THE GOSPEL OF JOHN, PART 4,
THE LIGHT AND THE WITNESS
By
Dr. Stephen Jones: Sep 12, 2019
Blog Post Date: 12-6-2019
Another
main theme in John’s gospel, which he introduces in John 1:4,
5 is that the living word was light:
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.
Light
dispels darkness. To John, walking in darkness was to live without the truth,
because light is truth. More specifically, John was referring to the truth of
creation and the re-creation. In both cases, the light of God overcomes the
darkness.
Christ’s
purpose was to manifest the glory of God in the earth. The glory is seen first
in the light that was spoken in Genesis 1:3.
Without light, there is no glory for the earth to reflect. Yet “God is light, and in Him there is no darkness
at all” (1 John
1:5). Therefore, Christ came into the world as a Reflector to bear
witness of the light of His Father.
The First Creation
In Genesis 1:1, 2
we read,
1 In the
beginning God created the heavens and the earth. 2 The earth
was
[became] formless and void [tohu va bohu], and
darkness was over the surface of the deep; and the Spirit of God was moving
over the surface of the waters.
Isaiah 45:18 tells us that God “did not create it a waste place [tohu] but formed it to be inhabited.”
Hence, we ought to understand from Genesis 1:2
that it BECAME a “waste place” at some point AFTER God created it. In the
original creation, God “formed
it to be inhabited,” which seems to imply that men lived on earth
in a previous civilization. From the archeological and historical clues that
yet remain, that civilization was quite advanced.
Yet
some disaster struck the earth, plunging that original civilization into chaos
and back to the proverbial “stone age.” It appears that there were survivors in
various parts of the earth, for when Cain was exiled, he was afraid “that whoever finds me will kill me”
(Genesis 4:14). God’s response was to protect him,
for we read in Genesis 4:15,
15 So the
Lord said to him, “Therefore, whoever kills Cain, vengeance will be taken on
him sevenfold.” And the Lord appointed a sign for Cain, lest anyone finding him
should slay him.
Was
Cain afraid of his own family? When he traveled “east of Eden” (Genesis 4:16), did he expect to meet family members
who had preceded him? That seems very unlikely. It is more likely that he found
people from a prior civilization and that his name Cain, or Kina, or China, was
named for him, as Mrs. Sidney Bristowe asserts in her book, Sargon the
Magnificent.
Cain
was married at some point and fathered children (Genesis 4:17).
Where did she come from? Was she his sister? In fact, who did Seth marry in
order to carry on the family line? Scripture is largely silent, but all of this
points to the idea that Adam was not the first man on earth. There were others
before him, but Adam was a special creation, given the calling to rule the
earth and to bring order out of chaos, to reflect the image of God, and to
shine the light in darkness. His sin, however, made him part of the problem,
which required another “Adam” (i.e., Christ) to restore all things, so that the
glory of God might fill the earth according to the divine purpose.
No
time frame for the earlier civilization is given in Scripture, of course,
because it was not particularly needful for us to know. Our focus should be on
the present time since Adam, who was given the calling and authority to restore
all things. History and Time, as we know it, properly began with the first
Adam, and again with the Last Adam, for the re-creation of the heavens and the
earth properly began with Christ’s resurrection.
The Light
In Genesis 1:3 we read about the first word (logos) by
which the earlier chaos was brought back into divine order:
3 Then
God said, “Let there be light.” And there was light.
As
we have already stated, Christ was “the
Firstborn of all creation” (Colossians
1:15), begotten by the Father. As the mirror Image of His Father,
Christ was the double witness through whom (dia)
all things were created. In other words, the Father created all things through
Christ, who was the Memra, the personal embodiment of the living Word.
In
the Word was life, which essentially defines personality
by heavenly standards. One might say that the Word had a life of its own. The
Word was not just composed of vibration or frequency in a clinical or
scientific way of speaking. All spoken words are conveyed through frequency, as
is light itself. Hence, the frequency of the first Word (Memra/Logos) also
produced light.
John
equates light with truth, anticipating John 14:6,
6 Jesus
said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to
the Father, but through [dia] Me.
Even
as all things were created through (dia)
the Son, so also must all men approach the Father through (dia) the Son. Jesus is “the truth,”
that is, the light. John 1:4,
5 introduces us to the idea that the Memra was life
and that this life was also light. This set the stage for the sixth
miracle-sign, where Jesus healed the man born blind (John 9:1).
The key lesson in that story is found a few verses later, where Jesus says in John 9:5,
5 While I
am in the world, I am the light of the world.
In
healing the man born blind, He manifested the glory of God in terms of light,
because the blind man could finally see the light. His physical healing
signified something much greater—healing spiritual blindness through the light
of truth.
Likewise,
in John’s first epistle, which in many ways was a continuation of his gospel,
he defines light in terms of knowing truth and walking in fellowship with the
Father through Christ, whose blood has cleansed us from all unrighteousness (1 John 1:9). Darkness, on the other hand, is the
chaotic condition of an unregenerate man who refuses to acknowledge the truth
of his sinful condition as well as the remedy that Christ has made for him (1 John 1:7).
Therefore,
when God spoke “light,” the Son essentially said “amen,” and the perfect double
witness established light (truth) in the world. This light was not merely words
that were true. The light was a living Person coming into the world. Physical
light thus provided earthly evidence of an invasion (or incarnation) of
spiritual Light in the Person of Christ. This light opens the eyes of the
blind, who walk in darkness. While healing from physical blindness is important
and certainly has the power to change one’s entire life, healing spiritual
blindness is even more important, for it establishes fellowship with God.
Seeing one’s family and friends is good but seeing God (through Christ) is even
better.
John the Witness
John 1:6-9 says,
6 There
came a man, sent from God, whose name was John. 7 He came for a
witness, that he might bear witness of the light, that all might believe
through Him. 8 He was not the light but came that He might bear
witness of the light. 9 There was the true light which, coming into
the world, enlightens every man.
John’s
calling and position was not to be the Christ, nor was he the Memra. He simply
bore witness of Christ, who is the light. It is therefore self-evident that a
double witness is not the same person as the one he is witnessing. Likewise,
the same is true of the Memra, who bears witness to the Creator. Jesus Christ
is the double witness of His Father; John bore witness of Christ. So John said
truly in John 1:20,
“I am not the Christ.”
Hence,
John’s crowning achievement was to baptize Jesus, because baptism, as
established in Leviticus
14:1-7, was where a priest bore witness that God had already healed
a leper. The priest was not called to heal the leper through baptism but was
called to baptize him “if the
infection of leprosy has been healed in the leper” (Leviticus 14:3).
In
other words, baptism was meant to provide an earthly witness to a heavenly
reality. So when Jesus healed lepers, He told them to present themselves to the
priest so that they could inspect him and bear witness that God had healed them
already. Luke 5:14
says,
14 And He
ordered him to tell no one, “But go and show yourself to the priest, and make
an offering for your cleansing, just as Moses commanded, for a testimony [marturion, “witness”] to them.”
Many
picture this as a former leper giving his personal testimony to the priest.
However, this is actually about the priest bearing witness to the congregation
or community that he is no longer a leper and no longer needs to shout “Unclean!
Unclean!” whenever someone approached him. The leper, being healed, was then
cleansed for seven days and pronounced clean for the third and final time on
the morning of the eighth day.
Baptism
was a formal cleansing ritual that was used in other contexts as well. Priests
baptized themselves at the laver before entering the sanctuary. Common people
baptized themselves (hands) before each meal (Mark 7:3).
Jesus needed no cleansing, yet He understood that the prophecy in the law
required Him to be baptized (Matthew 3:14,
15).
So
John bore witness of Christ, proclaiming Him to be “the Lamb of God” (John 1:29).
This
set the stage for a later encounter with those who objected to His healing a
man on the Sabbath. They said that He could not be from God, because He was
"breaking the Sabbath"
(John 5:18). The implication was that He could not be
the Messiah, nor could He be the Memra, the Living Word. But Jesus countered
this, saying in John
5:33-36,
33 You
have sent to John, and he has borne witness to the truth…. 36 But
the witness which I have is greater than that of John; for the works which the
Father has given Me to accomplish, the very works that I do, bear witness of
Me, that the Father has sent Me.
John
bore witness, but men might discredit John’s witness if they thought that Jesus
was a lawbreaker. Jesus did not violate the law, for doing good on the
Sabbath—even if it requires some work—is not a violation of the law, if one
understands the purpose of the law. The people viewed the Sabbath in rigid
terms that the rabbis had defined, but their views were not consistent with the
mind of God. Hence, Jesus remained sinless, even though many of the Jews
claimed that He was a law-breaker.
The
irony was that the people believed John the Baptist to be a genuine prophet,
but most of them, in the end, failed to believe his witness that Jesus was the
Christ.
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