that feeding as
They wanted confirmation.
They wanted a sign of
verification that would come from heaven, a cosmic sign.
They
remembered the Scripture text that said that in the manna Moses had given Israel "bread from heaven" to eat, the kind of food eaten by angels (6:31, cf. Ps 78:24, 25).
The prophet like
Moses, whenever he would come, would restore the manna to all Israel on the Passover day (cf. 6:14; Deut 18:15, 18). Jesus replied that the manna given by Moses was not the true bread from heaven that they were seeking, rather the true bread from heaven is a Person who comes down out of heaven and brings life to the world (John 6:32, 33).
They were looking for a
cosmic sign to verify that Jesus was the Messiah.
Instead He
answered, "I am the cosmic sign that proves that I am the Messiah" (cf. Luke 17:20, 21).
If they would believe in Him they
162 would receive all the evidence that they would need. Verse 34 indicates that the people still didn't understand what Jesus was saying, but as happened with the Samaritan woman at the well (4:11, 15), His offer was beginning to sound worthwhile.
They wanted whatever it was He was offering.
Jesus
repeatedly made it clear that the true bread from heaven is none other than Himself.
In fact, beginning with verse 35 all of
Jesus' statements are in the first person singular.
This
underlines His claim that relationship with Him personally is the ultimate issue of the discourse.
Note the sequence of bread of
life statements: +))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))), *V. 33-- The One who comes down T gives life to the world * *V. 35-- I am the Bread of Life * * *V. 41-- I am the Bread of Life * which comes down from heaven* *V. 48-- I am the Bread of Life * * *V. 51-- I am the Bread of Life * which comes down from heaven* *V. 58-- The Bread that came down R gives life to the world * .)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))-
The clear implication of the Bread of Life sermon is that seeing Jesus and believing in Him is what produces real life in the spiritual sense now and in the fullest sense "at the last day" (6:40; 5:21).
Just as food must be constantly eaten to
sustain physical life, so it is necessary to invite Jesus into our daily experience if we are to sustain spiritual life. "Believing" in the Gospel of John (cf. 1:12; 6:47) always has a continuous sense.
We do not believe only once, it must be an
ongoing and daily experience. John 6:37 is a beloved verse. connection between its two parts.
There is a fascinating Jesus states, "all that the
163 Father gives me will come to me."
Those given by the Father are
seen as a group (expressed in the Greek neuter gender). predestines a group to be saved, not individuals.
God
The second
part of the verse is in masculine gender, "Whoever comes to me I will never drive away."
Jesus receives the members of the group
one by one as they are made willing to come to Him.
The first
part of the verse expresses the divine side of salvation (cf. 44), the second part expresses the human dimension. two truths in balanced tension.
We see here
Salvation comes to no one apart
from the express will of God, yet at the same time, no one is saved that has not voluntarily chosen to come (cf. 39, 40).
The
tension between God's election and human choice will be examined in more detail in chapter 9 of this book. The "bread" that Jesus talks about is essentially His person, yet there is a difference between the first and last parts of the Bread of Life discourse. emphasis in on revelation.
In 6:35-50 the special
It is crucial that people recognize
who Jesus is and that He brings from heaven a revelation from God and about God that is of life and death concern to the human race (45-47). In verses 51-59, however, the emphasis moves in the direction of allusions to the Lord's Supper and to the cross.
It
is by "eating the flesh and drinking the blood" of the Son of Man that a person gains eternal life (54-56).
This "cannibalistic"
language is certainly not intended to express that the physical eating and drinking of Christ's flesh and blood is necessary in
164 order to sustain temporal life.
Rather, it is a graphic way of
expressing the fact that only through intimate relationship with Jesus, as close as food that has been eaten is to the body, can one gain the life that He promises.
"As our food becomes
incorporated with ourselves, so Christ and those who eat His flesh and drink His blood become spiritually one life, though personally distinct" (Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1041).
The
Lord's Supper becomes the physical illustration of these spiritual metaphors (cf. White, Desire of Ages, 389). Just as happened when Moses fed Israel with manna in the wilderness (49, 50, 58, cf. Exod 16:2, 7, 8; 1 Cor 10:10), the primary response of the Jews to the Bread of Life discourse is grumbling (6:41-43, cf. the response of Jesus' disciples in v. 61, 66) and arguing sharply among themselves (52). and experiencing His miracles is not enough (36).
Seeing Jesus The
responsibility of those who have seen is to believe (47, cf. 20:29). The Major Themes of the Passage The True Bread from Heaven The concept of the true bread that comes down from heaven is a beautiful symbol of both the greatness and the self-sacrificing condescension of Jesus.
In naming Himself as the source of
eternal life, He describes Himself as One equal with God.
At the
same time He offers Himself to be eaten by the believer, He places Himself at the believer's disposal, available to meet every legitimate need (Gruenler, 47).
165 Jesus replaces the manna with the true bread which comes down from heaven. nevertheless died. (John 6:58).
In the first case, people who ate the bread Jesus offers bread that leads to eternal life
There are a number of symbols in the Gospel of John
that are drawn from everyday experience, such as bread, water and life.
These are all Johannine symbols referring to the reality
of eternal life, which makes natural hunger and thirst seem insignificant by comparison. Have you ever been ravenously hungry, or thirsty to the point of desperation?
Do you remember what it was like to knock
down a cool drink at that time, or a slice of French bread with your favorite spread on it?
Jesus wanted memories like that to
trigger spiritual meanings, to offer lessons about the life that He came to offer.
The message of the Bread of Life sermon is
that your need for the spiritual life that Jesus brings is just as desperate as the pangs of hunger and thirst.
As the body
craves food and drink and sunlight, so the soul craves the presence of Jesus, and if Jesus is not allowed to be present, human beings will go to all kinds of ridiculous lengths to fill the gap with something else.
Inside every human being is a God-
sized hole that only Jesus can fill.
THE WORDS OF ETERNAL LIFE GETTING INTO THE WORD John 6:60-71 Please read 6:60-71 at least twice and then answer the
166 following questions: 1.
2.
Which teaching in the previous section of the chapter did the people find so hard to accept? Why do they turn away at this time? Why do Peter and the Twelve decide to stay? Write out your thoughts in two or three paragraphs. Why do you think Jesus all but invites the disciples to leave Him in this passage? Why do you think Judas stayed around?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage This passage provides the reaction of Jesus' disciples to the preceding discourse and dialogues.
In the process Jesus
faces a new "Exodus," an exodus of followers and disciples. appears to lose all but the Twelve.
He
The chapter ends with a
prophecy that one of the Twelve, Judas, would eventually betray Him. The Passage in Detail The passage opens with the complaint of Jesus' disciples, "This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it (60)?"
"Teaching"
translates the Greek "word" (logos-- a summary in one word of verses 35-59).
It dawns on them that the words of Jesus are all
that matter to Him, He has no intention of being primarily a wonder-worker. come.
They were clearly looking for the Messiah to
But they brought with their expectation a whole lot of
political and material baggage which Jesus had no intention of fulfilling. expectations.
Jesus refused to conform to their Messianic His concerns were clearly spiritual and not
material and political.
The people are disappointed.
Yet there
167 is much about Jesus that impresses them.
They wonder whether it
would be better to settle for what Jesus offers or look for someone else. Verse 63 functions as a summary in different words of the teaching of Jesus in the entire chapter. gives life, not literal flesh.
It is the Spirit that
Human beings cannot gain life by
their own efforts or by any material participation in Jesus (cf. Matt 16:17). for Jesus.
Without the Spirit we wouldn't even see our need It is quite possible that John included this
statement in the text specifically to counter the idea that participating in the Lord's Supper or in Christian worship in themselves accomplish what Jesus' implies by "believing."
Only
acceptance of Jesus' words, and a commitment to relationship with Him brings the Spirit, who brings life. In saying that some of His disciples do not believe, Jesus also implies that others do believe (64).
Once again Jesus
demonstrates that He knows the inner commitment or lack thereof of those who claim to follow Him.
Whenever people do commit
themselves fully to Jesus, however, it is a clear sign of the presence and work of the Father in their lives (65). Although many turn away from Jesus, the Twelve remain with Him and acknowledge that only He offers the words that lead to life (66-69).
Although virtually every believer has moments when
they wonder if following Jesus truly makes sense, the lack of any sensible alterative to Jesus is a powerful incentive to remain with Him through the dark moments, knowing that if we continue
168 reaching out to Him, our perception of the Light will soon return. Even among the Twelve there is one who does not truly believe, Judas Iscariot.
There is a difference of opinion
regarding the title "Iscariot."
Most likely it is the Greek form
of "ish Qeryyoth," or "man from Qeryyoth."
Qeryyoth is a village
in Judea, and if this identification is correct, Judas would be the only Judean disciple.
For whatever reason, the author of the
Fourth Gospel is harder on him than are Matthew, Mark, and Luke. And whenever Judas is mentioned it is always in the context of Jesus' suffering and death (in this case the mention of flesh and blood (51-59), and betrayal (71). In response to Jesus' teaching some people left, others stayed for the right reasons, Judas stayed for the wrong reason. Today also, many people only pretend to follow Jesus.
The real
reason they stay in church is for status, the approval of family and friends, or a place to make business contacts. may even use religion as a way to get votes. or nothing proposition.
Politicians
But faith is an all
We either accept Jesus or we reject Him.
APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2.
3.
Can you think of times in your life when God has stretched your meager resources the way He stretched the boy's lunch in 6:1-15? In what way do you need a similar miracle to take place today? Describe experiences in your life where you discovered God's ability to make a difference in the "storms" of life. How do you naturally respond to such storms in your life? How does this story encourage you to respond differently in the future? Can you think of a category of food that best describes your spiritual diet right now? Fast food? Junk food? High-
169
4.
5.
fiber diet? Dessert? Leftovers? What changes do you think you need to make in your spiritual diet? What was it that first motivated you to become involved in religious activities? How have your motives changed as you have drawn closer to Jesus? Are their still motives that you think Jesus would want to change? Have there been times in your life when following Jesus has seemed too difficult or disappointing? What kind of insights helped you decide to hang in there with Jesus rather than moving on to some other way of life?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
Compare John 6:1-15 with 2:1-11. Do you think the experience at the wedding of Cana had anything to do with Jesus' question to Philip in 6:5, 6? Read the entire Gospel through and underline or flag every assertion or narrative related to Jesus' ability to meet physical and spiritual needs. Try to write out a short presentation in everyday language that would make this theme of the Gospel relevant in the secular setting.
FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1.
2. 3.
For a thorough examination of the issues related to the synagogue liturgy in the first century and how it may have affected the sermon Jesus gave in John 6 see Brown, 1:277280, 303, 304. For an outstanding in-depth study of the I AM statements in both the OT and the Gospel of John along with the way Jesus builds on the OT texts involved, see Schnackenburg, 2:79-89. Ellen White comments on John 6:1-21 in passing in Desire of Ages, 364-382, pages 383-394 are devoted exclusively to John 6:22-71.
CHAPTER 8 THE WATER AND LIGHT OF LIFE JOHN 7:1 - 8:59 John 7 and 8 center around Jesus' appearances in the temple during the Feast of Tabernacles, the most popular and wellattended of the Jewish Feasts.
This is Jesus' third visit to
Jerusalem and Judea in the Gospel.
This time He stays in the
area for six whole months, the final months of His ministry. There are at least six more months between the events of John 6 and the events of John 7, possibly a year and a half.
A constant
undertone in this section of the Fourth Gospel is the murderous plot against Jesus by the Jewish ruling council, announced right at the beginning (7:1). The material in John 7 and 8 can be organized as follows: +))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))), * THE WATER AND LIGHT OF LIFE (JOHN 7-8) * * 7:1-9-The Unbelief of Jesus' Brothers * 7:10-24-Debate Over the Sabbath * 7:25-36-Jesus' Messiahship * 7:37-39-The Water of Life * 7:40-52-Divisions over Jesus' Origin * 7:53-8:11-- Woman Caught in Adultery * 8:12-20-The Light of the World * 8:21-30-Jesus' Origin and Destiny * 8:31-38-Truth Sets Free * 8:39-47-Paternity of the Jews * 8:48-59-Jesus Greater Than Abraham .)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))-
170
* * * * * * * * * * * * *
171 For convenience this chapter in the book will be divided into three parts, the first debate in the temple (7:1-52), followed by the scene concerning the woman caught in the act of adultery (7:53 - 8:11), followed by the second debate in the temple (8:1259).
The material in John 7 and 8 is somewhat reminiscent of
Jesus' debates with the Pharisees, Sadducees and the teachers of the law in Mark 2:1 - 3:6 and 11:27 - 12:40. JESUS AT THE FEAST OF TABERNACLES GETTING INTO THE WORD John 7:1-52 Please read 7:1-52 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2. 3.
List the differences of opinion and action between Jesus and His brothers. Write out your thoughts on how Jesus' relationships with members of His family affected His life and ministry. Read John 8 as well. List and categorize the various reactions to Jesus in John 7 and 8. How would you account for the vast range of reactions to Jesus? Read the entire Gospel of John through. Underline every passage containing the term "the Jews." On a piece of paper try to group the usages into the following categories: 1) the religious leaders, 2) Jews in general, and 3) a subgroup of Jews other than the religious leaders. How do the usages in John 7 compare to those of the rest of the book?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Background of the Passage Palestinian Climate The weather in Palestine divides into two major seasons, the dry season that centers on summer and the rainy season that centers on winter.
172 +))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))), * PALESTINIAN CLIMATE * * T * T ** T * / ) ) )))))))))) ) ) ) ) 3 ) ) )))))))))) ) ) ) ) 1 * * RJan Mar -> Sept DecRJan Mar -> Sept DecR * * * - - Rainy Season * ))))) Summer Drought * * Feast of Tabernacles * ** Feast of Passover .)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))-
* * * * * * * * * *
The Feast of Tabernacles comes at the time of the year when the summer drought is usually ending.
It is the time of the
early rain, when the grain, which depends on the winter rains for growth and development, is planted.
The "early rain" fills the
empty cisterns enabling life to be freed from the constant concern over the shortage of water.
It is also the time to
harvest the fruits of vine and tree, whose deep roots enabled them to survive the time of drought. The time of Passover comes at the close of the rainy season, the time of the latter rain which ripens and matures the grain. It is the time to begin harvesting the grain (Feast of Unleavened Bread and Wave Sheaf Ceremony). Although the summer drought is severe, dew mitigates the drought sufficiently so that the fruits trees and the grape vines can survive.
If the fruit were grown on a winter cycle, the
occasional frost in Palestine would hurt the fruit, so the summer cycle works fairly well in spite of the dryness. Palestine is not blessed with an overabundance of rain.
In
average years, there is barely enough for the needs of farming.
173 Even during the rainy season, it is sunny 50% of the time.
Dryer
years can quickly cause an agricultural crisis. The Feast of Tabernacles The Feast of Tabernacles was the last of the three greatest feasts of the Jewish liturgical year (Lev 23:33-43; Num 29:1238).
It attracted the largest delegations from outside
Palestine.
Jesus' brothers were no doubt anxious for Him to go
because of the great importance of this Feast in the popular sentiment (John 7:2-5).
It was a most joyous time of holiday.
The Day of Atonement was past. forgiven.
Sins had been confessed and
The people were clean before God.
A major theme of
the Feast, therefore, was joy and thanksgiving. The Feast commemorated the Exodus and the time of Israel's wandering in the wilderness (Lev 23:43), when God provided them with water and light (Exod 13:22, 23; 17:1-7).
At night during
the Feast of Tabernacles, therefore, huge bowls of oil were lit atop the pillars of the temple lighting the temple courts more brightly than at any other time of the year.
Central to the
festivities were torch-light processions, which added to the brightness and sparkle of the occasion.
So light became another
major theme of the Feast in Jesus' day. A further motif of the Feast was the concept of pilgrimage, the idea that God's people have no permanent abode, they are pilgrims and strangers on this earth.
The people would create
tents out of palm branches and live in them during the Feast, even if they owned a house in Jerusalem (in which case they built
174 the tent on the roof or in the back yard).
This reminder of the
Exodus taught them that just as God provided water and food to Israel in the wilderness, so He can continue to provide the same for the needs of the present.
A good omen for the coming year
would be the occurrence of rain during the Feast. The high point of the Feast of Tabernacles, therefore, was the "rain dance."
In this ceremony the priest led a great
procession out of the temple, and down the hill to the Gihon Spring, chanting the words of Isa 12:3, "With joy you will draw water from the wells of salvation."
After obtaining a pitcher of
water, the priests returned to the temple which was entered by a flight of 15 steps.
On each of the steps the priest recited one
of the 15 pilgrimage psalms (Ps 120-134). There were a pair of sinks in the floor of the temple court. Below the floor the pipes leading from each joined and led all the way down to the Kidron Valley.
While the water drawn from
the Gihon Spring was poured into one of the sinks, a pitcher of wine was poured into the other.
The water and the wine mixed
together where the pipes joined and flowed down to the Kidron River.
On a rainy day the water and wine would flow all the way
to the Dead Sea.
This recalled the OT promises of God's future
kingdom (Ezek 47 and Zech 14:8) in which water from the temple would restore the fertility of the Judean Desert and make the waters of the Dead Sea fresh. In His presence at the Feast, and particularly in His offering of water (7:37-39) and light (8:12; 9:5), Jesus affirms
175 that He is replacing the great institutions of Judaism with Himself.
The end-time events associated in the OT with the Feast
of Tabernacles become present realities in the person and teachings of Jesus.
These incidents, therefore, continue the
replacement of Judaism theme that we have encountered so regularly in the Gospel. The Passage in Detail The phrase "the Jews" (7:1) clearly means the ruling authorities in Jerusalem rather than the people as a whole (7:26, 32, 45).
This explains why you have Jews in the Gospel who are
afraid of "the Jews" (7:13).
It would also caution modern-day
readers from drawing any anti-Semitic inferences from the statements that John makes about the Jews in this Gospel.
"The
Jews" is used by the author of the Gospel as a compact way to describe the ruling class made up of Pharisees, Sadducees, and the doctors of the law. Things have not been going well in Galilee (6:60-71).
The
brothers suggest that if Jesus would do His miracles in Judea he might accomplish his aims (7:2-4). this advice.
There is a double irony in
First of all, His brothers had seen His miracles
and they did not believe in Him (7:5)!
Second, Jesus had
performed these miracles for the Galileans and they had left Him (6:60-66)! Jesus responds that the timing of their actions doesn't matter much as very little is at stake in their movements.
But
with Him everything hangs on issues of timing that they have no
176 basis for understanding.
No one had a quarrel with the brothers,
for their lives and teachings did not challenge society.
But a
single false step might bring a premature close to Jesus' ministry.
So once again he refused to let His family control the
agenda that had been set for Him by God (7:6-9, cf. 2:3-5). The Feast of Tabernacles was eight days long, so "halfway through the Feast" (7:14) means the fourth or fifth day of the festivities.
This was, evidently, the first time He sought to
teach openly in the temple.
The Jews were amazed that Jesus was
clearly learned in the key issues of life, yet He didn't approach subjects in the usual way, which was to string together endless quotations from previous rabbis (15).
Instead He asserted that
His Father provided the best kind of "rabbinical school" (16). He did not need to verify the truth of His teaching by quoting "the authorities," all who approached His teaching with a sincere purpose to please God in every aspect of life would quickly recognize its divine origin (17, 18).
Those who were truly
willing to do the will of God, wherever it would lead them, would know intuitively that Jesus was telling the truth about Himself. The reason that the Jews were questioning His teachings was the same as in John 5, His actions at the Pool of Bethesda (7:2124), which they interpreted as breaking the Sabbath.
Jesus
responded to their objections by arguing that the reason they misunderstood His actions was because they themselves were lawbreakers (19).
They accused Him of breaking the fourth
commandment, but they themselves were breaking the sixth
177 commandment by trying to kill Him.
The Jews were willing to
ignore the fourth commandment in order to circumcise a child, which act involved only a single body part; what Jesus did was concerned with the whole human being (22, 23). In verse 25 the theme shifts from the Sabbath healing to Jesus' Messiahship, which is the crucial issue in much of the Fourth Gospel.
Jesus' opponents trap themselves in a series of
self-contradictions on this issue.
First, they reject him
because they know where He is from (Galilee-- 41, 52) and no one will know where the Messiah comes from.
Then they disqualify
Jesus by arguing that the Messiah comes from Bethlehem (42).
But
the Christian reader of the Gospel knows that, in fact, Jesus was born in Bethlehem, not in Galilee.
In the end, however, the
opponents are forced to admit that they really don't know where Jesus came from (9:29 cf. 8:14, 19). It appears from the inclusion of these incidents that the problem of Jesus' origin was a major concern for second generation of Christians.
Matthew argues that the OT shows the
Messiah would come from both Bethlehem and Galilee (Matt 2:6, 23).
But John takes a different tack.
Rather than refuting the
arguments of Jesus' opponents by reasserting Matthew's stories, He takes a higher road by maintaining that Jesus' real origin was in neither place, it was in heaven (John 1:1-11, 14; 7:16, 28, 29, 33; 8:16, 18, 23). In the midst of this debate, probably at the point in the procession where the water was being poured into the temple sink,
178 Jesus arises and interrupts the whole preceding with a sublime statement of the replacement theme, the people sought spiritual water at the Feast, but Jesus replaces the water of the Feast with Himself.
The one who is thirsty enough to come to Jesus
will be able to drink and keep on drinking, and will even become a source of spiritual refreshment for others (7:37, 38). The chapter closes with the frustration of the chief priests and Pharisees with respect to the guards who had repeatedly failed to lay hands on Jesus (45-52, cf. 26, 30, 44). passage is filled with irony.
This brief
No sooner do the leaders assert
that none of the rulers or of the Pharisees believe in Jesus, then Nicodemus, a ruler and a Pharisee, calls their actions into question (50, 51).
They accuse Jesus of breaking the law, yet a
lawyer in their midst challenges their own fidelity to the law. They respond with a retort that is obviously false, "A prophet does not come out of Galilee."
The reality is that Jonah clearly
came from Galilee, and probably Nahum and Elijah as well.
As the
Gospel progresses, the leading opponents of Jesus sound more and more confused and progressively close their minds to the selfevident truths that the Gospel seeks to portray. A dominant characteristic of this chapter, therefore, is the distinction between the leaders and the crowd.
The leaders seek
to kill Jesus (1, 25, 32) the crowd doesn't know what to think (12, 13, 20, 25-27, 31, 40-43).
None of the leaders believe in
Him (48), the crowd is derided as ignorant (49) on account of their interest in Jesus.
179 The Major Themes of the Passage The Temptations of Jesus Astute readers of the four gospels quickly notice that John is the only gospel without a reference to Jesus' temptation by Satan out in the desert (cf. Matthew 4:1-11; Mark 1:12, 13; Luke 4:1-12).
But John often makes theological use of incidents in
Jesus' life without referring to the original settings behind the theology (cf. the Lord's Supper and Gethsemane).
The substance
of the three temptations in the desert are repeated in John 6 and 7.
Jesus is tempted to be king (6:15, cf. Matt 4:8-10; Luke 4:5-
8), He is tempted to do a miracle relating to bread (6:31, cf. Matt 4:3, 4; Luke 4:3, 4), and He is tempted to show off at the temple (7:2, 3, cf. Matt 4:5-7; Luke 4:9-12).
The difference is
that in the Gospel of John, these temptations all come through human agents (cf. Matt 16:21-23). The Water of Life In the temple ceremony the vessels of the priests are only filled for a short time.
Those who come to Jesus have flowing
water available at all times.
During the Feast of Tabernacles
the people prayed for rain, because rain at that time was a good omen for an excellent grain-growing season.
Jesus' statement in
7:37-39 indicates that the people's requests for water had been answered in an unexpected way (Jesus seems to have had a number of OT passages in mind when He spoke the words recorded in 7:38-Isa 44:3, 4; 58:11; Joel 3:18; Ezek 47:1-12; Zech 14:8).
180 In 7:39 the Holy Spirit is the living water that Jesus offers, and Jesus is the source of the Holy Spirit to those who come to Him.
In this assertion, Jesus is replacing the temple,
because in OT end-time expectation the temple was the source of living water to refresh the land (Ezek 47:1-12).
He has already
declared Himself the source of living water in John 4:10-15.
The
fresh direction that Jesus takes in 7:38 is to declare that those who come to Him will themselves become a source from which others can draw that living water.
The believer is able to pass on the
Spirit to others.
THE WOMAN CAUGHT IN ADULTERY GETTING INTO THE WORD John 8:1-11 Please read 8:1-11 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
Write out the words you think the teachers of the law and the Pharisees would have used to accuse Jesus had He told them to let the woman go. Write out what they would have said if He had told them to stone her. Describe in a paragraph or two what you would have written on the ground if you had been in Jesus' place.
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The relationship of this passage to the rest of the Gospel of John is somewhat uncertain.
In the NIV the comment is made,
"The earliest and most reliable manuscripts do not have John 7:53-8:11."
This can be shocking to someone accustomed to the
181 King James Version, which was based on a handful of fairly recent copies of the NT (12th to 15th Century).
In the last hundred or
so years, however, many more ancient manuscripts have been found, some as early as the Second Century.
The picture is as follows.
The story of the woman caught in adultery is omitted in all the earliest Greek manuscripts.
It is also omitted in most of
the oldest translations into Syriac, Latin, and Coptic.
Neither
does any Greek commentator on the Gospel of John mention the story before the 12th Century (a thousand years after the oldest Greek manuscripts).
None of the earliest Church Fathers mention
it as being a part of the Gospel of John.
Many of the early
manuscripts that do have the story contain a notation indicating uncertainty as to whether it belongs in the Gospel. Even when the story is found, it is located in a surprising variety of places.
John 7:52 is the most frequent, as is found
in most Bibles today.
But manuscripts exist where the story can
be found, respectively, after John 7:36, tacked on at the end of the Gospel of John (after 21:25), after Luke 21:53, and tacked on to the end of Luke (after 24:53).
This wide variety of locations
would be extremely unlikely if the story had been part of the original edition of the Gospel of John. The story of the woman caught in adultery, however, was not a late invention, it was clearly known in the church as early as the second century, the problem is that it was not clearly identified with the Gospel of John. this?
What shall we make of all
Evidently the story is based on an actual event in the
182 life of Jesus which was remembered by many people in a variety of places.
Although not included in one of the original gospels, it
was recognized as a unique and authentic witness to a special teaching of Jesus.
In the hopes of preserving this witness,
perhaps, various scribes sought to attach it to one of the canonical gospels.
The setting after 7:52 became the most common
because the story fits in well with chapters 7 and 8, a setting of controversy and debate where Jesus refuses to pass judgment (cf. 8:15). The Passage in Detail The contrast between those who go to their own homes (John 7:53) and Jesus, who appears to be "homeless" (8:1) is not unusual in the other gospels, where Jesus is portrayed as one who has no place to lay His head (Matt 8:20; Luke 9:58).
The term
"adultery" (John 8:3, 4) implies that the woman was married and had been caught cheating on her husband.
In bringing only the
woman the opponents of Jesus were in violation of the law of Moses which required that in the case of adultery, both partners should be stoned (Lev 20:10; Deut 22:22). Since Jesus was sitting down when the accusers arrived (8:2), it was easy for Him to bend down and write in the dust with His finger (6).
It may be that He stooped down to write a
second time in order to allow the accusers freedom to leave with as much dignity as possible (8, 9).
Although the Biblical text
doesn't say so, it is quite possible that Jesus was writing the secret sins of the accusers on the ground (White, Desire of Ages,
183 p. 461; Barclay, 2:3).
Most people would find such a
circumstance grounds for a hasty exit! The dilemma with which the religious leaders confronted Jesus was a difficult one.
If He told them to let her go, they
would accuse Him of teaching people to disobey the laws of Moses. If he told them to stone her, they would report Him to the Romans, who didn't allow Jews to stage their own executions.
In
His response, Jesus managed to uphold the legal penalty for adultery while highlighting the importance of compassion and forgiveness.
Those who are quick to pass judgment on others act
as if they were guilty of no sin themselves. Jesus does not judge the woman one way or the other. does not pardon her as He did the woman in Luke 7:36-50.
He He
chooses not to act as judge (John 3:17; 8:15), He will allow the future acts of the woman to bear witness as to how she has judged herself in relation to her encounter with Him (12:47, 48). The Major Themes of the Passage The theme of this passage fits in well with the Gospel of John.
Jesus knows all about the woman and He knows all about her
accusers.
Yet He refuses to pass upon her the sentence that she
so undoubtedly deserved.
This story has for millennia provided a
caution to those in the church who are quick to condemn the actions of others, even when the condemnation is just. an example of mercy and kindness.
Jesus set
Those who have tasted His
mercy in relation to their own sins will be merciful, tender, and longsuffering toward others who struggle with sin, even where the
184 sins appear willful and perverse (cf. 2 Tim 2:24-26, cf. White, Testimonies for the Church, vol. 6, pp. 120-123).
THE DEBATE CONTINUES GETTING INTO THE WORD John 8:12-59 Please read 8:12-59 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2. 3.
List the many statements Jesus makes in this passage regarding who He is and His relationship to His Father. Why do you think everything in this passage seems to hinge on who Jesus is and who sent Him? List all the issues that divide Jesus and His opponents in this passage. Is there development in the discussion or do they keep bringing up the same charges in different words? On a copy of the text mark every appearance of the words "Father" and "truth." What does the prominence of these terms indicate about the basic issues in the passage?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The rest of chapter 8 is part of the Feast of Tabernacles episode, which began at 7:1. AM" statements (8:12, 58).
The section begins and ends with "I Jesus continues to debate His case
with those who are in the temple courts for the Feast, but now the leaders come out from the backstage and take Jesus on directly (13, 22, 48, 52, 57). The Background of the Passage The Feast of Tabernacles, as mentioned earlier in this chapter, was a celebration of the Exodus with a particular
185 emphasis on the wilderness experience where God provided water from the rock and the pillar of fire to light and warm the night (Exod 17:1-7; Num 20:1-14; Exod 13:21, 22; 14:24; Num 14:14; Deut 31:15, cf. Isa 60:1-3; Zech 14:7, 8).
Jesus again interrupts the
proceedings, this time to declare that He is the One who lights up the world, He is the One who provided light in the wilderness (8:12). The Passage in Detail The main theme of 8:12-20, surpassing the theme of light (12) and the theme of judgment (15, 16) is the theme of witness, reminiscent from John 5:31-47.
The Father adds His witness to
the witness of Jesus, meeting the minimum standard of the law (8:13-18, cf. Deut 19:15).
If His opponents had truly entered
into relationship with Jesus, they would have known who Jesus' Father was, and would have felt the power of Their combined testimony (8:19). In 8:21-30 the debate about Jesus' identity, and His relationship with His Father continues.
Jesus makes a couple of
significant "I AM" statements (24, 28).
Verses 33-59 are quite
reminiscent of Jesus' denunciation of the Pharisees in Matt 23. The entire section is held together by the theme of Abraham (8:33, 37, 39-41, 52, 53, 56, 58).
Both Jesus and His opponents
claim to exemplify the heritage of Abraham. In verses 32, 33 the Jews and Jesus face a double misunderstanding.
They misunderstand what Jesus means by
freedom, and they misunderstand what it means to be the seed of
186 Abraham. sin.
The only freedom that matters to Jesus is freedom from
Sin has a way of dictating people's actions without them
even being aware of it.
Unless the truth of Jesus permeates the
life, the enslavement to sin will prevent people from attaining the full potential that God intended. Those enslaved to sin are no better off than the Gentiles, even if they are the physical descendants of Abraham (34-36). They need the salvation that Jesus offers as badly as the Gentiles do.
Jesus points out that descent from Abraham is not
truly measured in physical terms but in terms of behavior (3740).
A Jewish son is supposed to behave like his father (39).
The true children of Abraham behave the way Abraham behaved. When Jesus' opponents try to deflect the argument by pointing to God as their true Father (41) Jesus moves in for the rhetorical kill.
If they were children of God, they would
recognize Jesus as their spiritual brother, since He came from God (42).
Instead, since they seek to kill the One who brought
them the truth (40), their behavior marks them as children of the devil, who like Cain was a murderer and a liar from the beginning (44).
By contrast, Jesus' truthful and sinless behavior
witnesses that He is the true Son of God (45-47). At this point in the conversation things turn ugly.
The
opponents of Jesus react to His accusations by turning the charges back on Him.
"You Yourself are a child of the devil,
possessed by him to do his work" (48).
That made Jesus just as
bad as a Samaritan in their thinking.
While Jesus doesn't mind
187 being called a Samaritan, He doesn't like being called demonic (49). They further accuse Jesus of claiming to be greater than Abraham (52, 53).
Rather than denying the charge, He claims to
be the focus of Abraham's prophetic vision (56), thus He is not only greater than Abraham, He is the I AM (54-58; see chapter 7 for more information about the I AM passages in the Fourth Gospel).
Following this "blasphemy" Jesus slips away as His
opponents dirty their hands with stones (59). The Major Themes of the Passage The Cross as Exaltation The Gospel of John has a peculiar way of referring to the cross, it is the "lifting up" of Jesus (3:14, 15; 8:28).
While
the term is literally accurate as a description of the physical act of crucifixion, the term has the extended meaning of lifting up in an emotional sense.
To lift someone up is to encourage
them, or to glorify them to a high status. themselves up is to boast.
For someone to lift
Thus the "lifting up" of Jesus has
multiple meaning in the Gospel of John.
It applies to the
physical act of raising Jesus onto the cross. physical act of His ascension.
It applies to the
But more than that it is related
to the "glorification" of Jesus' character that took place on the cross.
The cross does more to validate Jesus' true nature than
all other evidence regarding His divine character (8:28).
188 The Truth Will Set You Free Like "lifting up" the word "truth" has more than one meaning in the Gospel of John (see Brown, 1:499).
Truth is, first of
all, an event that took place in the person of Christ (John 1:17; 14:6).
It is the arrival of Jesus and His life and death that
brought truth to the world.
But truth is also the revelation of
the will and character of God through the teaching and the life of Jesus while He was on earth (3:33, 34).
There is no other
place to go when one is searching for truth (8:32, 36; 14:6).
In
an extended sense, therefore, the written testimonies concerning Jesus' life and death, inspired by the Holy Spirit, have become the central source of truth in the world since the time of Jesus (16:13).
For the "second generation" the NT has become the
greatest revelation of God that is available to us.
To neglect
its testimony by commission or omission is to be cast adrift in a world full of lies and half-truths. In what sense does the truth set people free? four aspects.
Barclay notes
1) The truth brings freedom from fear.
The
disciple of Jesus never walks alone, and in the presence of Jesus fear is gone.
2) The truth brings freedom from self.
The
greatest handicap to a fulfilled life for most people is found within themselves. change.
The greatest frustration is the inability to
Jesus has the power to change lives.
brings freedom from other people.
3) The truth
Many people are paralyzed by
the fear of what other people may think of them.
To know that
you are acceptable to God means it no longer matters what other
189 people think.
4) The truth brings freedom from sin.
Many people
have experienced the addictive power of sin; they sin, not because they want to but because they have to. what they like, they do what sin likes.
Sinners don't do
Discipleship breaks the
chains of sin and empowers people to reach their full potential (Barclay, 2:21-23). The Light of the World In the wilderness, the pillar of fire represented God's presence, protection, and guidance of the Israelite people (Life Application Bible, p. 1893).
In John 8:12-59 Jesus portrays
Himself as the Light of the world.
In so doing He understood
Himself to represent God's presence, protection, and guidance to the New Israel of those who received Him.
As the Light of the
world, He also brings the truth about God that will set people free from sin (32-36).
But wherever the Light of Jesus' nature
and message shines, judgment follows as the inevitable result. The Light of the World brought judgment on the Jews of His time because of their persistence in sin that made them unwilling to accept the salvation from sin that He offered (33-59). At the end of history, as at the time of Jesus, the issue in the judgment is always, "What do you think of Jesus Christ." There is no other issue.
To accept Him is to have everything.
To reject Him is to lose everything.
But judgment in relation to
Christ always shines light on behavior (32-44).
The best
evidence of whether or not a person has accepted Christ is not in the profession of the mouth, but in the behavior of the life.
190 How we relate to God and how we treat one another are the evidence of whether or not we are in Christ.
Behavior is never
the basis of salvation, but it is the evidence in the judgment that a person is saved. APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2.
3. 4.
5.
Do you face opposition to your faith in your own family? If so, does knowing that Jesus faced the same problem help you to cope with your own situation? Does one tend to be more open or more cautious about expressing faith in the family setting? Why? When others are caught in sin are you quick to pass judgment on them, or is your primary emotion one of sorrow and compassion for them and their families? How do you think the response of Jesus to the woman taken in adultery ought to affect the church's response to divorce and re-marriage? Does knowing that Jesus accepts you as you are make you more or less likely to sin in the future? Why? Do you think Christians or secular people are more likely to misunderstand Jesus today? Explain your answer. Can you think of times in your experience when you grossly misunderstood the Bible, or some theological point? What were the causes of your misunderstanding? To what degree were you like or unlike the religious leaders of John 7 and 8? What are some things that you are proud of in your religious heritage? Do you think that your personal religious heritage is usually a help or a hindrance to relationship with Christ? Why? Does it help or hinder your relationship with other Christians? With those outside the Christian faith?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
2.
Using a Bible Atlas, the SDA Bible Dictionary, an encyclopedia, and any other resources available to you, try to expand your knowledge of the climate and the flow of the seasons in Palestine. Examine Lev 23 and Num 28, 29 with an eye to the comments on those chapters in the SDA Bible Commentary. Compare Jesus' debates with "the Jews" in John 7 and 8 with similar debates in Mark 2:1-3:6 and Mark 11:27 through 12:40. Note the comments on these passages in the SDA Bible Commentary. Note the similarities and the contrasts between the accounts in John and Mark. Taking Jesus' ministry as a whole, what can you learn from the way Jesus dealt with
191 opposition? To what degree is a similar response appropriate for Christians today? FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1. 2. 3.
For Ellen White's view on the meaning and significance of the Feast of Tabernacles read Patriarchs and Prophets, 540542, and Desire of Ages, 447-449. On the cross as the "exaltation" of Jesus see Schnackenburg, 2:398-410. See also White, Desire of Ages, 447-470.
CHAPTER 9 THE GOOD SHEPHERD BRINGS THE LIGHT OF LIFE JOHN 9:1 - 10:21 As Jesus left the temple complex, escaping the murderous purpose of the religious leaders, He came upon a man who had been blind from birth (John 9:1).
After being healed to the glory of
God (9:2-7), the narrative proceeds in a most humorous fashion (8-34).
With comical boldness the man interacts with neighbors
and with the religious leaders, defending Jesus ably and with much sarcasm almost as if by accident. After he is excommunicated from the religious system (34-35) Jesus seeks him out to confirm his developing faith at the expense of the Pharisees who were looking on (35-41).
Jesus then
uses a series of illustrations to defend His actions in support of the blind man (10:1-21).
He portrays Himself as the Good
Shepherd who cares for the outcasts of Israel. The passage as a whole (9:1 - 10:21) is a unity in which Jesus, the Light of the world (8:12; 9:5), brings judgment on the religious leaders who resist the shining of His light on the hearts and lives of those who had once served the system.
192
193 JESUS BRINGS LIGHT TO THE BLIND MAN GETTING INTO THE WORD John 9:1-41 Please read 9:1-41 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1. 2.
3. 4.
5.
List as many points of contact between John 9 and the previous section (John 7 and 8) as you can find. When does this scene take place? There are four major reactions to Jesus in John 9, those of the neighbors, the religious leaders, the man's parents and the man himself. Take four pieces of paper and put "neighbors," "religious leaders," "parents," and "healed blind man" on top of each sheet respectively. Draw a line down the middle of the sheet and put "certain" at the top of one side and "uncertain" at the top of the other. Then list in the appropriate column everything in the chapter that indicates what each of these groups or individuals is certain of and what they are not certain of. Write a paragraph on the value this story may have had to the second generation of Christians for whom John was writing. Write a paragraph regarding the dilemma that the religious leaders find themselves in with respect to Jesus' claims about Himself. In what way do John 5, 7 and 8 help to clarify the nature of this dilemma? What is the major theological issue in John 9:39-41? Compare this passage with John 6:36-47 and 12:37-43. Write out a paragraph describing how the Gospel of John seeks to balance the concept of God's absolute freedom of action with the concept of human responsibility.
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage In John 9 Jesus acts out in real life what He meant when He said, "I am the Light of the world" (8:12).
In healing the man
born blind, Jesus first of all gave him access to literal light, the man could now see (9:7, 11, 15).
At the end of the chapter
Jesus moves beyond the miracle of physical sight and gives to the
194 man his spiritual sight (9:35-39).
His power to give physical
sight demonstrated His ability and His authority to give spiritual sight and spiritual life. The story continues the Feast of Tabernacles' themes of John 8 and 9.
The theme of water is continued by the involvement of
the waters of the Pool of Siloam, from which the ceremonial waters of the Feast were drawn, in the process of healing (9:7, cf. 7:37-39).
The theme of light is illustrated in the healing
and declared explicitly by Jesus (9:5, cf. 8:12).
Though the
Jews of the day felt no need for Jesus because they were children of Abraham (8:33), the story of this man, a Jew, a son of Abraham, yet afflicted from birth, represented the spiritual need of his countrymen for Christ.
In 9:39-41 the main lesson of the
story of 9:1-38 is drawn out explicitly.
Other lessons from the
story are drawn out in the first half of John 10. The story of John 9 draws a sharp contrast between the healed blind man and the Pharisees.
He repeatedly admits
ignorance of who it was that healed him (12, 25, 36).
The
Pharisees, on the other hand, boast with confidence that they know exactly what is going on (16, 24, 29). The blind man continually grows in faith, talking about a "man 'they' call Jesus" (11), then coming to believe that Jesus must be a prophet (17), then wishing to become His disciple (27-note the "you too,"-- Talbert, Reading John, 160), then insisting that He must be from God (33), and finally worshipping Jesus as the Son of Man (38).
The Pharisees, on the other hand,
195 continually grow in blindness as the story progresses.
At first
they accept the fact that a healing took place (15), then they seem uncertain (16, 17).
As the debate continues they become
less and less objective until they try to entrap the man into saying the wrong thing (27), express their total rejection of Jesus (29), and finally end up vilifying the one whose main fault was that he happened to be in the vicinity when Jesus walked by (34).
At the end of the chapter, their blindness is confirmed by
the Light of the world (39-41). The Background of the Passage John's decision to include this story in his Gospel may indicate that the debate between the healed blind man and the religious leaders reflects the debates between Jews and Christians in the world to which John wrote.
After the
destruction of Jerusalem, Jews became increasingly interested in finding ways to identify Christians who were attending the synagogues so as to exclude them from the services of worship. This is in contrast to the situation reflected in the book of Acts where Christians generally worshipped quite freely in the synagogues and the temple (Acts 13:5; 15:21) The story of this chapter would, therefore, have been a comfort to second generation Christians, particularly Jewish Christians, who had lost their place in the synagogue and were wondering if they had done the right thing in following Jesus. Other possible attempts to speak to the difficult situation in which some Christians at the end of the century found themselves
196 are 12:42, 43 and 16:2. The Jews of the time believed that reward and punishments would follow actions as far as the third and fourth generation. When disease struck, there must be a spiritual cause.
Thus, if a
child were born blind it meant either that a parent or grandparent had sinned, or that God was punishing in advance for sins yet to be committed.
For those born of Jewish parents,
however, the "merits of the fathers" might come into play to mitigate the punishment.
It was felt that fathers like Abraham
and Moses had achieved such sterling obedience that they had piled up a fund of merit that might mitigate the consequences of sin in later generations of Jews.
This explains some of the
pride exuded by the statement, "we are children of Abraham" (8:33, 39). The Passage in Detail In 9:2 the disciples express the theology of the times when they ask who is to blame for the man's condition, he or his parents.
They seem to have felt that every illness or handicap
was a direct result of specific sin.
Jesus moves quickly to deny
this theology (9:3), thereby denying the whole Jewish system of rewards and punishments.
While it is true that many illnesses
are the direct result of sin or poor health practices, there are other reasons for people to be sick or handicapped.
A message of
this passage is that illness or disability sometimes provides a setting in which the work of God becomes uniquely visible. After anointing the man's eyes with mud, Jesus sends him to
197 the Pool of Siloam, at least 1200 yards from where Jesus was standing, to wash the mud off.
The man's eyes are opened at the
pool, not next to Jesus, another confirmation of the Johannine theme that Jesus' word is as good as His touch. After his neighbors engage the man in an amusing interchange (8-12), they bring him to the Pharisees for questioning (13). Since the day of the healing was a Sabbath (14), and since the man was born blind, Jesus' needn't have been in a hurry to heal him.
This fact creates a serious dilemma for the Pharisees (15,
16).
On the one hand, the healing pointed to the work of a man
accredited by God.
Taking the initiative to heal on the Sabbath,
however, showed Him to be a sinner, for the prophet who does mighty works yet does or teaches things contrary to the law of God is a false prophet (cf. Deut 13:1-5).
In doing this deed,
Jesus was pressing them to reason beyond their philosophical capacity!
And the stakes were very high.
As the healed man was
to point out, if performing a miracle indicated that someone was a prophet, performing a miracle without precedent in human history would surely signaled the arrival of the Messiah, would it not (John 9:32)? Although the man's parents knew the truth, they refused to speak because they feared the consequences (9:18-22).
But if
they counseled their son to maintain a similar silence, it did no good, he instead waxes bolder and bolder in sarcastic defiance of the religious leaders (27, 30-33).
The unbelief of the religious
leaders was an amazing thing to the healed man (30).
In their
198 final statement they even let on that they know that the healing was valid (34), their opposition is not based on reasoned argument, it is based on blind hatred.
Since Jesus is not in
their possession, they take out their wrath on the man Jesus had healed.
This illustrated to the second generation that those who
opposed them in their Christian walk were persecuting Jesus as well as them.
He shared in their suffering, as they shared in
His. Verses 35-41 set the stage for the Good Shepherd discourse of John 10.
Jesus is the One who cares for the outcasts.
When
the leaders of a religious system cast people out on the basis of their enmity for Jesus, they demonstrate their own blindness (3941) and give Jesus an opportunity to collect the outcasts for Himself (35-38). The Major Themes of the Passage Predestination and Human Responsibility A major issue in the Gospel of John is clearly signaled in the closing verses of John 9.
In verse 39 Jesus makes it clear
that God is in control of events in this world.
He has come in
order that judgment might take place, "so that the blind will see and those who see will become blind" (39). of any human choice or responsibility.
There is no hint here
But then in response to
the Pharisees Jesus asserts that they must take responsibility for their own blindness (41), no one has done it to them. We see in John 9:39-41, therefore, a dynamic tension between
199 the assertion that God is in control of events, on the one hand, yet human beings are responsible for their own destiny on the other (for an elaboration of what I mean by "dynamic tension" see What the Bible Says About the End-Time, 80). The same dynamic tension is found throughout the Gospel, 12:37-43 for example.
This passage seeks to answer the question,
why is it that Jesus did so many miraculous signs and yet many did not believe in Him (37)? given.
Two answers to the question are
First, it is asserted that many "could not believe"
because, to quote Isaiah the prophet, God "has blinded their eyes, and deadened their hearts" (38, 39).
The original is
explicit, "they were not able to believe" (38) because of God's action.
Second, however, even many who believed would not
confess their faith "for they loved praise from men more than praise from God" (42, 43).
Unbelief has a dual cause; divine
action, on the one hand, and human action on the other. It is clear throughout John that faith is a condition for receiving the gospel.
It is an attitude that human beings must
adopt for themselves (3:18, 36).
They are not allowed any excuse
for unbelief (15:22; 12:47), it ultimately results from a lack of will (5:40; 7:17).
Ultimately people do not come to Jesus
because in some way they refuse to come. Ultimately in the Fourth Gospel, unbelief signals a moral problem.
The reason people don't come to Christ is that they
have something to hide (3:19-21; 5:44; 8:37-47).
Sin, you see,
leaves you only two choices if you want to live with yourself.
200 First, you can confess your sin to God and whoever else it needs to be confessed to, and be at peace with yourself and the universe.
Or, second, you can change your theology to fit the
reality of your unredeemed sinfulness. Behind most heresies, therefore, is a moral problem. People's theologies change to fit their lifestyles. supported by the findings of psychology.
This is
Research indicates that
what you believe has relatively little impact on how you live. You will find sexual, physical, alcohol and drug abuse among church members in good and regular standing and in similar proportions to the secular world.
But the reverse is different,
how you live has a massive impact on what you believe.
To engage
in known sin will eventually change what you believe, if it is not confessed and forsaken. But the above truth must not cause us to overlook its opposite reality in the Fourth Gospel.
In John 6:36-47 Jesus
asserts that no one comes to God unless it was given him or her by God (37).
No one comes to God unless they have been drawn by
God, or "pulled" (44).
But while faith is never possible without
God's intervention, even in this passage there is the sense that in the end people are permitted to make their own decision, whether they will allow themselves to be drawn or not (37, 40). "Everyone who listens to the Father and learns from Him comes to Me" (45). In the sayings of Jesus recorded in the Fourth Gospel, therefore, John strikes a powerful dynamic between God's
201 "predestination" and human responsibility. say that they came to God. chooses to draw them.
No one should ever
No one comes to God unless God
The power and love of God are ultimately
responsible for every person who comes to Jesus. God draw?
But who does
"They will all be taught by God" (45, cf. Isa 54:13).
The danger in the doctrine of predestination is not in what it affirms, but in what it denies.
Predestination affirms
rightly that God is the reason anyone comes to faith. ever boast of what a great Christian they are.
No one can
None of us would
even begin the walk with Christ, unless God had intervened in our lives.
But predestination oversteps the bounds of Scripture if
it asserts that we have no choice in the matter of whether or not we will be saved. The Gospel of John repeatedly asserts that human beings have a choice in the matter, and that they are held responsible for that choice.
The ultimate and greatest sin in the Fourth Gospel,
therefore, is unbelief (16:9; 9:41).
To refuse to believe in the
face of such a great salvation, and in the face of all God's "pulling" power is sin of unconscionable proportions.
Yet even
there, no human being would even become aware of the sin of unbelief unless the Holy Spirit became the agent of conviction (16:9).
To boast of spiritual prowess is, therefore, the most
feeble of all boasts. Perhaps this dynamic tension can best be harmonized as follows: when I look at my own personal past, it is clear that I owe all spiritual progress to the mighty working of God in my
202 life, at the same time, however, when I look to the future, it is equally clear that there are choices that I must make in order to continue in that progress.
THE GOOD SHEPHERD FINDS THE OUTCASTS GETTING INTO THE WORD John 10:1-21 Please read 10:1-21 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
3.
Using a concordance to the King James Version (such as Cruden's or Strong's) find all the verses in the Gospel of John that contain the statement "verily, verily" (look up the word "verily"). Make a list of all these verses and write beside each a brief summary of how it fits into the context. Does it introduce a new thought or emphasize a previous one? Does it come at the beginning, middle, or end of a discourse or discussion? Compare John 10:1-21 with Luke 15 and Matt 18. On three sheets of paper write down the similarities and differences that you see between these three versions of the lost sheep motif in their respective contexts. What do the sheep, the shepherd, the stranger, and the robbers each represent? In what way is this passage related to John 9?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The first part of John 10 (1-21) is closely connected with the events of John 9.
This is evident in the original.
The
chapter does not begin with some expression of a new beginning, but with "I tell you the truth" ("verily, verily I say unto you" in the KJV-- Greek: amên amên).
Nowhere else in the Gospel does
Jesus use this expression at the beginning of a discourse, it
203 always comes as a point of emphasis in the midst of a discourse or a discussion (for example, 6:26, 32, 47, 53; 8:34, 51, 58). Jesus builds on the story of His healing of the blind man and then rescuing him from the spiritual abuse of the religious leaders (9:1-41).
The response of the healed blind man to Jesus
is reflected in 10:4; he was a sheep that recognized the voice of the Shepherd and followed Him.
In John 10 Jesus is the Good
Shepherd who cares for the sheep, even the sheep that have been cast out of the sheepfold. John 9:39-41, therefore, is duodirectional.
It functions as
the summary and conclusion of the spiritual lesson of John 9.
At
the same time, it provides the take-off point for the discourse on the Good Shepherd in John 10.
The Light of the world reveals
the true condition of those would-be shepherds, the Pharisees. Instead of genuinely caring for the sheep, they prove themselves to be hirelings. John 10:1-21 divides naturally into two parts.
Verses 1-6
offer an analogy from real life in the ancient world (1-5) followed by a concluding statement (6).
Then in 10:7ff. Jesus
offers allegorical explanations of the analogy in verses 1-5.
He
speaks of Himself as the Gate (7-10) and the Good Shepherd (1118) who does not lose track of His sheep (cf. 26-30).
Verses 19-
21 offer the mixed reaction of the religious leaders who were present. The Background of the Passage John 10:1-5 is the closest you come in the Gospel of John to
204 Jesus telling a parable.
In addition to this passage, there are
a number of other statements that sound vaguely like parables. Analogies is probably a better word to describe them.
Jesus
speaks of the wind (3:8), the best man at a wedding (3:29), the harvest (4:35-38), slave and free (8:34, 35), the traveler by night (11:9, 10), the grain of wheat (12:24) and the vine (15:17).
These are not parables in the truest sense such as one finds
in Matthew, Mark and Luke.
The analogy in 10:1-5 actually bears
a lot of similarity to ancient riddles. Sheepfolds in ancient Palestine were usually natural caves. The sheep would be led into the cave in the evening and the shepherd would take up his position at the entrance to the cave and sleep there.
Any robber or wild animal that sought access to
the sheep would have to physically get by the shepherd to do it. The same was true for any sheep who wished to wander out for a stroll in the dark.
Where caves were not available, a fieldstone
enclosure would be built with an opening at one end just big enough for the shepherd to block with his body as he slept.
So
when Jesus described Himself as the Good Shepherd and as the Gate for the sheep, listeners would have recognized that these concepts were two different ways of describing the same activity. There are several OT parallels to the Good Shepherd discourse.
As Moses neared the end of his life he became
concerned to find a worthy successor for the leadership of Israel (Num 27:12-23).
He prayed that God would appoint a man over the
community who would lead them out and bring them in like a
205 shepherd does for sheep (27:16, 17).
This role passed on to
Joshua (whose name is the Hebrew equivalent of Jesus).
In Mic
2:12, 13 Yahweh Himself takes on the role of the Shepherd of Israel.
And in Ezek 34 it is the kings of Judah who are the
shepherds of Israel.
But they have been unfaithful to the
requirements of the task (34:2-6). their shepherd Himself (11-16).
So Yahweh plans to become
He will then set right the
things which have been neglected and mishandled (17-22), and will place over Israel His servant David, who will handle them according to Yahweh's plan (23, 24).
From then on Israelites
will prosper in all that they do (25-31). In the OT, therefore, the Good Shepherd concept is associated with Yahweh Himself and with the successors of Moses and David.
All of these concepts clearly apply to Jesus, who is
the true Moses (John 1:17, etc.), a king in the line of David (1:49; 12:13, 15; 18:33-39, cf. 7:42), and one who is equal with the Father (1:1; 10:30). One further detail is most interesting.
In the ancient
Jewish synagogue liturgy, Ezek 34 was read on a Sabbath after the Feast of Tabernacles, when the Feast of Dedication was drawing near.
In the Gospel of John, the Good Shepherd discourse comes
directly after the Feast of Tabernacles (cf. 7:1-11, 14, 37) and just before the passage describing Jesus' visit to the Feast of Dedication (10:22).
Thus, the Good Shepherd discourse of Jesus
fits into its expected place in the Gospel as determined by the historical context.
206 The Passage in Detail The riddle of 10:1-5 stresses the relationship between the shepherd and the sheep.
He always comes in by the entrance,
never by another way, as a robber might do (1, 2).
The sheep
follow him because they recognize his voice and he calls them by name (3, 4).
They will not follow a stranger because they don't
recognize his voice (5). Jesus then sought to explain the analogy or riddle He had just shared (6).
He is the Gate for the sheep and all who came
before Him were thieves and robbers (7-10), but the true sheep did not listen to them (8). (9).
The Gate is the Gate of salvation
The "thieves and robbers" who came before Him may be a
reference to the Sadducees and the chief priests who had dominated the temple system since early in the time of the Maccabees (152 BC).
As a matter of fact, the word for "kill" in
verse 10 is frequently used for sacrificial slaughter in the temple.
Although allowed to dominate the religious system, the
Sadducees and the chief priests never had the confidence of the common people within early Judaism. In contrast to the thieves and robbers who steal, and kill, and destroy, Jesus provided a life that is abundantly richer and fuller than that provided by the religious systems that opposed Him (10).
It has all the quality of eternal life, but begins
immediately for those who believe in Jesus (5:24, 25). The Good Shepherd is next placed in contrast to the hired hand, who doesn't own the sheep (10:11, 12).
The hired hand has
207 no personal concern for the sheep, he watches them only to make a living.
When a wild animal comes he runs away to protect what
really matters to him, himself (12, 13).
The Good Shepherd, on
the other hand, is not only in intimate relationship with the sheep, he is willing to lay down his life for them, because their welfare is his primary concern (14, 15). The "other sheep that are not of this sheep pen" (16) is probably a reference to the incoming of the Gentiles, of whom the first fruits are acknowledged in John 12:20-22.
In fact, the
arrival of the Gentiles to see Jesus seems to signal to Him that the time of His death has come (12:23, 24), the time when He is about to draw, not just the Jews, but everyone to Himself (32). Jesus closes His discourse with a reference to His voluntary death and resurrection in obedience to the command of His Father (10:17-18), a point on which we will elaborate in the chapter on the crucifixion (John 18, 19).
Again the religious leaders seem
uncertain whether Jesus is demon possessed or someone who speaks and acts for God (10:19-21). The Major Themes of the Passage Jesus is the Gate When Jesus describes Himself as the Gate through which the sheep must pass in order to be saved, the Gospel is delivering the same message as Acts 4:12 (cf. John 14:6).
Jesus replaces
all other methods of salvation.
There is no other way into the
sheep fold except by the Gate.
All other paths to salvation are
208 excluded now that Jesus has come. Jesus is the Good Shepherd As the Gate of salvation Jesus is the One who brings us to the Father.
As the Good Shepherd, Jesus is the One who takes
care of those who have entered the sheepfold of the church.
His
two great qualifications for being the Good Shepherd are that He is willing to die for the sheep ((John 10:11-13, 17-18) and that He knows the sheep intimately (3, 14-16).
In these two
qualities, He is in contrast to the Pharisees, who are represented by the hired hands.
The Pharisees do not care for
the sheep, they neither know them, nor are willing to die for them.
For them religion is primarily a matter of self-interest.
Jesus, on the other hand is the Good Shepherd. sheep are lost under His care.
None of the
Not only does He take care of His
own, He is claiming the outcasts of the religious leaders for Himself (9:34-38).
The leaders threw the formerly blind man out
of their religious body, but Jesus reaches out to him and accepts him. The "parable of the lost sheep" in John 10 operates at two levels.
In the first place, it functioned at the time of Jesus
as a rebuke to the Jewish religious leaders who so roughly handled the man born blind.
In their treatment of him they
betrayed their true character as hirelings.
At the extended
level, the story functions in the Gospel of John as an encouragement to members of the second generation who are facing similar treatment to that of the man born blind.
In the second
209 generation hears the voice of the True Shepherd, they are to follow that voice no matter how the hired hands of their day respond. In Matt 18 the parable of the lost sheep functions differently.
The context is church discipline (Matt 18:15-17,
cf. 18:10-14).
The true shepherd of the church will follow the
example of Jesus and do whatever it takes to find a sheep that has drifted out of the church (12, 13).
But although God regards
these lost sheep with tender regard (14), there are bigshots in the church who don't respond to the little ones the way God does (5-7).
Matt 18 is addressed to the bigshots who love to censure
the little ones in the church who struggle with weakness and immaturity.
Those who sit in judgment within the church should
be concerned about how they handle their position because one day they will be called into a higher court themselves (7-9).
In
that court it will be demonstrated that God was more forgiving than they were (23-35). You see, the weak among the sheep are in far greater danger outside the fold than they are within (unless, of course, the leaders of the church turn out to be wolves in sheep's clothing!).
Yet in Matt 18 we find the amazing situation where
the shepherds of the sheep are pushing the sheep out of the fold, giving them occasion to stumble and be lost (6, 29, 30). Apparently God is far more tolerant toward those who fail than we are.
He is even more tolerant of our failures than we are of
ourselves!
210 In Luke 15:3-7 the sheep is not thrown out, it wanders out all by itself, yet the Good Shepherd goes out to find it anyway. The message of John 10 is, "I don't let My sheep get lost" (John 10:28, 29).
The message of Luke 15 is, "Even if they choose to
get lost, I never give up on them, I persevere until I find them and bring them back."
The blessed assurance of these passages is
that no one who comes to the Father through Jesus is ever cast out (John 6:37).
We may be weak in faith, and stumble from
pillar to post, but if we remain in Jesus, as a branch remains in the vine (cf. 15:1-7), we will not only be secure, but gradual growth in grace and character will take place as well.
It is our
job to believe and to choose, it is His job to keep us safe in His hand (10:28, 29). APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2.
3.
What kind of handicaps, financial reverses, relationship problems, illnesses, or other sorrows have ultimately proven to be a great blessing to you spiritually and in other ways? How did you come to recognize the hand of God in some of these circumstances? Have there been times in your life when you have been excluded from a group because of your religious convictions? Did this exclusion eventually prove to be a blessing or does it continue to hurt today? What steps could you have taken to prevent that exclusion? Would these steps have pleased God? Have you learned to distinguish the "voice of God" in your life as opposed to other "voices?" What strategies have helped you become more open to God's leading in your life? What aspects of modern life make it particularly difficult to sense the voice of the Good Shepherd? Can you recall the last time you knew that God had been guiding you in a certain direction?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
Read through the entire Gospel of John once more carefully.
211 Isolate every statement that you can find which relates to the issues of God's freedom of action on the one hand (statements like "I came to this world in order to. . .") and human responsibility on the other (statements like, "If you are willing to do His will . . ."). Note how often one or more of each comes in the same passage. Try to develop your own approach to the issue. FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1. 2. 3.
For more information on ancient riddles and the Gospel of John see the dissertation by Doh. For further study of the issue of predestination versus human responsibility in the Gospel of John see Schnackenburg, 2:259-274; SDA Bible Dictionary, 873-875. See also White, , 470-484.
CHAPTER 10 THE MESSIAH BRINGS LIFE FROM THE DEAD JOHN 10:22 - 11:1-57 The material covered in this chapter divides naturally into three parts.
First comes Jesus' visit to the temple precincts in
Jerusalem during the Feast of Dedication (10:22-42).
Jesus uses
the opportunity to speak of his own dedication to be the One sent by God into the world (36).
The next section (11:1-44) contains
the narrative of the death and resurrection of Lazarus, which serves as a foretaste of Christ's own death and resurrection.
By
this astounding miracle Jesus proves that He is truly the Resurrection and the Life (25, 26).
This same miracle, however,
provides the context in which the religious leaders become so desperate to counter His influence on the people that they lay specific plans to kill him in order, they feel, to save the nation from destruction (11:45-57).
JESUS AT THE FEAST OF DEDICATION GETTING INTO THE WORD John 10:22-42 Please read 10:22-42 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 212
213 1. 2. 3.
Compare this passage with the account of Jesus' visit to the temple in John 7 and 8. Write down every common feature between the two narratives that you can detect. What are the main issues between Jesus and the Jewish religious leaders in this passage? Try to summarize Jesus' responses to each of these issues in a paragraph. List on a sheet of paper all the events recorded in the Gospel that occur in the region of the Jordan. On the basis of this survey, how would you explain that Jesus was much more favorably received across the Jordan than in Jerusalem?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage This passage contains many echoes of Jesus' visit to the temple during the Feast of Tabernacles.
The events all take
place in the precincts of the temple (cf. 7:14, 28).
The Jewish
religious leaders are in the forefront of the attempt to debate with Him (cf. 8:25, 53).
A primary issue is the question of
Jesus' Messiahship (cf. 7:26, 31, 41, 42; 9:22).
There is once
again an attempt to arrest Him and to stone Him (7:30, 32, 44-46; 8:59).
Jesus again claims a unique relationship with His Father
(7:16, 17, 28, 29, 33; 8:16-19, 26-29, 38, 42, 49, 50, 54, 55). The passage revolves around two basic issues, the question of whether or not Jesus is the Messiah (10:24), and the accusation of the Jews that Jesus has committed blasphemy in His claim to a unique relationship with God (10:33). to the first issue is found in verses 25-30.
Jesus' response
The response of the
religious leaders is to pick up stones with which to execute Him (31).
They justify the planned execution on the charge of
blasphemy (33), to which Jesus responds at some length (34-38).
214 After a further attempt to seize Him, He slips away and returns to the other side of the Jordan where the Baptist had done his preaching, and where He is received more positively (39-42). This break in the account brings to a close the section of the Gospel that centered on Jesus' activity in relation to the feasts of Judaism (chapters 5-10 of the Gospel). The Background of the Passage The Feast of Dedication (called Hanukkah today) did not originate in OT times.
It celebrated the re-dedication of the
temple in Jerusalem in 165 BC after Antiochus Epiphanes, King of Syria, had defiled it a few years before.
Among other things,
Antiochus sacrificed a pig on the temple altar, forbade keeping of the Sabbath, and compelled many Jews to eat pork.
After the
Maccabees, a group of Jewish guerilla fighters under the leadership of Judas Maccabeus, liberated Jerusalem from the clutches of Antiochus, they saw to the cleansing and rededication of the temple, the celebration of which became an annual feast within Judaism.
By attending the Feast, Jesus lent it a certain
legitimacy, even though it did not have a Biblical origin. The concept of the dedication of the temple, however, did have a Biblical origin.
In the wilderness, God Himself appeared
in person at the dedication of the tabernacle under Moses (Exod 40:34, 35; Num 7:1-11).
Num 7, therefore, became the chief
reading from the books of Moses for the Feast of Dedication. When Solomon finished the construction of the temple, there was a similar ceremony of dedication, and once more the personal
215 appearance of God took place (1 Kings 8:1-11, 62-65; 2 Chr 7:19). After the Exile in Babylon, Zerubbabel raised up a more modest temple (Hag 1:12 - 2:9) to replace Solomon's which had been destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar (2 Chr 36:18, 19).
The opening
of this building was also celebrated with a ceremony of dedication (Ezra 6:13-18).
A similar service was held nearly a
hundred years later to celebrate the completion of the walls of Jerusalem under Nehemiah, (Neh 12:27-47).
So the ceremony of
dedication under the Maccabees which eventually developed into the annual Feast of Dedication was certainly not without precedent in the sacred Scriptures of the Jewish people. In the NT the concept and/or language of dedication is used in relation to the dedication of the infant Jesus in the temple (Luke 2:23), the baptism of Jesus (Matt 3:13-17; Luke 3:21, 22), the scene in John 10 that we are discussing, the inauguration of the heavenly sanctuary at the ascension of Christ (Heb 10:20, cf. Rev 4, 5), the cessation of the heavenly sanctuary's ministry before the seven bowls of wrath are poured out in Revelation (Rev 15:5-8; cf. 16:1-21) and the inauguration on earth of the New Jerusalem (Rev 21:1-8, 22). The Passage in Detail The Feast of Dedication normally comes in the month of December, at the onset of winter (10:22).
The weather in
Palestine at that time is quite similar to November in Europe and the northern half of the continental United States, cold and
216 often rainy.
Bitter winds strike Jerusalem out of the east much
of the time. Jesus was walking with His disciples in the part of the temple area called Solomon's Colonnade (23).
This was
appropriate to the season because Solomon's Colonnade was a roofed walkway supported by columns along the eastern wall of the temple complex.
The colonnade provided shelter from the bitter
east winds and on clear days was warmed in the later part of the day by the sun. The religious leaders gather around Jesus and demand a plain answer to the question, "If you are the Christ (Messiah), tell us plainly" (24).
"How long will you keep us in suspense?" is a
creative but accurate English translation of a Greek idiom that says, roughly, "How long will you keep our souls raised up?"
It
is conceivable that the question was intentionally tricky like the one in the story of the woman caught in adultery (8:3-11). The Feast of Dedication celebrated Jewish deliverance from foreign oppression 200 years earlier, thus it would tend to raise hopes that deliverance from Rome might again occur during the Feast.
In that kind of atmosphere the Romans would be more
sensitive to Messianic claims than usual.
The intent of the
question may have been to stir up the Romans against Jesus. Jesus responds that He has already answered their question through his actions, such as healing the man born blind (cf. 10:21), but that they cannot understand because they are not His sheep, and do not, therefore, recognize His voice (25-27).
In
217 verses 26 and 27 Jesus refers back to the Good Shepherd discussion at the beginning of the chapter (3-5, 14-16).
Verse
28 reiterates a common theme in the Gospel of John, eternal life has become a present reality through relationship with Jesus. This is possible because He and the Father work in total harmony (28-30). In verse 32 we find one of Jesus' most humorous comments in the Gospel of John.
The religious leaders stand before Him with
stones in their hands, breathing fire (31).
Jesus says, as it
were, "Just one moment, before you stone me please explain, for which of my good works are you stoning me?"
They respond that
they are not objecting to His good works, but that they seek to stone Him for blasphemy, for claiming to be God (33, cf. 5:18). Jesus replies first of all that the word "God" is not always an inappropriate term for human beings to take upon themselves (10:34, 35).
Psalm 82 indicates that earthly judges in ancient
Israel functioned as "gods" because they were carrying out God's work of judgment according to His appointment.
If that
designation was appropriate for ordinary human beings when they were appointed by God, how much more is the term appropriate when God's own Son, the one who existed with God from eternity and bears within his own person the fullness of deity, is appointed by God to go into the world to reveal what God is like (John 10:35, 36, cf. 1:1)!
If the argument goes over our heads a bit
today, the basic point is clear.
Jesus' claims do not exceed
what Scripture allows (Talbert, Reading John, 170).
218 As the "Dedicated One" Jesus was sent by the Father to do works that are the counterpart of the works in the temple, saving human beings from sin (John 10:37, 38).
His miracles, such as
the raising of Lazarus which He is about to do, testify to those who are willing to listen that Jesus is truly the One He claims to be (cf. 20:30, 31).
But the religious leaders again
demonstrate that they are not truly listening (10:39). Since Jesus' own land has rejected him (cf. 1:11), He leaves Judea to find faith across the Jordan (40-42).
There the
ministry of the Baptist is still respected, and, as a result, Jesus gets a much more positive hearing than He does in Jerusalem and Judea.
Verse 41 is the last of four mentions of the Baptist
in the Gospel of John, each shorter than the one before (1:19-36; 3:23-30; 5:33-35; 10:41).
It is almost as if the author of this
Gospel has programmatically illustrated the increase of Jesus and the decrease of the Baptist in terms of the respective attention that they receive from the reader of the Gospel (cf. 3:30). The Major Themes of the Passage The Dedication of Jesus The key theme of this section of the Gospel is that in the person of Jesus God has once again come to the temple as He did at its various dedications in days of old (cf. Exod 40 and 1 Kings 8).
And He comes at the official time of dedication in the
calendar of the temple (10:36)!
Once again Jesus appears as the
substantive replacement of a Jewish feast.
He offers to those
219 who believe in Him the very life that was promised to those who worshipped at the temple in Jerusalem (cf. 1:14; 2:21).
Those
who believe in Jesus have fuller access to God than that available to those who supported the sacrificial system in Jerusalem (10:27-29, cf. 1:12-18; Rom 5:1, 2; Heb 9:6-10; 10:1922). The Deity of Christ It seems that what Jesus meant in 10:30 is best understood by the reaction of the Jews in verses 31 and 33. understood Him to claim equality with God.
They clearly
And instead of
refuting the charge by saying, "Of course I am not equal with God, where did you come up with such a stupid idea?" Jesus offers the problematic response of verses 34-36, essentially saying, "There is nothing Scripturally wrong with what I said or with what you understood.
Furthermore, if you where truly paying
attention to the things I have been doing you would not question My claims about Myself (37, 38)." The controversy between Jesus and the Jews began over His healing on the Sabbath, but intensified over His claim to be equal with God (cf. 5:16, 18).
The religious leaders were not
expecting the Messiah to be a divine figure.
Therefore, when
Jesus claimed unity of being with God and apparently defied the regulations related to the Sabbath, they felt justified in rejecting Him as the promised Messiah.
220 JESUS RAISES LAZARUS FROM THE DEAD GETTING INTO THE WORD John 11:1-44 Please read 11:1-44 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1. 2.
3. 4.
5.
Describe briefly the effect of the previous passage (10:2242) on Jesus' actions in this passage. What verse(s) hold(s) the key to understanding the theological purpose that Jesus had in raising Lazarus from the dead? Describe that theological purpose in a paragraph or two. Why do you think Jesus delayed two days before going to Bethany? Write a brief paragraph about each person, group, and event that was affected in some way by that delay. Based on the encounters in this chapter, try to write a brief character sketch of Mary and Martha. What are their respective personalities like? What is their respective attitude toward Jesus at the time of His visit in this chapter? How did they feel about His delay in responding to their request? What is the respective condition of their faith before Lazarus is raised? Explain. Since Jesus knows that He has come to raise Lazarus from the dead (11), why is He troubled and sorrowful in verses 33-38? Explain your answer.
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The setting of this narrative is the preceding section. Jesus has earned the undying hostility of the religious leaders in Jerusalem by claiming to be God (10:33).
Jesus has withdrawn
from the area of Jerusalem, thus lowering the tension somewhat (10:40).
But the reader senses that all it will take to provoke
the religious leaders to finish off Jesus is one final provocative act.
The scene is, therefore, set for the last straw
in Jesus' stormy relationship with the Jewish ruling council.
221 The key statement of the chapter seems to be found in 11:4; the purpose of Lazarus' illness and death is that both God and His Son might be glorified in it. meaning.
This is a deliberate double
The characters of Jesus and His Father are glorified in
what the miracle tells of their power to give life and to show mercy, but Jesus is glorified in the sense that the miracle is what precipitates His suffering and death (11:53).
The purpose
of the glorification is that the disciples and others might believe (11:15, 40). The Background of the Passage A tomb in the Bethany area has been found containing the names Lazarus, Mary and Martha.
Although one cannot be
absolutely certain that this is the actual grave of the three individuals featured in this passage, it is unlikely that this is merely a coincidence, since they were probably a wealthy family (who could afford "many" mourners [11:19], Talbert, Reading John, 173).
At the least, this remarkable find is a further piece of
evidence confirming the basic accuracy of the historical setting in the Gospel of John. In popular Jewish belief at the time, the soul of an individual hovered over the body for three days hoping for resuscitation to take place, after that there was no more hope of resurrection (Talbert, Reading John, 172).
The result of the
fact that Jesus delayed coming for two days (11:6) was that Lazarus would be dead a full four days when Jesus raised him (17, 39).
Had Jesus come earlier, His raising of Lazarus from the
222 dead might have aroused no more interest than merely another healing.
But the delay resulted in a powerful confirmation of
the fact that Jesus is the Resurrection and the Life (25, 26). The Passage in Detail The mention of Mary's anointing of Jesus' feet (11:2) seems a bit strange when the story is only told in the next chapter of the Gospel (12:1-8).
Evidently the author knew that the story
was widely known among the second generation of Christians who made up his original audience. Why does Jesus delay for two days?
The primary reason, of
course, is that Jesus does nothing in the Gospel apart from the direction of God.
When it would be time to go, the Father would
in some way signal that to Jesus (cf. 4:4; 7:1-9). such a signal can be seen in 12:20-24.
An example of
Somehow Jesus recognized,
in the request of the Greeks to see Him, an indication that the hour of His suffering and death had come, probably because that death was to draw all creation to Himself (12:32). When Jesus indicates that He is ready to go to Lazarus, the disciples protest, reminding Him of the recent attempt to stone Him in the environs of Jerusalem (cf. 10:31, 33).
The disciples
seem to sense that if Jesus goes back to Jerusalem, it will be for the last time.
Jesus' reply reminds them that He is the
Light of the world (11:9, 10, cf. 9:4-5, 1:4; 3:16-21).
Just as
He cannot go wrong when He operates at the direction of His Father, the disciples cannot go wrong when they are walking in Jesus' light.
223 The passage that follows (11:11-16) is a clear illustration of the Hebrew analogy between death and sleep.
The Greek word
for sleep here (hypnou) is the root from which we get the word "hypnotism," putting people to sleep. (No wonder some people think a lot of hypnotism is going on in churches these days!) Thomas hardly seems to be a doubter in this passage.
If Jesus is
about to die, Thomas is quite prepared to die with Him!
Actually
the real doubter in the Gospel of John is Philip (6:5-9; 14:811). Verse 17 demonstrates that Jesus did not deliberately delay his arrival in Bethany so that Lazarus could be dead for four days.
He apparently did not know the exact time of Lazarus'
death, although He did know that it had occurred. Jesus does not immediately enter into Bethany, but remains outside of town and sends word that He has come. to meet Him but Mary stays at home (20).
Martha goes out
Perhaps Mary was a
fragile personality who felt wounded that Jesus had not come immediately at her request (3).
Perhaps she was uncertain
whether Jesus really cared and feared to go out and see Him. Martha had no such qualms, and after a gentle expression of disappointment, she immediately expresses her continuing faith and trust in Jesus (21-22, 24), drawing from Him one of His most stirring self-affirmations (25, 26).
In response Martha offers
one of the most profound expressions of faith in the whole Gospel (27), far superior to that of Peter (6:68, 69), it is the very expression that the Gospel sought to elicit from its readers
224 (20:30, 31).
Martha, therefore, forever assigned to the kitchen
in Luke 10:38-42, stands out in this Gospel as one of the brightest examples of mature faith and discipleship. Not so with Mary.
When Mary finally goes out, at the
specific request of Jesus (28), she repeats Martha's complaint, but without any affirmation of continued faith (32).
As a result
she receives no revelation from Jesus (cf. 25, 26), and He draws no confession of faith from her (cf. 27).
Instead He becomes
deeply troubled at her lack of faith and the evident lack of faith in those with her (33-37).
That Mary's statement expresses
a lack of faith is clear from the parallel between Jesus' reactions in verses 33 and 38 and the statements that caused those reactions (32, 37).
Jesus has come to invite them to
behold the resurrection and the life.
Instead of anticipating
what He has to offer, they invite Him to behold death, the tomb of Lazarus (34). John 11:26 has troubled many people.
What does Jesus mean
when He says that those who believe in Him will never die? see believers dying all the time.
We
Does that mean that the body
dies, but the soul continues to live in Christ?
Here is where
the dialogue between Jesus and His disciples in verses 11-16 becomes instructive.
For Jesus the death that believers die, is
not really death, it is only temporary like sleep (11-14). Though believers may sleep like Lazarus, they will never die in the ultimate sense. God is fully able to give life to anyone He wishes (5:21-
225 29).
The exciting thing is that those who live and believe in
Jesus live in the divine favor (11:26). any longer.
Death need not be feared
They may sleep but they will never truly die.
Those
who have received spiritual life from Jesus are guaranteed physical life at the resurrection. Though Martha's faith shone brightly in verses 21 to 27, she fails to fully reason to the implications of Jesus' I AM statement (25, 26) for the situation at hand (39).
Jesus gently
rebukes her for not seeing that He had come to do something above and beyond all that she could ask or think, a miracle that would foreshadow the fullness of the eschaton (40).
Jesus prays with
eyes open and head raised (41, 42; the Bible does not mandate a particular body position for prayer over against all others).
He
does not touch Lazarus or even approach the tomb (43-- "Jesus called with a loud voice").
His word is as good as His touch.
What results is an indisputable miracle (44). been dead for four days.
Lazarus had
The reality of the miracle is not even
questioned by the hostile witnesses (47).
In describing this
miracle, John clearly has Jesus acting out the promise of 5:28, 29.
The dead man is in a tomb (11:17, cf. 5:28), He hears the
voice of Jesus (11:43, cf. 5:28) and he comes out (11:43, cf. 5:29).
This is what happens when the Resurrection and the Life
comes in contact with death (11:25, 26, cf. John 5:21-30).
226 The Major Themes of the Passage Glory In the chapter on the wedding at Cana we first noted the theme of glory.
It is a major highlight in this chapter as well.
The ultimate moment of glory for Jesus (in this Gospel) is His exaltation on the cross.
It is there that the character of God
is most plainly revealed in human flesh.
While the raising of
Lazarus brought praise to God (cf. 12:12-18) and was the means of encouraging belief (40), the greatest glory arose from the fact that the miracle resulted in the arrest, suffering and death of Jesus.
That is why the account of raising Lazarus comes at the
transition in the Gospel from stories about the earthly ministry of Jesus to the narrative of His suffering and death.
It is the
turning point in the Gospel to a focus on the final Passover (12:1; 13:1) and the passion that took place then. Mary, Martha and the Second Generation Fortunately, Mary of Bethany's moment of spiritual darkness is only short-lived.
In the resurrection of her brother Mary
receives the ultimate rebuke as well as the ultimate encouragement.
She may appear spiritually hopeless at this stage
of her experience, nevertheless, when her feeble faith receives its ultimate confirmation, she rises to become the brightest example of discipleship in the Gospel (12:1-8).
What an
encouragement to the second generation to believe even when Jesus is absent, and His power seems to have failed!
What an
227 encouragement to us who live in a secular world where God also seems absent and powerless!
Mary is an example of God's
limitless power to redeem those whose faith is weak and whose hope is gone. But to the second generation, of which we are a part, the greater example may be Martha.
Mary is like Thomas, who had to
see in order to believe (cf. 20:24-28).
But Martha in this case
represents the second generation, who although she had not yet seen the resurrection nevertheless believed on the grounds of what she already knew about Jesus.
There are two types of saving
faith in the gospel, the faith of those who see and the faith of those who believe without seeing (29).
Only the latter is
relevant for the second generation and for today, at a time when Jesus is not physically present, yet can be fully appreciated through the words of His disciples. The Meaning of "Life" The word "life" is used in a number of different ways in the Gospel of John.
It is important, whenever possible, to be able
to distinguish the exact nuance intended.
In Matthew, Mark, and
Luke, of course, eternal life is limited to the future, when Jesus returns in power and glory and raises those who believe in Him to a physical life that will never end (Matt 19:29; 24:30, 31; 25:46; Mark 10:30; 13:26, 27; Luke 18:30).
But in the Gospel
of John, life is particularly focused on the present reality of what Jesus does for those who believe in Him (John 3:15, 16, 36). It is apparent in the Fourth Gospel that Jesus is the true
228 Giver of Life (5:21, 26; 6:33; 11:25, 26; 14:6, etc.).
That life
is imparted by His words (4:50; 5:8, 24; 6:63; 11:43), so the second generation is at no disadvantage.
They have access to
Jesus' words through the Gospel (17:20).
"Life" in the Gospel of
John is not primarily understood as physical existence, but rather as the answer to humanity's search for meaning and significance.
Jesus makes it possible to attain life at its
fullest potential (8:32, 36; 10:10).
Above all else, eternal
life is marked by a present and living relationship with God through Jesus Christ (17:3).
The physical resurrection of
Lazarus was the sign of two things, that Jesus had the power to give eternal life now (in the sense of meaning and significance to life) and to raise the dead to eternal physical existence at the last day (5:28, 29). There are two keys to attaining life at its best.
The first
is to know that the source of that life is found only in Christ (14:6; 6:33-59, cf. 1 John 5:11, 12). (John 11:25, 26). (1:4, 12).
Wherever Jesus is, life is
The second key to attaining life is believing
It is through continual relationship with Jesus that
individuals appropriate the life that is ever present in Jesus (3:16, 36).
229 THE PLOT TO KILL JESUS GETTING INTO THE WORD John 11:45-57 Please read 11:45-57 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
List all the events in the Gospel that provoked a reaction from the religious authorities. What reaction did the raising of Lazarus produce? In what way do you think the leadership's reaction to the miracle in John 11 was affected by perceptions of Jesus developed in earlier encounters? Please elaborate on your answer on the basis of specific passages in the Gospel itself. Please list on a piece of paper the chief concerns of the religious leaders that make them willing to eliminate Jesus? Would these have been legitimate concerns if Jesus had been a fraud? Explain.
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The occasion for this meeting of the Sanhedrin was the raising of Lazarus from the dead.
We see in this context a
phenomenon that is true throughout the Gospel.
Every miracle
which Jesus performed had two equal and opposite results.
On the
one hand it built faith on the part of those who saw the true significance of the sign (2:11 and 11:45, for example).
But the
same miracle also increased the opposition and hatred toward Jesus of the religious authorities that had resisted Him virtually from the first (5:16-18; 9:14-34; 11:45-53). This relationship of accelerating provocation can be clearly seen in the following chart, where the events appear like an ascending staircase:
230 +)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))), * +)Q Cleansing the temple (2:13-22) * +)3)Q Healing on the Sabbath (5:1-18) * * .)Q Disrupting Worship (7:37-39; 8:12) * * +)Q "Blasphemy" (8:58, 59) * .)3)Q Healing on Sabbath (9:1-16) * .)Q "Blasphemy" (10:30-33) .))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))-
* * * * * *
The last straw that the religious leaders are waiting for in the Gospel of John is the raising of Lazarus from the dead (11:1-44-a total of seven provocative acts in Jerusalem).
In the Fourth
Gospel it is the resurrection of Lazarus that precipitates the final steps that lead to the "hour" of Jesus' ultimate "glorification" and "lifting up," the cross (11:45-53). The Passage in Detail Among the mourners who had come to commiserate with Mary over the death of her brother there was a division of reaction; some believed in Jesus, but others felt that it was a provocation that needed to be reported to the authorities (45, 46).
In
virtual desperation, the authorities called a meeting to consider the implications of Jesus' greatest miracle for their standing before the people (47).
They feared two things.
of all concerned for their political position.
They were first They feared that
the people would stop listening to them and go over to Jesus as their primary spiritual authority.
Their second fear was that
the Romans would then do with Jesus and His followers what they had done with the many Messianic pretenders up until that time (48). Apparently the meeting broke down into a babble of fearful
231 speculation, for Caiaphas had to take forceful steps even to get their attention (49, 50).
To him the matter was of such grave
severity that only the death of Jesus could possibly save the nation from destruction.
So from that moment on the council set
its face to destroy Jesus (53). Being aware of the council's plans Jesus no longer moved about publicly in a way that brought Him to the attention of the religious leadership. area of Judea (54).
He withdrew with His disciples to a remote As Passover drew near, the crowds began to
speculate whether Jesus would dare to make an appearance at the Feast (55, 56).
The ruling council bided its time, awaiting an
opportunity to arrest Jesus (57).
These last four verses of John
11 signal the conclusion of Jesus' public ministry and provide part of the literary bridge to the narrative of His passion. The Major Themes of the Passage The Biting Humor of the Gospel of John We have seen that the Gospel of John has many examples of deliberate double meanings.
It also has many examples of the
biting style of humor called irony, in which one pokes fun at a victim by saying the opposite of what is truly intended ("Oh, what a lovely dress!
Where can I get one like it?" says the vain
teen-age girl to another whose dress had been handed down for generations!), or a person's expectations are suddenly and rudely shattered (the cigar that blows up in your face!).
The purpose
of such humor in this Gospel is to show the reader that to oppose
232 the Gospel's view of Jesus is to ultimately look foolish and to see one's hopes and dreams destroyed. John 11:48-52 brings home the subtle and ironic message that in destroying Jesus the religious authorities were defeating their own intentions for themselves, both in this life and in the life to come.
The ruling council of the Jews was obviously
panicked by the resurrection of Lazarus (11:45-48).
They feared
that if they didn't put a stop to His work "everyone will believe in him, and then the Romans will come and take away both our place and our nation" (48).
Caiaphas, a blustering windbag ("You
know nothing at all"-- 49), came on the scene to argue that the council had to do away with Jesus if the nation was to survive (50). The ironic double meanings of the Fourth Gospel reach their height in 48-52.
Caiaphas, expressing his hostility to Jesus, is
congratulated for successfully prophesying that Jesus' death would produce the salvation of the nation (though obviously in a totally different sense than Caiaphas intended)!
God evidently
used him to explain the meaning of Jesus' death even though he didn't realize what he was doing. The irony of John reaches almost riotous proportions in verse 49.
In desperation the Sanhedrin says that if they allow
Jesus to continue living everyone will believe in Him and the Romans would come and destroy both city and temple. does the reader at the end of the first century know?
But what That in
crucifying Jesus the ruling council of the Jews brought upon
233 themselves the very consequences they had feared.
The purpose of
the religious leaders in crucifying Jesus was to save the nation and the temple.
The ironic result was that their action
destroyed the nation and the temple.
Their purpose was to
prevent the world from believing in Jesus.
The ironic result of
the crucifixion was that through the death of Jesus God brought salvation to the world in a way that the religious authorities would never have dreamed. Contemporary Implications The sinful human heart has an almost infinite capacity to justify injustice.
In this passage we see sincere religious
people developing good, solid reasons to destroy a gentle Teacher whose primary mistake was to tell the truth about Himself. During the Jewish Holocaust of World War II, the Nazis prided themselves in the conviction that the day would come when the world would thank them for getting rid of the Jews. acting as servants to all nations!
They were
Such incredible self-
deception will reach its full and final zenith in the last days of earth's history (cf. Rev 13:16, 17).
Jesus speaks of a time
"when anyone who kills you will think he is offering a service to God" (John 16:2).
The Jewish religious leaders of Jesus' day
were no more guilty of such self-deception than any other people. Those who reject Jesus today would act the same as they did, if given the same opportunity.
234 APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2.
3.
4.
Does it make any real difference if a person believes that Jesus is fully God or not? In what ways would the ministry of the Gospel of John be diminished in your life if you thought Jesus was only a good man? An angel? The highest created being? Can you think of times in your life when God delayed in answering your requests? How did you feel at such times? Did you ever question God's care and concern at such times? How did you recover your confidence in God? What experiences confirmed your faith at those times? Who do you relate to in this story? Mary? Martha? Lazarus? The mourners with Mary? The Jewish leaders? Do you think Jesus would weep or rejoice over your attitude toward Him right now? What changes in your attitude do you think He would like to make? Have you ever opposed something that you knew deep down inside was right? Why did you do it? How did you come to acknowledge your self-deception? Can you think of some strategies for avoiding self-deception on a day-to-day basis?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
2.
Using a Bible Atlas, study a map of the temple precincts in Jerusalem. Identify the location of Solomon's Colonnade. Would Jesus and His disciples be within earshot of the inner courts of the temple? How far were they from the Roman fortress of Antonia? With the help of a concordance and/or the SDA Bible Dictionary find and list all the resurrections from the dead in the Bible. How many eras of Biblical history are represented? In what way(s) is the resurrection of Lazarus unique among these? In what ways is it similar?
FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1.
2. 3. 4.
For the history surrounding the Dedication of the Temple in 165 BC read the book of 1 Maccabbees in the Apocrypha. See also the SDA Bible Commentary, 5:28-31 and SDA Bible Dictionary, 1076. On the issue of self-deception and its cure, see Paulien, Present Truth in the Real World, 191-200. For more information on the biting humor of the Gospel of John see Culpepper, Anatomy of the Fourth Gospel, 169-180, and the book by Duke. See also White, Desire of Ages, 524-542.
CHAPTER 11 "THE HOUR" OF LIFE-GIVING JOHN 12:1-50 John 12 contains two main narratives, a discourse of Jesus and a brief epilogue to His public ministry.
The material in
John 12 functions as a transition between the public ministry of Jesus and the "hour" of His suffering and death.
The first
narrative tells of Jesus' "anointing for His burial" by Mary at the dinner in Bethany (1-8).
After a reminder of the plotting of
the chief priests against Jesus (9-11), the second narrative describes the triumphal entry into Jerusalem with extreme brevity (12-19), again with reference to His death (16).
Somewhere in
the vicinity of Jerusalem, possibly in the temple precincts, a request by some Greeks to see Jesus causes Him to recognize that the "hour" of His suffering and death has come, and He meditates on its significance in dialogue with the crowd (20-36).
John
12:1-36 as a whole, therefore, is saturated with the ironic theme that the life Jesus offers can only come through the death of the Life-Giver. The rest of John 12 functions as a summary epilogue of some of the key movements in the first main part of the Gospel.
After
an explanation of the reasons why most of the religious leaders 235
236 did not believe in Him in spite of the signs which he did (3743), the epilogue concludes with a brief summary of Jesus' message; He has come to reveal the Father (44-46) and all who hear Him will be judged by the words He says (47-50). GETTING INTO THE WORD John 12:1-50 Please read 12:1-50 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
3.
4. 5.
Compare John 1:19 - 2:11 with John 12-19. List the evidence in these respective sections that each covers roughly a week of time. Do you see any relation between these "weeks" in the Gospel and Creation week in Gen 1 and 2? In a paragraph or two, please outline the theological significance of perceiving the cross in the light of Creation week. The actions of both Mary and Judas could be evil or beneficial depending on the context in which they occurred. On what basis is Mary commended and Judas condemned in this account? Please explain your answer. Compare John 12:12-16 with Zech 9, the context from which the quotation in verse 15 is drawn. Does the arrival of the Greeks in 12:20 relate to anything in the context of Zech 9:9? What point is John making about the nature of Jesus' kingship and the difference between his view of Jesus' kingship and that of the crowd in John 12:9-19? Please explain in a paragraph or two. What do you think Jesus is calling His disciples to do in verses 25, 26? Where is Jesus to be found in the world of everyday life? How do you follow Him in practice? On the basis of the context, why does Jesus seem to be troubled in verse 27? What do the Greeks have to do with the cross?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage A comparison of 12:1 and 13:1 suggests a "week" of events that may be intentionally parallel to the "week" at the beginning of the Gospel (1:29, 35, 43; 2:1).
As in the original creation
237 God labored for six days (Gen 1), declared His work finished (Gen 2:1, 2), and rested on the seventh day (Gen 2:2, 3), so Jesus' final labors last six days (John 12:1), He declares His work finished (19:30), and rests in the tomb on the Sabbath day (19:31, 42; 20:1). The Passage in Detail Six days before Passover would be Saturday night of the last week before the crucifixion (12:1-- according to John Passover began that year at sundown Friday; 13:1; 19:31, 35-37).
Jesus
arrives again in Bethany, the place where Mary, Martha, and Lazarus live (cf. 11:17, 18), just about two miles from Jerusalem.
A dinner was given in honor of Jesus, with Lazarus,
the man who had been raised from the dead, at His side (12:2). Martha served, of course, while Mary was busy at the feet of Jesus, as usual (12:2, 3, cf. Luke 10:38-42).
Pure nard was a
fragrant perfume imported from the East and extremely expensive, so the event could hardly have gone unnoticed by the bystanders at the dinner (John 12:3). The narrative of Mary's faith is well-placed to contrast her faith and love for Jesus with the cold-hearted calculations of Caiaphas (11:49, 50) and Judas (12:4-6).
The brief narrative of
Judas is one of the great pieces of ironic humor in the Gospel. Judas claims that the expenditure of perfume as an anointing for burial is a wasteful act (5), yet by betraying Jesus, he was the one largely responsible for its necessity.
Judas expresses
concern for the poor, yet in stealing from the purse he makes it
238 clear that the only poor person he cared about was himself (12:5, 6)!
Later on in the Gospel, the disciples thought that Judas was
leaving the upper room to give something to the poor (13:29), when in actual fact he was going out to betray Jesus (21, 26, 27, 30).
The ultimate irony of the Gospel is, however, that no one
ever gave more to the "poor" than Judas did when he betrayed Jesus to His death on the cross! The crucial matter in the comparison between Mary and Judas is the question of motive.
Mary's anointing of Jesus' feet was
motivated by unselfish love and sacrifice.
Judas' criticism of
Mary, on the other hand, was motivated by greed and deceit.
Once
again Jesus demonstrates that He knows what is in the heart of another person, but He does not expose Judas' motivations to public view.
Instead, He defends Mary by pointing out that
social action (helping the poor), as important as that may be, is ultimately meaningless apart from the cross (12:7, 8, cf. 12:2326; Matt 25:34-46).
Judas, however, instead of learning that
honoring Jesus is far more valuable than money, is soon to exchange Jesus' life (according to Matt 26:14-16; 27:3) for 30 pieces of silver. The two transition passages (John 12:9-11 and 12:17-19) serve to keep the Lazarus motif in the reader's mind. Lazarus (10)? 17, 18).
Why kill
Because he was a powerful witness to Jesus (11,
The author here makes evident that the religious
leaders were no longer operating rationally.
They were so
committed to their theological position that they were willing to
239 commit murder to prevent the facts they were denying from coming to light.
They were wrong and knew they were wrong, but saving
face had become the only priority (cf. 42, 43). Lazarus had committed no blasphemy and broken no Jewish law. He was simply a living witness to the power of Jesus to back up His divine claims.
His experience, therefore, became a foretaste
of John 16:2, where Jesus predicted that the time was coming when His followers would be put out of the synagogue and when even murder would be equated with sacrificial service to God.
Once
Jesus is rejected there is no limit to lengths people will go to oppose Him! The triumphal entry in the Gospel of John (12-16), therefore, is intimately related to the Lazarus incident, being surrounded by a double mention.
The language of verse 13 ("they
took palm branches and went out to meet him") is technical language in Greek for the kind of triumphal procession reserved for a king who has been the victor in a battle or war.
The words
of the people, on the other hand, were drawn from an OT model of triumphal procession moving toward the temple (Ps 118:26, 27). Jesus chose a time and place in which a great crowd of people would be gathering and used an acted parable to unmistakably proclaim that He was the long-looked-for Messiah. The people got the point, but only partially. openly hail Jesus as a nationalistic king.
They began to
The combination of
"king" with "coming one" (John 12:13) has been seen before in the Gospel (6:14, 15).
In John 6, however, Jesus' kingship was
240 clearly a spiritual one (6:35, 63).
In John 12 the author of the
Gospel again modifies the Jewish expectation.
Yes, Jesus is a
king, He has been anointed (12:7), He will receive a crown (19:2).
But He is not the king of nationalistic expectation, His
kingship is universal (11:52; 12:19, 20, 32). The universal nature of Jesus' kingship is evident from the quotation from Zech 9 (12:15).
The Messianic king of Zech 9 not
only has a spiritual mission (Zech 9:9-- "righteous," "having salvation," "gentle"), but He proclaims peace to the Gentiles (cf. John 12:20), and His rule extends to the ends of the earth (Zech 9:10).
The basis of His universal spiritual rule is the
"blood of the covenant" (Zech 9:11, cf. Zeph 3:9, 10, 16, 19). But the fullness of the disciples' understanding of these things would not come until after Jesus was glorified (John 12:16). Once again the second generation of Christians is in view here. The presence of Jesus that is available to Christians through the Holy Spirit brings greater understanding than that which was available to the disciples when Jesus was personally present among them (cf. John 14-16). With the triumphal entry we have seen three great reactions to the miracle of raising Lazarus from the dead.
The miracle
made the Jewish religious leaders want to kill Jesus for fear of what would happen to them if they did not (11:45-53).
The
miracle filled Mary with gratitude and self-sacrificing love (12:1-8).
At the same time the miracle inspired the crowd to try
to use Jesus to meet their own nationalistic expectations (12:9-
241 19, cf. 6:2, 14, 15). The raising of Lazarus, therefore, provoked three varying reactions to Jesus, two of them negative.
Of the three
reactions, Mary's is clearly the one that the author of the Gospel wishes the reader to see as the great model of response to the miraculous signs of Jesus. fickle. Jesus.
The crowd, by way of contrast, is
By John 12:34 they begin to have second thoughts about They will soon enough acquiesce to Jesus' crucifixion.
The arrival of the Greeks on the scene (12:20) confirms the verdict of 19, "The whole world has gone after him!"
Here we see
further fruits of the promised "whosoever believes" (3:16, cf. 20:30, 31), the whole Gentile world was opening up to the gospel (4:42; 7:35; 10:16; 11:52; 12:32, cf. White, Desire of Ages, 622).
The raising of Lazarus has even gotten the attention of
the Gentiles! This golden moment evidently functioned as some sort of signal to Jesus personally, He recognizes in the arrival of the Greeks the arrival of His own "hour" (12:23).
The hour of Jesus'
glorification in the Fourth Gospel is seen not only in His resurrection and ascension, but also in His self-sacrificing suffering and death (24, cf. 13:32; 17:1, 5). The only valid response to the hour of Jesus is for those who believe in Him to follow Him in suffering (12:25, 26).
The
servant of Jesus will be willing to exchange this present life for a truly eternal one (25). centeredness.
To follow Jesus is to disown self-
When our lives are filled with striving for
242 advantage, security and pleasure we do not experience the fullness of life that Jesus offers.
Transferring control of our
lives to Christ is the way to genuine fulfillment.
Those who
disown self-centeredness and submit their lives to Jesus' control will always seek to be wherever Jesus is (26). Where is Jesus that we might follow Him and be where He is? The context of the passage makes it clear that Jesus is to be found in the way of the cross (23-24, 27-33). when we follow Him in the way of the cross.
We are where He is He is to be found
where His people are, particularly the suffering, the downtrodden, the weak, the sinners, and the outcasts (cf. 4:7-42; 5:1-15; 9:34-38; Matt 25:34-46).
Our hour of glory is to give
ourselves to self-sacrifice for the sake of others in some very down-to-earth places.
The Gospel of John illustrates the
believer's way of the cross in 13:1-17.
As we serve others by
"washing their feet" we follow Jesus in the way of the cross.
We
find Him in the person of others. Verse 27 brings us to what could be called the "Johannine Gethsemane."
Jesus is troubled and questions whether He should
ask His Father to release Him from His "hour."
The matter is
similar to the Fourth Gospel's relationship to the many of the major events in Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
John does not report
the temptations of Jesus in the desert but their substance is found in surprising places (6:15, 31; 7:3).
There is no
eschatological sermon on the Mount of Olives but the substance of the sermon is found in the Book of Revelation!
There is no
243 experience of anguish in Gethsemane just before Jesus' betrayal and trial (cf. 18:1-11).
But all the elements of the Gethsemane
experience are contained in John 12:20-36. (12:23, cf. Mark 14:41). cf. Mark 14:34).
The hour has come
Jesus' soul is deeply troubled (12:27,
He contemplates finding a way to avoid His hour
of suffering and death (12:27, cf. Mark 14:35, 36). What causes Jesus' agony here? Greeks (12:20).
It is the arrival of the
This passage seems to be a replay of one of
Satan's temptations in the desert, the temptation to achieve His universal kingship not by suffering and death, but by obeying the command of Satan (Matt 4:8-10; Luke 4:5-8).
Jesus sees in the
Greeks Satan's distraction attempting to turn Him away from the impending cross.
It is as if the arrival of the Greeks suggests,
"You can have all the kingdoms of the world without dying.
Just
go to them, heal the sick, raise the dead, preach to them, and all will be yours."
Jesus' response is to say no to the Prince
of this world, his way will be judged at the cross (John 12:31), the lifting up of Jesus will be the casting down of Satan!
And
the cross, not signs and wonders, will ultimately prove to be the very thing which draws everyone and everything to Jesus (12:32, 33). The response from heaven to Jesus' prayer of anguish was to assure Him of double glory (28).
The Father had glorified the
whole ministry of Jesus in the past (cf. 17:4).
And He was about
to glorify Jesus again on the cross (12:23, 24, 32, 33). affirmation was for the benefit of the disciples (30).
This They
244 needed to know that the way to real glory was in the way of suffering and death, not the way of miracles and human adulation. They needed to know that the Father approved the way of the cross.
One day they too would face opposition and suffering so
severe that it would often lead to death. What kind of judgment was to take place on the cross (31, 32)?
That this was intended as a decisive and crucial statement
is indicate by the pair of "nows" in verse 31. to be a cosmic and universal judgment.
This judgment was
Satan would be dethroned,
and Christ would be enthroned as a result of the cross (cf. Rev 5:5-12).
At the cross all the sins of the world were condemned
and punished in the flesh of Christ (Rom 8:3; 1 Pet 2:24).
To
those who understood the significance of the cross, the ways of Satan would be forever stripped of their power to deceive.
The
way of God's self-sacrificing love would be forever exalted in their place. The crowd was stunned. 12:34)?
What sort of Messiah is this (John
On the basis of the OT Scriptures it was possible to
believe that the Messiah would never die (Ps 110:4; Isa 9:7). What good, after all, is a suffering and dying Messiah?
But the
doctrine of an everlasting Messiah ignored Scriptures like Isa 53:5-9, which hinted at a very different kind of Messiah than they had read into other Scriptures.
It is dangerous to do a
selective reading of Scripture, no matter how sincere the effort, and no matter how lofty the doctrine that one is seeking to protect.
245 Jesus' reply to them reaffirms the centrality of "light" in the message of the Gospel (cf. 1:4, 5, 9-11).
All their ideas
needed to be subject to the light that came from heaven in the person of Jesus.
And that light would soon be taken away from
them, and those left in darkness would have no idea where they were going (12:35, 36).
As if acting out that final threat,
Jesus vanished from their midst (36).
This moment marked the end
of the narrative of Jesus' public ministry.
After a brief
theological summary (12:37-50) of the public ministry He is described as ministering only to his disciples from henceforth (John 13-17, 20, 21). The next section (12:37-43) was discussed in relation to the theological language of the wedding narrative in Cana (2:1-11) and in relation to the predestination versus human responsibility discussion that arose out of 9:39-41. to discuss it in detail here.
We do not need, therefore,
Suffice it to say that this
section functions to explain why it is that so many people refused to believe in Jesus in spite of the incredible signs that Jesus did in their presence (12:37). unbelief fulfilled Scripture (38-41).
On the one hand, their On the other hand, it was
a failure of the will, they chose to seek praise and adulation from their fellow human beings rather than from God (42, 43).
By
implication, those who seek God's approval more than human approval will recognize who Jesus is, and be willing to follow Him, even if following Him should lead them to much suffering and even death.
After all, the praise of others is fickle and short-
246 lived, God's acceptance has eternal significance.
Barclay notes
(2:133) that secret discipleship is a contradiction in terms. "Either the secrecy kills the discipleship or the discipleship kills the secrecy." John 12:44-50 offers a brief summary of key elements of Jesus' message.
To believe in Jesus is to believe in the Father
who sent Him (44). Him (45).
To see Jesus is to see the Father who sent
Jesus then repeats the point of 35 and 36, He has come
into the world of light so that all who believe in Him can escape the darkness (46). In 47 and 48 Jesus summarizes His theology of judgment. Whether the judgment is past, present, or future all judgment in Christ is interrelated.
These two verses seem to strongly
reflect Moses' last sermon recorded in the Book of Deuteronomy (18:18, 19; 31:19, 26; 32:45-47). world for judgment (47).
Jesus did not come into the
Yet there is a judgment in the present
world, that judgment is effected by the words that Jesus speaks and how people respond to those words (48).
The judgment in the
words of Jesus will be consummated in the judgment that occurs at the last day (48).
Present and future judgment are not sharply
distinguished here at the conclusion of Jesus' public ministry. The Major Themes of the Passage Representative Characters Since the Gospel of John does not contain parables in the usual sense, the author seems to have replaced their impact by
247 utilizing the experiences of Jesus and those who responded to Him as acted parables.
As a result many of the characters in the
Gospel function as representatives of groups of people or of types of response to Jesus. Mary, Martha, and Lazarus, although they were real people, are used in the Gospel to symbolize types of Christians.
Mary
symbolizes the type of Christian who is naturally fragile and prone to depression and discouragement, yet in Christ can attain marvelous heights of love and devotion.
Martha, on the other
hand, is a more practical type without the mood swings of Mary, she features discerning faith and a spirit of service.
Lazarus,
whose personality is more of a mystery, nevertheless symbolizes those Christians whose illness, handicap, or bereavement focuses their attention more acutely on the hope of the resurrection than others find necessary. In general, the women of the Gospel of John are symbols of true faith in the midst of doubt and uncertainty.
The Samaritan
woman, Martha, and Mary are all positive figures in the Gospel, as is Jesus' mother.
All of the women are portrayed as real
people with real flaws, yet none are hostile to Jesus, and all seek to understand and appreciate Him.
If the ancient world had
been populated only by women, Jesus' life would have been in no danger! The character of Mary is, of course, the most interesting, particularly if Mary of Bethany is to be equated with Mary Magdalene and the woman caught in adultery as some students of
248 the Gospel believe.
The common denominator of all these accounts
of Mary is that she is found at the feet of Jesus.
Mary of
Bethany anoints Jesus' feet in the spirit of sacrifice (John 12:3).
She falls at His feet in supplication (11:32).
She sits
at His feet in study and contemplation (Luke 10:38-42).
Mary
Magdalene stands at the feet of Jesus in sorrow before the cross (John 19:25-27).
She falls in submission at His feet before the
tomb in the garden (20:14-17).
And the unnamed woman of John
8:3-11 is dragged to Jesus' feet in humiliation, but receives release from her accusers there. For the Christian there is no higher place than at the foot of the cross, at the feet of Jesus. that leads to no regrets. transcends all others.
One finds there a submission
One finds there a purpose that
It is at the foot of the cross that one
begins to understand why it is better to lose one's life for Christ's sake than to seek to gain it for oneself. The Legal Structure of the Gospel of John A simple reading of the Gospel is sufficient to detect a different tone between the first and second parts of the Gospel of John. 12).
The first part is about Jesus' public ministry (John 1-
The second part largely concerns His instruction of His
disciples (13-21).
The first part is combative and has an
argumentative ring to it. His opponents.
Jesus spends much time in debate with
The second part of the Gospel is more
contemplative and devotional. The first part of the Gospel (John 1-12) is modeled on a
249 trial.
Witnesses are called, evidence is presented and the
reader is invited to draw the intended verdict; Jesus is the Messiah who came down from heaven to show the world what God is like.
Whole sections of the Gospel have a courtroom atmosphere
to them (John 5:16-47; 6:22-71; 7:1 - 10:21-- the closest analogy elsewhere in Scripture is probably Matt 18).
It is Jesus who is
on trial in the Gospel of John, along with the claims He makes for Himself. The intention of the Gospel is to lead the reader to the verdict that Jesus is truly the Messiah, the Son of God, and that through faith in Him it is possible to obtain life, just as He promised (20:30, 31).
For the reader of the Gospel, the greatest
witness of all is the Holy Spirit (see the chapter on the Holy Spirit for further observations) who takes the place of Jesus as a witness on this earth (15:26, 27; 16:7-11).
The sobering part
of reading the Gospel of John is that in passing judgment on Jesus, every reader also passes judgment on themselves, for the judgment in favor of or against Jesus settles the eternal destiny of all who read the Fourth Gospel. APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2.
If you had a year's worth of salary or a year of time to use to honor Jesus how would you use it? How would your friends be likely to react? What percentage of your current budget reflects a commitment to honoring Jesus? What percentage should be devoted directly to honoring Jesus? Would the percentage be different if you were a millionaire? How does one balance the needs of others ("the poor") with one's own needs? Is your present relationship with Jesus like that of the crowd in John 12-- up and down depending on the latest events? Can you think of a time when your experience with
250
3.
4.
Christ was really powerful and some piece of news just took all the wind out of your sails in an instant? Can you think of strategies that can help make one's Christian walk more consistent? Have you ever found yourself in a situation like that of the religious leaders who believed in Jesus but refused to confess Him because they feared the loss of their colleagues' approval (cf. 42, 43)? Where are such situations most likely to happen in today's world? At home? On the job? In school? What is it that makes us the most hesitant to share our faith? How does your church relate to people like Mary who have slipped badly, but want to make a fresh start? Does it make a difference if the offense is the first or if the person is a repeat offender?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
With the help of an exhaustive concordance list every reference to the "crowd" in the Gospel of John. How does the attitude of the crowd compare to that of "the Jews." Is there a change or development in the attitude of the crowd to Jesus? How does their attitude in John 12 compare to 7:40-43; 10:19-21?
FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1. 2.
For more information on John 12 see SDA Bible Commentary, 5:1018-1026. Ellen White mentions John's version of Mary's sacrifice in passing in Desire of Ages, 557-568. The same is true of the triumphal entry in 569-579. The material in 621-626 focuses directly on John 12:20-43.
CHAPTER 12 THE DISCIPLES REPLACE JESUS JOHN 13:1 - 17:26 With chapter 13 the entire tone of the Gospel of John is transformed.
Instead of acting, teaching, and debating in public
Jesus retires to an unspecified place (13:1, 2; presumably the upper room mentioned in the other gospels, cf. Matt 26:17-19; Mark 14:12-15; Luke 22:7-12) to quietly instruct His disciples at great length.
In John 13-17 the shadow of the cross hangs over
the room as the disciples begin to figure out that Jesus is truly about to leave them, and He tries to prepare them for that experience.
Jesus repeats Himself continually in this part of
the book, yet the disciples seem incapable of understanding. Most of the material in this section of the Fourth Gospel is totally absent from Matthew, Mark and Luke.
It is included here
because of John's unique concern for the second generation of Christians who would have no personal contact with Jesus or His disciples.
In this section Jesus offers His disciples a farewell
discourse in which He teaches them how to live without His physical presence, just as the second generation would have to live without the physical presence of the disciples. The second generation, however, would not be found at a 251
252 disadvantage.
Because of the Spirit they would have access to
the fullness of the life that Jesus offers as much as any disciple who actually walked with Jesus on this earth.
In fact
the disciples in the upper room were particularly dense and uncomprehending.
Thus John 13-17 underlines the truth that it
was better for the disciples that Jesus would no longer be physically present because even greater actions and understanding would be possible once the Spirit had come (John 14:12-17; 16:7). This portion of the Gospel begins with the account of the footwashing and the identification of the one who was to betray Jesus (13:1-30).
The departure of Judas enables Jesus to engage
in frank and open dialogue with His disciples concerning His and their future (13:31 - 14:31).
After the supper is over Jesus
lingers in the upper room with His disciples (14:31; 18:1).
He
delivers a lengthy discourse over the same themes that He had raised in the earlier dialogue (15:1 - 16:33), doing so with only a minimum of interruptions on the part of the disciples (16:17, 29).
The section closes with the magnificent prayer of Jesus for
His disciples and for the second generation that would come to believe in Him through the written words of the disciples (17:126). The section begins with the footwashing (13:1ff.) and ends with Jesus and His disciples leaving the room and heading across the Kidron Valley to an olive grove where Judas would betray Jesus (18:1-3).
An interesting problem is John 14:31, where
Jesus invites the disciples to leave the room.
Did the discourse
253 of John 15-17 happen as the group was lingering in the room after rising to their feet (not an unusual occurrence in human conduct)?
Or is this, as some scholars suggest, evidence that
after the death of John someone else inserted material on the same subject as chapters 13 and 14?
Since we have no external
evidence that the latter took place (although the production of Prophets and Kings by Ellen White provides an example of how such an insertion might have happened-- cf. Life Sketches, p. 436), the former is to be preferred (Ellen White offers a further suggestion, that John 15-17 took place on the way from Jerusalem to Gethsemane, Desire of Ages, 674). Since John 13-17 is portrayed as a unified experience I have chosen not to divide the material into separate chapters but to treat it as a whole in two different ways.
First, this chapter
seeks to unpack the main issues of the section in four parts (13:1-30; 13:31 - 14:31; 15:1 - 16:33, and 17:1-26).
The next
chapter zeroes in on the statements of Jesus about the role of the Holy Spirit in the time between His first and second advent (14:16, 17; 14:26, 27; 15:26, 27; 16:7-15).
The chapter will not
be limited to John 13-17, but will examine Jesus' statements about the Holy Spirit in the light of all that the Gospel of John has to say about the role of the Holy Spirit.
254 JESUS WASHES THE DISCIPLES' FEET GETTING INTO THE WORD John 13:1-30 Please read 13:1-30 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1. 2. 3. 4.
On a piece of paper carefully list all the things in this passage that Jesus knows but the disciples do not. Try to write out in a paragraph or two an explanation of each of the following "difficult" statements: verses 8, 10, 14, 19, 27a. In a paragraph or two, please explain why you think Peter was so firmly against the idea of Jesus washing his feet (verse 8). List in order everything the passage says about Judas. Try to describe the kind of relationship he might have had with Jesus.
EXPLORING THE WORD The Background of the Passage It was the custom at that time for people to bathe themselves before attending a feast.
Upon arrival they would not
need to bathe again, they only needed to have their feet washed. The washing of the feet, then, was like a ceremony that preceded entry into the house where they were to be guests (Barclay, 2:141). The Passage in Detail Before the Passover Feast, which was to begin twenty-four hours later according to John (19:31-37; in Matthew, Mark, and Luke the supper in the Upper Room was a Passover meal), Jesus' thoughts turn to His departure from this world and the effect that His departure would have on His disciples (13:1).
This is
255 truly a remarkable statement under the circumstances.
As Jesus
approaches the cross one would expect Him to be thinking of Himself and the awful experiences He would undergo the next day. But He is so absorbed in His love for His disciples that He thinks, instead, of what life will be like for them after He has returned to His Father.
He looks past His own immediate
suffering to contemplate their future suffering and to prepare them for it. John 13:1, therefore, summarizes in a nutshell what chapters 13 through 17 are all about.
They comprise a farewell discourse,
in which Jesus prepares His disciples for the realities of a world which they will have to face without His physical presence. For the author of this Gospel, the sense of loss and helplessness that the disciples felt when they realized that they were about to lose Jesus paralleled the experience of the second generation of Christians who were about to lose him, their last living link to the earthly Jesus. The footwashing was no ordinary act.
Jesus knew who He was
(13:3) and He knew the character of those He was ministering to (2).
It was a deliberate act of divinity in service to sinful,
even unregenerate, humanity. characteristic abruptness.
Peter, of course, responds with In the Greek Peter says in the
strongest possible language that he would absolutely not (a double negative) permit Jesus to wash his feet no matter how long he had to think about it (8).
The Greek of verse 8 could be
translated in modern English, "No way in all eternity!"
Peter is
256 totally appalled at the possibility of Jesus washing his feet. Peter no doubt thought that he was protecting Jesus from humiliation.
But Jesus' answer to him (8) makes it clear that
Peter was actually protecting himself from the humiliation of admitting his need of Jesus' ministry to the lost (cf. Mark 10:45).
"It is not humility to refuse what the Lord deigns to do
for us (Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1058)."
The truest
humility comes when we accept the self-sacrificing grace of Christ. In verse 10 Jesus drew an analogy from bathing to distinguish between two kinds of spiritual cleansing.
The first,
associated with the full-body bath, represents initial justification, that point in a person's life when he or she accepts Jesus' cleansing for the entire life, setting it off in a new direction.
This one-time cleansing at the beginning of the
Christian life is represented by baptism. The footwashing, on the other hand, represents the Christian's need to deal with the soiling that comes from daily contact with the sinful world and its contamination.
The foot is
the part of the body that in ancient times was in regular contact with the earth, and therefore needed continual cleansing.
So
those who have been justified once need continual renewal in that justification as life goes on.
The beautiful encouragement to be
drawn from this analogy is that our daily shortcomings on this earth do not call our justification into question! has bathed needs only to wash the feet again!
The one who
We are not in and
257 out of God's grace several times a day!
We are secure as long as
we do not choose to turn away (cf. John 10:27-29). The image of Jesus washing the disciples' feet represents His forgiveness of sins committed after baptism.
If so, then for
the disciples to wash one another's feet signifies the willingness to forgive those daily irritations and transgressions that threaten the unity in love which Jesus purposed for His disciples (13:34, 35-- Talbert, Reading John, 194). Apparently Judas was never clean in first sense (13:11). Although he walked with Jesus for a long time he was never right with God.
For him the footwashing was of no avail.
The other
disciples, however, feeble and defective as they were, were counted as right with God through the ministry that Jesus had performed for them. Although the bread and wine of the communion service do not appear explicitly in the Gospel of John, 13:18 contains a strong hint that the footwashing took place in the context of the supper.
Those whose feet He had just washed were sharing "Jesus'
bread."
In Paul's account of the Lord's Supper he talked about
people who would eat and drink unworthily at the communion table (1 Cor 11:27-30).
Perhaps he had the example of Judas in mind.
Those who eat at the Lord's table, yet behave in ways that betray the Lord become Judases in their own right. Jesus' quotation of Ps 41:9 (13:18) reminds the reader of the betrayal of David by Ahithophel, his trusted friend and counselor (2 Sam 25:12, 31-37-- Ahithophel may have been
258 Bathsheba's grandfather, an interesting twist on the situation, cf. Anchor Bible Dictionary, 1:193).
Since dipping bread and
offering it to another was a special gesture of friendship (Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1059; Barclay, 2:146), it seems clear that Jesus was seeking deep relational fellowship with Judas and, therefore, found his betrayal particularly painful (13:20, cf. White, Desire of Ages, 645, 716-722). It is interesting that the disciples never suspect Judas. Since they trusted him to keep the money (12:6; 13:29), he is probably the last disciple that they would have suspected.
And
in spite of the actions of Judas, Jesus never exposes him to the others (13:27-30).
He even allowed him to be seated in the place
of highest honor, to the left of the Master (Barclay, 2:145). Until this point Judas could have turned back, but his mind becomes settled under the influence of Satan (13:27 cf. 13:2). Unlike Nicodemus, he moves from the light into darkness (13:30, cf. 3:2, 19-21). The Major Themes of the Passage The primary lesson in the footwashing service is that Christian belief is not adequate unless it manifests itself also in practical behavior.
The disciples called Jesus "the teacher"
(13:13, Greek), the same title Jesus used to describe Nicodemus (3:10).
They also called Him "Lord" (cf. 20:28), which meant
that He had the right to tell them what to do.
Unlike Nicodemus,
who could be content to teach theoretical truths, Jesus was a teacher who expected His disciples not only to believe what He
259 believed, but to live as He lived (13:14-16).
Those who hear His
teachings are invited to follow Him by serving as He served (cf. 12:26).
Jesus recognized, however, that in the Christian life
performance tends to fall far short of knowledge (13:17).
We all
know more truth than we practice. Although not a central theme of the passage, Jesus' statement in John 13:19 has profound implications.
Jesus states
that He describes things (like the betrayal of Judas and the coming of the Spirit, cf. 14:29) before they happen, so that when they happen the disciples will believe.
This text restates what
we have discovered elsewhere (cf. 7:39; 12:16).
The disciples
really didn't believe in the full sense until after Jesus was gone from them.
They never had things figured out ahead of time.
I believe that this verse has implications for the understanding of Bible prophecy.
Although God outlines His plans
for the future in the Bible, these outlines are never so clear as to limit His future action, nor are they so explicit that His actions could be described in intricate detail ahead of time. The purpose of prophecy is two-fold, it should affect the way we live today, and it should clearly mark the action of God in history after those actions have taken place.
We should never
expect to have everything all figured out ahead of time.
Many
"apocalyptic Jews" thought they had things figured out in advance, yet the very exactness of their calculations caused them to miss the true fulfillment when it came.
260 DIALOGUE AT THE TABLE GETTING INTO THE WORD John 13:31 - 14:31 Read 13:31 - 14:31 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1. 2.
3. 4.
Why did Jesus wait until Judas was gone before He shared the material in this section? List the evidences that Jesus' offers for claiming to be one with the Father in 14:9-14. Can you think of further evidences offered in Jesus' teachings in the first twelve chapters of the Gospel? (hint: chapters 3, 5, and 8 are particularly helpful) What do you think Jesus meant when He said that His followers would do greater works than He did? Greater in what way? Write out your answer. List everything in this passage associated with the word "love."
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage From 13:31 through the end of chapter 17, Jesus offers a final address, or farewell discourse, to His disciples.
In so
doing, He follows the pattern of many other great figures in His Jewish heritage (see next section).
He sought to prepare His
disciples for earthly life without his physical presence. The Background of the Passage A number of major Bible characters offer farewell speeches just before their death.
These include Jacob (Gen 47:29 -
49:33), Moses (the entire book of Deuteronomy!), Joshua (Josh 2224), David (1 Chr 28, 29), and Paul (Acts 20:17-38, cf. 2 Tim 3:1 - 4:8).
Similar speeches can be found in the intertestamental
261 literature, probably influenced by the OT examples (cf. Tobit 14:3-11; 1 Enoch 91ff.; and 2 Esdras 14:28-36, for example). These speeches seem to conform to fairly consistent patterns, suggesting that the farewell discourse was an established literary genre in the ancient world (see Brown, II:597-601; Talbert, Reading John, 200-202). The Passage in Detail The departure of Judas seems to be a turning point in this section of the Gospel (13:31-- "When he was gone" translates "therefore" in the Greek).
It enables Jesus to speak freely to
His disciples for the first time (Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1059).
In 13:31-35 five mentions of "glory" (31, 32) and four
mentions of "love" (34, 35) sandwich Jesus' introduction of a constant theme of the Farewell Discourse, He is going away soon, and they won't be able to find Him (33, cf. 7:33-36; 8:21, 22). The glory of Jesus (13:31, 32) is His death, resurrection, and ascension (12:27-32, 38-40; 17:1-5).
The mission of His life
(glory) is His revelation of the loving character of God to His disciples (1:14-18). The disciples' mission to the world, on the other hand, is not described in terms of glory, it is described in terms of love (13:34, 35).
As Jesus had loved them; in the footwashing and now
in His death on the cross, so they were to love one another.
The
disciples of the One who laid down His life for the world will be known when they behave like their Master. The love Jesus talks about here will clearly transcend
262 secular love.
People don't normally help when it's not
convenient, give when it hurts, or face ridicule and accusations without fighting back.
Therefore, everyone will know that
something special has taken place. Jesus talks about a "new" commandment in the sense that it gains its power from the model of the cross.
The cross does not
change the old commandment, it puts it in a clearer form (cf. 1 John 2:7; Mark 12:28-33).
As the cross brings God's love home to
the followers of Jesus, so their love for one another will demonstrate God's love to the world. In 14:1-4 Jesus unpacks the going away statement (13:33) in more positive terms.
He is going away to His Father's house and
when He returns, He will bring them with Him to His Father's house.
This language of going away and returning seems to have a
deliberate double meaning.
It is clear that Jesus returns to His
disciples, in a sense, in the person of His representative, the Counselor or Holy Spirit (14:16-18). rather than physical.
This return is spiritual
But in the fullest sense of the passage,
Jesus here talks about His physical and personal return at the Second Coming, at which time He will bring all those who follow Him back to His Father's house, to be with Him forever.
In verse
4 Jesus states a riddle designed to draw out questions so that Jesus can open Himself up further to the disciples' understanding. Thomas takes the bait and denies that he knows the way to the place where Jesus is going (14:5).
This enables Jesus to
263 make one of the most sublime statements of His earthly ministry (14:6-- see "Major Themes" below).
Philip misses the point, as
usual, and asks for a visible manifestation of the Father (8). Jesus asserts what the disciples should have known, and what the reader knows from the Prologue on; to see Jesus is to see what the Father is like (9). Father.
The Son is the express image of the
In both words and works, the Father communicates through
Him (10, 11). Then comes a most astounding statement (12).
Whoever
believes in Jesus will not only do the kinds of things that Jesus has done, he or she will do even greater things than Jesus has done!
In what sense can the disciples be said to do greater
works than Jesus? limitations.
The earthly Jesus was subject to human
When He goes to the Father He leaves those human
limitations behind.
When Jesus spoke to the disciples the Father
could be seen only in the person of Jesus.
But when He returned
to the Father and sent the Spirit, the disciples became agents by means of which the character of God would be manifested to the world. Because Jesus went to the Father (12) millions of disciples (11, 12), empowered by the Holy Spirit (16, 17) through prayer (13, 14), would extend the work of Jesus on a magnitude not possible before.
The essence of that greater work, of course,
was the gathering of the second generation of Christians!
Once
again, therefore, Jesus highlights the importance of that second generation to Him.
It was to be and is the focus of His
264 attention in the Father's house. Not only are the disciples to behave as Jesus' behaved (in love and mighty works), they are to be constantly obedient to His words (14:15, 21) through the empowerment of the Spirit (16, 17). In response to the other Judas (22), Jesus underlines the point; to love Him is to obey His teaching, and such obedience will result in the very presence of the Father dwelling with the disciples (23, 24).
The Father will show Himself to the
obedient, and thus the disciples extend the presence of the Father throughout the world.
Love is more than nice words, it
involves commitment and conduct (Life Application Bible, 1912). The concluding words of John 14 are Jesus' only call to get up and leave the room.
It seems that John 15-17 take place as
Jesus and His disciples arise to go.
Like many farewells, no one
is in a hurry to leave the hallowed place of last words.
Perhaps
the words "Come now, let us leave" imply Jesus' eagerness to get on with the final battle with Satan (cf. 14:30). on the disciples have little to say.
From this point
The discussion becomes a
sermon. The Major Themes of the Passage Love as I Have Loved The central theme of John 13:31 - 14:31 would seem to be the love that the disciples are to demonstrate during the time when Jesus is away from them.
The disciples' love for one another
will be modeled on the love Jesus demonstrated on the cross
265 (13:34).
It will be empowered by the Holy Spirit (14:16, 17,
26), who will become real to them as they pray (14:13, 14) and obey (14:15, 21-24).
Through the disciples, then, the love of
the Father will become manifest to the world (13:35; 14:23) just as it became manifest to the disciples through the life, death, resurrection and ascension of Jesus. Being loved is the most powerful motivation in the world (Life Application Bible, 1909).
The ways we use to express love
to other people are the ways that we ourselves have experienced love.
When the "love" we have received is abusive and
controlling, we seek to "love" others in abusive and controlling ways.
We love others as we have been loved.
The pure, tender,
uncontrolling, and unconditional love of Jesus for people whose faults are fully known to Him (cf. 13:1, 18) provides the basis and the motivation for us to break patterns of abuse.
We can
learn to truly love others to the extent that we have allowed ourselves to experience His love.
Those who are much loved can
love much. The Redeemed in the Millennium Although John was probably not thinking about the millennium when he chose to record the words of Jesus found in 14:1-3, the passage offers the only explicit statement in all of Scripture with regard to the location of believers during the millennium which follows the Second Coming.
When Jesus comes, He will not
join his followers here on earth, rather He will bring them back to heaven with him (3).
He does not say, "I will come to be with
266 you again where you are," rather He says, "I will come back and take you to be with me that you also may be where I am."
Thus,
contrary to most protestant pre-millennial expectation, Jesus does not reign on earth with the believers during the millennium, they reign together in heaven (cf. Rev 20:4-6).
The earth
becomes desolate, the followers of Jesus are gone and the rest of humankind is destroyed at the Second Coming (Rev 19:17-21).
Rev
20 itself does not make this point explicit. The Way, the Truth and the Life John 14:6 offers a beautiful summary of the Gospel's message in one sentence, "I am the way and the truth and the life."
This
message summarizes the main themes also of the Prologue to the Gospel.
Jesus is the way to the Father for all who follow Him
(14:1-10, cf. 1:12, 18).
He is the truth in the sense that He is
the One who came down to share with earth the character of God and the things of heaven (cf. 1:1-5, 9-11, 14-18).
And life is
what all who believe in him receive (cf. 17:3; 5:24; 1:4, 5, 12, 13, 16, 17).
The exclusiveness of this passage is certainly not
politically correct in our day and age.
But the way Jesus
provides is simple enough and broad enough for everyone to take advantage of, if they are willing to accept it.
God is quite
capable of judging the response of those who, because of circumstance or through the neglect of others, have never heard of Jesus.
267 DISCOURSE AFTER SUPPER GETTING INTO THE WORD John 15:1 - 16:33 Please read 15:1 - 16:33 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
3. 4.
In the "parable" of 15:1-10, who are symbolized by the branches and who are symbolized by the fruit? Do these terms have more than one application? Explain your answer. What does Jesus mean by "remaining" in Him? List everything in the passage associated with the words "love" and "hate." How do you think these concepts are related in Jesus' mind? What is the relationship between love and obedience in this section? List all occurrences of the word "world" in this passage. What does Jesus mean by this term? What event does Jesus have in mind in 16:20-22? Please explain your answer. How does the world's joy contrast with the joy of the disciples?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage In chapters 15 and 16 Jesus continues the themes of the earlier discussion, but now virtually without interruption from the disciples (only at 16:17 and 16:29).
It is as if the
disciples are so dense before the time when the Spirit comes that even the simplest teachings need to be repeated over and over. The Passage in Detail John 15:1-10 contains the well-known figurative lesson of the vine and the branches.
It is based on the frequent OT
comparison of Israel to a vine (Isa 5:1-7; Jer 2:21; Ezek 15:18).
Most Christians identify with the branches in the passage
and see this "parable" as a reminder of the importance of
268 maintaining a personal relationship with Jesus.
Such a reading
has been quite fruitful over the centuries. In the initial telling of this figure of speech, however, the vine represented Jesus, the branches the disciples to whom He was speaking, and the fruit that the branches would bear portrayed all those who would come to faith, not through the direct ministry of Jesus, but through the ministry of the disciples; in other words, the second generation (Ellen White uses the text both ways in Desire of Ages, 676-677).
Everyone
who has come to faith since the time of that first generation are summed up in the fruit that grows on the branches which are connected to the vine.
It is through the words and actions of
the disciples that the second generation comes to faith.
The
vine, therefore, is an analogy for the whole church, including both first and second generations. Jesus draws a number of implications from this analogy.
A
grapevine has only two possible uses, either it produces food and drink, or it must be cut down to provide fuel (Ezek 15:1-5, cf. Isa 5:1-7; Jer 2:21).
On the positive side, the Father is the
gardener who tends to all parts of the process (15:1). Relationship with Jesus is not different from relationship with the Father.
When relationship to the vine and to the gardener
are maintained, fruit will be the inevitable result. On the negative side, the disciples are warned that those branches which do not bear fruit will be pruned off (2).
Just as
the words of Jesus are the basis for maintaining a relationship
269 with the "vine" (7), so they are also the means of pruning (3). The words of Jesus to the disciples nurtured them but pruned Judas out of the "vine" (13:18-30).
For the second generation
the physical presence of Jesus is replaced by the words of Jesus ministered through the writings of the disciples.
Attention to
the words of Jesus will unify the church at the same time that it removes those out of harmony with Jesus' instructions (15:3-6). As the disciples remain in the vine, the church will grow in response to their prayers (bear fruit-- 7, 8). In John 15:9-17 Jesus expands the lesson of the vine by elaborating on what it means to "remain" in the vine. "Remaining" in the vine means remaining in Jesus by means of two related principles, love and obedience.
As He had brought out
earlier, love will cause the disciples to live and love as Jesus loved them (15:9, 12, 13, cf. 13:34, 35) and to obey His commands (15:10, 14, cf. 14:15, 21-24).
Jesus had already acted out both
principles in His relationship to His Father (15:10).
The
disciple, therefore, is to be characterized as much by doing what Jesus did as by obeying what Jesus said.
Such remaining in Jesus
will be fruitful, because the disciples' prayers will naturally be in accordance with God's will (15:7, 14-16, cf. 14:12-14). In John 15:18-21 Jesus elaborates on the consequences of relationship with Him, based on the footwashing statement "no servant is greater than his master" (15:20, cf. 13:16).
Those
who are in intimate relationship with Jesus should expect the same opposition from the "world" that Jesus experienced in His
270 earthly ministry and on the cross (15:18, 20, cf. Matt 10:34-36; Luke 12:49-53).
By "world" Jesus means human society organized
in opposition to the true God (Barclay, 2:185). As the relationship of Jesus with the Father is to be the model for the disciples' association with Jesus (John 15:10), so Jesus' relationship with the world is paralleled by the relationship of believers with unbelievers (15:18).
The world's
hatred of the disciples is rooted in its hatred for Jesus (cf. 15:22-25).
While Jesus was on earth the world's hatred was
directed primarily at Him, after He leaves, it will turn its attention to those who represent Him on earth.
The reason for
the opposition is that Jesus and His disciples do not conform to the ways of the world (15:19-- although in a sense the opposition is totally unreasonable, cf. 15:25). often the opposite of God's values. tolerate threats to its control.
The values of the world are The world does not lightly
In such a world, disciples will
often feel out of place. Jesus continues on this theme in 16:1-4.
The brief comment
about the Holy Spirit (15:26, 27) fits into this section through the double use of the word "testify" (related in Greek to the word "martyr").
The disciples will not have to face the world's
opposition alone, Jesus will assist them in their testimony by the Counselor He will send.
When the time of opposition comes,
and people think that they are doing God a favor in their persecution of the disciples (16:2), they will also be fortified by the words of Jesus which the Holy Spirit will bring to their
271 remembrance (16:1, 4, cf. 14:26).
Jesus knew that without His
warnings ahead of time the disciples would be overcome by a "double whammy."
Not only would they miss the physical presence
of Jesus, but they would face the opposition of the world to a degree they had never experienced before. If the going away of Jesus would cause the disciples so much pain, why does Jesus do it?
Because the benefits of the Spirit's
presence far outweigh the losses resulting from the absence of Jesus and the hatred of the world (16:7).
The Holy Spirit will
not only deal in judgment with the world (8-11), He will share with the disciples truths that Jesus is unable to share with them in their Spirit-less condition (12-15).
In Jesus' mind the
overall equation works to the disciples' advantage, in spite of the difficulties. In John 16:16 Jesus springs another riddle on His disciples. The riddle raises four different questions in their minds (1719).
(a) What does Jesus mean when He says that in a little
while they will not see Him anymore, while at the same time He says that (b) after a little while they will see Him?
(c) What
does He mean when He says that He is going to the Father? And what does He mean by a little while?
(d)
The riddle of verse 16
clearly has a double meaning; in the immediate sense Jesus is referring to His death (when they feel they will never see Him again) and His resurrection, in the ultimate sense He refers to His absence at the ascension and their joy at His ultimate return.
272 Verse 20 describes a great reversal.
While the world
rejoices at Jesus' "departures" the disciples are made sad.
Yet
their sadness will be turned into joy, and, by implication, the world's rejoicing will be short-lived.
In verses 21 to 24 it is
clear that the motifs of the world's hatred and the disciples' benefits in the Spirit are still in view.
The sorrow they will
experience in Jesus' absence is mitigated by their joy in a new kind of relationship with Jesus and the Father.
Jesus assures
the disciples that they will find the Father to be just like Him (25-28)!
When they pray to the Father in Jesus' name, the Father
does not have an unwilling ear.
He is predisposed already to
answer their requests because of His love for them and because of their relationship with Jesus. The discourse after supper closes with a humorous little interchange in which the disciples finally claim understanding of Jesus' words (29, 30), but Jesus brings them back to reality with a bit of irony; "So you believe at last? That must explain why you are about to abandon me" (31, 32)!
The disciples catch just
the barest glimpse of Jesus' meaning and express great satisfaction in their achievement!
It is as if they were
thrilled to make any sense out of His sayings at all!
Jesus had
to take comfort in the fact that there was One who would not forsake Him (32).
In His final hours on earth He was forced to
live without human sympathy (cf. Ps 69:20).
But because of the
cross, one day the disciples would learn to have peace on the same basis as He did; relationship with God (33, cf. 14:27).
273 The Major Themes of the Passage The Theme of Love Continued The theme of love, which was so central to the discussion at the table (13:31 - 14:31), is further underlined in John 15:1217.
The disciples' love for each other was to be modeled on the
love that Jesus had for them (15:12).
Jesus expands the love
concept in this section by describing it as self-sacrificing friendship (13).
As Jesus would lay down His life for them, so
their love for one another would often call for the ultimate sacrifice.
While Jesus commands His disciples, they are not mere
servants, who just receive and execute orders without knowing why, they are friends who obey in the context of an intimate knowledge of Him (15). Central to the ongoing friendship between Jesus and His disciples would be prayer.
Jesus would be eager to respond to
their requests (14:13, 14) because of the intimacy between Him and them (15:7) and because of the fruit they would bear (15:16). A repeated concept in the farewell discourse is that the disciple can ask for anything and get it (16:23-27), provided that the request comes out of the intimate understanding that comes from remaining in Jesus. The Hatred of the World A major emphasis of the discourse after supper (15:1 16:33) is the two-fold experience of Jesus' followers in the world.
On the one hand, the disciples will experience the same
274 hatred and persecution that Jesus experienced because they are like Jesus and unlike the world (15:18-25; 16:1-4).
All this
will be counterbalanced by the benefits that will accrue to them because Jesus goes to the Father and sends the Spirit (15:26, 27; 16:7-15).
The tension between these two aspects of the
disciples' experience is illustrated by such concepts as the mixed emotions of childbirth (16:21, 22), the mixture of peace and trouble (33), and seeing while not seeing (16).
JESUS DEDICATES HIS DISCIPLES
GETTING INTO THE WORD John 17:1-26 Please read 17:1-26 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1. 2. 3.
With the help of a concordance, list all the passages in the Gospel of John that use the word "glory." What does it mean to glorify someone? What is Jesus really asking for here? With the help of a concordance, list all the passages in the Gospel where the word "truth" is found. How do people get sanctified by the truth? Think of the prayer as a "report" Jesus is giving to His "Superior" about His activities on this earth. Write out your version of the report with particular emphasis on the things Jesus did to carry out His Superior's orders.
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The farewell get-together of Jesus and His disciples draws to a close with an intercessory prayer in three parts. 1-5 Jesus prays for Himself.
In verses
In verses 6-19 His attention turns
275 to His disciples and their need to be fortified for the experience of doing without His physical presence.
Then in
verses 20 Jesus explicitly turns His attention to the second generation, those who would come to faith through the word of the disciples rather than the direct ministry of Jesus.
His desire
for both generations was that they would come to unity in love and in Jesus (21-26). The Passage in Detail Jesus begins His prayer with the request for help to complete the task of glorifying the Father, first through the completion of His work on earth, and then by exalting Jesus back to the heavenly glory that He had had from the beginning (17:1-5, cf. 1:1-5).
Jesus wants to be glorified so that the Father may
also be glorified (17:1).
And the glorification of Jesus comes
from the perfect character of the work that He did on earth, especially His work on the cross (17:4, cf. 12:23, 24).
It is on
the cross that the character of God would be most clearly seen. The result of this glorification is that eternal life has become available to those in relationship with Jesus (17:2, 3). Jesus then directs His attention to the disciples who were the beneficiaries of His revelation of the Father's glory (17:6, cf. 14:6-11).
The disciples now knew that Jesus had come to
earth from the Father, and they, therefore, knew that Jesus was the revelation of the Father's character (17:7, 8).
Jesus does
not pray for the world, the benefits of His prayers are only for those who have renounced the world (9).
The bulk of His prayer
276 is for the disciples since they will have to remain in the world when Jesus returns to the Father (11). Jesus prays for three things.
On the negative side, He
prays that the disciples would be protected from the hatred of the world and of the evil one (12, 14, 15).
On the positive
side, He prays that the disciples will experience the fullness of His joy in spite of His departure (13), and that they will be sanctified by the truth of the Father's word (17, 19).
This
sanctification will not only set them apart for the task of representing Him in the world, it will equip them with the qualities of mind and character needed for the task (Barclay, 2:216). In verse 20 Jesus turns to the second generation, those who would come to belief through the testimony of the disciples.
In
the fullest sense, this includes all Christians who did not have a personal encounter with Jesus in the flesh.
This section
touches base with both the tragedy and the opportunity of the church.
When the love that Jesus prays for produces unity in the
church the world will come to know that Jesus is truly the One who represents the character of the Father on earth (21, 23; 13:34, 35, cf. Eph 1:9-10).
Jesus' prayer is answered whenever a
church in loving unity draws new believers out from the world. By contrast, however, the world will never believe in Christ through the instrumentality of a church that is bitterly divided. It was through the earthly ministry of Jesus that the disciples came to know the Father, through the sending of the
277 Spirit, Jesus would continue to make the Father know among the members of the second generation of Christians (26).
CONCLUSION In the farewell discourse Jesus encourages His disciples that His going away will not be the end of His ministry. would be two substitutes for the ministry of Jesus.
There
Through the
Holy Spirit, Jesus would continue to manifest Himself and His Father to them.
Through the Spirit all the benefits of Jesus'
ministry would continue to be theirs.
But that is not all.
As
branches connected to the Vine by the Spirit, the disciples themselves would replace Jesus in a real sense.
Through their
word and their writings, they would make Jesus real to a new generation.
As they would be ministered to by the Spirit, they
would also reach out by the Spirit in ministry to the world, and thereby create a new generation of believers, for whom the word of Jesus would truly prove to be as good as His touch. APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2.
3.
4.
Can you think of a person in your life who illustrates what it means to wash feet in relationships? How can you put Jesus' teaching into practical use in at least one relationship this week? What would it mean to "wash feet" in the context of everyday family life? On a scale of one to ten, how does your local church rate in its carrying out of Jesus command to love as He loved? What are some major barriers that prevent the practice of His command? What can you do personally to make a difference in this area? If someone objected to the exclusiveness of John 14:6, how would you respond? Do Muslims, Buddhists, etc. fit in here somehow? Have Christians abused this text in their relationships with others? In what ways? Jesus says the disciples will do "greater works" than He
278
5.
6.
did? Of all the works that Jesus did, which would you most like to do? If you did such a work would it be a blessing to the world, or might you cause more harm than good? In what ways have you personally experienced the hatred of the world for the truth about Jesus? To what degree was that hatred directed at your own shortcomings in personality or presentation? How well do you deal with change in your life? Among the things Jesus says in this passage to prepare His disciples for major changes, which would be most helpful to you when you face changes? What kind of advice do you tend to offer others who are facing similar changes?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
Review some of the great farewell speeches in the Bible outside this Gospel (see above for some examples). Try to develop a list of common elements in all these discourses. To what degree did Jesus conform to a common literary pattern? In what ways did He deviate from earlier examples?
2. FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1. 2.
See White, Desire of Ages, 716-722 for further insights into the character of Judas. The footwashing and the farewell discourse are treated in White, Desire of Ages, 642-680.
CHAPTER 13 THE HOLY SPIRIT REPLACES JESUS JOHN 14-16 (passim) The format of this chapter is unique.
The role and nature
of the Holy Spirit's work in the Gospel of John cannot comfortably be handled in a section by section manner.
Instead
of concentrating on a section of the Gospel, therefore, this chapter examines the Holy Spirit theme throughout the Gospel of John, but with
particular emphasis (as is the case in the Gospel
itself) on the "Counselor" passages in John 14-16. Structure There are eleven passages in the Fourth Gospel which refer, either directly or indirectly, to the nature and work of the Holy Spirit.
Five of these are located in the narrative sections of
the first half of the book (1:32, 33; 3:5-8, 34; 4:23, 24; 6:63; 7:37-39).
Five can be found in the farewell discourse of Jesus
in the upper room (14:16, 17; 14:26; 15:26; 16:7-11; 16:13-15). The eleventh is the brief mention in 20:22.
There are three
other mentions of the word "spirit" in the Gospel (11:33; 13:21; 19:30), these all seem to refer either to the inner consciousness of Jesus or to his physical breath. 279
280 The five passages in the first half of the Gospel mention the Spirit almost parenthetically. questions than they answer.
They often raise more
It is as if John used these passages
to plant seeds in the reader's mind that would only sprout in the fertile soil of the farewell discourse (John 13-17).
There Jesus
becomes much more explicit in His teaching about the Spirit.
The
references in the early part of the Gospel help prepare the reader's mind for the deeper teachings to follow.
The final
passage (20:22) hints at the fulfillment of all these teachings that would come at Pentecost. Background Transfers of Authority At least three times elsewhere in the Bible we find a description of a transfer of authority similar to the one between Jesus and the Holy Spirit.
In each of these a principle figure
dies or moves off the stage leaving another to take his place, carry on his work, and interpret his message.
The second person
plays a very similar role to the first and there is a mention of the Spirit at the time of the changeover. When Moses laid his hands on Joshua, for example, Joshua became filled with the "spirit of wisdom" (Deut 34:9).
Because
of this the Israelites accepted him as their leader and teacher, and he was able to accomplish what Moses was not able to do, bring the Israelites into the promised land (Deut 32:48-52; 34:4; Josh 1-12).
The idea of Jesus as the successor and teacher of
Moses, the "new Joshua" ("Jesus" is a Greek equivalent of the
281 Hebrew name "Joshua"), is very much a part of John's understanding of the mission of Jesus (1:17; 3:14; 5:45-47; 6:3035). When Elijah ascended to heaven he left a double portion of the Spirit with his successor Elisha (2 Kings 2:1-15).
As in the
previous case, the transfer took place near the Jordan river (in the Hebrew the names Joshua and Elisha are very closely related). The transfers of authority from Moses to Joshua and from Elijah to Elisha seem to have set the pattern for the baptism of Jesus by John (John 1:17; Luke 1:17).
There at the Jordan,
accompanied by the Spirit (John 1:32, 33; Matt 3:16), John hands over his prophetic mantle to Jesus and then fades from view. These earlier transfers of authority provide a significant background to the work of the Spirit in the Gospel of John.
It
is necessary for Jesus to depart and ascend before the Spirit can fully come with power upon the disciples (Jude 9; Matt 17:3; 2 Kings 2:11, cf. John 16:7).
If we carry out the analogy in full,
the true successor of Jesus is not so much the Spirit as the disciples themselves, empowered by the Spirit!
Jesus is replaced
on earth by two successors, the Spirit and His disciples.
The
Spirit continues Jesus' work for the disciples in particular, the disciples carry out the Spirit's work in the world (John 14:26; 15:26, 27; 16:8-11). Foretastes of the Spirit In the Old Testament and other Jewish writings we sense some of the richness with which Israel anticipated the future work of
282 the Spirit.
The Spirit of God often came upon the prophets so
they could speak the words of God to humanity (Isa 48:16; Ezek 2:2; 3:4-15; Dan 4:8, 9, 18; 5:11-14; Mic 3:8).
The universal
presence of the Holy Spirit, therefore, was to be a sign of the last days (Isa 32:14, 15; Joel 2:28-32).
The Spirit was often
associated with water (Ezek 36:25, 26; Isa 44:3, cf. John 4:7-26; 7:37-39) as an agent of cleansing (Ezek 36) or nourishment (Isa 44:3, cf. Isa 35). Isaiah, in particular, associates the expectation of the Spirit with God's future Messianic agent.
The Spirit of wisdom,
understanding and might would be upon Him (Isa 11:2).
The Spirit
would enable Him to bring justice on earth (Isa 42:1-4).
Through
the anointing of the Spirit He would deliver the people of God, chastise their enemies, and restore Zion to its favored status before God (Isa 61:1-9).
These things are fulfilled in the
Fourth Gospel through Jesus sending His spirit to His disciples. The Meaning of "Counselor" In the Gospel of John Jesus employs an unusual way of naming the Holy Spirit. as "Paraclete."
He uses a Greek term that can be transliterated This term is usually translated "Comforter" or
"Counselor" (NIV).
The root meaning of the Greek word translated
Counselor combines the Greek word for "call" (kaleô) with the Greek word for "alongside" (para). A "paraclete," then, is a person who is called alongside to help someone.
Because of this the Holy Spirit as Counselor
concept is often associated by scholars with our modern notion of
283 a defense attorney at a trial.
In the legal sense a Counselor
intercedes or appeals in behalf of another.
As used in the
Gospel of John, then, there is a strong legal connotation to the word Counselor, which fits well with the Spirit's role as a witness (John 15:26) who aids the disciples in their witness to Jesus. The idea of the Spirit as a Comforter (called alongside to comfort), however, is not foreign to the farewell discourse either.
The disciples would be bereft like orphans if the Spirit
were not sent after Jesus' departure (14:18).
The Spirit would
come to help them cope with their grief at the loss of physical contact with Jesus (16:6, 7). The Counselor or Paraclete appears four times in the farewell discourse (14:16, 26; 15:26; 16:7).
He dwells within
the disciples (14:16), represents Christ to them (14:26), instructs (14:26), bears witness to Christ (15:26), and convicts (16:7, 8).
He is Helper, Counselor, Comforter, and Friend.
THE HOLY SPIRIT IN THE GOSPEL OF JOHN: OUTSIDE THE FAREWELL DISCOURSE (1-12, 18-21) GETTING INTO THE WORD Please read 1:29-36; 3:1-21, 31-36; 4:7-29; 6:60-71; 7:37-39 and 20:19-23 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
Write out a paragraph for each of the above passages in which you describe what each passage is saying about the Holy Spirit. Some of the passages may yield much more information than others. Is there a common thread that runs through them all? Write out a paragraph or two for each passage describing the
284 setting in which a mention of the Spirit took place and the character of the audience in each case. In which setting is the role of the Spirit most clearly outlined? Does Jesus at times seem to be hiding the truth as much as revealing it? How did the character of the audience affect the way in which the Spirit was described? EXPLORING THE WORD In John 1 it was the Spirit descending out of heaven and alighting on Jesus which opened the Baptist's eyes to the reality that Jesus was the Messiah that he had been looking for (verse 32).
God had earlier revealed to the Baptist that just such an
event would signal the identity of the Messiah to him so he could point Him out to the people (33).
In effect the Spirit was a
divine witness to the Baptist of exactly who Jesus was.
In John
1 the Spirit began to testify about Jesus (cf. 15:26; 16:13, 14). Jesus would then be the agent who would multiply the Spirit's work on earth (1:33; Joel 2:28-32, cf. Acts 2). In John 3 Jesus uses neither the term "paraclete" nor the adjective "holy" with reference to the Spirit, yet it is clear to whom He is referring (5-8).
Baptism in the Spirit is an
essential pre-requisite to entrance into the Kingdom of God (5). Although it is impossible to comprehend just how it is that the Spirit works, the work of the Spirit is real enough so that its effects in people's lives can be clearly seen (8). The Spirit is also alluded to in the story of the woman at the well.
The living water that springs up from within and leads
to eternal life reminds the reader of references to the Spirit in the Greek OT (John 4:10-15; Isa 44:3; Ezek 36:25, 26).
People
285 who received Jesus' living water would never thirst again because they would carry the source of supply with them in the person of the Holy Spirit. Although somewhat difficult to understand, the mention of the Spirit in John 4:23, 24 confirms the earlier reference to the Spirit in chapter 4. be tied people.
In the age of the Spirit worship will not
to any specific location, or favor any particular Worship in spirit is universal.
Worship does not mean
coming to a particular place or doing certain things, it involves an intimate relationship with God.
When the Spirit dwells within
like living water, the relationship with God is energized and made real.
Worship arises spontaneously out of a living
relationship. In John 6:63 Jesus states that the Spirit is the one who brings life (cf. 4:10-15!) and that the words that Jesus has spoken bring both the Spirit and life. life on their own.
Human beings cannot gain
Jesus and the Spirit work together to make
life possible. It is in John 7:37-39 that the narrator of the Gospel becomes more explicit in unpacking the nature and the work of the Holy Spirit.
Although the Spirit has made a number of
appearances thus far in the Gospel, He would only be truly revealed in the context of Jesus "glorification" on the cross. It is in the shadow of the cross, in John 13-17, that Jesus becomes truly explicit with regard to the Spirit's role in the Christian life.
John 7:37-39, therefore, is a transition
286 passage.
It sums up much of what has been said before about the
Spirit, at the same time it sets the stage for the clearer, moredetailed information that comes in the farewell discourse. Just before the Thomas incident at the conclusion of chapter 20, Jesus is described as breathing on the disciples, (reminiscent of the creation of Adam in Gen 2) followed by the comment, "Receive the Holy Spirit" (John 20:22).
This incident
would seem to be a foretaste of the outpouring of the Spirit upon all believers at Pentecost.
Now that Jesus had been glorified,
the promise of 7:39 had begun to be fulfilled.
THE HOLY SPIRIT IN THE FAREWELL DISCOURSE GETTING INTO THE WORD Please read John 13-17 at least twice with particular attention to 14:16, 17; 14:26, 27; 15:26, 27; 16:7-11 and 16:1315. Then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
3.
Write out five paragraphs in which you describe what each of the above passages is saying about the Holy Spirit. List the ideas that are mentioned in more than one passage. What are the common threads that run through them all? Make a list of all the titles that are used for the Holy Spirit in these passages and also in the others studied in the previous section. In a sentence or two write out the meaning of each of these titles as far as you can determine them from the context. In a short paragraph describe how you understand the Spirit's operation in relation to sin, righteousness, and judgment (16:7-11). How would you define each term? Why does Jesus have to go away before these things can move into operation?
287 EXPLORING THE WORD Structure Jesus' last discourse to His disciples (John 13-17) contains five passages regarding the work of the Counselor, the Holy Spirit (14:16, 17; 14:26; 15:26; 16:7-11; 16:13-15).
The
interesting thing is that the farewell discourse generally makes coherent sense if read without these passages, as we have done in the previous chapter.
Yet the Counselor passages fit in quite
well with the direction of the rest of the discourse.
This makes
it interesting to study them together as a unit, as we do here, at the same time it is important never to treat them in total isolation from their context.
We begin by looking at the five
passages themselves, then we consider their contribution to the farewell discourse and the Gospel as a whole. The Five Passages in Detail The first Counselor passage is John 14:16, 17.
According to
this passage in context, the Spirit becomes available to the believer who is obeying (14:15, 21) and praying (13, 14).
The
Spirit is "another Counselor," meaning that the title Counselor is not unique to the Holy Spirit (16).
It is Jesus, the original
Counselor, who is represented to the disciples through "another" Counselor, the Holy Spirit (18, cf. 1 John 2:1).
The Greek has
two words for "another," one representing similarity, and the other distinction. similarity.
The word chosen here (allos) represents
The Holy Spirit is another Counselor, one just like
288 Jesus. The purpose for the sending of the Holy Spirit is two-fold according to this text.
First, the Counselor provides the
disciple with a permanent divine presence.
Jesus may have to go
away, but the Counselor will be with them forever (John 14:16). He will even live inside of them (14:17). Second, the Counselor plays the specific role of taking the place of Jesus during the time when He is absent from the disciples.
He is "another" Counselor, like Jesus (16).
He is
the Spirit of Truth, a designation just applied by Jesus to Himself (17, cf. 6). just as Jesus was.
The Counselor is rejected by the world, But He "remains" with the disciples (17,
"lives with them"-- NIV) and dwells in them as they were to remain in Jesus and He was to live in them (14:20; 15:4-10; 17:23, 26). (14:18).
Jesus comes to the disciples through the Holy Spirit
They will see Jesus again when the Spirit comes (19).
So the Counselor replaces the physical presence of Jesus with His spiritual presence. The next Counselor passage is 14:26. explicitly called the Holy Spirit. Jesus' name.
Here the Counselor is
He is sent by the Father in
His purpose in coming is to teach the disciples
everything that they need to know in Jesus' absence, with emphasis on reminding them of the words that Jesus said (cf. 25). This promise was no doubt recorded by John as a special validation of his Gospel to the new generation.
The accuracy of
John's remembrance of Jesus is assured by the ongoing presence of
289 the Spirit with Jesus' disciples. If verse 27 is part of the Counselor passage, a further purpose for the Spirit's work emerges.
He comes to offer them
peace and comfort in the context of their fears of being left alone (cf. 18). The next Counselor passage does not appear until 15:26. Again He is called the Spirit of Truth.
Here the Spirit's
teaching about Jesus is expressed in the language of the law court.
The Counselor will testify about Jesus in the context of
the world's hatred for Jesus and the disciples (15:18-25, cf. 16:1-4).
Persecuted disciples will feel the need of legal
testimony regarding the validity of their experience.
As was the
case with 14:27, it is uncertain whether 15:27 is to be understood as an extension of the Counselor passage in the previous verse.
The disciples are not said to testify because
they have heard the Spirit, but because they were with Jesus from the beginning of His ministry.
The Spirit's testimony will
encourage and corroborate their own testimony. The next Counselor passage is John 16:7-11. Jesus makes a clear statement of comfort.
In verse 7
In the context of the
world's hatred (1-4), the disciples are better off without Him, even though His going away is painful (5, 6).
They are better
off because His going will enable the Counselor to be with them (7).
The Counselor will deal with the world's hatred and
persecution by bringing it to conviction in relation to sin, righteousness, and judgment (8-- it has been suggested that these
290 three terms deal with the past, present and future of every sinner who comes to Christ, cf. Froom, p. 70). The Counselor, first of all, brings a sense of sin to those who thought they were doing the right thing in persecuting the followers of Jesus (9, cf. 2, 3).
Sin is deeper than just bad
actions, the primary sin is a failure to believe in Jesus.
This
sin is so obscure to most people that only the direct presence of the Holy Spirit could possibly make that conviction real.
One of
the clearest signs of the Spirit's presence in a one's life, therefore, is a strong sense of one's own defects of character. The good news is that the Counselor is also a Comforter.
To
those who are keenly aware of personal sin, the Spirit brings a sense of relief from sin in the righteousness of Christ (10). But what does the sense of righteousness have to do with the last part of verse 10, "Because I am going to the Father, where you can see me no longer?"
When Jesus goes to the Father, He will
intercede for His disciples at the Father's side. righteousness is ministered to their account.
His
The Spirit will
bring the righteousness ministered at the right hand of God back to earth for their sakes.
The fact that they see Jesus no more,
will be part of the disciples' assurance. The Counselor also brings conviction of judgment (11), but this is a different judgment than those rendered in verses 9 and 10 (convictions of sin and righteousness).
This conviction is
the sense of liberation from Satan's control that comes when people realize that Satan was totally overthrown at the cross
291 (cf. 12:31).
Those who identify with Jesus' death in their
behalf are freed from Satan's power and control.
Those who side
with Satan in his judgment against Jesus and those who follow Him are judged in his judgment.
Believers who are sentenced in
earthly courts can know by the conviction of the Spirit that they and their persecutors will one day stand in a higher court, where the convictions of earth will be reversed and God's people will be vindicated. The last Counselor passage (16:13-15-- Spirit is used here rather than Counselor) lists a number of further characteristics of the Spirit's work for the disciples and all who follow Jesus. The "Spirit of truth" will guide them into all truth (13, cf. 14:17, 26). know.
Like Jesus he will teach them what they need to
But He will not come to teach about Himself, the Spirit's
focus is always on Jesus (16:13-15, cf. 14:26; 15:26; 16:9).
The
Spirit will keep the disciples updated on Jesus' work, He not only reveals what Jesus is doing in the present, He also reveals what Jesus will do in the future (16:13, cf. Rev 1:1, 10!). Perhaps this is the best note on which to turn to a contemplation of the overall picture of the Spirit's work as outlined in the Gospel of John.
There are no revelations to be
found in the Holy Spirit except those that concern Jesus.
An
obsession with the Spirit is not healthy if it directs our attention away from Jesus.
Jesus does not need the Spirit to
glorify Him in His person, the Father did that when He exalted Jesus to His right hand at the ascension; the role of the Spirit
292 is to exalt and glorify Jesus in the estimation of humanity here on earth.
The Spirit is Jesus' representative or ambassador here
on earth.
When we listen to the Spirit, we are listening to
Jesus Himself.
THE ROLE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT IN THE GOSPEL OF JOHN Getting Into the Word Before reading the following material, write a short essay on the role of the Holy Spirit as described in the Gospel of John. Try to utilize all the information you have discovered so far. Wherever possible, list texts which back up the things that you are saying about the Spirit in your essay. Exploring the Word There are two primary aspects to the work of the Holy Spirit as outlined in the Gospel of John. of a coin.
They function like two sides
One side is in relation to those who believe in
Jesus, the other side is in relation to the non-believing world. For the disciples the Holy Spirit comes to take the place of Jesus and do for them what Jesus would do if He were personally present.
Thus, the character and activity of the Spirit bears a
close resemblance to the character and activity of Jesus in the Gospel.
The Holy Spirit comes to the disciples as "another
Counselor" (14:16), a Counselor like Jesus.
Jesus was the
disciples' helper, comforter, advocate and friend.
Jesus was
their first Counselor, the Holy Spirit was the second. Because of the close relationship between the work of the Spirit and that of Jesus, there are many parallels between them
293 in the Gospel.
The Gospel can report that Jesus is not only full
of truth (1:14), He is the truth (14:6), the very source of it (1:17).
Yet at the same time the Counselor is called the "Spirit
of truth" (14:17).
The world, therefore, not only rejects the
truth that came through Jesus (1:10; 18:38), it refuses to accept the Spirit either (14:17).
The disciples, on the other hand, are
to know the Spirit (14:17) as well as Jesus (14:7-9; 17:3). There are many other parallels between the work of Jesus and the work of the Holy Spirit in the Gospel of John.
In 14:26 the
Holy Spirit teaches all things to the disciples and brings Jesus' words to their remembrance.
Thus the Spirit continues the
teaching ministry of Jesus (6:59; 7:14, 17; 8:20, etc.).
As the
Holy Spirit is sent from the Father (14:16, 26; 15:26), so Jesus was sent from the Father (3:17, 34; 5:23, 24, 30, 36-38, etc.). The Spirit testifies about Jesus (15:26), in John 14-16 Jesus testifies about the Spirit! The Spirit speaks only what He hears (16:13), Jesus did the same throughout His ministry (5:30; 8:28; 14:24).
The Spirit
takes from Jesus and makes it known to the disciples (16:15) as Jesus took from the Father and made it known to the disciples (8:28).
The Spirit "remains" with them (14:17) and dwells in
them as they were to remain in Jesus and He was to live in them (14:20; 15:4-10; 17:23, 26).
Both Jesus and the Spirit are
associated with "the word" in the Gospel (1:14; 6:63). It is interesting to note that there are a number of parallels to the narrative sections of the Gospel in the teaching
294 about the Counselor in the upper room.
In 15:26, 27 the Spirit
bears for the world the same witness He bore to John the Baptist in 1:32.
Jesus' words to Nicodemus are brought to mind by 14:17.
The Spirit which the world could not see (cf. 3:8) will be found in the disciples, bringing the new birth promised to Nicodemus (cf. 3:3-8).
As the breath of God enters the body in the first
birth so the "breath" (spirit) of God enters the body also at rebirth.
The association of Spirit and truth are found in 4:22-
24 and 14:17, 15:26 and 16:13.
The words of 7:39 are echoed in
16:7 where the departure of Jesus is seen as the prerequisite of the Spirit's coming. These connections are significant for our main theme in this book.
The second generation is not at a disadvantage, compared
with the first.
She has the same Spirit as the original
followers of Jesus, but in even greater measure.
The Spirit
which was seen on Jesus by the Baptist, was offered to Nicodemus and the woman at the well, and was promised to whoever would come to Him by Jesus in the temple, is available to all who receive the written words of the Gospel of John.
Through the Spirit the
second generation can receive the same Jesus by abiding in His words (15:7; 16:13).
Through the Spirit they can have even
greater blessings than would have been possible if Jesus had remained on earth in His bodily presence (14:12; 16:7). From all of the above it seems clear that the primary role of the Holy Spirit in the Gospel of John is to function as the Successor and Replacement of Jesus' ministry for His disciples on
295 earth.
He does for the believer exactly what Jesus would do if
He were physically present at that same time and place.
As such
the Spirit expands and enhances the ministry of Jesus to those who follow Him.
The prominence of this theme in this Gospel is
because of John's special concern for the second generation of believers, those who face life without the presence of anyone who knew Jesus in the flesh.
It was crucial to help them understand
that the physical absence of Jesus in no way hinders their ability to know Him and to receive everything from His hand that He would have given if physically present.
The Spirit is the
medium through which Jesus brings life to a new generation!
So
effective is the Spirit's work that Jesus can even say that His followers are "better off without Him" (16:7)! To underline the significance of the Spirit's continuing ministry to the second generation, the Gospel ends in such a way that Jesus remains present with His disciples on a beach (21:4, 9, 11, 15-25).
There is no ascension scene where Jesus separates
Himself from the disciples (although John is clear that such an ascension actually took place, cf. 20:17).
The Gospel closes
with an affirmation of Jesus' continued presence with His followers through the Holy Spirit (cf. Matt 28:16-20).
This
would be of particular encouragement to the second generation of Christians. There is another side to the coin of the Spirit's work as outlined in the Gospel of John.
The Spirit testifies in the
context of a hostile world (15:18 - 16:11).
To my knowledge this
296 is the only place in all the Bible where the Spirit is described as performing a work directly in the world.
The Spirit is not
confined to believers only, He also has a role to play with unbelievers. In the NT the word "convict" (16:8) consistently means to show someone their sin and call them to repentance (Büchsel, p. 474).
It is a legal term that refers to the kind of cross-
examination that forces someone to see and admit their guilt (Barclay, 2:192).
It is a work shared by Jesus (Rev 3:19) with
the Holy Spirit.
The Spirit's work in the world is to bring the
world to an awareness of its sin, particularly in its refusal to believe in Jesus (John 16:9), as well as an awareness of the provision made to deal with that sin (16:10), and the consequences of continued rejection (11).
The world is guilty in
its rejection of Jesus, but it takes the Spirit to bring this guilt home to human consciousness (9). Furthermore, the world needs to know that the only righteousness that is acceptable to God comes to them through the provision made by Jesus Christ (10).
The world contains many
purported roads to salvation but all are dead ends except the one that passes through Him who died on the cross (12:31, 32; 14:6). Because of the world's refusal to follow Jesus, the cross truly becomes the judgment of the entire world (11, 12:31). As was the case with the Spirit's work in behalf of the disciples, so the Spirit's work for the world parallels the work of Jesus.
Jesus is the Light of the world (1:4-5; 8:12; 9:5) who
297 brings conviction of sin and assurance of righteousness (1:9-11; 3:18-21; 9:13-35).
Although He did not come to pass judgment on
the world (3:17; 8:15), His very presence brings judgment with it, both positive and negative (3:18-21; 5:22-25; 8:16). In summary, the work of the Holy Spirit as outlined in the Gospel of John is as an extension of the work of Jesus Himself. The Spirit is Christ's Successor and Representative both with the disciples and to the world.
Through the Spirit, therefore, Jesus
is always present in and among those who believe in Him.
The
Spirit extends the presence of Jesus to the new generation that never knew His physical touch.
The teaching that Jesus could no
longer do in the flesh, the Spirit would do everywhere in His behalf.
The witness that He would no longer bear, the Spirit
would bear in His behalf.
Through the Spirit Jesus would
continue to be glorified. On the other hand, as Jesus brought judgment and conviction to all who were exposed to His light, so the Holy Spirit has a ministry also to the world, to bring conviction of sin, the offer of righteousness, and a warning of judgment to come. rejected Jesus and still does so today.
The world
But in spite of the
world's continued rejection, the Spirit continues to convict and many in the second generation continue to hear Jesus' voice through the voice of the Spirit. APPLYING THE WORD 1.
To what degree have you been aware of the Holy Spirit's active involvement in your life? What difference do you think the material in John could make in people's lives
298
2.
3.
today if it were taken seriously? Do you sometimes feel like the disciples in the upper room, abandoned by their strongest link to God? Has a person with major spiritual influence in your life ever died or moved away? What happened to you spiritually when that took place? Were you able to replace that source of spiritual strength with a new relationship or spiritual growth of your own? How would you suggest people should prepare for the eventual loss of some of the spiritual influencers in their lives? What methods has the Spirit used in your life to bring you to an awareness of your own defects of character? To teach you lessons about life? To help you understand the Scriptures?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
2.
With a comprehensive concordance find all the references to "spirit" in the Bible. Quickly eliminate all references to such things as the human spirit or breath and the winds that blow. Further eliminate those passages that are ambiguous (for example, you can't tell if the reference is to wind or Spirit, or if the reference is to a person's inner nature as opposed to what God's Spirit does in a person). When you have collected as many clear references to the third person of the Godhead as you can, look up key passages in the SDA Bible Commentary. Look up key terms in the SDA Bible Dictionary. On the basis of the above study try to answer the following questions: How would you demonstrate from Scripture that the Holy Spirit is truly a person and not just an impersonal force? How would you demonstrate that the Holy Spirit is fully God? What difference did the cross, the resurrection and Pentecost make? In what sense is the Spirit's operation different in the NT era? What is the unique contribution of the Johannine material to the Biblical evidence? What themes does John have in common with such Pauline passages as Rom 12; 1 Cor 12-14 and Eph 4:1-16?
FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1. 2. 3.
For in-depth studies of the role of the Holy Spirit in the Gospel of John see Brown, 2:1135-1144, and Schnackenburg, 3:138-154. For a general Adventist study on the work of the Holy Spirit see Froom. Ellen White gives special attention to the farewell discourse of Jesus in Desire of Ages, 662-680. She focuses directly on the work of the Holy Spirit in Acts of the Apostles, 47-56.
CHAPTER 14 THE ARREST, TRIALS, AND DEATH OF JESUS JOHN 18:1 - 19:42 The material concerning the passion of Jesus in the Gospel of John begins and ends in a garden (18:1; 19:41-- Talbert, Reading John, 232) and falls naturally into three parts.
First,
there is a section describing the betrayal, arrest, and indictment of Jesus (18:1-27).
The trial before Pilate assumes
the central role in John's account and is covered in 18:28 through the middle of the 16th verse of chapter 19.
The
crucifixion itself, followed by the burial of Jesus is described in 19:16b-42.
Our discussion of the cross event in the Gospel of
John will likewise be divided into three parts. Of all the material in the Gospel of John chapters 18 and 19 have the most in common with the accounts in Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
For this reason, the discussions in this chapter will
focus to a large degree on the differences between John and the other three gospel accounts, and how these differences help the reader to highlight the major theological points that John was trying to make in his narrative of the cross and the events surrounding it. The crucifixion account in John offers ironic contrasts 299
300 between Peter and Pilate on the one hand, and Jesus on the other. Although quite different in faith profession, education and occupation, Peter and Pilate have one thing in common.
Both will
do anything to avoid pain and embarrassment over the short-term, at the expense of long-term consequences.
By way of contrast,
Jesus is willing to suffer extreme pain and rejection over the short-term in order to secure the eternal consequences of His spiritual kingship.
THE BETRAYAL, ARREST, AND INDICTMENT OF JESUS GETTING INTO THE WORD John 18:1-27 Please read 18:1-27 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2. 3.
Read the parallel accounts in Matthew (26:36 - 27:10), Mark (14:32-72) and Luke (22:39-71). Make a list of all the items that are unique to the Gospel of John. Also list items that are omitted in John. Write a short essay in which you address the unique approach of John to these events. Are there any unique theological themes in 18:1-27 that remind you of material covered earlier in this Gospel? On a piece of paper, divide this passage up into paragraphs, to the best of your ability. What is the central point of each paragraph? Explain. In a paragraph or two each, try to describe the emotional state of each of the main characters who appear in this passage, Jesus, Peter, the other disciple, Annas.
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage John 18:1-27 divides naturally into five parts.
First,
comes the arrest of Jesus in a garden across the Kidron Valley
301 from Jerusalem (18:1-11).
This is followed by a legal hearing
before Annas, the father-in-law of the reigning High Priest Caiaphas (12-14), which account is interrupted by the first denial of Peter (15-18).
Then the center of attention again
moves back and forth between the interrogation room in the High Priest's palace (19-24) and the courtyard outside where Peter twice more denies Jesus (25-27). The Background of the Passage The interrogation before Annas is a unique feature of the account in the Gospel of John.
Annas is otherwise mentioned only
in the writings of Luke, but even in them Annas in not mentioned in relation to the events surrounding the crucifixion itself (Luke 3:2; Acts 4:6).
On the other hand, the interrogation
before Caiaphas, which plays a major role in Matthew (26:59-68), Mark (14:55-65), and Luke (22:63-71), is assumed in John but not described (John 18:24, 28). The Passage in Detail After the farewell discourse, Jesus leads His disciples out of Jerusalem, across the Kidron Valley to an olive grove (original just says "a garden").
There they encounter Judas with
a large detachment of armed soldiers and religious officials (John 18:1-3).
Jesus moves forward boldly and identifies
Himself, to the consternation of those who wished to arrest him (4-6).
When they recover their composure He invites them to take
Him, but to let His disciples go (7-9).
When Peter seeks to
302 defend Jesus, He rebukes him (10, 11). A comparison of this passage (1-11) with Matthew, Mark, and Luke yields some fascinating information. that the spot is a garden (1),
Only John mentions
Matt (26:36) and Mark (14:32)
speak of "a place called Gethsemane." went to the Mount of Olives (22:39).
Luke only says that they John mentions that they
went there "often" and that Judas knew the place (2).
Also
unique to John is the detachment of soldiers going along with the crowd, and the presence of Pharisees (3).
Strikingly absent at
this point is any description of Jesus' agony in Gethsemane (but note John 12:27). A number of other elements are unique to John.
Jesus moves
forward to meet the mob, rather than awaiting their arrival (4). He asks, "who is it you want?" and they fall to the ground when he again uses those mighty words "I am he" (4-6, cf. 8:58). There is no kiss from Judas, Peter and Malchus are named (10), and there is a reference to the fulfillment of a prediction made by Jesus (9).
Jesus asks that His disciples be released, and the
account implies that this request was respected since the disciples are not said to flee as they do in Matthew (26:56) and Mark (14:50), some even follow Jesus up to the place of His hearings before the priests (John 18:15, 16). The key point that John seems to be making in this passage is that Jesus is in full control of the situation, fulfilling the statement He made in 10:18, "No one takes it (my life-- cf. 17) from me, but I lay it down of my own accord."
In the Synoptic
303 Gospels, Judas is the one who precipitates the death of Jesus by his kiss of betrayal, Jesus is the victim (Matt 26:45-56; Mark 14:41-52; Luke 22:47-54).
But in John it is Jesus who is in
control of the situation. John points out that Jesus and His disciples went to that garden often and that Judas "knew the place" (John 18:2).
If
Jesus had wanted to avoid arrest, He could simply have headed somewhere else.
Instead He leads His disciples to the garden,
knowing what would be happening there (4).
Jesus is not in
anguish in this account, he is fully controlled.
He does not
wait for the betrayer, he moves forward and addresses the mob, showing an ability to fully intimidate them if that would have served His purpose (4-6).
His death is voluntary, they could
never have arrested Him had He not allowed it. Jesus is equally in control of the fate of His disciples (79).
It is, therefore, almost amusing when Peter steps into the
breach to save Jesus.
Although Jesus was fully in control of the
situation, Peter saw things as totally out of control, so he flashed his sword, and became a slasher for Jesus. told him to put away his sword.
But Jesus
His good intentions would have
prevented events from unfolding in the way that God had planned (11).
Jesus knew that He must go to the cross or God's plan of
salvation would fail.
Peter did not know this, so his actions
designed to get control of the situation would only have moved things truly out of control.
As always in the Gospel of John,
Jesus does exactly what His Father would have wanted Him to do
304 (cf. 15:10). After His arrest, Jesus is taken to Annas for a preliminary, unofficial interview.
As mentioned earlier, Annas plays a role
in Jesus' trial only in the Fourth Gospel (18:12-14, 19-24).
He
was the father-in-law of Caiaphas, the reigning High Priest (11:49, 51), and served as the High Priest before him.
It is
interesting that Annas is also called the High Priest in the Gospel of John, even though he is no longer in office (18:19, 22).
So you have the fascinating statement that Annas, the High
Priest, sends Jesus to Caiaphas the High Priest (24). According to the Old Testament, the High Priest was to hold his office for life.
No doubt conservative Jews, at least, still
considered Annas the true High Priest and still called him by that title as long as he lived (see Brown, 2:820).
This would be
a way for people to quietly express their disapproval of the authority of Rome, which had taken upon itself the right to enthrone or depose the High Priests of the Jewish faith.
But
like it or not, Caiaphas had the authority to make final decisions, delegated to him by Rome.
Annas, for all his
spiritual authority, could only counsel and persuade. This part of the Gospel takes place on a "double stage." While Jesus is being interviewed by Annas, Peter is being interviewed by the High Priest's servants in the courtyard (1518, 25-27).
Peter and "another disciple," presumably John,
follow Jesus and those who arrested him to the residence of the High Priest (15).
The other disciple was evidently an
305 acquaintance of the High Priest, and thereby gained access to at least the courtyard for Peter and himself (15, 16).
Presumably,
the girl at the door knew John to be a disciple of Jesus, but didn't challenge him because he had privileged access.
Peter was
not so lucky (17, 25-27). Many aspects of the story of Peter in the courtyard are unique to the Gospel of John.
The involvement of the other
disciple who entered with Jesus because he was known to the High Priest (15, 16), the fact that the maid who first challenges Peter is the doorkeeper who let him in (17, cf. Matt 26:69; Mark 14:66; Luke 22:56), the reason for the fire (it was needed for them to keep warm-- John 18:18, 25) are unique details.
In John
also, Peter is challenged repeatedly with questions rather than assertions from those standing by (18:17, 25, 26).
From these
details we learn that more than one disciple tried to stay close to Jesus during his trial.
We also learn that the weather at the
time was cold, which may indicate a further element in the sufferings of Jesus on the next day. A further interesting aspect of these scenes is the way Peter is detected in 25-27. detected by his dialect.
In the Synoptic Gospels Peter is
"Your [Galilean] accent gives you away"
(Matt 26:73, cf. Mark 14:70; Luke 22:59).
But in John Jesus is
detected by a relative of the man whose ear was cut off (18:26). This also helps to explain why John was not challenged and Peter was.
Peter had come boldly to the front at the time of Jesus'
arrest.
Now that boldness would challenge him to further
306 boldness, but he would fail the test.
Poor, impulsive Peter.
Too bold one minute, too timid the next! Since Peter does not change location when Jesus is moved from Annas to Caiaphas (24-27), we can assume that the two high priests lived in different wings of the same palace, both of which fronted on the same courtyard.
The trial before Caiaphas
is not described in the Fourth Gospel. The description of Jesus' interview with Annas begins with a description of the High Priest's questioning. "about his disciples and his teaching" (19).
He asks Jesus While Jesus answers
Annas in words similar to those used in Matthew (26:55), Mark (14:49), and Luke (22:53), in John's context the intent of His answer is totally different.
In the Synoptics, Jesus challenges
the secretiveness of His arrest.
In John Jesus perceives the
questioning of Annas to imply that He has founded a secret society with secret teachings. has no secret agenda.
He asserts, therefore, that He
He has taught nothing different in private
than He has taught publically in synagogue or temple (20, cf. Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1068). There may be even more below the surface of this brief dialogue.
Barclay points out (2:227) that Annas' attempt to
extort a confession from Jesus (18:19) violated Jewish legal procedure.
Jesus responds by insisting that the trial be
conducted in a proper and legal manner (20, 21), with appropriate witnesses duly called.
Annas and his deputies apparently didn't
take too well to instruction (22, 23)!
It is immediately clear
307 that the religious leaders were not interested in a fair trial. As is typical for this Gospel, Jesus is quite assertive (2123).
He certainly does not follow an extreme understanding of
His own statement in Matthew about turning the other cheek (23, cf. Matt 5:39). authority.
He protests against his opponent's abuse of
Being a Christian is not the same as being a doormat.
It is appropriate and even advisable in most situations for Christians to set boundaries in their relationships with others (see Cannon, 179-199).
Allowing other people to walk all over
you generally helps neither you nor them.
There is sometimes a
fine line between being humble and being abused.
JESUS BEFORE PILATE GETTING INTO THE WORD John 18:28 - 19:16a Please read 18:28 - 19:16a at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
3.
Read the parallel accounts in Matthew (27:11-31), Mark (15:1-20) and Luke (23:1-25). Make a list of all the items that are unique to the Gospel of John. Also list items that are omitted in John. Write a short essay in which you address the unique approach of John to these events. Are there any unique theological themes in 18:28 - 19:16a that remind you of material covered earlier in the Gospel? Write a paragraph or two on the motivations and emotions of Pilate as he works his way through the issues that confront him. Do the same for the religious leaders. In what ways are their reactions to Jesus similar? In what ways are they different? Note the various times that Pilate addresses Jesus in this passage. Try to write out an explanation of why Jesus responds on some occasions but remains silent on others.
308 EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The story of Jesus before Pilate divides somewhat naturally into two parts.
In the first part (John 18:28-40) the issue
hangs somewhat in the balance as Pilate seeks ways to release Jesus without losing ground politically.
In the second part
(19:1-16a) it is increasingly clear that Pilate's attempts to release Jesus are heading nowhere and that it is only a matter of time until Jesus is sentenced to death. The Background of the Passage The role of Pilate is much more central and detailed in the Gospel of John than it is in Matthew, Mark, or Luke.
For John
Pilate, like Nicodemus, Thomas, and others (12:42, 43), stands in the Gospel as a representative of those who are attracted by Jesus and His message but have at best a partial, unsaving faith in Him.
While Nicodemus seems to be coming to the light, Pilate
shies away, and in the end goes along with those who wish to destroy Jesus. At the time of the trial Pilate was in a position of considerable weakness in relation to the religious leaders.
A
series of blunders in handling Jewish religious sentiments had not only repeatedly enraged the religious leaders and the people but had even raised in the Emperor's mind the question of Pilate's fitness to govern (Barclay, 2:238-240).
One more major
incident and he would be out of office, and might even lose his
309 life.
In his position of weakness, he was vulnerable to
blackmail, as we will see. The Passage in Detail In the morning Jesus was led from the High Priest's house to the palace of the Roman governor, where the Jewish religious leaders stayed outside for fear of defilement (18:28).
The
material in verses 28b-32 is unique to the Gospel of John. Pilate asks the basic legal question, "What charges are you bringing against this man" (29)?
Unless it was routine for
Pilate to rubber-stamp the decisions of the Jewish religious council, and apparently it was not, the statement in verse 30 was somewhat insolent on the part of the religious leaders.
Pilate,
however, insists on correct procedure, "If you want to control this matter, handle it yourselves" (31).
But the Jews had no
right under Roman law to crucify Jesus, so the author of the Gospel notes how the legal niceties of the situation resulted in the fulfillment of Jesus' prediction regarding the manner of His death (31, 32, cf. 12:32, 33). In John 18:28-32 we note two special interests of the author.
First, John points out that the Passover meal is
approaching (18:28), which means that Jesus died at the time when the Passover lambs were being slain all over Jerusalem, a remarkable fulfillment of the type (cf. 19:35, 36).
We also note
that John gives much more detail with regard to the legal niceties that affected the interactions between the Romans and the Jews.
The Jews were allowed to judge people in many areas
310 but Rome retained the right to decide in cases where capital punishment was in view. In verses 33-38a, Pilate has his first interview with Jesus. All the material in this passage is unique to John except the question, "Are you the King of the Jews" (33)?
Although the
charges brought by the religious leaders are not mentioned, Pilate's question makes it clear that the priests have formulated the charge in terms of a rival kingship with Rome.
In Jesus'
reply (34) we see Him seeking to discern if Pilate had a personal interest in the matter from a political perspective, or if he was just pursuing something the Jews had put Him up to (see Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1070).
Pilate declines to admit any personal
interest, his question is a legal one (35). Jesus' next answer directly responds to Pilate's legal question (36).
Jesus' kingship is not to be understood in the
earthly political terms that Pilate was concerned about.
The
kingdom that Jesus rules is "from another place," in other words, outside of Pilate's jurisdiction.
As evidence for this Jesus
offers the convincing argument of the behavior of His followers at the time of His arrest.
If He were a political revolutionary,
His followers would have fought to the death to prevent His arrest.
Perhaps in this comment we see a further reason for
Jesus' rebuke of Peter in verse 11. Although convinced by Jesus' argument in verse 36, Pilate wants to make sure that He has understood what Jesus is saying (37a).
Jesus reiterates that His kingdom is a spiritual one,
311 concerned with truth, rather than with political, economic and military power (37b).
Jesus' words have self-authenticating
power for all those who are honestly searching for truth.
But
Pilate will have none of this spiritual turn to the discussion. He again disdains personal interest in Jesus with a flippant, "What is truth" (38a)? Pilate was very much a child of his times.
The age in which
Jesus was born had so many conflicting claims to truth that the great thinkers of the time tended to be quite uncertain (see Lohse; Koester, 141-280; White, Desire of Ages, 32). ways it was a lot like the pluralism of today.
In many
Pilate wanted to
do what was legally correct, but he had no time for someone with strong religious convictions. Convinced that he had settled the matter, Pilate went out to render judgment, offering a face-saving way out for the religious leaders who had sought to condemn Jesus (38, 39).
Unlike the
Synoptics, he does not offer Barabbas as an alternative choice, he urges them to accept the release of Jesus.
They could then
say that Pilate agreed that Jesus was no good, but since it was Passover it was time to be generous and give Jesus another chance.
The religious leaders, however, were not interested in
saving face, whether their face or Pilate's face (40). wanted Jesus dead at any cost.
They
This made the matter a lot more
complex than Pilate had expected. Both the religious leaders and Pilate now face a dilemma. The religious leaders realize that the civil charges aren't
312 working, they need to try some other tack.
Pilate realizes that
in order to do the right thing, he either has to persuade the religious leaders to his side of the case, or release Jesus in the face of their wrath.
Ignoring the latter option, Pilate
decides to try exciting their sympathy for Jesus as a person (19:1-5).
For Pilate, self-interest and justice were in conflict
with each other.
Pilate lacked the integrity to do what he knew
was right (18:38; 19:6) because his self-interest got in the way (Gruenler, 133). Pilate, therefore, has Jesus flogged (to appease the religious leaders, according to Mark 15:15) and looks the other way as his soldiers crown Jesus with thorns, dress Him in royal robes, mock Him and slap Him around (1-3).
Although Pilate
recognizes that Jesus' royal claims are no direct threat to Caesar, he no doubt shared his soldiers disdain for any other claim to royalty, however innocuous. In a sequence that is unique to John (4-7),
Pilate then
presents the abused Jesus to the religious leaders, hoping they will agree that He is an innocent victim.
In the process Pilate
utters the unforgettable words, "Behold the man," which probably had little or no significance to him, but vibrated with significance to John because of its similarity to the outcry of the Baptist at the beginning of Jesus' ministry, "Behold the Lamb!" (5, cf. 1:29, 36). The religious leaders do not respond as Pilate had hoped, so he tries to shift the responsibility totally onto them (19:6).
313 But while Pilate does not seem able to release Jesus without their consent, they are unwilling to close the case without gaining a verdict of conviction from him.
Since the civil
charges do not work, the religious leaders move in a different direction.
They insist that Jesus' act of blasphemy in claiming
to be the Son of God (5:16-18; 10:33) requires Pilate to act in order to protect their religion from sacrilege. Pilate was vulnerable on this point.
As mentioned earlier,
on several occasions in the past Pilate had acted in ways considered blasphemous by the Jews (see Barclay, 2:238-240).
On
at least one of those occasions, the Emperor had been forced to intervene against Pilate in behalf of the Jews.
Pilate could not
afford, politically, to be again seen as performing or allowing sacrilege to take place against the Jewish religion.
So we see
the religious leaders beginning to play dirty in verse 7.
They
threaten that Pilate will pay a heavy personal price if he goes against their wishes in this matter. In verses 8-16, which are unique to the Fourth Gospel, we gain further insight into Pilate's dilemma, and the solution he chooses.
He is perplexed because of personal vulnerability to
the political influence of the religious leaders with Rome.
But
with considerable skill, Pilate in the end turns the situation to his political advantage, although to the personal disadvantage of Jesus. His appeal to the religious leaders having failed, Pilate fearfully returns to Jesus hoping to extract something from Him
314 that will save Pilate from having to back down to the Jews (8, 9).
But Jesus is not interested in repeating Himself (9).
Jesus, however, does seem to be moved with some pity for Pilate's dilemma.
He knows that Pilate is not against Him personally, and
He thoughtfully absolves Pilate of blame to the extent possible under the circumstances (10, 11).
Pilate, perhaps sensing a
certain bond with Jesus developing, redoubles his efforts to release Him (12).
He could, of course, have released Jesus on
his own authority (cf. 10), but he was too vulnerable politically to do so without the consent of the religious leaders. In triumph, the religious leaders press home their new-found political advantage.
Caesar will side with them, they assert, if
Pilate releases a man who makes himself a rival king (12).
At
this point Pilate realizes that his indecision is weakness, that he cannot save both himself and Jesus. himself.
He determines to save
Having come to firm decision, the governor now takes
control of the situation.
He will consent to the request of the
religious leaders, but they will pay dearly for it.
Again Pilate
echoes the Baptist, "Behold your King" (14, cf. 19:5; 1:29, 36)! The religious leaders do not realize that they have already won.
Fearing that Pilate is trying some new tack to circumvent
them, they repeatedly cry, "Take him away, crucify him!" (15) Pilate moves in for the kill, "Shall I crucify your king?" have no king but Caesar," say the chief priests. his reward for crucifying Jesus (16). for it.
"We
Pilate now has
They will owe him dearly
They have placed on public record their obligation to
315 serve Caesar. Earlier (11:48-52) Caiaphas had insisted that one man had to be sacrificed so that the nation might not be destroyed.
Now he
is ready to sacrifice the nation in order to destroy one man (White, Desire of Ages, 745).
The religious leaders rejected
Jesus' kingship with such passion, that they now rejoice in a king that they had always hated. that pledge in the future. him.
Pilate intends to hold them to
They will have no more power over
From this point on in the Gospel story Pilate is unmovable.
THE CRUCIFIXION OF JESUS GETTING INTO THE WORD John 19:16b-42 Please read 19:16b-42 at least twice and then answer the following questions: 1.
2. 3.
Read the parallel accounts in Matthew (27:32-66), Mark (15:21-47) and Luke (23:26-56). Make a list of all the items that are unique to the Gospel of John. Also list items that are omitted in John. Write a short essay in which you address the unique approach of John to these events. Are there any unique theological themes in 19:16b42 that remind you of material covered earlier in the Gospel? In light of the entire episode, what do you think was the "official" reason that Jesus was crucified. Explain. Compare each of the quotations of Scripture in this passage with the OT context from which the text was quoted. Does John's use accurately reflect the intention of the original? Why do you think that John highlights the fulfillment of Scripture so strongly here? List ways in which this fulfillment motif might aid Christian witness, whether in John's time or today.
316 EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage John 19:16b-42 falls into four basic parts, the crucifixion of Jesus (16b-27), the death of Jesus (28-30), the incident of piercing Jesus' side (31-37), and the burial of Jesus (38-42). The Background of the Passage Much of the crucifixion scene is unique to John.
This is
particularly the case with verses 31-42, which have virtually no parallels of detail with Matthew, Mark, or Luke. Crucifixion was a peculiarly Roman form of execution.
An
individual was required to carry his own cross in public places as a warning to others. tied with ropes.
Some people were nailed, others were
The key element, however, was that in order to
breathe victims had to exert strength to raise their bodies somewhat.
Death came by suffocation when they were no longer
strong enough to raise themselves.
Death, therefore, was slow
and painful (Life Application Bible, 1923).
Breaking the legs,
of course, would hasten the process when that was for the executioners' convenience.
An additional element of torture was
shame and exposure, being hung naked in front of family and friends and in all kinds of weather. The Passage in Detail In verses 19-22 the "new" Pilate strikes again.
All of the
gospels mention the placard placed on the cross of Jesus, but only John mentions the controversy between Pilate and the Jews
317 over that inscription.
Only John notes that the inscription was
prepared by Pilate himself in the three great languages of the Empire, Aramaic (the most common language of the East, including Palestine), Greek (the most common language, particularly in the West), and Latin (the language of official decree). The wording chosen by Pilate combined with the shame and disgrace of the method of execution made the crucifixion of Jesus symbolic of Rome's dominance over Judaism and Palestine.
In his
choice of languages Pilate turns the scene into a public spectacle designed as a blow against the prestige of the Jews and their religious leaders. summarily dismissed.
Protest from the chief priests is
They have no more power over Pilate.
He
has become unmovable. In verses 23 and 24 the focus turns to the fact that the cross is a fulfillment of prophecy.
With Pilate now acting as if
he were in full control of the situation, the reader is reminded again that ultimate control remains in the hands of the God of Scripture.
John is not interested in describing details such
as the darkness that came over the scene (Matt 27:45; Mark 15:33; Luke 23:44-45) or the mockery of Jesus on the cross (Matt 27:3944, 47-49; Mark 15:29-32, 35-36; Luke 23:35-37, 39).
Perhaps he
does not wish to repeat details that have already been treated by others.
In any case, his interests lie elsewhere.
Jesus' death
is voluntary, purposeful, and according to the Scriptures.
John
highlights the fact that the actions of the soldiers constituted an amazing and exact fulfillment of prophecy on the part of
318 people who were in no way aware of the fact that they were doing so (cf. 19:36-37). Verses 25-27 seem to function in two ways in the Fourth Gospel.
First, they provide opportunity to note the presence of
the author of the Gospel at the cross (26, cf. 21:20-24).
John
is the disciple who experienced the most intimate relationship with Jesus (13:23-- "in the bosom of Jesus," cf. 1:18).
He is
the only disciple who sees the glory of Jesus as He hangs on the cross (cf. 12:23-25).
As such he becomes the ultimate witness
about Jesus to the second generation of Christians. one who knows (cf. 19:35).
He is the
His Gospel is sufficient to meet
their spiritual needs. Second, this scene demonstrates the beautiful selfforgetfulness of Jesus who, in the midst of great suffering, turns His attention to take care of His mother (twice more in the original the word "behold" is highlighted, 26, 27, cf. 5, 14). She appears only twice in the Gospel, here and at the wedding of Cana (2:1-5, 12).
In both situations He calls her "woman."
both places the cross is in view.
In
In this particular scene Jesus
leaves both His mother and the second generation of Christians in the care of the beloved disciple, the only one who has seen and fully understood the glory of Jesus. Among the unique elements in 19:28-30 are the cry, "It is finished," the statement that Jesus knew the full significance of His suffering and death, and His awareness that He was fulfilling Scripture in all that He did on the cross.
Once again we see
319 Jesus in full control of the situation. What was finished (or, more accurately, fulfilled-completed) on the cross? on the cross.
Certainly the law of God was fulfilled
God was never more faithful to His covenant than
when He dealt out the wages of sin to Jesus (cf. Rom 6:23), the representative of sinful humanity.
For John as for Paul Jesus
was obedient to death, even the death of the cross (John 15:10; 18:11, cf. Phil 2:8).
If the law of God could have been changed,
humanity could have been saved without a cross.
Instead it was
at the cross that God ratified His faithfulness to the covenant (see Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1074). What was fulfilled at the cross?
John is certainly clear
that the prophecies related to the Messiah were fulfilled.
This
was true down to the minutest detail of just what type of garment was divided, what type was wagered for (John 19:23, 24), and just how the body of Jesus was handled (19:35-37). In verses 32 and 33 John shows that the reality of Jesus' death was verified by disinterested people who were expert in judging such matters.
The piercing and its results (34)
underscore the reality of that death.
This information, unique
to John, helps to undercut theories that have appeared occasionally since ancient times to the effect that Jesus did not truly die, but went into a comatose state from which the disciples revived him and after which they proclaimed His resurrection.
Explain the empty tomb any way one wishes, but
there is no question that Jesus was truly dead that Friday
320 afternoon.
And like everything else about this story, these
events were according to the Scriptures (35-37, cf. Exod 12:46; Num 9:12; Zech 12:10). Although Joseph of Arimathea asks for the body of Jesus in each of the gospels, John brings out many unique features to the story.
He highlights the character of Joseph and Nicodemus as
secret disciples of Jesus (John 19:38, 39). were a lot like Pilate.
In many ways they
Their jobs, positions, and reputations
were at stake in the decision that they would have to make with regard to Jesus. by the cross.
Again like Pilate, their actions are emboldened
"A seemingly dead Christ has wakened a sympathy
which a living one had failed to evoke.
The heroism of faith is
usually kindled by desperate circumstance, and is not seldom displayed by those who before were the most timid, and scarce known as disciples at all." (Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1075) This scene, therefore, takes on symbolic overtones within the Gospel of John. (cf. 12:32).
It is the cross that draws people to Jesus
It is the cross that distinguishes the true
followers of Jesus from those who only profess His name, but have no living relationship with Him.
When the light of the cross
appears, Judas and Pilate shy away into the darkness, but Joseph and Nicodemus come forward into the light (cf. 3:18-21). The Major Themes of the Passage Ironically, although both Pilate and the chief priests thought that the crucifixion had permanently ended Jesus' kingdom, the Gospel of John brings out that the cross was
321 actually the "glory" of Jesus (12:23, 24), and that through death Jesus would become the author of life to all who believe in Him (cf. 1:9-13). forever.
Through death His kingdom would be established
John agreed with Paul that on the cross Jesus turned
the wisdom of the world into foolishness (cf. 1 Cor 1:18-25). Talbert (Reading John, 247) points out that the cross in the Fourth Gospel has a number of meanings.
It is the completion of
Jesus' obedience to the Father, the accomplishment of the Father's work (12:27, 28; 19:28, 34-37, 40).
It is the place
where Jesus and the Father are glorified (7:39; 12:16, 23; 17:1, 5). 37).
It is part of the carrying out of God's plan (19:24, 28, 36, The cross defeats the ruler of this world (12:31).
The
cross draws all things and people to Jesus (12:32, cf. 10:16; 11:52).
It is for the supreme benefit of humanity, it is for us
(6:51; 10:11; 11:50; 12:24). Life comes through death.
The cross is the ultimate irony.
Victory comes through defeat.
Acceptance comes through rejection.
Joy comes through sorrow.
APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2.
Can you think of times in your life when you have yielded to the temptation to take matters into your own hands (cf. John 18:10, 11)? What were the long-term consequences? What strategies could you apply to help you trust God more consistently in your life? What kinds of things do you say to others when life seems totally out of their control? What kind of reactions do you get? What would have been the long-term consequences for this world if Peter had succeeded in preventing Jesus from going to the cross? Describe a time in your life when, like Pilate, you had to choose between worldly position and reputation, on the one hand, and what you knew to be right. What decision did you make? Why? What were the consequences? Would you make the same decision today? If you had been with Pilate that day, what advice would you have offered him, if asked?
322 3.
4.
Are there any places or circumstances where you feel compelled to be a "secret disciple?" Are their any people with whom you have great difficulty being honest about your faith in Jesus? What motives drive you to hide your faith at times? What insights have enabled you, in the past, to speak out boldly at times? Is there a current situation in which you need to step out boldly and let others know where you stand? What would it take to get you to "go public" for Jesus? Both Jesus and Pilate had to deal with religious leaders whose minds were made up in advance. Describe a situation in which you had to deal with a person like that. How did you respond? Would you respond differently now? How should a Christian respond when the issue at stake has to do with his or her faith?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
2.
With the help of the SDA Bible Dictionary and the SDA Bible Commentary find out all you can about First Century legal procedures in the Roman Empire in general and in Palestine in particular. What procedures were followed in John 18 and 19? What procedures were ignored or violated? Also learn all you can about crucifixion as a method of torture and execution. Using the SDA Bible Dictionary and The SDA Bible Commentary learn all you can about the composition and procedures of the Sanhedrin.
FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1. 2.
On the meaning of the cross in John's Gospel see Schnackenburg, 2:398-410; Talbert, Reading John, 246, 247. Ellen White does not focus specifically on John's view of the cross, but she covers the events of John 18, 19 as part of her account based on all four gospels. See Desire of Ages, 685-778.
CHAPTER 15 THE RESURRECTION AND RE-APPEARANCE OF JESUS JOHN 20:1-31 GETTING INTO THE WORD Please read John 20:1-31 through several times and then answer the following questions: 1. 2.
3.
4.
5.
Into how many different units would you divide this chapter? List the various verbal signals in the text which indicate that the reader is moving into a different unit? According to the evidence in this chapter, was it necessary for the stone to be removed in order for Jesus to escape the tomb? If not, why do you suppose the stone was removed? Write out your answer. In speaking to Mary, what term does Jesus use to describe His disciples? Re-read John 13-20. List all the terms Jesus uses to address His disciples. Do you see any progression in intimacy? Is there any decisive turning point that causes Jesus to view His disciples differently? In a paragraph or two describe the various ways in which the relationship of Jesus and His disciples will be different from this point on. What phrase does Jesus repeatedly use to address His disciples when He returns to the "upper room?" In a paragraph or two describe why you think Jesus chose this particular form of greeting. On a piece of paper note all the parallel words and ideas between the Thomas incident (24-29) and the statement of purpose (30, 31). How does our understanding of the purpose of the Gospel differ if we read that concluding statement in the light of its context in chapter 20?
323
324 EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage The twentieth chapter of the Gospel of John contains four incidents related to the resurrection of Jesus, followed by the kind of statement that would normally bring a gospel to its conclusion.
In the first incident Mary Magdalene's report brings
Peter and "the other disciple" to the now empty tomb (20:1-9). After they leave the scene, Mary reappears, sees two angels, and then encounters the risen Jesus Himself (10-18). takes place that evening.
The third scene
Jesus appears to them while they are
gathered behind locked doors (19-23), presumably in the same place where He had delivered his "Farewell Discourse" (John 1317).
Finally, Jesus appears to Thomas, who missed out on the
earlier encounters, and brings him also to belief in His resurrection 20:24-29).
These scenes offer a combined
affirmation of both the reality of Jesus' resurrection, and the difficulty many have in believing without seeing. The Background of the Passage According to listing in the Life Application Bible (page 1929), the New Testament bears witness to a total of eleven postresurrection appearances of Jesus.
He appeared to Mary Magdalene
by herself (Mark 16:9-11; John 20:10-18), and, possibly on another occasion, in the company of other women (Matt 28:8-10). He appeared to Peter by himself in Jerusalem (Luke 24:34; 1 Cor 15:5).
He appeared to two travelers on the road to Emmaus (Luke
325 24:13-35, cf. Mark 16:12, 13). He appeared to ten disciples behind locked doors (Mark 16:14; Luke 24:36-43; John 20:19-25), and then to the same group with the addition of Thomas (John 20:24-29, cf. 1 Cor 15:5).
He
appeared to seven disciples while they were fishing in Galilee (John 21:1-23) and eleven disciples on a mountain (Matt 28:1620).
Finally, He appeared to those who watched Him ascend into
heaven (Luke 24:44-49; Acts 1:3-11).
In addition to these
narrative accounts, Paul asserts that Jesus also appeared privately to His own brother James (1 Cor 15:7) and to a crowd of 500 (1 Cor 15:6). The many witnesses to Jesus' resurrection provided a safeguard against the accusation that the accounts of the resurrection were the fabrication of a handful of disappointed disciples trying to save face.
As long as these disciples lived
their stories could be compared and checked out (cf. Luke 1:1-4). The author of the Fourth Gospel was the last living witness to the resurrection of Jesus. But perhaps the greatest evidence of the resurrection of Jesus, especially for the second generation who had no living witness to the event, is the fact of the empty tomb.
Given the
circumstance, this is extremely hard to understand if Jesus were not indeed raised from the dead.
Certainly the enemies of Jesus
had no motive for removing the body of Jesus from the tomb, and if they had done so, why didn't they just produce the body to prove that He was not risen?
326 It is equally clear from the contemporary accounts that the disciples had neither the ability, nor the intention of stealing the body of Jesus (it is the chief priests who raise the possibility, according to Matthew 27:62-64).
While Jesus was
still alive they showed an abysmal lack of courage (Matt 26:56; Mark 14:50; John 18:17, 25-27), why would their courage increase after His death?
Not only so, the disciples didn't believe that
Jesus would allow Himself to die in spite of His repeated assertions of what lay ahead (see, for example, Mark 8:31-33; 9:30-32; 10:32-34).
They were very slow to believe in His
resurrection, when in fact He proved to be alive again (John 20:1-9, 24-29).
In any case, the guard of Roman soldiers
provided formidable evidence that no such act was committed (Matt 27:62-64; 28:11-15). If the disciples had stolen the body of Jesus, their later behavior is totally unexplainable.
Who would sacrifice fame,
fortune, and family to spread a hoax throughout the world?
Who
would suffer ridicule, torture and death on account of an event that never took place? If neither the disciples of Jesus nor His enemies stole the body of Jesus, the empty tomb conclusively demonstrates the reality of Jesus' resurrection.
And if Jesus rose from the dead,
the implications for today are enormous.
For one thing, if Jesus
rose from the dead, no other miracle is impossible or incredible. Anything the second generation could possibly ask of Him can be done if it is according to His will.
Our own resurrection is
327 guaranteed by the certainty of His.
Not only so, the same divine
power that raised Jesus from the dead can bring life and healing into even the most hopeless of human situations. The Passage in Detail Before dawn on the first day of the week Mary Magdalene approached the tomb and saw that the great entrance stone had been removed (John 20:1).
Since the risen Jesus was able to pass
through solid objects (19, 26), the entrance stone was not rolled away in order for Jesus to get out of the tomb, but to let the disciples get in and verify that He was gone (Life Application Bible, 1925)!
Without checking herself, Mary immediately ran to
Peter and the disciple "whom Jesus loved" (cf. 13:23), presumably John (20:2).
She clearly did not think in terms of a
resurrection, but only in terms of some further indignity being visited on the body of Jesus by the chief priests. Peter and the other disciple race for the tomb, with Peter the decisive loser (3, 4).
But the other disciple did not enter
until after Peter arrived and preceded him into the tomb (5-8). Peter is clearly a doer, bolder in action. disciple proves to be the superior thinker.
But the beloved According to this
account, the beloved disciple was the first to believe in the resurrection, not because he had expected it, but because he put two and two together and the evidence added up (Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1076, cf. White, Desire of Ages, 789). Neither of them at that time felt compelled by the Scriptures to expect a resurrection (9).
328 The disciples didn't stay at the tomb long, but Mary lingered, weeping (10, 11).
Leaning into the tomb for a look she
saw two angels seated where the body of Jesus had been (11, 12). They asked why she was crying and she indicated her belief, not in a resurrection, but that the body of Jesus had been stolen but some unknown person or group (13). that someone is standing behind her.
At that instant she realizes She turns and sees Jesus,
but thinks that He is the keeper of the garden around the tomb (14, 15).
In bemused irony, Jesus repeats the exact wording of
the angels' question, "Woman, why are you crying?" But Jesus cannot restrain Himself any longer, He has to let her know what has happened.
He simply says, "Mary," and she
immediately recognizes that it is Him (16).
The behavior of Mary
reminds me of the quotation in Desire of Ages, page 297, "There are souls perplexed with doubt, burdened with infirmities, weak in faith, and unable to grasp the Unseen; but a friend whom they can see, coming to them in Christ's stead, can be a connecting link to fasten their trembling faith upon Christ." To the second generation of Christians the message in this little scene is powerful.
Although Mary was in the personal
presence of Jesus, her eyes were so blinded with tears that she was unable to grasp Who it was that she was speaking to.
The
personal presence of Jesus was of no advantage to her until she gave attention to His word.
For the second generation the
connecting link with Jesus came in the words of John's Gospel. Through the words of the Gospel faith is made real, and tears are
329 dried up. Verse 17 underlines the theme, "Do not hold on to me, for I have not yet returned to the Father."
The essence of Christian
life is not to cling to the physical presence of Jesus, but to look forward to the relationship that would become available in the Spirit once Jesus had ascended to the right hand of the Father.
Through the Spirit the words of the Gospel would provide
the life that had come through His physical presence.
Mary ran
to share the message with the disciples (18). In verse 17 Jesus uses a most precious title for His disciples.
He says to Mary, "Go to my brothers, and tell them,
'I am returning to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.'"
This is the first and only time in the Fourth Gospel that
Jesus ties Himself to His disciples in such intimate terms. Earlier He had called them "servants" (13:16), then "disciples" 13:35).
Later on He called them "friends" (15:15).
But now, in
spite of their incredible faithlessness in forsaking him in His hour of need (a fact that John downplays in comparison with the other gospel writers), Jesus progresses into an even more intimate characterization, He calls them brothers, fellow children of His Father (Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1076)! That evening the disciples assembled behind locked doors in case the Jewish leaders wanted to do away with them as well as Jesus.
Is it possible that in spite of the testimony of both the
beloved disciple and Mary Magdalene, they still do not believe that Jesus is risen?
In any case, Jesus appears to them, twice
330 announcing, "Peace be with you" (20:19, 21).
He then breathes on
them, a reminder of the original creation (Gen 2:7) and a symbolic conveyance of the Holy Spirit, perhaps a foretaste of the Pentecost experience which was to come fifty days later (John 20:22). The disciples' fear on this occasion reiterates once more that the physical presence of Jesus on earth in no way shielded the disciples from doubt and perplexity.
On the other hand, the
presence of the Spirit would raise the disciples up to the place of Jesus in His ministry of forgiveness to the world (23).
The
verse does not imply that the disciples would have the power to offer or withhold forgiveness at whim, but as was the case with Jesus, their proclamation of the gospel would bring both light and darkness, both life and death, both forgiveness and judgment (cf. 3:16-21, cf. also 2 Cor 2:15, 16). Thomas was not with the other disciples the evening of the resurrection (John 20:24).
There is no suggestion in the passage
that Thomas absented himself out of willful despondency, he may just have been otherwise occupied.
But he was clearly unwilling
to accept the reality of the resurrection on the basis of the disciples' testimony alone.
In the passage before us the
combination of "Unless I see . . .," with the strong double negative (in the Greek), "I will absolutely not believe it" (my translation), indicates extremely firm unbelief (20:25). A week later circumstances repeated themselves, this time with Thomas present.
Again the doors were locked, again Jesus
331 appears, again He announces, "Peace be with you" (26).
Then He
turns to Thomas and repeats Thomas' wording in verse 25 to a large extent, challenging him to satisfy his doubts by examining the physical body of Jesus (27). It turns out that Thomas' boasting was empty, he doesn't actually have to put his finger in the nail marks or touch the scar in Jesus' side, the mere sight of Jesus is enough to call forth one of the most sublime affirmations of Jesus' deity in all of the New Testament, "My Lord and my God" (28).
This phrase
offers a fitting counterpart to the Prologue of the Gospel, where the Word exists from all eternity as God and with God, yet condescends to become flesh (1:1-2, 14). The statement of Thomas (20:28) brings the christology of the Gospel to a climax.
And Jesus does not suggest that Thomas
has overstated the matter, instead He commends Him for his affirmation of belief, but reserves His blessing for those (the second generation) who will come to the same conclusion as Thomas but without experiencing the physical presence of Jesus (29). "Doubting Thomas" represents all those in the Gospel whose belief was dependent on physical signs and wondrous experiences.
The
greater experience is reserved for that generation which would come to belief through the testimony of others, through the living Word of the Gospel. This in fact is the reason why the Gospel of John was written. language.
Verse 30 begins with "therefore" in the original The purpose of the Gospel is to be seen in relation to
332 the Thomas incident.
Although the physical Jesus did many other
"signs" besides the ones listed in the Gospel, the Gospel contains "sufficient specimens" (Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1077) to create the kind of belief in Jesus that Thomas came to, and without an inspection of His resurrected body!
And best of
all, those of the second generation who come to that belief will find life, abundant life, in His name (31)! The purpose of the Gospel of John is that the reader would acknowledge Jesus as the Messiah (Jewish designation) and the Son of God (Gentile designation), so a comprehensive mission is in view (20:31).
The second generation is not limited by race, sex,
culture, or geographical location.
All who are willing to
receive the words of Jesus as recorded in this Gospel can receive the life that He offers. The Major Themes of the Passage The Slowness of the Disciples to Believe The primary theme in the chapter seems to be the slowness with which the followers of Jesus come to belief in the resurrection, in spite of the abundance of physical evidence. First Peter and John come to see the evidence, and though John believes, it doesn't seem to affect Peter (1-9).
Then Mary
stumbles her way to recognition (10-18), but only after a personal and physical encounter with Jesus.
In spite of her
testimony and John's the disciples huddle together behind locked doors like sheep without a shepherd (19-23).
Finally Thomas
333 stumbles his way to belief (24-29). It is as if the whole chapter is one big commendation to the second generation, who feels so inferior to the first generation, yet has done what only the beloved disciple seemed able to do in the first generation, and that is to come into full belief without personal contact with Jesus.
The first generation, with
the exception of the author of the Gospel is unwilling to accept the message on the testimony of others. has already done more than this.
The second generation
In keeping the faith after the
death of the beloved disciple, they would be exceeding the faith of the original disciples.
No wonder a special blessing was to
be theirs (29)! It is probably unfair to speak in terms of "doubting Thomas."
On at least one occasion he showed exceptional faith
and courage (11:7-16).
The only difference between him and the
other disciples in chapter 20 is that he didn't have the opportunity to see Jesus as they had.
The disciple who expressed
doubts even when Jesus was present was Philip (6:5-7; 14:8-11), but the Gospel does not make a major issue out of Philip's doubts.
It is clear from the Thomas incident that Jesus does not
reject people who have doubts as long as those doubts are honest and the person has not rejected all avenues by which Jesus could reach him or her.
Doubt can play an important role in the
process of rethinking difficult issues.
It is probably better to
doubt out loud, as Thomas did, than to slide into silent disbelief (Life Application Bible, 1927).
Barclay notes (2:277)
334 that there is more faith in a person who insists on being sure than in someone who glibly repeats what he or she has never thought out. There may be a lesson in this chapter for those who wish to reach out to people with a secular mindset.
People who hear
about the resurrection of Jesus for the first time today will probably need much time before they can grasp it, just as Mary, Peter, and Thomas did (Life Application Bible, 1925).
At first
they may try to think of other explanations for the empty tomb, as Mary did (cf. 20:2, 13-15).
Then they may check out the facts
but fail to be convicted, much as was the case with Peter (cf. 6, 7).
Only when they personally encounter Jesus and commit
themselves to Him will they fully understand the significance of this incredible event (cf. 16-18, 26-28). The Fulfillment of the Farewell Discourse One of the main purposes of the appearance stories in the Gospel of John seems to be to demonstrate that many of the things which Jesus promised in the Farewell Discourse (John 13-17) have had already been fulfilled within days of His death and resurrection (Talbert, Reading John, 253-255).
Jesus came back
to His disciples as He had promised (20:19, cf. 14:18; 16:22). He brought them His peace (20:21, cf. 14:27).
He brought
rejoicing to their hearts (20:20, cf. 16:23).
He brought the
Spirit which He had promised (20:22, cf. 16:7).
The time for
mutual forgiveness had come (20:22, 23, cf. 13:14, 15). encountering Jesus again, they had entered the time of
In
335 fulfillment. APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2.
3.
4.
Can you think of a time in the past when you had difficulty believing? How did you come to resolve that difficulty? What form did your "encounter" with Jesus take? What implications would you draw from that experience that could help you and others maintain faith in spite of the doubts of the present? What does the term "brother" mean to you? What was Jesus trying to communicate to His disciples by means of that term? How does your relationship with your own siblings affect the way you relate to Jesus? Where could you use the peace of Jesus right now? Are there inner fears that disturb your trust? Are there people who make life difficult to bear? Are there situations at work, school or home that create turmoil in your life? How can the peace of Jesus become yours more effectively in the midst of obstacles? What strategies do you use to make Jesus real to you in your present experience? How can we "touch" His hands and side today?
RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
Carefully compare this chapter with Matthew 28, Mark 16, Luke 24, John 21, Acts 1, and 1 Cor 15. On a piece of paper list all the post-resurrection appearances of Jesus that are mentioned in the New Testament. In what ways do the accounts of John 20 agree with or differ from the accounts in other NT books? What information can you add to the comments made in this chapter and the next?
2. FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1. 2.
For a thorough discussion of the arguments for the historicity of the resurrection of Jesus, see McDowell, 185273. Ellen White comments on John 20 in passing in Desire of Ages, 788-794, 802-808.
CHAPTER 16 THE DISCIPLES GIVE THEIR LIVES JOHN 21:1-25 John 21 is often described as the Epilogue to the Fourth Gospel, because the material comes after what sounds like the concluding words of the Gospel in 20:30, 31.
Whether the
material was part of the original edition of the Gospel, was added by the author in a second edition, or was added from the author's memoirs after his death (among the many theories that abound!), the story that makes up most of the chapter is a precious addition to our knowledge of Jesus' ministry and the effect it had on His disciples. Because this chapter functions as the conclusion to the Gospel of John, I have chosen to divide it into two parts.
The
first will consider the narratives that make up the bulk of the chapter (21:1-23).
The second part touches briefly on 21:24, 25
with the purpose of drawing the entire book to a conclusion.
336
337 JESUS AND HIS DISCIPLES ON A BEACH GETTING INTO THE WORD John 21:1-23 Please read John 21:1-23 through several times and then answer the following questions: 1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
On a piece of paper list all the post-resurrection appearances of Jesus mentioned in the Gospel of John. How many different occasions are mentioned? How many different people saw Jesus? In a paragraph or two write out what you think is the main purpose of the post-resurrection appearances in the Gospel of John. Compare John 21 with Gen 1 and 2. In what ways is Jesus portrayed like Adam? What implications does this comparison suggest about the purpose of Jesus' ministry? Does it have any implications for the debate over the human nature of Christ? What insights in this chapter would be of particular interest to the second generation, that didn't know Jesus or anyone who had known Jesus when He walked on earth in physical form? Write out your answer, either in list form or in a paragraph or two. Three times Jesus questions Peter. On a piece of paper make three columns. In the first write out the exact words of Jesus' three questions. In the second column write out Peter's replies, in the third write out Jesus' responses. Note the similarities and differences between the three sets of questions and responses. What significance do you draw from this encounter between Jesus and Peter? Why did Peter immediately ask about John? John 21:20-23 is a very early reference to an effort on the part of some Christians to set an approximate time for the second coming of Jesus. Write out what you think "the brothers" were trying to accomplish by spreading this rumor. What do think the consequences would have been if John hadn't taken the time to squelch the rumor?
EXPLORING THE WORD The Structure of the Passage John 21 tells the story of how the disciples encountered Jesus in Galilee after His resurrection.
After a long and
fruitless night of fishing, Jesus directs their efforts from the
338 shore, with great success resulting (1-6).
When they tow the
catch to shore, they find that Jesus has already prepared breakfast for them (7-14).
After breakfast, Jesus and Peter take
a walk along the beach (20) so Jesus can assure Peter of his worthiness to continue as a disciple (15-19) and define the relationship between Peter and the author of the Fourth Gospel (20-23). The Background of the Passage The impression one gets, particularly in the Gospel of John, is that the post-resurrection appearances of Jesus were occasional and rather unexpected.
Mary, the eleven, Thomas, and
now seven disciples are all startled at the suddenness of Jesus' appearances to them.
In a genuine sense, the ministry of Jesus
to His disciples was completed in the Upper Room (John 13-17), He says very little to them after His resurrection.
The purpose of
the post-resurrection appearances was primarily to validate the genuineness of the resurrection. The Passage in Detail Seven of Jesus' disciples, including Peter and the sons of Zebedee, decided to go fishing on the Sea of Tiberias, another name for the Sea of Galilee (21:1-3).
One of these disciples is
the "disciple whom Jesus loved," who also authored the Fourth Gospel (7, 20, 24).
But it is not clear from the account that he
is necessarily one of the sons of Zebedee, since two other unnamed disciples are included in the group (2).
339 The disciples were out all night (3) but caught nothing. Why were they fishing at night?
There are two main types of
fishing, net fishing and lure fishing.
In clear, daylight
waters, the method of preference is lure fishing, where the fish is attracted to some bright or tasty-looking object, bites and finds itself hooked onto a line.
While net fishing has the
potential of catching a number of fish at one time, it tends not to work in clear water during daylight, for the fish will see the net coming and swim out of the way.
Net fishing is best done at
night, therefore, when the fish can be surprised. But all night the disciples toiled, without any success. morning arrives, one final opportunity remains.
As
If they could
cast the net in the shadow of the boat they might surprise a few fish whose eyes had become accustomed to the morning brightness. Suddenly Jesus appears on the shore, though the disciples did not recognize Him at this point (4).
He suggests that they throw the
net on the other side of the boat, no doubt the sunny side (5, 6)!
Whoever this was on the beach, He did not appear to know
much about fishing! What the disciples were about to discover is that Jesus is the Second Adam (cf. Rom 5:12-21; 1 Cor 15:45-49).
He was Adam
as Adam was meant to be, in perfect relationship to God and in full dominion over the earth, including dominion over the fish of the sea (cf. Gen 1:26-28)!
The fish in the sea that morning
obeyed Jesus' command and swam right into the disciples' net. Many people love to debate whether Jesus had the nature of
340 Adam before or after the Fall.
It is easy to debate the issue
because both assertions are true to Scripture up to a point.
In
Rom 8:3, for example, God's Son is portrayed as coming in the likeness of sinful man, a condition necessitated by the fall of Adam.
John 21, on the other hand, shows Jesus demonstrating the
kinds of powers Adam had available to him before the Fall.
As in
so many other areas of theology, the Biblical picture is a bit more complex than most people would like one to believe. That was all the evidence the beloved disciple needed to once again figure things out first (21:7, cf. 20:8).
Peter, this
time, didn't hesitate to act on the other disciple's insight. Impetuous as ever, he immediately jumps into the sea to get to Jesus more quickly, while the rest of the disciples followed in the boat, towing the huge catch of fish (21:7, 8). When they arrived at the shore, they discovered that Jesus had been doing some fishing of His own and had begun to prepare breakfast over a fire (9).
He added some of the 153 large fish
that the disciples had caught under His direction (10, 11), and the author of the Gospel notes that in spite of the huge catch, the net was not broken (11). There followed a rather silent breakfast, in which the disciples ate the meal that Jesus offered (12, 13). disciples silent? Jesus?
Why were the
Were they a bit unsure whether this was really
Were they bewildered as to how these post-resurrection
appearances related to the farewell discourse Jesus gave before His crucifixion?
In any case, they shared the same uncertainties
341 that the second generation would feel on the death of the beloved disciple.
The physical presence of Jesus offered no advantage to
the disciples.
Only the departure of Jesus and the coming of the
Spirit would provide solid assurance, and that reality was the same for both the first and second generations of Christians. Interestingly, the breakfast is described in the language of the Lord's supper, the same words being used in verse 13 that are found in John 6:11, "Jesus took the bread and gave it to them," language reminiscent of the accounts of the Lord's supper in Matthew 26:26, Mark 14:22, and Luke 22:19 (cf. 1 Cor 11:23). Although the Gospel of John contains no account of the Lord's Supper, this incident, combined with the narrative in chapter 6 provides a clear flavor of the communion service. After breakfast, according to verse 15, Jesus questions Peter three times about the depth and sincerity of his relationship with Jesus, no doubt in intentional response to Peter's three denials of Jesus described in chapter 18 (15-18, 25-27).
Three times Jesus asks, Peter replies, and Jesus
responds to that reply (21:15, 16, 17). "Simon son of John, do you love me?" "You know that I love you."
Each time Jesus asks,
Each time Peter replies,
Each time Jesus responds with
something like "Feed/take care of my lambs/sheep." The first time, Jesus adds a phrase. you love me more than these?" other disciples do?
"Simon son of John, do
Does Peter love Him more than the
No doubt Jesus wanted to draw Peter out on
this point, since he was quick to boast earlier that his loyalty
342 to Jesus exceeded that of the others (see Matt 26:33).
But when
Peter refuses to respond to this part of the question (John 21:15), Jesus accepts that as a confession and does not press him on that point again (21:16, 17).
It would seem (at least until
verses 20-23) that Peter has learned something of the folly of spiritual comparison.
What counts is the depth of one's
relationship with Jesus, not how that depth compares with others. Over the centuries scholars and preachers have made much over the fact that there are two different Greek words for love found in this passage, and that there are slight variations in Jesus' responses to Peter.
Recent, careful investigation
indicates, however, that John had the habit of using synonyms without intending the reader to draw any special significance from the variations in root meaning (see Beasley-Murray, John, 394; Talbert, Reading John, 261).
The two Greek words for "love"
(agapê and phileô) are clearly used synonymously in the Fourth Gospel elsewhere.
Either word can be used whether the topic is
God's love for humanity (3:16; 16:27), the Father's love for the Son (3:35; 5:20), Jesus' love for us (11:5; 11:3), or our love for Jesus (8:42; 16:27).
John does not seem to use words with
the same precision that many of his interpreters do (see also Brown, 2:1102-1103)! What we have in 21:15-17, therefore, is essentially a threefold repetition of question, reply, and response.
This is
unexpected and could even seem rude on the part of Jesus.
Its
effect is to probe Peter to the depths of his being, at the cost
343 of considerable pain (17, see Beasley-Murray, John, 405). Peter's self-confidence and assertiveness are gradually chipped away until he is left with nothing but the certainty that Jesus knows His heart, and will be fair in His judgments. "No pain, no gain" is a common saying among those who seek to develop the full potential of the human body.
In this life,
at least, "no pain, no gain" seems to be a law of spiritual growth as well.
Those who have advanced far in spiritual life
are usually those who have suffered much.
This is, perhaps, a
major reason why there will be few rich people in the kingdom of God.
There is something about pain, loss, poverty, and emotional
anguish that can bring people to the place where major gains in spiritual development are possible.
And sometimes, as happened
in the case of Peter, the author of that pain is Jesus Himself, who, like a loving surgeon, wounds so that He might heal. doesn't settle for quick or superficial answers.
Jesus
He insists on
getting down to the true feelings and motives of those He loves. The process, however, usually demands a price. In the text the threefold dialogue seems to take place in the presence of the other disciples at the breakfast location. But verse 20 implies that Jesus and Peter were walking along the beach.
Ellen White suggests that Jesus and Peter got up between
verses 17 and 18 and commenced a private conversation as they walked along (Desire of Ages, 815).
The confession needed to be
in front of the other disciples so that he could regain their confidence after his terrible betrayal in the High Priest's
344 courtyard (18:15-18, 25-27, cf. White, Desire of Ages, 811). After his confession, Jesus assures Peter that He will be an accepted and faithful follower of Jesus all the way to his death (18, 19).
"Shall we say (with many) that Peter was here
reinstated in office? excluded from it.
Not exactly, since he was not actually
But after such conduct as his, the deep wound
which the honor of Christ had received, the stain brought on his office, the damage done to his high standing among his brethren, and even his own comfort, in prospect of the great work before him, required some such renewal of his call and re-establishment of his position as this." (Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1078). Peter's ultimate task for life was to "follow" Jesus (19). He was to do the things that Jesus did. of Jesus in his life on earth.
He was to take the place
His role, like that of all the
disciples was as a replacement for Jesus in His work for others on earth (see the Conclusion of Chapter 12 of this book).
As
such the work of Peter and the other disciples was parallel to the work of the Holy Spirit, as outlined in the farewell discourse.
Under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and through
their word and their writings, Peter and the disciples would make Jesus real to a new generation. Peter is not totally cured of the disease of comparison just yet, however.
As he walks with Jesus along the beach he turns
and sees the beloved disciple following them (21:20, wanting to secure his fair share of Jesus?).
Peter wants to know what the
beloved disciple's future will be like (21, in comparison with
345 his?).
Jesus' response was emphatic in the original, "You must
follow me" (22), the beloved disciple's experience was not to be Peter's concern. It may be that Peter took Jesus' command, "Feed my sheep," as an indication that he was to be the head of the church, even over the other disciples, like John.
If so, he would be expected
to be as concerned over John's experience as any other member of the church. part.
Jesus clearly prohibits such exclusivity on Peter's
The church is to have many leaders, not just one.
The
church would find safety in a multitude of counselors. There is a spirit of independence and ruling over others that leads to spiritual ruin whenever it is practiced in the church.
It is a strength of the Bible that there are four
gospels rather than just one.
That prevents us from making any
one idea, any one picture of Jesus an absolute that all people, whatever their race, culture, or personality, must follow.
The
same God who made the infinite variety of birds, animals, flowers and fish, respects the diversity of His human flock as well.
The
church, therefore, will only truly reflect His character, through a diversity of leadership that reflects the character of the body itself. As mentioned in the Introduction to this book, the major purpose of John 21:20-23 was to squelch a rumor that had been going around the churches that John would live to see Jesus come. The conclusion from John's old age, no doubt, was that the return of Jesus was imminent in the 90s of the first century.
But like
346 all attempts to calculate the generation in which Jesus would return, this rumor was extremely dangerous (see Paulien, What the Bible Says About the End-Time, for an extensive examination of the pitfalls of date-setting).
The death of John would be
devastating to a church that believed that Jesus had predicted His return within the lifetime of the beloved disciple. The author of the Gospel makes it clear that Jesus' comment about the beloved disciple had been misunderstood.
Jesus was not
saying that John would live to see Him come, but rather that John's future, even if it were a remarkable one, was not to be Peter's concern.
An implication of this incident is that no
human statement, not even an inspired one, not even one from the lips of the Lord Himself, will ever be totally immune to misunderstanding.
As long as life shall last, we will have to
continually struggle as we seek to express ourselves and communicate the good things that God has revealed to us.
That
thought humbles me as I think of how often I have presumed things about people and ideas based only on a misinterpretation of some off-hand comment.
Our understanding of God and of others is
feeble and defective at best (cf. Jer 17:9). The Major Themes of the Passage The Catch of Fish and the Church The story of the great catch of fish seems to carry strong symbolic overtones for the author of the Gospel.
In the light of
chapters 17 and 20 and the miracle stories in the Gospel, we have seen the evangelist's concern for the second generation of
347 Christians, who would soon have to face life without the guidance of anyone who had been with Jesus in the flesh. The story of John 21 functions as a parable of the church in John's day.
The disciples represent the first generation of
Christians, those who had walked and talked with Jesus.
Through
them and through their writings the second generation of Christians, represented by the fish, had come to Jesus.
The
story makes a number of points that would be appreciated by the readers of the second generation. For one thing, it is clear that it was Jesus Himself who directed the conversion of the second generation. on their own could accomplish nothing.
The disciples
It is only as Jesus
directed them that they were able to reap a harvest.
Although
Jesus was no longer physically present, His care and concern for the second generation was as real as if He stood by the shore of their lives. The quantity and the size of the fish indicate that the ministry of the disciples was to be quite successful.
The
unbroken net symbolizes the unity of the church, though made up of two generations, and of people from an enormous variety of backgrounds; the unity of the church was not to be threatened by the transition to the second generation. It is also interesting to note that Jesus caught some fish on His own, apart from the efforts of His disciples.
Does this
symbolize that some members of the second generation received direct calls from Jesus just as the disciples did?
Not every
348 true disciple of Jesus is called directly by the church (cf. Mark 9:38-40-- Jameison, Fausset, and Brown, 1078). One of the most important titles for the church in the Gospel of John is the phrase "children of God" which comes right at the centerpoint of the Prologue (John 1:12).
It may be
coincidental, but one scholar has pointed out that the Aramaic (the language of Jesus and His disciples) expression for "children of God" contains numerical letters that total 153, exactly the same number as the amount of fish caught in chapter 21 (verse 11-- see Romeo).
Whether or not the number would have
been recognized by the original readers as significant, the story seems to bear large implications for the second generation of the church. Following Jesus Twice Jesus says to Peter, "Follow me" (19, 22).
As the
only disciple addressed in this way in John 21, Peter stands as the representative of all the disciples.
Jesus indicates in
verses 18-19 that following Him is a lifelong pursuit that will lead in many cases to torture and death.
It is significant that
Peter's death is described in terms that remind the reader of the death of Jesus by crucifixion. death of Jesus.
Peter's death would be like the
Just as Jesus' death brought glory to God (7:39;
12:23; 17:4, 5), so the death of Peter and the disciples would bring glory to God (21:19). A major theme of the Gospel is that Jesus' death is the means by which He brings life to a new generation.
He gave His
349 life so that those who follow Him might have life (see especially 10:11-18).
Now He calls Peter, and by extension the other
disciples, to give their lives for the sheep, even unto death. They are to become undershepherds to the Good Shepherd in His concern for the welfare of the flock (the original of 21:16 says, "Shepherd my sheep"). The lives, deaths, words, and writings of the disciples of Jesus became the bridge by which the second generation came into relationship with Jesus.
They are also the bridge by which each
of us has come to Christ.
Through the empowerment of the Holy
Spirit the disciples, though feeble and defective witnesses, have performed far above reasonable expectations. gone forth with power through them.
Jesus' word has
Like Jesus, they did not
give their lives in vain.
THE CONCLUSION OF THE GOSPEL This chapter, and the Gospel as a whole, conclude with a validation of the testimony of the one who wrote the Gospel, the beloved disciple (24).
Although he has now brought his work to a
conclusion, he nevertheless feels that he has but scratched the surface of the vast and incomparable riches to be found in the accounts of what Jesus said and did.
Anyone who contemplates the
life and character of Jesus long enough could multiply gospels without end, a task this book has no doubt contributed to.
In
the final analysis, the gospel that matters most to you is the one that Jesus has written on your heart through the Holy Spirit.
350 As a member of Jesus' new generation, have you allowed His words and His works their full place in your life?
Have you come
to believe that His word is as good as His physical presence on earth? name?
In believing have you experienced abundant life in His Are you ready to write your own gospel, as a testimony to
the Jesus you have come to know?
The story of John's Gospel and
the narrative of this book are now coming to an end.
The impact
of Jesus on your life is only beginning. APPLYING THE WORD 1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Have there been times in your life when God seemed absent and you decided to "go fishing" spiritually for a while? Describe one of those times and refresh your memory regarding the means by which God succeeded in getting your attention again. Is there a way by which you can make yourself more open to such encounters in the future? If you were asked the same question that Jesus asked Peter, how would you respond? Based on your own experience with failure, how do you suppose that Peter felt about his denials of Jesus in John 18? How do you feel when you fail? What ways has God used to "reinstate" you? Do you ever compare yourself with others? Have you ever wondered why other people's lives move along the way they do? How did that affect your desire to do what God was indicating that He wanted you to do? Was the result of such thinking positive or negative? Why? We often compare ourselves with others either to rationalize our own conduct or to blame God for being unfair. How has comparison worked in your experience? Have comments of yours ever been taken out of context or completely misinterpreted? Describe the last time this happened to you. In what way do you find it comforting to know that Jesus, the all-knowing Son of God could be misinterpreted as well, even by sincere and well-meaning Christians? What does John 21:20-23 imply about the value of second- and third-hand information? Why should John's Gospel be treated differently than other forms of secondhand information? Have you ever encountered people who tried to calculate the general timing of the end? How did you respond to their way of thinking? What were the consequences in your life and theirs when time continue beyond expectation? How would John relate to such calculations?
351 RESEARCHING THE WORD 1.
Make a xerox copy of both Luke 5:1-11 and John 21:1-14. Carefully compare the two stories noting all words in common, and noting significant differences. Compare the contexts of the two stories. With the help of the SDA Bible Commentary as well as the Bible Amplifier try to develop a sermon or an essay in which you compare and contrast the two stories, drawing the appropriate lesson(s) in each case. What other fishing stories can you find in the gospels? What light do they shed on Luke 5 and John 21?
FURTHER STUDY OF THE WORD 1. 2. 3.
On the meaning of the catch of fish to the second generation of Christians see Minear and Romeo. For more information on Jesus' dialogue with Peter see Beasley-Murray, John, 404-409; Brown, 2:1102-1117. See also White, Desire of Ages, 809-817.
Word Count: 88,357