My
Commentary on John
John
1:1-5 (ESV)
1 In
the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
was God. 2 He was in the beginning with God. 3 All things
were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that
was made. 4 In him was life, and the life was the light of men.
5 The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not
overcome it.
1
From the beginning was the word,and the word was with god ,and the
word was god.
There
is a lot of information here ,I'll look at what the beginning is and
what the word is and how the word is God and not a god as some cults
would teach.( denying the deity of Christ Jesus is one of the signs
of a cult)
A
very big sign.
From
the beginning:
The
beginning of what some would ask ,on the surface one would have to
say ,The beginning of creation. This wouldn't be totally wrong for
the Word was there at the creation start . The ESV say's from the
beginning or NASB in the beginning this is telling us that the Word
preexisted prior to the beginning of creation. So the deeper
understanding is ,the Eternity of the Word ( Jesus Christ)
per-existed prior to creation .
Whats
the word ? above I said the word is Jesus Christ ,so how did I come
to that .
The
Word or Greek LOGOS :
In
John, denotes the essential Word of God, Jesus Christ, the personal
wisdom and power in union with God, his minister in creation and
government of the universe, the cause of all the world's life both
physical and ethical, which for the procurement of man's salvation
put on human nature in the person of Jesus the Messiah, the second
person in the Godhead, and shone forth conspicuously from His words
and deeds.
Scripture
that show the Word is a personnel being:
John
1;1-5
1 In
the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
was God. 2 He was in the beginning with God. 3 All things
came into being through Him, and apart from Him nothing came into
being that has come into being. 4 In Him was life, and the life
was the Light of men. 5 The Light shines in the darkness, and
the darkness did not comprehend it.
These
verse’s show clearly that the word LOGOS is God The word is the
one who created this would be the second person of the trinity
Jesus. But yet more scripture needs to be used to show this is Jesus.
John clearly shows Jesus is the Word . This will become clearer as I
continue to look at john.
Here
is a pretty good explanation of the Word or Logos ,its long but I
think quit clear.
For
Jews, John’s use of logos
would have evoked the phrase, the “word of Yahweh.” This title
was an important part of biblical traditions about Yahweh and His
effective power over the universe. The phrase was regularly used to
refer to Scripture as divine law (Isa
2:3), written instruction (Psa
119:11), and prophetic revelation (Hos
4:1; Ezek
6:1). More important, the “word of Yahweh” was depicted as an
active force at work in the world to accomplish Yahweh’s will (Isa
55:11; Jer
23:29). This force was the agent through which Yahweh created the
world (Psa
33:6, 9;
Gen 1:3, 6,
11).
A
Jewish audience in the first century ad
would also have accepted “the Word” as a divine title based on
the regular substitution of memra
(Aramaic for “the Word”) for the divine name in Aramaic
translations of the ot,
also called targums.
The Aramaic translators used this title to avoid instances where
Yahweh was described in human terms (i.e., with an arm or hand). This
tradition connected “the Word” with creation even more: The
targum for Isa
48:13a reads “By my word I have founded the earth” (replacing
“my hand” in the Hebrew text with memra).
For
Greeks, the idea of “the Word” as God’s active agent on earth
resonated with the Greek notion that the Logos was the stabilizing
principle of the universe. In Greek, logos
can mean “reason,” or rational thought. In Greek philosophy,
logos
referred to the ordering principle behind the universe, the
all-pervasive creative energy at the source of all things. The
philosopher Heraclitus (sixth century bc)
declared this principle always existed and was responsible for all
things. The Logos was ultimate reality, the ever-present wisdom
organizing the universe. The Stoic philosophers developed this idea
further in the third century bc,
and envisioned the Logos as the rational principle of the universe
that made everything understandable. The Logos was the impersonal
power that originated, permeated, and directed everything.
John’s
use of the term logos
does not appear to be indebted to Greek philosophy, however. His
presentation of the Logos as a personal Creator involved in His
creation and incarnated in the person of Jesus completely subverted
the philosophical idea of the Logos as an impersonal force. A Greek
audience would have recognized the concept as important, even if they
did not fully understand it. John’s usage combines Jewish and Greek
concepts about the universe and ultimate reality. The first century
ad
Jewish philosopher Philo of Alexandria also explicitly combined these
two worlds of thought, describing the Logos as the rationality of the
mind of God and the template for the divine ordering of creation.
John’s
assignment of “the Word” to the role of the active agent in
creation (John
1:3) connects with the biblical picture of creation through the
divine word (Gen
1:3; Psa
33:6), and creation through divine wisdom (Prov
3:19, 8:22–31).
Proverbs 3:19
describes “wisdom” as Yahweh’s agent in creation. Wisdom is
regularly personified in Proverbs
1–9 and takes an active role in creation in Prov
8. Just like divine wisdom, “the Word” was also life-giving
(compare Prov
3:18 and John
1:4).
Creation
is the central concept of the message of John’s Gospel. Both the
Jewish and the Greek associations of “the Word” find their
ultimate meaning in creation. The Greeks were searching for
knowledge, for a way to understand the impersonal principle bringing
order to the universe. John
proclaims
that the one who gives order to creation is personal and divine. For
the Jews, the connection between “the Word” and creation was
natural since the role of Creator inherently belongs to God. But
neither the Jews nor the Greeks would have expected John’s
conclusion. He took a familiar concept, rich with meaning, and gave
it a surprising twist. “The Word” was God, not an impersonal
force, not just a tool God used to accomplish His purpose. “The
Word” was personal. “The Word” was God, and God came in human
form as Jesus (John
1:14).
John
puts it all together. Jesus is none other than God’s creative,
life-giving, light-giving Word. Jesus is the power of God that
created the world and the reason of God that sustains the world—come
to earth in the flesh. Using the term logos
to communicate this prepared John’s hearers to accept the validity
of his message.
Douglas
Mangum
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