Insights On John by Charles Swindoll, Excerpt
Insights On John by Charles Swindoll, Excerpt
Insights On John by Charles Swindoll, Excerpt
SWINDOLL
SWINDOLL’S
N E W T E S TA M E N T
INSIGHTS
INSIGHTS ON
JOHN
A vailable J uly 2010
H ardcover, 368 p ages
$25.99 ISBN 978-0-310-28435-2
Author’s Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Introduction to John . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Commentary on John . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Special Features
Key Terms (word studies)
Maps
Timelines
Pictures
Charts
Sidebars
From My Journal
Application section
“Reading Swindoll is like riding a magic carpet that carries me back twenty
centuries where I can truly see, taste, and feel the world and words of Jesus. Swin-
doll’s signature is story, and story has the power to turn black and white into
Technicolor.”
— Dee Brestin, author of The God of All Comfort:
Finding Your Way into His Arms
“Reading Insights on John is like sitting with Chuck and gleaning wisdom from
his years of experience as a follower of Jesus and lifelong student of Scripture. But
it isn’t just truth or a mere study that Chuck writes. He’s written this book in a rich
and meaningful way, so that you can’t help but pause and worship God as you are
reading. It’s really rare when a book does that.”
— Dan Kimball, author of They Like Jesus But Not the Church
F or almost sixty years I have loved the Bible. It was that love for the Scriptures,
mixed with a clear call into the gospel ministry during my tour of duty in the
Marine Corps, that resulted in my going to Dallas Theological Seminary to prepare
for a lifetime of ministry. During those four great years I had the privilege of study-
ing under outstanding men of God, who also loved God’s Word. They not only
held the inerrant Word of God in high esteem, they taught it carefully, preached it
passionately, and modeled it consistently. A week never passes without my giving
thanks to God for the grand heritage that has been mine to claim! I am forever
indebted to those fine theologians and mentors, who cultivated in me a strong com-
mitment to the understanding, exposition, and application of God’s truth.
For more than forty-five years I have been engaged in doing just that — and
how I love it! I confess without hesitation that I am addicted to the examination
and the proclamation of the Scriptures. Because of this, books have played a major
role in my life for as long as I have been in ministry — especially those volumes
that explain the truths and enhance my understanding of what God has written.
Through these many years I have collected a large personal library, which has
proven invaluable as I have sought to remain a faithful student of the Bible. To the
end of my days, my major goal in life is to communicate the Word with accuracy,
insight, clarity, and practicality. Without resourceful and reliable books to turn to,
I would have “run dry” decades ago.
Among my favorite and most well-worn volumes are those that have enabled me
to get a better grasp of the biblical text. Like most expositors, I am forever search-
ing for literary tools that I can use to hone my gifts and sharpen my skills. For me,
that means finding resources that make the complicated simple and easy to under-
stand, that offer insightful comments and word pictures that enable me to see the
relevance of sacred truth in light of my twenty-first-century world, and that drive
those truths home to my heart in ways I do not easily forget. When I come across
such books, they wind up in my hands as I devour them and then place them in
my library for further reference . . . and, believe me, I often return to them. What
a relief it is to have these resourceful works to turn to when I lack fresh insight, or
when I need just the right story or illustration, or when I get stuck in the tangled
text and cannot find my way out. For the serious expositor, a library is essential. As
a mentor of mine once said, “Where else can you have 10,000 professors at your
fingertips?”
In recent years I have discovered there are not nearly enough resources like those
I just described. It was such a discovery that prompted me to consider becoming a
part of the answer instead of lamenting the problem. But the solution would result
in a huge undertaking. A writing project that covers all of the books and letters of
the New Testament seemed overwhelming and intimidating. A rush of relief came
when I realized that during the past forty-five-plus years I’ve taught and preached
through most of the New Testament. In my files were folders filled with notes from
those messages that were just lying there, waiting to be brought out of hiding, given
a fresh and relevant touch in light of today’s needs, and applied to fit into the lives
of men and women who long for a fresh word from the Lord. That did it! I began
to pursue the best publisher to turn my dream into reality.
Thanks to the hard work of my literary agents, Sealy and Matt Yates, I located
a publisher interested in taking on a project this extensive. I thank the fine people
at Zondervan Publishing House for their enthusiastic support of this multivolume
venture that will require over ten years to complete. Having met most of them over
the years through other written works I’ve authored, I knew they were qualified to
handle such an undertaking and would be good stewards of my material, staying
with the task of getting all of it into print. I am grateful for the confidence and
encouragement of both Stan Gundry and Paul Engle, who have remained loyal
and helpful from the beginning. It is also a pleasure to work alongside Verlyn
Verbrugge; I sincerely appreciate his seasoned wisdom and keen-eyed assistance.
It has also been especially delightful to work, again, with my longtime friend
and former editor, John Sloan. He has provided invaluable counsel as my general
editor. Best of all has been John’s enthusiastic support. I must also express my
gratitude to both Mark Gaither and Mike Svigel for their tireless and devoted
efforts, serving as my hands-on, day-to-day editors. They have done superb work as
we have walked our way through the verses and chapters of all twenty-seven New
Testament books. It has been a pleasure to see how they have taken my original
material and helped me shape it into a style that remains true to the text of the
Scriptures, at the same time interestingly and creatively developed, and all the while
allowing my voice to come through in a natural and easy-to-read manner.
I need to add sincere words of appreciation to the congregations I have served
in various parts of these United States for almost five decades. It has been my good
fortune to be the recipient of their love, support, encouragement, patience, and fre-
quent words of affirmation as I have fulfilled my calling to stand and deliver God’s
message year after year. The sheep from all those flocks have endeared themselves
to this shepherd in more ways than I can put into words . . . and none more than
Chuck Swindoll
Frisco, Texas
Marcellus Cuspius Fadus (AD 44–46) Ventidius Cumanus (AD 48–52) Porcius Festus (AD 60–62) Lucceius Albinus (AD 62–64)
Tiberius Julius
Herod Agrippa I (AD 37–44) Alexander (AD 46–48) Herod
Pontius Pilate (AD 26–36) Marullus (AD 37–41) Antonius Felix (AD 52–60)
Tiberius (AD 14–37) Caligula (AD 37–41) Claudius (AD 41–55) Nero (AD 55–68)
John’s World (map_00_03_mediterranean) 000% ?
Gessius Florus (AD 64–66)
Black Sea
Pergamum A S I A
Aeg
Thyatira
Smyrna Sardis
ean
Ephesus Laodicea
a
Pa t m o s
Antioch
(Syrian)
Antakya
CYPRUS
Jerusalem
0 50 km.
0 50 miles
John’s World - Before he met Jesus, John probably thought he would spend his life tending the
family fishing business in Bethsaida and travel no farther than 50 miles (80 km) from home. But the
destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 probably forced him to relocate to Syrian Antioch, where a large
Gentile church continued to thrive. Then late in life, Domitian exiled the apostle to Patmos, where
he penned Revelation. Tradition strongly suggests he spent the remainder of his life near Ephesus,
ministering to the churches in Asia.
8
Marcus Antonius Julianus (AD 66–70) Titus (AD 79–81) Nerva (AD 96–98)
JOHN
Introduction
J ohn had lived long enough to see it all, from the beginning all the way to the
end. As a brash, blustering young man, the idea of tramping around the wilder-
ness of Judea to follow John the Baptizer appealed to him a great deal. So he left his
thriving fishing enterprise in the hands of his brother, James, and abandoned his
privileged status for a diet of locusts and wild honey — and the chance to prepare
Israel for the coming of Messiah. He helped the forerunner of the Christ baptize
thousands of repentant Jews and supported this strange, Elijah-like figure as he
called down judgment on the corrupt temple leaders.
Finally the day came when John saw the long-awaited Anointed One. He looked
nothing like what John had imagined; but his wilderness mentor, John the Baptizer,
was unequivocal. This was the One. He and another of John’s disciples decided to
get a closer look, to follow Him home, to hear what He had to say about Himself and
Israel. And before the dawn of the next day, he knew. They had found the Messiah.
The time he spent with Jesus flew by in the beat of a lash, yet it remained vividly
clear in his mind for more than seventy years. He saw the man who he thought
would be a conquering, super-David, Savior of Israel, instead stripped, beaten mer-
cilessly, and hung on a cross like a petty thug. He saw the sky darken as the Light of
the world faded into death. He saw his hope resurrected to assume a more glorious
form than he could have imagined. He stood in awe as the presence of God filled
the squabbling, self-promoting disciples and transformed them into the bones and
muscle, hands and feet of Christ’s body.
Presentation Authentication
Section Prologue
of the word of the word
Encounters with
Themes the son of God.
The evil-dominated “The world”
world
Life Sign
Public signs
2 Water to wine 6 Feeds multitude 11 Raises dead
Emphasis 4 Heals nobleman’s son 6 Walks on water
5 Heals invalid 9 Heals blind man
Comprehend Follow
Abide Glorify
Hate Completed
Advocate Manifest
Private Talks
14 Heaven
17 Prayer
15 Fruit
20 Appearances
16 Promises
21 Commissioning
Believers
As the blood of his martyred brothers inspired new believers, John nurtured
them. As Paul, Barnabas, Silas, Apollos, Luke, Timothy, Titus, and a host of other
missionaries zealously expanded the church westward, John shored up its founda-
tion. As critics bashed, John defended. As imposters subverted, John exposed them.
As false prophets misled, John refuted their heretical message. He condensed his
teaching into three letters, which originally circulated within the churches of Asia
Minor around AD 65.
After John outlived all his martyred peers, Emperor Domitian exiled the apostle
to the nearly barren isle of Patmos. There he saw the future of the world, all the
way to its destruction and re-creation; he preserved everything he witnessed in
“The Revelation.” After Domitian’s death, John rested in the care of the church in
Ephesus, which in turn enjoyed his gentle, grandfatherlike shepherding.
The Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) had been staples of church
teaching as early as AD 50. They told the story of Jesus from different perspectives,
yet each one included many of the same events, largely taken from His ministry in
Galilee. Decades later, Christianity grew into more than a movement; it became
sophisticated system of thought. And this maturity brought new challenges. The
danger came less in the form of physical attacks or religious opposition, and more
by philosophical corruption and theological compromise. Furthermore, the biog-
raphy of J esus lacked a much-needed cosmic dimension.
So, in the final years of his life — when the nearness of death gives memories
an eternal glow — and after having witnessed the most significant period of history
the world has ever known, John wrote of his Master.
the mystery of the Holy Spirit unlike any other gospel. Moreover, John’s narrative
provides a broad range of practical lessons to guide the believer through life. Several
passages come to our rescue when leading someone to faith in Jesus Christ, while
others bring comfort and consolation when we must bury a cherished loved one.
From the gospel of John, we learn about our increasing estrangement from the
world and our deepening intimacy with the Almighty, and we begin to appreciate
the priority the Lord places on unity in the family of God.
John took a deliberate approach. Under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, he
carefully crafted each sentence to unveil the fascinating mysteries of heaven in
simple language, and he painstakingly chose which facts to relate and which to
leave out. In his own words, “there are also many other things which Jesus did,
which if they were written in detail, I suppose that even the world itself would not
contain the books that would be written” (21:25). Rather than pen a document
that quadrupled the size of the Old Testament, he chose the “less is more” approach
and strategically chose which stories to relate in order to accomplish his primary
purpose: “so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that
believing you may have life in His name” (20:31).
Why do we have four biographies of Jesus when one could have done the job? Why
not fourteen? In reality, we do not have four gospels; we have one gospel from four
vantage points. We have one biography from four witnesses, each writer providing
a unique perspective.
If we were to document the life of Jesus using only pictures, we could choose
one of two methods. We could use a motion picture camera to record every move-
ment in detail, and if the reel were long enough, replay His life from birth, to
death, to resurrection, and beyond. The running time of the film would exceed
thirty-three years of nonstop viewing! Or we could capture key moments in still
photographs — perhaps from several angles at once — and tell the story of His life
in a photo essay. The benefits would be obvious. The story can be told briefly, yet
adequately, allowing time to reflect on the details of the most important moments.
In the case of the gospels, we have four albums of Christ’s life, created by individu-
als who highlighted different, yet crucial themes.
Matthew was a Jewish disciple of Jesus Christ who once earned his living
as a tax collector, an official of the Roman government. Moved by the Spirit of
God, he wrote a biography of Jesus from a Hebrew point of view, emphasizing the
regal rights of Jesus as Messiah and legitimate King of Israel. He traced Christ’s
g enealogy to Abraham, through King David. It’s a Jewish book written by a Jew to
his fellow sons of the covenant. His primary theme: The Messiah has come.
Mark was not one of the Twelve, but the son of a follower named Mary (Acts
12:12) and a close associate of Barnabas, Paul, and Peter. He presented Christ’s
ministry from a practical, action-oriented point of view, in a narrative frequently
punctuated by the phrase “and immediately.” This style would have appealed to
the can-do Romans of the first century, who respected deep thinkers but looked to
men of action for leadership. Mark’s gospel shows Jesus to be the no-nonsense God-
man who came from heaven to complete a task. He “did not come to be served, but
to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many” (Mark 10:45). Mark’s primary
theme: The Son of God came to seek, serve, and save.
Luke was a physician, probably born and reared in Macedonia. He was a
Gentile, not a Jew. He wrote to neither the spiritually privileged Jew nor the
politically privileged Roman, but to common Greeks, most of whom had no
power, no wealth, and no hope. Luke’s gospel highlights the humanity of Jesus,
favoring the title “Son of Man” and providing details about His humble birth,
His ordinary boyhood, His compassion for the poor and sick, and the global
scope of His ministry. Luke’s genealogy traces Jesus’ lineage all the way back to
Adam, the father of all humanity. Luke’s primary theme: The Son of Man came
to redeem all of humanity.
John certainly knew of these gospels and probably taught from them for many
years before deciding, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, that the biography of
Jesus remained incomplete. The Christian world knew Jesus as King of the Jews,
Jesus as the servant, and Jesus as the Son of Man, but there remained a need for the
theme, Jesus as the Son of God. John wrote his gospel so that we would know that
the Son of Man is God in human flesh — completely human, yet no less God than
when, “in the beginning,” He spoke the universe into existence.
The gospel of John provides no genealogy, illustrating the fact that Deity
has no beginning. The gospel of John offers no childhood details and retells no
parables,2 perhaps to emphasize His transcendent nature as God. The gospel of
John bypasses Jesus’ temptation in the wilderness, His transfiguration on the
mountain, His commissioning the disciples after His resurrection, and His ascen-
sion from earth.
Instead, John writes from a philosophical and theological perspective, plac-
ing great emphasis on the miracles of Jesus, which he calls “signs.” For John, the
miracles indicated a supernatural happening, proof that what many considered to
be theoretical truths were in fact real and tangible. The Word had become flesh
to give all of humanity every reason to believe and to leave us with no excuse for
doubt. John’s primary theme: The man we know as Jesus is none other than God
on earth.
• Matthew wrote, “This is the Messiah, the King; worship Him.”
• Mark wrote, “This is the Servant who served humanity; follow Him.”
• Luke wrote, “This is the only man among men without sin; emulate Him.”
• John says, “This is God in human flesh; believe in Him.”
John declares, in effect, “I’m not writing merely to inform. I’m not writing merely
to entertain. I’m writing to stir the heart of the reader to believe.” The Greek word
translated “believe” appears ninety-eight times in the gospel of John — multiple
times per chapter. But what does it mean “to believe”? Does it mean to believe
the historical personage of Christ, to accept the fact that a man named Jesus
lived at some point in time? Does it mean to admire Him, or to emulate Him,
or to take up His revolutionary cause? Does it mean to entertain warm feelings,
or to venerate Him as more than human, or to devote time and energy in order
to please Him?
No. Those kinds of belief are good — some are even necessary. But the kind
of belief John calls all his readers to embrace encompasses much more. First, the
Greek term pisteuo m means “to acknowledge the truth as truth.” When I say that I
believe the book of John, I mean to say that I accept its content as truth. To believe
in Christ is, first, to accept what He says as truth. Second, and more importantly,
pisteuo m means “to trust, to rely upon, to derive confidence in” something or some-
one. When I say I believe in Jesus Christ, I declare that I trust Him, I rely on Him,
I have placed my complete confidence in Him; everything I know about this life
and whatever occurs after death depends on His claims about Himself and how I
must respond to His offer of grace.
In the past few years, churches all across the United States have experienced
remarkable growth, and the “megachurch” phenomenon has encircled the globe.
It’s exciting to see. The burgeoning numbers packing these sanctuaries, however,
include multitudes caught up in a movement who listen with Bibles in their laps
and take copious notes on what they hear from week to week, but have never given
themselves over to the message of Jesus Christ and placed their absolute trust in
Him. They listen and learn and nod in agreement, but they do not believe. They
have not submitted their hearts and wills to the truth of Jesus Christ — His identity
as God and His offer of eternal life through faith alone.
Another important aspect of John’s call to belief is that we are invited to believe
in Jesus Christ, the person — not merely His message, His teaching, His example,
or His challenge to live in a certain way. We are called first and foremost to believe
in Him. This was the intellectual and moral crisis presented to people of all kinds
in John’s narrative, many of whom responded with belief, complete trust. Consider
just six examples.
• John, the forerunner of the Messiah: “I did not recognize Him, but He who
sent me to baptize in water said to me, ‘He upon whom you see the Spirit
descending and remaining upon Him, this is the One who baptizes in the
Holy Spirit.’ I myself have seen, and have testified that this is the Son of
God” (1:33 – 34).
• Nathanael, the cynical disciple: “Nathanael said to [Philip], ‘Can any good
thing come out of Nazareth?’ Philip said to him, ‘Come and see.’ Jesus saw
Nathanael coming to Him, and said of him, ‘Behold, an Israelite indeed, in
whom there is no deceit!’ Nathanael said to Him, ‘How do You know me?’
Jesus answered and said to him, ‘Before Philip called you, when you were
under the fig tree, I saw you.’ Nathanael answered Him, ‘Rabbi, You are the
Son of God; You are the King of Israel’ ” (1:46 – 49).
• Peter, the impulsive disciple: “As a result of this [difficult teaching] many of
His disciples withdrew and were not walking with Him anymore. So Jesus
said to the twelve, ‘You do not want to go away also, do you?’ Simon Peter
answered Him, ‘Lord, to whom shall we go? You have words of eternal life.
We have believed and have come to know that You are the Holy One of
God’ ” (6:66 – 69).
• Martha, the dutiful follower: “Martha said to [Jesus], ‘I know that
[Lazarus] will rise again in the resurrection on the last day.’ Jesus said to
her, ‘I am the resurrection and the life; he who believes in Me will live
even if he dies, and everyone who lives and believes in Me will never die.
Do you believe this?’ She said to Him, ‘Yes, Lord; I have believed that
You are the Christ, the Son of God, even He who comes into the world’ ”
(11:24 – 27).
• Thomas, the pensive disciple: “Then [Jesus] said to Thomas, ‘Reach here
with your finger, and see My hands; and reach here your hand and put it
into My side; and do not be unbelieving, but believing.’ Thomas answered
and said to Him, ‘My Lord and my God!’ Jesus said to him, ‘Because you
have seen Me, have you believed? Blessed are they who did not see, and yet
believed’ ” (20:27 – 29).
• John, the biographer: “Many other signs Jesus also performed in the pres-
ence of the disciples, which are not written in this book; but these have been
written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God;
and that believing you may have life in His name” (20:30 – 31).
John’s narrative is remarkable in several respects, not the least of which is its struc-
ture. The first verse of chapter 13 marks a dramatic shift in the story of Christ’s
earthly ministry so that the final nine chapters read very differently than the first
twelve. Chapters 1 through 12 describe an extensive, very public ministry and mes-
sage. Chapters 13 through 21 bring us behind closed doors to witness the private
ministry of Jesus. Chapters 1 through 12 carry us through a period of more than
three years, while the final eight chapters span four days (not including the epi-
logue of chapter 21, which took place at some point within the forty days of Christ’s
resurrection). The first section highlights the miracles of Jesus, while the second
section records His discourses with the Twelve.
Chapter 1 opens with the forerunner proclaiming the arrival of the Messiah and
the baptism of Jesus, accompanied by the booming voice of the Father. In chapter
2, Jesus turns water into wine. In chapter 4, He heals an official’s son. In chapter 5,
He heals a paralyzed man. In chapter 6, He feeds more than five thousand men and
their families and walks across the surface of the Sea of Galilee. In chapter 9, He
gives sight to a man suffering blindness from birth. His miracles reach a crescendo
in chapter 11 with His raising a man from the dead. John calls these “signs” because
they prove that Jesus, while completely human, was more than human. He was the
Son of Man who is also the Son of God.
Chapter 13 begins a relatively quiet period in the narrative, a calm before the
great storm. Just before His arrest, trials, crucifixion, burial, and resurrection, Jesus
pulls His men aside for a final time of preparation — a review of His most impor-
tant lessons before the great test, after which they will be sent out to minister with-
out their Master’s physical presence.
Chapter 13, servant-hearted love. Chapter 14, the promise of heaven, the unity
of the Trinity, and the promise of the Spirit. Chapter 15, the life of the believer
in a hostile world and the need for abiding in Christ. Chapter 16, the certainty of
challenges and persecution, the care of the Holy Spirit, the power of prayer, and
the promise of victory. Chapter 17, Jesus’ prayer for Himself, His disciples, and all
future believers — a prayer that casts His vision for the church. Chapters 18 and
19 describe His Passion; then chapter 20 takes us behind closed doors for several
private post-resurrection appearances to His closest followers. Chapter 21 allows us
to witness the Lord’s quiet fellowship with His disciples and His gentle restoration
of Peter after his failure.
John did not structure his gospel account haphazardly. The narrative unfolds
much like the Christian life itself. Our initial, intriguing introduction to the Savior
quickly leads to a call to believe and to follow. Understanding will come in time.
This is not an intellectual decision but a moral one. Then, as we witness His power,
hear His teaching, and experience life in His presence, our understanding deepens
and our confidence grows. Gradually we become mature disciples, though never
beyond the need for grace after failure. Dr. David Beck goes even further to pro-
pose that John intentionally portrayed anonymous characters — including himself,
“the disciple whom Jesus loved” — as a means of drawing the reader into the nar-
rative so that he or she might participate in the story.3
In other words, John’s account of Jesus’ life and ministry on earth is no mere
biography. The gospel of John is an invitation to believe in the Son of God, to
become His disciple, to deepen our understanding of His identity and mission, to
grow in maturity, and to join Him in tending His sheep.
Now . . . let us “behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world”
(1:29)!
1. Quoted by I. Howard Marshall, The Epistles of John (2nd ed.; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1978), xi.
2. Some consider His illustration in 10:1 – 18 to be a parable, but I suggest it is merely an analogy, a
word picture. Parables are short stories, illustrations that feature characters and a plot.
3. David R. Beck, The Discipleship Paradigm: Readers and Anonymous Characters in the Fourth Gospel
(Leiden: Brill, 1997).
K e y Terms
λαμβάνω [lambanom] (2983) “to receive, to accept, to hold to oneself”
In the literal sense, the term means to accept deliberately what has been offered. When
used of a person, “to receive” is to welcome intimate connection, as when a man or
woman receives a partner for marriage, or when a host receives a houseguest.
σάρξ [sarx] (4561) “flesh; substance of the body; earthly, tangible matter”
This word has three spheres of use: literal, technical, and philosophical. In the literal sense,
“flesh” is merely muscle and sinew, as distinct from bone, blood, etc. It also acquired a
technical nuance to denote the material aspect of humanity. Greek philosophy and reli-
gion eventually came to see everything tangible, including “flesh,” as inherently evil.1 John
uses “flesh” literally and technically to speak of humanity in the tangible realm in order to
undermine the influence of Greek religion on Christian doctrine.
Several students at this nationally acclaimed school thought that Sodom and
Gomorrah were lovers, and many named the four Gospels as “Matthew, Mark,
Luther, and John.” According to these top-ranked students, Eve was created from
an apple, Moses baptized Jesus, Jezebel was Ahab’s donkey (not far from the truth!),
and Jesus spoke in “parodies.”2
During the late 1950s and early 1960s, I had a close relationship with Campus
Crusade for Christ. Some close friends and I would talk to students on the cam-
puses of the University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, and the University of Texas
at Austin and in Arlington. As a conversation starter, we used a simple question-
naire, which included the question, “Who in your opinion was Jesus of Nazareth?”
The most common response was, “The Son of God.” That may surprise you, as it
did me. I expected “a great teacher,” or “the founder of Christianity,” or “a martyr
who died for his beliefs.”
When I asked the follow-up question, however, “How did you come to that
conclusion?” the most common response was “I don’t know.” I find the same to be
true among many Christians today. They know the right answer, but they don’t
know why the answer is true.
The apostle John wrote his account of Jesus’ life to reveal the identity of Jesus
so that we might respond in belief. He opens his gospel with a prologue (1:1 – 18),
which declares in bold, unambiguous terms that Jesus is none other than God in
human flesh. John then weaves this primary thesis through the rest of the narrative.
Jesus claimed deity, His miracles supported His claim, His activities presupposed
this truth, and His resurrection finally vindicated everything He said and did.
John’s prologue offers four reasons to believe that J esus Christ is God:
• Jesus Christ is eternal; He has no beginning and He will have no end
(1:1 – 2).
• Jesus Christ is the Creator; all things were made by Him (1:3).
• Jesus Christ is the Source of life; nothing remains alive apart from Him
(1:4 – 13).
• Jesus Christ, though completely human, fully reveals the Father (1:14 – 18).
Before we examine each of these reasons in detail, read 1:1 – 18 and take note
of John’s deliberate progression from infinity and eternity down to the single indi-
vidual, in whom resides all that is infinite and eternal.
1:1 – 2
These first two verses emphasize that Jesus Christ is eternal; He has no beginning and
He will have no end. A literal translation of the first phrase is, “In beginning,” not
“In the beginning.” The phrase lacks a definite article. In eternity past, before the
beginning of anything — space, time, matter — in the indefinite expanse of time-
less existence, in a beginning that had no beginning, “the Word” was existing in an
eternal, infinite “present.” The verb translated “was” represents the imperfect past
tense of the Greek verb eimi, “to be.” The literal rendering of John’s first sentence
is, “In beginning was existing the Word.”
Why is this so important? Because John carefully crafted these initial sentences
to establish an essential truth. He chose his words carefully and arranged them
precisely to leave no room for misunderstanding. Before any conceivable point in
the eternal past, “the Word” was already existing.3 “The Word,” therefore, has no
beginning. “The Word” has always existed.
Later in the prologue (v. 14), we learn that “the Word” is Jesus Christ. The
Greek term is logos, a profoundly significant concept among philosophers for at
least three centuries before Christ. It referred to an uncreated divine mind that
gives meaning and order to the universe. John essentially co-opted the concept,
saying in effect, “The concept pagan philosophers have theorized actually exists;
He is God, and Jesus Christ is He.”
John continues to describe “the Word” by saying He was with God. The Greek
preposition pros, when used in this manner, represents familiarity. “The Word” and
God the Father were existing close together, sharing place, intimacy, and purpose.
In fact, the intimacy and familiarity was such that “the Word was God.” The Word
and God share the same essence; therefore, all that is true of God is true of the Word.
E ph es u s: T h e B irt h pl ace o f “ t h e Wo rd ”
Around 500 BC, a Greek noble of Ephesus named Heraclitus taught that the universe operates according
to a rational structure, a unified ordering principle, which we can discern if we carefully observe its patterns
and solve its many riddles. According to this theory, all the laws of physics, mathematics, reason, and even
morality can be traced to this one ordering principle, which he called logos, “the Word.”
Other philosophers, such as the Stoics, adopted this seminal idea and added their own doctrines, even
going so far as to describe “the Word” as a divine animating (life-giving, life-moving) principle permeating
the universe. Philo of Alexandria (20 BC – AD 50), a Jewish philosopher heavily influenced by Plato, taught
that the logos was God’s creative principle, necessary because God, in the realm of pure thought, cannot
have any direct association with anything in the tangible realm of matter.
Ephesus not only gave birth to the logos idea, it became a celebrated repository of texts on Greek
philosophy. By the time John lived and taught there, clashes with the priests of Artemis had become a dis-
tant memory. Now, the philosophers of Greece, both ancient and modern, threatened to corrupt Christian
doctrine. Some have suggested that John was overly influenced by the Greek logos idea and have accused
him of leaning toward Gnosticism. Greek philosophers, however, would have strongly objected to the logos
becoming flesh. John merely affirmed the valid parts of Greek philosophy in order to preach the truth of
Christ on common ground.
Perhaps as a result of John’s teaching, the church in Ephesus became a fortress of Christian theology.
Mark W. Gaither
Psalm 90 came from the pen of Moses and celebrates the eternal existence of
God, who has no beginning, unlike His creation.
Lord, You have been our dwelling place in all generations.
Before the mountains were born
Or You gave birth to the earth and the world,
Even from everlasting to everlasting, You are God. (Psalm 90:1 – 2)
The Hebrew word for “everlasting” is ōlām and is probably derived from a simi-
lar word meaning “to hide.” If an object is moved further and further away from
an observer, it eventually vanishes from sight. It is beyond the vanishing point. A
good paraphrase would render the idea this way: “From the vanishing point in the
past to the vanishing point in the future, You have existed, Lord.”
John expressed this very idea about the Word. A. W. Tozer captures the thought
well in his book The Knowledge of the Holy:
The mind looks backward in time until the dim past vanishes, then turns and
looks into the future till thought and imagination collapse from exhaustion; and
God is at both points, unaffected by either.
Time marks the beginning of created existence, and because God never began
to exist it can have no application to Him. “Began” is a time-word, and can have
no personal meaning for the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity.4
To underscore and summarize his point, John adds, “He was in the beginning with
God.” In that eternal existence before time, the Word and God were together and they
were the same being. Theologians describe this eternal relationship this way: While the
Father and Son are distinct “persons,” sharing the same nature and attributes, they also
share the same essence. And by “essence,” Father and Son exist as one Supreme Being.
1:3
J esus Christ is the Creator; all things were made by Him. In vv. 1 – 2, John has stated
that the Word is Deity and goes on to make his case from the standpoint of time:
Only God is eternal; and because the Word is eternal, He is God. Now in v. 3,
the apostle establishes the deity of Christ from another perspective: creation. (Bear
with me as I delve into the realm of ancient philosophy.)
In the ancient mind — Hebrew and Gentile — everything that exists can be
placed into one of two distinct categories:
Anything “not created” — that is, anything that was not brought into being — is
deity. For the Hebrew in particular, only God was “not created.” Therefore, any-
thing said to be “not created” is, by definition, God. With this ancient worldview
in mind, reread 1:3 carefully: “All things came into being through Him, and apart
from Him nothing came into being that has come into being.”
Note John’s emphasis on the phrase “come into being,” which he uses three
times. Anything that “came into being” had a beginning. At one point it did not
exist, and then it began to exist. John takes us back to eternity past, far beyond
Genesis 1:1, to say that Christ was already existing. As very God, who existed alone
as “not created,” He brought everything else that exists into being.
Why is this point so important? Because false teachers — starting in John’s day
and persisting even now — claim that Jesus Christ is not God, coequal, coeternal,
and coexistent with the Father in eternity past. Many claim that He was the first
created being, that the Father brought the Son into existence, who then created
everything else. Arius, a third-century false teacher, was fond of saying, “There was
a time when He was not.” This teaching continues today as official doctrine for
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormons) and the Jehovah’s
Witnesses; both organizations have modified John’s prologue to suit their theolo-
gies. John points to the moment of creation, however, to say that before anything
existed, Christ, who is the Creator, called “all things” into being.
1:4 – 8
J esus Christ is the Source of life; nothing remains alive apart from Him. John’s gos-
pel does something the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) do not.
John’s prologue is not unlike a Rubik’s Cube, the exasperating puzzle-toy of the 1970s. You can’t change
one sentence of the prologue without causing logical problems with the others.
Joseph Smith, for example, altered John’s prologue in his “Inspired Version” of the Scriptures to sup-
port the notion that Christ is not God, but rather an exalted figure created by God before anything else. He
failed, however, to account for 1:3.
In the beginning was the gospel preached through the Son. And the gospel was the word, and the word
was with the Son, and the Son was with God, and the Son was of God. The same was in the begin-
ning with God. All things were made by him; and without him was not anything made which was made.
(John 1:1 – 3, Joseph Smith’s Inspired Version)
According to Smith’s Inspired Version, the Word created “all things.” Furthermore, anything that “came
into being” — that is, anything (or anyone) that had a beginning — was created by the Word. But if “there
was a time when Christ was not,” if He came into being at some point in time, then J esus had to have cre-
ated Himself before He existed.
If that sounds like nonsense, you’re right. It is nonsense! Therefore, on this point we can agree: “With-
out him was not anything made which was made.” Christ could not have made Himself; therefore, He is
God, and He created all things.
atthew traced Christ’s genealogy back to Abraham. Luke traced His roots to the
M
first human, Adam. But John reaches beyond physical creation to state that in Jesus
Christ was life and light, two images Moses used in reference to God in Genesis
1. The Creator spoke the universe into existence and then filled it with the light of
His truth (Gen. 1:3). The Creator then began filling the earth with life: vegeta-
tion, sea creatures, birds, land animals, and His crowning achievement, humanity.
He breathed His own life into the man and woman, who together bore His image.
John says, in effect, “In the beginning, God the Son created humanity and
filled them with life. He then came to earth as a human to bring life again to
humanity, which is spiritually dead because of sin.” While it is true that John did
not specifically mention the fall of humanity (Gen. 3), we are safe in assuming that
by the end of the first century, the doctrine of human depravity was well under-
stood by most. Nevertheless, John did highlight our desperate need for salvation by
describing the world’s reaction to the appearance of Life and Light.
John declares that the darkness of the world did not katalambano m the light. This
Greek word has a range of meaning, depending on the context, and, therefore, has
no direct English equivalent. The primary meaning is “to seize, attack, overpower,
hold without losing grip.” As often happens in language, however, the literal defini-
tion eventually led to its metaphorical use, “to comprehend or understand.” Which
Some symbols are so universal, so common to human experience, that they have the power to cross
cultural and even linguistic barriers. Students of art and literature know these symbols as “archetypes.” The
color green, for example, symbolizes growth or new life. Winter alludes to death or hardship. In biblical and
other ancient literature, truth is often pictured as light. When someone gains wisdom, we say he or she has
been “enlightened.”
When Moses told the story of creation, he drew upon the literary symbol of light to communicate an
important truth. Immediately after the formation of space and matter, the Lord filled the void and formless
earth with light — literal light, yes, but not merely illumination. Before He fashioned physical sources of light
on the fourth day — the sun, moon, and stars — He filled the universe with the light of His presence. Truth.
The foundation on which everything else would be built. Before giving the world order (dividing day and
night, sky from earth, dry land from ocean), the Lord suffused every atom with His truth so that everything
would reflect His character.
One day, perhaps sooner than we think, a new heaven and a new earth will have no need “of the light
of a lamp nor the light of the sun, because the Lord God will illumine them” (Rev. 22:5). Evil will be gone and
all of creation will again reflect the One in whom “there is no darkness at all” (1 John 1:5). This is our hope
because “these words are faithful and true” (Rev. 21:5).
did John mean? “The darkness did not overpower the Light” or “The darkness did
not comprehend the Light”?
This could be a double entendre, both literal and figurative. In the end, dark-
ness could not suppress the Light even by placing the Light in a tomb. The verses
that follow, however, appear to stress the mental deficiency of the darkness: its
unwillingness to believe and therefore its inability to understand. Then, as the story
of Jesus unfolds, John will show that truth is nonsense to a mind darkened by sin
(8:44 – 45, 47; 14:17; 18:38).
John the Baptizer, the man Jesus called the greatest of all the prophets (Matt.
11:9 – 13), was no match for the darkness. Like Moses, Samuel, Elijah, Isaiah,
Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Daniel, and all the luminaries of the Word throughout the cen-
turies before him, John failed to enlighten humanity. After all, they were only
human. The only hope for humankind was the Source of light, who can illumine
every mind because He is more than human.
1:9 – 13
Verse 9 can be troublesome at first glance. It would seem to contradict what John
had just declared in verse 5: “The Light shines in the darkness, and the darkness
did not comprehend it.” Read on and John’s point becomes clearer. Now that the
Source of light has come to earth and has illumined the minds of humanity, no one
can legitimately claim ignorance. All who do not believe are without excuse. Before
His arrest, Jesus told His disciples:
If I had not come and spoken to them, they would not have sin, but now they
have no excuse for their sin. He who hates Me hates My Father also. If I had not
done among them the works which no one else did, they would not have sin; but
now they have both seen and hated Me and My Father as well. But they have done
this to fulfill the word that is written in their Law, “They hated Me without a
cause.” (John 15:22 – 25)
Let me illustrate John’s point another way. Every modern house connects to an
electric grid, which provides all the energy necessary to illumine every dark corner.
The people living in these homes, however, can choose to live in the dark. The
light is available but it isn’t compulsory. Although the Source of light has come to
the world and has illumined all minds, many choose to draw the shades and shun
the light. Now that Christ has come, belief or unbelief is no longer a crisis of the
intellect (if it ever was); it is a crisis of the will. When a darkened mind chooses
to remain in darkness, no one is to blame but the individual making that choice.
While many have rejected the light, many others have chosen to receive it
through faith — that is, to choose to believe in Jesus Christ. John foreshadows the
teaching of Christ in 3:1 – 21 by declaring that those who have chosen to believe are
“children of God” as the result of supernatural birth from above. A natural birth is
the result of two humans deciding to procreate. A person is spiritually born as the
result of God’s sovereign choice.
1:14 – 18
J esus Christ, though completely human, fully reveals the Father. Believe it or not, in
John’s day, most had no problem accepting the deity of Christ. They were more
troubled by His humanity. The influence of Plato permeated every aspect of reli-
gion and philosophy so that anything tangible came to be seen as inherently evil.
The great hope of Greek philosophers was to escape the foul, obnoxious material
realm in order to commune with the divine mind, which existed only in the realm
of pure idea. In life, they tried to deny the body as a means of connecting with what
they conceived as god. They saw death as the liberation of the soul (the good aspect
of man) from the prison of the body (the evil aspect of man). So, naturally, they
recoiled from the notion that God would become anything genuinely material.
To preserve the sinlessness of God, these philosophers invented all kinds of
myths to explain how Christ could appear human without actually having earthly
material as a part of His nature. The most common, Docetism, suggested that He
only seemed to be tangible, but was in fact a heavenly apparition. The so-called
Gnostic gospels tell stories of how Jesus created the illusion of eating food while
never actually digesting it or needing to relieve Himself.
John’s terminology was unashamedly offensive to these false teachers. He says,
in effect, “The Word became meat.” Since I’m a chili lover, I sometimes describe
His incarnation by saying He was “God con carne.” He lived among us in the mate-
rial world. We literally saw Him, and heard Him, and touched Him. In 1 John 1:1,
the apostle puts it in unmistakable terms: “What was from the beginning, what we
have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, what we have looked at and touched
with our hands” (italics mine).
God didn’t remain abstract. Having revealed Himself in dreams and visions, as
supernatural fire in the midst of a bush, as an otherworldly glow above the ark of
the covenant, and not content to send angels in His place, God became a man — a
flesh, blood, and bone human being, who could be seen, heard, touched, and even
smelled. The Son of God became a tangible representation of the Father in all His
glory. If we have trouble understanding God the Father, we need only look to God
the Son for all we need to know. Or, to summarize John: We saw His glory (v. 14)
and we received His fullness (v. 16), because Christ has “explained” the Father
(v. 18). The Greek term describes what I am doing right now: expositing. The Son
has exposited the Father far better than all the best commentators in history.
Throughout Jesus’ thirty-plus years on earth, people wondered, What’s God like?
You could have said, “Visit the home of Mary and Joseph; the child they’re rear-
ing is His visible presence.” As Jesus conducted ministry among the inhabitants of
Galilee, Samaria, and Judea, many wondered, What’s God like? The disciples could
have said, “Come and see for yourself. He is the Rabbi of this band of disciples;
God is declared and displayed through Him.” To this day, people struggle to know
who God is and what He’s like. We can point to Jesus Christ and say, “Get to know
Him, and you will know God.”
Application
Five Qualities of Authentic Faith
What does it mean to be a genuine believer whose life is characterized by authentic
faith? I find in John’s gospel no less than five practical qualities that flow out of a life
of trust in Christ.
(1) A genuine believer is not too independent to admit his or her own needs. Through-
out John’s narrative, those who needed healing, or forgiveness, or enlightenment
understood their own helplessness and came to Christ for help. While pride kept many
trapped in their sin, vulnerability gave Jesus the opportunity to perform miracles.
That kind of trust in the Lord should translate into intimacy with others. Children
long to hear their parents apologize after making a rash decision, or reacting harshly,
or behaving hypocritically. Godly wives long for the Lord to break the wills of their
husbands so they might finally hear the words, “Honey, I’ve reached the end of my
rope. I need your help.” Godly husbands long to have their wives give themselves
without reservation, rather than remain locked away in towers of distance and distrust.
Only when we trust the Lord enough to admit our weaknesses and our inad-
equacies will we enjoy intimacy with the people He has given to us as a blessing.
(2) A genuine believer is not too busy to know the people around him or her.
People, not tasks, are the priority of believers living out their faith in truth. All too fre-
quently, men and women say the people they love are more important than anything
else, but then rarely admit it — or even allow themselves to feel their value — until a
loved one lies cold in a casket at the front of a church. Authentic trust in Christ rec-
ognizes the value of others, despite their failures or their shortcomings, and devotes
adequate time to knowing them well.
(3) A genuine believer isn’t too proud to rely on God’s Word. Most churchgoers do
their best to live in obedience to the Scriptures they know. Genuine faith, however,
hungers to know as much about God’s Word as possible, because it doesn’t trust in
self. Genuine trust in Christ remains humbly devoted to knowing what He thinks
about life and how He would have us live.
(4) A genuine believer doesn’t rely solely on his or her own perspective. Genuine
believers have no trouble admitting the continuing impact of their sinful natures,
and they do whatever is necessary to nullify its influence when making decisions.
They seek truth in God’s Word, they pray for the Holy Spirit’s leading, they submit
to the wisdom of mature counselors, and they remain sensitive to the constructive
criticism of others — even their enemies.
(5) A genuine believer doesn’t take himself or herself or life itself too seriously. That’s
not to suggest that life isn’t serious or even dismal at times. Life in a fallen world
can be hard! Nevertheless, genuine believers maintain a loose grip on their posses-
sions, even looser on the people they love. They accept injustices and abuses and
setbacks as confirmation they are on the road to glory. They maintain a composed
perspective, they refuse to allow bitterness to spoil their outlook, they choose joy,
and they never pass up an opportunity to laugh.
Believers can do this when they genuinely trust God as unfailingly good and
utterly sovereign.
Of course, authentic belief in Jesus Christ has eternal implications. He came
to seek and save the lost, to receive them to Himself, and to enjoy their worship
forever. But genuine faith has profound implications for life here on earth. Our
abundant life begins now.
Do you believe in Christ? I mean, really believe?