THE GOSPEL OF JOHN, PART 2,
JOHN'S HEBREW PERSPECTIVE
By
Dr. Stephen Jones: Sep 10, 2019
Blog Post Date: 11-7-2019
John
was from a priestly family, and “was known to the high priest and entered
with Jesus into the court of the high priest” (John 18:15). Later, he was also able
to speak to “the slave-girl” acting as the doorkeeper to allow Peter into the
courtyard where the trial was being held (John 18:16, 17).
Further,
John was the only one of the twelve disciples who remained at the foot of the
cross with the women while Jesus suffered and died (John 19:25, 26).
James
and John were sons of Zebedee. Jesus called them “sons of thunder” (Mark 3:17). The
fact that they were fishing in the sea of Galilee when Jesus called them
suggests that Zebedee himself was not a priest. However, his wife, “the
mother of the sons of Zebedee” seemed to think that her sons were worthy of
a higher place in the Kingdom (Matthew 20:20, 21) may reflect
her earlier upbringing in a priestly family.
The
point is that John had priestly connections, however obscure from a biblical
standpoint. Yet Eusebius says that “he wore the petalon,” which was a high
priest’s mitre, or headpiece, which seems to suggest that a priestly
background, for such terminology was used of no other disciple, not even Peter
or Paul.
It
is always helpful to know the background of a book’s author, for even though
the Holy Spirit inspires certain ones to write Scripture, the personality,
education, and writing ability of the human author remains intact. In this
case, by understanding John’s family connection to the temple priests in
Jerusalem, we may deduce that he was more familiar than most with the temple
rituals, rules, and procedures.
Because
the temple in the first century was ruled by the Sadducee sect, which was
heavily influenced by Greek thought, we can say with certainty that John was
fluent in Greek long before he left Galilee to live in Ephesus. Yet John’s
beliefs differed from the Sadducees—perhaps because of Jesus’ training—for
shortly after Christ’s ascension we find him (with Peter) teaching the
resurrection of the dead (Acts 3:1; 4:1, 2). The Sadducees arrested them for
this. Years later, Paul was tried before the Sanhedrin, where we read in Acts 23:7, 8,
7 And as he said this, there arose a dissension between the Pharisees
and Sadducees, and the assembly was divided. 8 For the Sadducees say
that there is no resurrection, nor an angel, nor a spirit; but the Pharisees
acknowledge them all.
From
a purely doctrinal point of view, Paul and John agreed with the Pharisees in
these divisive issues. By extension, we may also say that their view contrasted
with Greek theology as well. Therefore, in reading John’s Gospel, we must
understand his Greek words through his Hebrew thought process, rather than
through the Greek mindset.
The
most important term to understand at the outset is the Logos, which is how John
starts his gospel. “In the beginning was the Logos,” and understanding
the Logos is the beginning of his revelation set forth in his gospel.
The
Greek Logos
The
Greek idea of the Logos began with the philosopher, Heraclitus, who lived from
535-475 B.C. He defined it as the organizing force behind an ever-changing
universe. A century later, his successors, Plato and Aristotle, saw it as the
principle that gave life to all creation, as well as the faculty of reason in
men.
The
Greeks did not distinguish between soul and spirit, as did the Hebrews, and so
they believed the mind (i.e., soul) was spiritual and divine. To them, the soul
was the seat of the Logos in men, which gave them the power of reason, and this
formed the basis of their love of wisdom, i.e., philosophy.
Yet
John did not come from a Greek background. His thought process was Hebrew. In
those days the Septuagint translation of the Hebrew Scriptures into the Greek
language provided their Hebrew-Greek dictionary. The Septuagint standardized
the way in which Hebrew words were translated into Greek.
These
Hebrew-Greek equivalents did not mean that the Hebrew concepts ought to be
changed to fit Greek thought or theology. For example, the Hebrew concept of sheol
(the grave or the state of the dead) cannot be redefined according to the Greek
equivalent, hades. Although the New Testament often uses the word hades,
it must be thought of in terms of sheol. Otherwise, we will think of it
in terms of immortal souls crossing the underground River Eridanus into the
realm of the god named Hades, who was said to be the brother of Zeus and
Poseidon.
Neither
does sheol have a three-headed dog named Cerberus accompanying the god
of the underworld.
The
Perfect Man and Sonship
For
our purpose, we must understand that the Greek Logos was not the same as the
Hebrew Logos, even though there is certainly a limited similarity. The idea
that the Logos was the Intelligent Cause of all things and that Divine Reason
brought all things into being was indeed a biblical concept. Likewise, the
Platonic idea that the Logos gave life to all creation is reflected in John 1:4, “In
Him was life.”
The
Greeks were concerned about describing “the perfect man” and how to attain such
perfection through the acquisition of wisdom in the schools of philosophy. John
presented Jesus Christ as being that ideal Man, and he showed also how the rest
of us may attain the same perfection through Him, His crucifixion,
resurrection, and ascension. Christ is the “Door” (John 10:9) through which all men must
pass.
The
door was not mere philosophy, nor could any man reach perfection through the
soulish study of wisdom, which characterize works-based religion based on the
will of man. The Door of Christ depends fully upon the work of Christ and the
fact that He fulfilled all of the laws that prophesied of Him—the most prominent
being the laws of sacrifice. Hence, John leads the reader back into the word of
God and into the Torah (law), which laid the foundations for Christ’s ministry
and how to become the sons of God.
The
Greek search for “the perfect man” is answered in John’s gospel in terms of
becoming the sons of God (John 1:12, 13). By structuring his gospel
according to the eight days of the feast of Tabernacles, John also shows how
that feast prophesies of sonship from birth to the presentation of the sons on
the eighth day, according to the law (Exodus 22:29, 30). For this
reason, the first miracle-sign is the wedding feast of Cana, which, when
calculated into modern measures, tells how Jesus turned 153 gallons of water
into wine. The eighth sign, which is its parallel, presents 153 mature fish (John 21:11),
because 153 is the biblical number representing the sons of God. The Hebrew
phrase, beni h' elohim, "sons of God," has a numeric value of 153.
The
transformation from water to wine speaks of the atomic change that will occur
in our bodies through the fulfillment of the feast of Tabernacles (1 Corinthians 15:51,
52). What was thus begun on the first
day of Tabernacles (i.e., the first miracle-sign) is to be completed on the
eighth day when the sons of God are presented to the Father, so that they may
be manifested to the world.
John
was not adopting the Greek view of things but was instead appealing to His
Greek readers to adopt the truth of the Hebrew scriptures. What the Greeks were
seeking could never be attained through philosophy or through the will of their
souls. It could be attained not by classroom study but only by being begotten
by the Spirit. It is a matter of becoming part of the family of God, where all
recognize the Fatherhood of God (Ephesians 3:14, 15).
The
Hebrew Logos
The
Septuagint uses the word logos as the equivalent of the Hebrew dabar,
“the word.” For example, in Numbers 11:23 God says, “Now you
will see whether My dabar will come true for you or not.” The
Septuagint reads, “Now shalt thou know whether My logos will come to
pass to thee or not.”
Again,
speaking in the plural, Deuteronomy 1:1 begins with “These
are the dabarim” (NASB), and the Septuagint reads, “These are the logoi.”
The
Hebrews went beyond the surface meaning of dabar by applying it to the
concept of the Memra. The Memra was the creative word of God and was
also used in the Targum as a substitute for “the Lord.” In other words, God
Himself was also His word, because His word expresses who He is. God will
always be true to His word because He must always be true to Himself. Hence,
the Memra was said to be the manifestation of God.
The
Memra, when used to describe God’s rule over the destiny of man (i.e.,
predestination), was “the agent of God.” The Targum states also, “My Memra
shall be unto you for a redeeming deity” (The Jewish Encyclopedia, Vol.
III, pp. 464-465, 1904 ed.). We are also told that the Greek equivalent of
Memra was Logos.
The
concept of the Memra was surely well known to John himself, and through John
the church too came to understand it. In fact, because the early church used
the term logos to apply to Christ, the Jews themselves nearly abandoned
the term. The Jewish Encyclopedia says,
“In
the ancient Church liturgy, adopted from the Synagogue, it is especially
interesting to notice how often the term ‘Logos’…. was changed into ‘Christ’….
Possibly on account of Christian dogma, rabbinic theology, outside of Targum
literature, made little use of the term ‘Memra’.” (p. 465)
There
was only a slight comparison between the Logos of the Greek mindset and the
Memra in Hebrew thought. The Greeks had little or no knowledge of biblical law,
and they sought worldly wisdom (1 Corinthians 1:20, 24) rather than the wisdom of God
contained in the law (Deuteronomy 4:5, 6).
In
fact, neither Jews nor Greeks sought perfection through spiritual begetting.
Both sought perfection by the will of the flesh and the will of man in their
own ways. John, however, presents another way, another path, through the only
Door, Jesus Christ. That Door is understood by the revelation in the word of
God (including the Torah).
When
John begins His gospel by saying, “In the beginning was the Logos,” he
was explaining Genesis 1:1, “In the beginning God
created.” He was also presenting Christ as the Memra of God, the One so
filled with the word that He became the living word, the embodiment of the
word, the word made flesh. In so doing, Christ was the perfect image of God and
“the exact representation of His nature” (Hebrews 1:3).
This
was what Adam was supposed to be. He failed, because he had been created
(Genesis 1:27) in the image of God and formed
(or shaped) from the earth (adamah) in Genesis 2:7. So Paul tells us in 1 Corinthians 15:45-47
says,
45 So also it is written, “The first man, Adam, became a living soul.”
The last Adam became a life-giving spirit… 47 The first man is from
the earth, earthy; the second man is from heaven.”
It
would take a begotten Son to succeed where a created son had
failed. Adam thus was not the Memra; only Christ is the Memra.
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