THE LOGOS, PART 1
By Dr. Stephen Jones: Aug
22, 2019
Blog Post Date: 9-8-2019
In John 1:1-5 the apostle introduces his gospel of
Christ in this way:
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 by [dia, “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 And the light shines in the darkness, and
the darkness did not comprehend it.
John’s
introduction sets the stage for the rest of his gospel It was designed mainly
to show how Jesus Christ manifested the glory of the Father in the earth,
essentially bringing heaven to earth. Christ bore witness to His Father, and
John the Baptist bore witness to Christ (John 1:6, 7). The idea of the double witness was also a
prominent theme in John’s gospel.
The Logos: Greek and Hebrew
The
big historical question, of course, is who (or what) is the Logos, here
translated “Word.” Should we adopt the Greek view, as did the Gnostics, or
should we adopt the Hebrew concept?
It
appears that the first philosopher to use the term Logos in relation to a
divine being was Heraclitus about 500 B.C. shortly after the Babylonian
captivity of Judah. He saw the Logos as the underlying principle of Order in
the world.
During
the period of the Grecian empire and into the time of Roman domination, Jewish
thought and their biblical interpretations were often heavily influenced by the
Greek philosophers. Historians call it the Hellenization of Judaism. The Book
of Jubilees 12:4, written in Greek and dated from 200-150 B.C., portrays
Abram telling his idolatrous father, Terah,
4 Worship the God of heaven, who sends down dew and rain upon the earth
and does everything upon the earth and has created everything through his
word and all living things are from before his face.
The
Wisdom of Solomon 9:1, 2 (dated in the first
century B.C.) has Solomon praying for wisdom in this way:
1 O God of my fathers, and Lord of mercy, who hast made all things
with thy word 2 and ordained man through thy wisdom, that he
should have dominion over the creatures which thou hast made, 3 and
order the world according to equity and righteousness, and execute judgment
with an upright heart: 4 give me wisdom….
In
both cases, God is seen creating all things through His word (logos).
The Septuagint translation of the Scriptures from Hebrew to Greek (280-250
B.C.) renders Psalm 33:4-6,
4 For the word [logos] of the Lord is right; and all his works are
faithful. 5 He loves mercy and judgment; the earth is full of the
mercy of the Lord. 6 By the word [logos] of the Lord
the heavens were established; and by the breath of His mouth all their host.
In
this case, Greek word logos is seen to be the equivalent of the Hebrew
word davar, “word.” Since the Septuagint served as the main Hebrew-Greek
dictionary in the first century, we ought to use this as our standard in
defining Greek words in terms of their Hebrew meanings.
The
first-century Jewish philosopher, Philo of Alexandria, who lived from about 20
B.C. to 40 A.D., spoke of the Logos as the angel of God’s Wisdom and also as
the First-born Son of God. He derived his teachings on Wisdom from Proverbs 8,
where Wisdom is personified (as a desirable woman), So Proverbs 8:22-30 reads,
22 The Lord possessed me at the beginning of His way, before His works of
old. 23 From everlasting I was established, from the beginning, from
the earliest times of the earth… 27 When He established the heavens,
I was there… 29 when He set for the sea its boundary, so that the
water should not transgress His command, when He marked out the foundations of
the earth; 30 then I was beside Him, as a master workman; and I was
daily His delight, rejoicing always before Him.
Paul
himself equated Christ to the Wisdom of God in 1 Corinthians 1:30,
30 But by His doing you are in Christ Jesus, who became to us wisdom
from God and righteousness and sanctification and redemption.
The
fact that wisdom was personified as a woman does not undermine the idea that
Jesus was the wisdom of God, for Paul says that in the spirit there is neither
male nor female (Galatians 3:28). In fact,
in the law the sacrifices included both male and female goats (Leviticus 4:23, 28). A male was sacrificed for the sin of
leaders; a female was sacrificed for the sin of the congregation. The
difference has to do with relationships in regard to authority.
Hence
also, when “the only begotten God” was brought forth by the Father (John 1:18), the underlying purpose was to provide
a double witness for creation. Similarly, God took Eve out of Adam to provide a
double witness for him in the marriage relationship.
Insofar
as Christ was the Firstborn Son, He was male, but insofar as He was taken from
God’s side to provide a double witness in creation, He was female.
The
law is said to be “wisdom” in Deuteronomy 4:5, 6, and the law of the double witness is a display
of that wisdom. For this reason, Christ is the Wisdom of God, portrayed as a
woman rejoicing at the creation of all things.
One
of the Dead Sea Scrolls (DSS 1QS XI:11) reads this way in Hebrew,
“By [God’s] knowledge
everything came to be, and everything which is happening—He establishes it by
his design and without him [nothing] is done.”
The
same Scroll (1:19, 20) reads,
“By the wisdom of thy knowledge thou didst
establish their destiny ere they came into being, according to [thy will]
everything came to be, and without thee [nothing] is done.”
This
scroll reads much like the beginning of John’s gospel. The writer’s viewpoint
was not taken from Heraclitus but from the creation story in the first chapter
of Genesis, where we read that “God said…,” and from Deuteronomy 1:1, “These are the words….” Deuteronomy 1:1 uses davar in Hebrew but logos
in the Septuagint Greek.
The
Living Word in Hebrew Thought
In
Jesus’ time, boys were expected to memorize the book of Leviticus by the time
they were five. They were expected to memorize have all five books of the Torah
memorized by the time they were twelve. If they showed aptitude, a rabbi might
come to them and say, “Follow me,” and if he did so, he would be trained in the
tradition of that rabbi until the age of thirty, after which time he himself
would be recognized as a rabbi.
None
of Jesus’ disciples had shown such aptitude, for most of them had become fishermen.
But Rabbi Jesus called them, and they followed. Normally, in rabbinical school,
the students were expected to learn the mind of their teacher and not to
deviate from it. They were to come into the image of their rabbi and bear
witness of his teachings thereafter. The same could be said of Jesus’
disciples.
Some
rabbis, however, distinguished themselves above their peers. If two other
rabbis bore witness, the distinguished rabbi became a rabbi with authority, who
could then create his own “yoke” (discipleship training) that differed from his
earlier mentor. In Jesus’ case, the Father in heaven and John the Baptist on
earth bore witness of Him (John 5:33, 37), making Him a rabbi with authority. His yoke
was based on entering God’s rest, as Jesus said in Matthew 11:28-30,
28 Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you
rest. 29 Take My yoke upon you, and learn from Me, for I am gentle
and humble in heart; and you shall find rest for your souls. 30 For
My yoke is easy, and My load is light.
In Luke 20:2 men questioned Jesus’ authority,
because His teachings were innovative as if He were a rabbi with authority.
2 … “Tell us by what authority You
are doing these things, or who is the one who gave You this authority?”
In
my view, Jesus’ early training came from His mother’s uncle, Joseph of
Arimathea, who, as a member of the Sanhedrin, was a distinguished rabbi in his
own right. No doubt Joseph bore witness of Jesus and certainly learned much
from Jesus Himself. Would not Joseph have recognized Jesus as a rabbi with
authority? Likewise, John the Baptist bore witness of Him when he received
revelation that Jesus was the Messiah.
The Memra
There
was one further step in the upward climb of a rabbi that was reserved only for
the Messiah. It was called the memrah, the idea that the rabbi with
authority was so perfected that his very life was the fulfillment of the law. He
was the word made flesh. That is, he lived the word of God by
manifestation. The Jewish Encyclopedia says in Vol. VIII, pages 464-465,
1904 edition,
MEMRA
(= “Ma’amar” or “Dibbur,” “Logos”): “The Word,” in the sense of the creative or
directive word of speech of God manifesting His power in the world of matter or
mind; a term used especially in the Targum as a substitute for “the Lord” when
an anthropomorphic expression is to be avoided….
“The
Memra,” instead of “the Lord,” is “the consuming fire” (Targ. Deut. ix. 3,
comp. Targ. Isa. xxx. 27). The Memra “plagued the people” (Targ. Yer. to Ex.
xxxii. 35.)
“Not
His “hand,” but His “Memra has laid the foundation of the earth” (Targ. Isa.
xlviii. 13)…
Like
the Shekinah (comp. Targ. Num. xxiii. 21), the Memrah is accordingly the
manifestation of God. “The Memra brings Israel nigh unto God and sits on His
throne receiving the prayers of Israel” (Targ. Yer. to Deut. iv. 7)….
As
in ruling over the destiny of man the Memra is the agent of God (Targ.
Yer. to Num. xxvii. 16), so also is it in the creation of the earth (Isa. xlv.
12), and in the execution of justice (Targ. Yer. to Num. xxxiii. 4). So, in the
future, shall the Memra be the comforter (Targ. Isa. lxvi. 13): “My
Shekinah I shall put among you, My Memra shall be unto you for a redeeming
deity, and you shall be unto My Name a holy people” (Targ. Yer. to Lev.
xxii. 12). “My Memra shall be unto you like a good plowman who takes off the
yoke from the shoulder of the oxen.”
The
Jewish Encyclopedia also notes that the idea of the Memra was expressed by the early
Christians by the Greek term, Logos. We read further on page 465,
“In
the ancient Church liturgy, adopted from the Synagogue, it is especially
interesting to notice how often the term “Logos,” in the sense of “the Word by
which God made the world, or made His Law or Himself known to man,” was changed
into “Christ” (see “Apostolic Constitutions,” vii. 25-26, 34-38, et al.).
Possibly on account of the Christian dogma, rabbinic theology, outside of
Targum literature, made little use of the term “Memra.”
John
gives Jesus’ credentials, saying, “In the beginning was the memra,”
translated into Greek as the Logos, “the word.” It was used to represent God
when He manifested Himself on earth. (Another word is the Shekinah.) John
looked at the Messiah in the same way that the people looked at the memra.
It is the “image” of God. Hebrews 1:3 reflects the
same belief, saying,
3 And He is the radiance of His glory and the exact representation of
His nature, and upholds all things by the word of His power.
Jesus
fulfilled the expectations of the Memra, but He was rejected because He did not
use that power to release Judah from its captivity to Rome. Likewise, Jesus’
“yoke” was unlike that of other rabbis. The Jewish Encyclopedia says on
page 465,
“My
Memra shall be unto you like a good plowman who takes off the yoke from the
shoulder of the oxen.”
Jesus
criticized the yokes that the other rabbis had placed upon the shoulders of
their disciples, saying in Matthew 23:4,
4 And they tie up heavy loads and lay them on men’s shoulders; but they
themselves are unwilling to move them with so much as a finger.
This
is repeated in Luke 11:46. The yoke of the
rabbis was far heavier than Jesus’ yoke, because the rabbis had added numerous
burdens to the law of God. Jesus taught a return to the original law, leaving
out all the cumbersome traditions that had encrusted the purity of the law
itself.
Jesus
was the Memra of God, the living Word, that is, the living expression of the
mind of God and the essence of His Person-hood. In His earthly ministry, He was
the Word personified in human flesh, although after His return to glory, “even
though we have known Christ according to the flesh, yet now we know Him thus no
longer.” The Memra is the Hebrew view of the Logos, and this is how we
ought to interpret the Logos in the introduction to John’s gospel.
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