Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - John 1 Part 1 • Dr. Eric D. Huntsman • Jan. 16 - Jan. 22
Episode Date: January 11, 2023What does the Book of John teach us about Jesus Christ? Dr. Eric D. Huntsman explores John 1’s Christology, the authorship of the Book of John, and the power Jesus Christ can have in our lives.Pleas...e rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.coApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYThanks to the follow HIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way.
We love to learn, we love to laugh, we want to learn and laugh with you.
As together we follow him.
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith and I am your host and I'm here with my beloved co-host,
John, by the way. Welcome, John, by the way.
Welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
That's a nice adjective. I hope that's true.
Because we're talking about another beloved John today.
We're spending our entire episode in one chapter of the Gospel of John, John chapter one.
John, when I saw that this lesson was on John chapter one, I knew exactly who we should
bring on. Who's joining us today?
Yes, we're excited to have Dr. Eric Huntsman back with us. Again, our listeners might
remember as we talked about the Psalms and he is coming to us from, isn't this awesome technology?
He is actually in Jerusalem, a place you may have heard of
as you've gone through the New Testament,
and the Book of Mormon, and everything else.
But we're delighted to have him here to talk about this,
and I'll give you a reminder of who Eric is.
If you see that smiling face
and you watch music in the spoken word, like I do,
you may say, I think I recognize him
from the baritone section. Eric was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, raised in upstate New York,
in western Pennsylvania, and Tennessee. He married in Elaine Scott in 1993. They had two children,
Rachel and Samuel. I love reading this background of Dr. Huntsman, received a Bachelor's in Classical Greek and Latin
from Brigham Young University, Master's in Ancient History from the University of Pennsylvania,
a PhD in Ancient History from the University of Pennsylvania, and he joined the faculty at BYU in 94
as an instructor of the classics, became an assistant professor of classics and ancient history,
and then transferred to the College of Religious Education, becoming an assistant professor of
ancient scripture in 2003, Associate Professor in 2008, and he was appointed as the coordinator of
Ancient Near Eastern Studies program in August 2012 after spending a year teaching at the BYU Jerusalem
Center and then promoted to full professor in 2015. It's got a number of books. God
so loved the world about the final days of the Savior's life. Good tidings of
great joy, which is one I have. I also have the miracles of Jesus. Worship,
adding death to your devotion.
And this one becoming the beloved disciple,
coming under Christ through the gospel of John.
That was studied in 2018.
It would be perfect to have this year.
And you have another one coming out in February
called Greater Love, Half No Man.
Great Easter book, yes.
Look at that beautiful book about Easter. I also wanted
to mention he gave a talk at a BYU devotional called Hard Sains and Safe Spaces, making
room for struggle as well as faith that it was a great talk. I also forgot to mention
he served in the Thailand Bangkok Mission. It ordinance working in Provo Temple.
And as I said, a member of the Tabernacle Choir.
So we're really glad to have you and Hank, I was telling you
before we hit the record button that I don't know if there's
anybody who knows more about the book of John that we could
have got today than Dr. Huntsman.
So we're thrilled to have you.
Thank you for joining us today.
Thanks, John.
Thanks, Hank.
Yeah.
We love having Eric on follow him. He's a friend of the podcast. I'm starting out my come follow me study
I really want to get a lot out of this gospel. I've got the the expert here. How should I go about studying the gospel of John?
What can you tell me about it?
Well, you know, one of the things you can do and should do for gospel of John is what you should do for all the gospel
There's this tension because in the one hand, particularly as we do it in gospel doctrine,
we tend to harmonize the gospels because the gospels are based on the real life experiences,
teachings, and doings of Jesus.
And so it's natural for us to try to come up with a chronology for Jesus' life and
ministry and see how the gospels all fit into that.
But in addition to harmonizing as we do in classes sometimes,
I think it always is worth studying each gospel individually. Because when we study the
gospels individually, we're able to see their particular portrait of Jesus, understand a particular
agenda, the emphasis, the style of the individual evangelist, real quickly before we get into
John, when I'm teaching religion to 11, I do take the gospel separately and I only bring
them together for the last week of Jesus' life.
And maybe they're a little cute, maybe they're simplistic, but I kind of characterize the
gospel to help my students differentiate between them.
So starting with the oldest first, I often say that the the Mark and Jesus is what I call
the John Wayne Jesus. He's the strong tough guy kind of fellow
Very human very emotional. I mean the son of God
But he's the most human of the four portraits that we have in the gospel
And I also call the gospel of Mark the Harry Potter gospel mark loves miracles
He loves to have Jesus do all kinds of things say, makes the miracles huge and exciting and almost magical.
Whereas the Matthew, the Jesus and the gospel of Matthew
of course is the royal king of Israel.
The Luke and Jesus is what I like to call the primary Jesus.
Jesus loves me this I know because the Bible tells me,
so actually the gospel Luke tells you that.
In the gospel Luke, Jesus is always forgiving
and compassionate and healing.
And the Johanna and Jesus, the one we're going to treat today, is what we call the divine Jesus. We use the term in biblical studies called
Christology, which is the study of the person and the work of Jesus. First of all, the person.
What does it mean when we say Jesus is the Christ, the anointed one of God, the son of God?
And then the work of Jesus, what does he come to do? And of course, all four gospels agree he came to suffer, die and rise again. But they approach it from
different angles. So as I said, this Mark in Jesus is sometimes called a low
Christology. You know, he's the son of God because at the baptism of God declared
in the son of God. And then his deeds prove it. Now, we have a friend, Julie Smith,
who's done a great volume, the B.Y. New Testament commentary series who actually argues against the
low Christology from Mark. She calls it a full Christology of Mark. But then you
have Matthew and Luke which have a higher Christology because he's the
son of God because Jesus was divinely conceived and were actually born. So those
two gospels add what we call infancy narratives at the beginning. But the
Johanna in Jesus is divine from the get-go.
And as we'll read when we get into John chapter one,
in the beginning was the word and the words of God,
and the word was God.
I mean, patently unashamed saying that Jesus is God,
which is not always comfortable for Lardy Saints,
because in the first article of faith
and our understanding of a Godhead,
we don't usually say Jesus is God.
Sometimes it makes it easier if we say Jesus is divine, but that's how the gospel of John presents him. So that's the
first thing I would do is I take the gospel of John and say, okay, what is the
characterization of Jesus first and foremost? Who is the author and how does the
authorship affect the way that portrait of Jesus is drawn? Who is the original
audience of the gospel and how does that affect the
way the gospel is related? Then how does it apply to us if that makes any sense.
Now in terms of the gospel of John, Mark, Matthew and Luke are very close together and some of your
listeners will know this term synoptic. It comes from the Greek synopsis which means looking at it
with the same eye or from the same perspective. The usual assumption is that Mark was the earliest gospel written, perhaps based on the testimony
of Peter.
Mark was the helper of the translator of Peter.
And then Matthew and Luke, even though Matthew, if the traditional authorship is correct,
and he's the apostle Matthew, even though Matthew was there, he had not written a gospel
yet.
And so when he saw this wonderful literary creation, the story of Jesus as a narrative,
he said, wow, that's great, but I have some teachings of Jesus, some parable, some sermons that Mark didn't use,
I'm going to fold them into there. And then Luke has either Mark and Matthew, or just Matthew, and then he adds some things.
But still, those three gospels, more or less follow the same outline with some differences occasionally with different
portraits of Jesus. But the gospel of John is almost 90% unique material. And so that's one of the things that's so
interesting about the gospel of John is it gives us figures, characters, events that you don't have in Mark, Matthew, and Luke.
So that on its own is a reason to study the gospel of John. When I introduced John in a Christ-navillacian gospel class or in a religion 211 class,
the gospel class at BYU, I always put up a little chart on what do we know about
Jesus from the synoptics and then I have another column and what do we know about
it from John and it's amazing how many differences there are. And then I'll often
pause and I'll ask the students and say, what is it you like about the gospel of John? And people will say, well, Jesus is so powerful.
Jesus is so strong. Jesus is so divine. Or I love the stories he has about individual characters.
We have these sharply painted characters such as Nicodemus and the woman in Samaria,
Mary of Magdalena, the mother of Jesus et cetera. And they'll say all these different things
they like about the gospel of John
and why it's so appealing.
And I agree with all those things,
but I will tell you right off
why I resonated with the gospel of John
from a very young age.
I spent my last two years of high school
in Jackson, Tennessee.
My dad moved there, my junior year of high school.
And I suddenly was moved from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Catholic and Presbyterian friends. I was moved to what I
like to call the buckle of the Bible belt. I was put right in this evangelical stew and
all my friends were born again and they were so passionate about the Lord Jesus Christ.
And it was a time in my life when I was selling my own testimony and shaking my own testimony.
I had a lot of questions and I'm going to talk about the book of Mormon for a while if you don't mind. And this new testament come upon me here. I decided I was settling my own testimony and straightening my own testimony. I had a lot of questions. And I'm going to talk about the Book of Mormon for a while, if you don't mind, and this
new testament come upon me here.
I decided I was going to read the Book of Mormon to settle my testimony of the Book of
Mormon because my friends were really arguing against the church and against the prophetic
mission of Joseph Smith.
And instead of doing what I had been taught in seminary, what my mother had taught me,
which was you read the Book of Mormon, then you'd moron I ten it.
You pray it out the whole book and it's true.
And if it's true, Joseph,
and the prophet, and the prophet, the church is true,
I decided I was gonna be inductive rather than deductive.
I was gonna pray every chapter
as I was going through the Book of Mormon.
Just try to find out, do I believe this?
And I didn't need to wait till moron I ten.
I got to that final chapter of 2 Nephi
when Nephi is giving us farewell.
And he says, if you don't believe me,
believe these words, because they are the words of Christ.
And suddenly this Jesus who I was striving so hard
to get to know as a teenager,
as I was just accepting him into my life
and following him as my savior,
I thought, yeah, this is Jesus. Everything that says about Jesus is what I believe, what I know is true. And so I got the strong
testimony of the Book of Mormon. Well, now let's supply that to John. I started to read the gospel
of John that same senior year of high school because after the Book of Mormon I read the
Gospels and I liked Mark and I really liked Matthew and especially Luke, but I got to John.
And it was the same Jesus I had come to know and love in the Book of Mormon.
And so the way I describe it, not that we have a favorite gospel, but if we did it might
be John because it's the Jesus I know that I love and I worship, whom I had gotten to know
in the Book of Mormon.
As I try to explain this idea of Christology,
particularly the high Christology of John,
I once again use the Book of Mormon example.
When I was first teaching religion,
after I moved from classics to the education
and wanted to start off,
I ended up liberately with the title page
purposes of the Book of Mormon.
I said, okay, what is the title page tell us
the purposes of the Book of Mormon art?
Well, the Sabrina's to know
is the great things that God has done for our fathers and our mothers is to bring us to knowledge of
the covenant. And then to bring us to a knowledge that Jesus is the, and I paused, and my freshman
all said, son of God, I'm like, wrong. Jesus Christ is the eternal God, manifest in self-doll
nation. Think about 3rd Nephi 11, the risen Lord touches down in
battleful. And what does he say? I am the God of Israel and the whole earth. So even this
idea of talking about the divinity of Jesus, even if talking about the divinity of Jesus
is a little unfamiliar to us or not the way we easily talk about them in the church of Jesus
Christ of Lardy's name. The Book of Mormon absolutely gives us
permission to do what John 1 1 says in the beginning was the Word and the Word is with God and the
Word was God. He was the divine Jehovah before the incarnation and we'll come back to that when we
get into John 1. But that's what I would encourage people to do is understand a little bit about John
and we'll talk a few more moments about that who who we assume the author is, and who we think the
audience was, and how the book is structured. But then particularly for Latter-day Saints who have
a testimony of the Restoration, the Jesus who appeared in the Sacred Grove and in the Kirtland
Temple, from Joseph and the Sydney Saun section 76. When you know that, Jesus, you're going to find
him in the Gospel of John. That's wonderful, Eric. I just think when I was a kid and Sydney saw in section 76 when you know that Jesus you're gonna find him in the gospel of John
That's wonderful Eric. I just think when I was a kid and I saw the gospel according to Matthew the gospel according to Mark the gospel
According to Luke it sounded like well actually it was like this well actually it was like this and
The the JST helped me that call all of these chapters the the testimony of Matthew, the testimony of Mark, the testimony of Luke.
And that helps us see why, as Eric was just explaining,
there may be some different things,
like the John Wayne Jesus, the Royal King,
they were maybe writing to different audiences
and so forth, but it's nice to,
oh, okay, this is what they wanted us to know,
this is what they remembered, this is what they taught.
I just like that distinction there. Yeah, there's a slight clarification we can make on that.
I know our footnotes have the testimony for all four Gospels of the JST title or alternative.
But if you look at that big fat folio edition of the JST that Fowler Lane and Jackson and Matthews did,
it actually appears that he changed it for Matthew and John, the testimony of Matthew and John.
The earliest versions of the JST manuscripts, it's actually still the Gospel of Mark and
Luke.
The reason that may be significant is that Mark and Luke were not there, but Matthew and
John's traditional authors of those gospels were apostolic witnesses.
But back to what you're saying, if I can pull out a little Greek, not to beat you over
the head with it, but in all these gospels, it's Ellen Gellion, the good news, Qatar, according to whatever. But from the earliest
Christian tradition there were not four gospels. There was one gospel. One gospel as you were
hinting John from the perspective of Matthew or according to testimony and John because it's all the same good news
But it is as you say from the perspective or sharing the testimony of that gospel of those particular authors
So if we were going to play a game of one of these things is not like the others
John would be the standout in Matthew Mark and Luke you said are the synoptics like synonym like same I
Yeah, and then John it's
its own thing you know one of the earliest I think it's papyrus is quoted by you see it says that
John having seen as the gospel had been told by Mark Matthew and Luke decided to compose a
spiritual gospel the idea of being what happened and what Jesus said and what Jesus did had already been
recording these other gospels and yet somehow John was moved upon by the spirit to give
it a slightly more spiritual.
I would say, because all of them are spiritual, perhaps a more symbolic take.
So I want to ask my students what's different about this gospel.
They say, wow, it's so symbolic.
Jesus is the door, the gate, Jesus is the vine, Jesus is the light of the world. There are all these wonderful symbols and it's so symbolic. Jesus is the door, the gate, Jesus is the vine, Jesus is the light of the world.
And there are all these wonderful symbols,
and it's so deep.
I'm gonna slide into this as we move further
into our discussion.
One of the things that's so powerful
is that John has what we call discourses and dialogues.
Jesus talks to people at length.
Now if you go to the earliest Gospel Mark,
the saints of Jesus are very short.
There's short parables, short teaching saints.
The only exception is Mark 13, the olive at discourse.
We have a whole chapter where Jesus was given
an extended prophecy of sermon.
Matthew to be sure has long sermons,
some of the mouths of the greatest example
of that chapter 57, but he has five of those sermons.
But no one has dialogues like John does. And we'll
talk about this as we move into material, but Nicodemus in John chapter 3, the woman at the well
and John 4, talking to Martha and Mary and John 11, the farewell discourses after the last supper.
You have 14, 15, 16, 17 Jesus is speaking at length to disciples. And there's a power in dialogue
because as you see Jesus speaking with one person,
and I hope to talk about this as we set up chapter one,
that person may be a stand in for you.
And you almost feel like Jesus is speaking to you.
There's an immediacy about this gospel,
which I think is so powerful.
That was the basis for your book, right?
Eric becoming the beloved disciple?
Yeah, exactly.
So as we move into John chapter one, the high
Christology of John is established in the first 18 verses. I used to say the
Prologue of the Gospel, John was John 1, 1 to 18, and we'll talk about this in
more detail in a moment, the so-called Logos hymn. Jesus is the divine word who
became flesh. And then I said, well, 19 to 51 is moving into the ministry. But as I was doing a study for Lincoln
Blue Mel's masterful collection on New Testament, it's a great resource for
this year. New Testament history, culture, and society, or something, but it's a
collection and theology, a lot of great, Larry St. Scholars have contributed to it.
And Lincoln asked me to do the chapter on the Gospel of John. As I was looking at
the outline that I put together for that chapter, the outline for the gospel of John, as I was looking at the outline that I put together for that chapter,
the outline for the gospel of John, originally had the prologue just being those first 18 verses,
but then it became apparent to me that verses 19 to 51, which we're also going to talk about today,
where Jesus encounters people and people encounter him, that was also part of the prologue.
As we slide the moment after we finish our discussion of the background and the authorship
and the audience and the structure of the gospel as a whole, as we slide into our discussion
of chapter 1 this week's Come Follow Me assignment, I'm going to argue that that chapter gives
you the two main themes of the gospel of John.
The primary one, which I had known since I was a senior in high school, the Divinity
of Jesus, the Hy high Christology of John.
But the one that was new and gave birth to that book
you mentioned versus 19 to 51 is the encounters
people have with Jesus.
I realized this is also a gospel about discipleship.
When people encounter Jesus, how did I respond to him?
Now some of course reject him,
but those who do accept him,
how do they become what we call in Greek Mothatease?
The Cyphal is both a learner, that's the way we usually think of a disciple being a student, but it's also an apprentice.
Someone who's not just learning from the master, but someone who's seeking to become like the master.
And so the secondary theme of this gospel, I argue, is discipleship. And the disciples we're going to talk about
in the second part of this discussion,
give us the template or the model for that.
And so I decided to do a whole book,
not on what I thought I would write.
I thought when I finally write a book about John,
it's going to be about the high-christology of John.
It could be about the divine Jesus.
But it ended up being a book about discipleship.
Because one of the things that struck me
as I got into the gospel of John
is how dramatic it is.
And he draws these powerful characters,
and then I've already mentioned Jesus talks
with them, their dialogues.
I mean, it's like a play.
And characters, so I did a lot of study of character theory.
And how characters done in the Hebrew Bible,
and particularly in Greek tragedy,
you know, that was my old field before I went into religion. And I said, wow, each of the main characters in John
represents a different faith walk, different people encounter Jesus and because of their life
situation, their background, who they are, they respond differently, and their walk of faith is
different from each other. Okay, these first disciples are going to talk about respond one way.
The mother of Jesus in chapter 2 at the wedding at Canaan, as she goes, mom, sure to know who he is, she responds a different way.
Then you have Nicodemus who's kind of like this teacher in Israel. He's a professor. He's a sitting at an lecturer.
And he actually has trouble understanding Jesus on a spiritual level, although he gets there eventually by the end of the book.
Then you have the woman at the well and outsider.
She's a woman, but she's an outsider ethnically too.
She's a Samaritan.
A Samaritan.
And then you do another layer,
at least in Jesus' dialogue,
with her, she has kind of an interesting
and challenging marital history.
She seems to have been rejected by her own community.
And yet she is the first missionary in the gospel of John.
She responds by running to her village
and preaching and the whole village gets converted.
In fact, that's the only time Jesus is called
Savior in the gospel of John,
is when the Samaritan has come up to the woman
at the well and they say,
we no longer believe because of your word,
but because we found out for ourselves
that he is the Christ, the Savior of the world,
not just of the Jews.
Moving on, there's this wonderful family in Bethany, which is in the Savior of the world, not just of the Jews. Moving on, there's this wonderful
family in Bethany, which is in the middle of this gospel, Martha Lazarus and Mary of Bethany,
which I like to call the Friends of Jesus. You've got Thomas and Peter at the end who are
impulsive but devoted disciples, fallible but faithful disciples. They all have these different
walks and experiences. And what that said to me, it was about the same time, John.
You mentioned my devotional back in 2018.
It was the same time I was doing my devotional.
There are so many people who have so many different experiences in the church today.
Whether because of the socioeconomic background, their faith background, their sexual orientation,
their gender, their race, and the gospel of John was
giving me some models for how that was okay, and that maybe people could find themselves
in one of these characters.
Of course, the danger is once you start saying diversity, where's the body of Christ,
where's the unity?
In fact, some years ago, I was on the college diversity inclusion committee, and we didn't
actually end up doing this, but I actually said once the college said,
I would prefer to say inclusion and diversity rather than diversity and inclusion.
Because the goal is inclusion.
We want everyone to be part of the same team, the same body of Christ, the same church.
Now, let's recognize their diversity.
We don't want to minimize that.
So I thought, how am I going to control this?
If I write a chapter in this little book on each of these
characters in John, and at the end of each chapter,
I have a little application section where I compare it
to someone today.
I will confess, I was Nicodemus.
I was a guy with too many questions,
who was too intellectual, who had to really struggle
to get my testimony.
It wasn't until the end when Nicodemus sees Jesus on the cross in chapter 19. He realizes,
oh, that's what he was saying in John 3. When you see the Son of Man lifted up
upon the cross. So I actually use myself in a crisis of faith I had on my
mission as the application section at the end of chapter and Nicodemus.
But the conclusion, how am I going to tie this all together? How am I going to
have the unity of faith? Isn't that what Joseph Smith read in James?
One faith, one baptism.
And I realized and we're going to come back now
to the authorship of the gospel, John.
It was the figure of the blebid disciple
who gave us the model for the inclusion for the unity.
The author.
The author or source.
We'll talk about this in a moment.
The author or source of this gospel never names himself. And it's only towards the end of the gospel starting with the last supper that
he's called the God. And there's a disciple of him, Jesus loved. And he appears in four
powerful scenes. He may appear in this first chapters. We'll see as we finally get the gospel
doctor lesson for the week. He may appear in chapter one, but what we see at the last supper
is he is the disciple leaning in the arms of Jesus. Our King James says leaning in the bosom of Jesus.
In my own translation of this, I say, reclining in his arms because the word
Copone, which can be translated, bosom means embrace. And real quick for fun.
The only other time that word is used is at the end of the
high Christology part of chapter one, when it says that the word was in the bosom of the
father's or King James. Just as the word was in the bosom of the father, this disciple is
in the bosom where they embrace the Jesus. Isn't that lovely? So anyway, we're introduced
to him there. Then he may be the one who is walking with Peter after the arrest of Jesus
to the high priest, Paulus. The next important scene is in chapter 19 when he is sent the
foot of the cross with the mother of Jesus and Mary, and Mary the aunt. He's right there
sent the foot of the cross. And then of course he and Peter are running when they hear the
tomb's empty. They're running to find the empty tomb. And then finally, at the end in chapter 21,
after Peter's kind of rehabilitated
after the threefold denial,
the Lord asked them three times,
if he loves me, gets to say three times,
I love you, Lord, he says, okay,
if he had my sheep,
has this little personal priesthood interview
a prophecy about how it's gonna end his ministry,
it's through martyrdom.
He turns around and he feeds the disciple
whom Jesus loves following.
He says, okay, I'm going to die.
I'm going to be martyr.
What about this guy?
It's really interesting because Jesus says,
if you notice how I come again, what is that to you?
And we usually just go straight to section 7 and talk about the translation of John
and the post translation career of John.
But we missed the context.
Jesus raises this because Peter is saying, okay, I'm following you this way
and I'm going gonna lay down my life
Re what about this guy and the Lord said to Peter no matter what happens to John let me live for I come again
What is that to you?
You follow me which is so powerful. We don't judge the discipleship or the ministry of other people
We just follow the Lord himself. So I have these four things from my conclusion.
We can be like the bleb to Cypill, leaning in the arms of Jesus' love. The last supper
says we take the sacraments, we participate in ordinances, we can stand with him at the foot
of the cross, having a testimony he died for the sins of the world, we can be like him running
with hope to the empty tomb to find out that he's risen. And then we can continue to follow him.
However, that is without judging other people's discipleship, we can follow him to the end.
And so that's how that book ended, Hank and John, is I use the beloved disciple figure
as the binding model, no matter what your personal walk is like.
These are the things we need to all share.
The love of Christ, testimony they died for us,
hope in the resurrection, and a commitment to follow him. This is fantastic. I love that the church
let us just do one chapter of a single gospel to allow us this time to talk about the gospels
individually. Like you've been saying, they each have separate unique missions to them. If you can
see them separate from one another, you'll get more out of them.
You've certainly shown us that with John. It's interesting what you were saying before, Eric, about.
There was an old orange religion to 11 manual, which did a harmony. But the one that they have now
goes Matthew and then Mark and then Luke. And I love it that way so that we can look at unique voice and
contribution and everything to each one and that's kind of what you were just
saying Hank and it's fun to be able to say now you'll notice that in the market
account we get a little of this but the Matthew channel doesn't mention and
things like that but I was curious Eric about I think you said you prefer
teaching them one at a time. Yeah the way
I do it is you know I do some historical and literary background for a couple
lectures and then I do infant scenarios so I do Matthew one through two
in a lesson and Luke one through two in a lesson so we get the background and
then I do Mark up and tell Jerusalem so you get Mark's portrayal of this as I
called this John Wayne Jesus
with all the miracles. You've read my book, The Miracles of Jesus. Mark has 19 discrete
miracle stories. Now while it's true Matthew Luke have 21, Mark so much shorter miracles
are happening much more frequently, and his descriptions of them. So for instance,
a miracle they all share, the story about cast not the Legion of Devils. Mark's count
is twice as long as Matthew's account.
Because Mark is about the beads of Jesus, whereas Matthew is mostly about the teachings of
Jesus and then Luke kind of balances them.
So what I do is I teach Mark, and then I have an exam.
And then I teach Matthew and then Luke, and my students have read Mark, and so they can
see how Matthew either adds something to what Mark had like the sermon on the mount, how he shortened something like shorter miracle descriptions,
what Luke does, and I have an exam, and then I do John, and then what I do for the last
few weeks of the semester is I bring them all together for the passion narrative.
So we start with the triumphal entry, the last what my new book is about Trevin Hatch and I did his book on Holy Week. By then the students know those
four voices so well those four portrayals of Jesus so well that we can take
them together and say okay this is what Jesus did on that Sunday what is
the way the Monday and Tuesday. Here's the story about the anointing on Wednesday.
Here's the last supper and get semening on Thursday. Here's good Friday.
And on my exam I can actually put passages from the gospel and say tell me the story about the anointing on Wednesday. Here's the last supper and get some any on Thursday. Here's good Friday.
And on my exam, I can actually put passages
from the gospel and say, tell me which gospel this is from.
And they can always do it.
All four gospels have Peter cut off someone's ear
in the Garden of Cassandra when Jesus was being arrested.
But only Luke has and put it back on.
And that's because Luke's gospel that focuses
on healings and
compassion. Jesus only enluved as Jesus on the cross teach the first missionary discussion
and they can identify it. Oh, here's an interesting one since we're talking about John. Mark, Matthew,
and Luke, that's how I always say Mark, Matthew, Luke, rather Matthew, Matthew, Mark, Matthew,
Luke, all have Simon and Sirene help Jesus carry carry the cross to Golgotha. In John, that story
is left out because the Johanine Jesus doesn't need help from anyone. In John, Jesus carries
his own cross the whole way. So if I put on the exam, Jesus carrying his cross came to Golgotha.
My students know in an instance that's John because they've had the experience with the
gospels individually that even when we're taking them together
They can identify the style or the portrayal of Jesus or the ampisties. No, that's awesome
I like the the John Wayne Jesus of Mark and I don't know what you guys think of this
But I feel like the bookmark sounds a little like the book Mormon because people are always amazed and astonished
Yeah, yeah book Mormon has people that are always amazed and astonished. Yeah, yeah. The bookworm has people that are always amazed
and astonished and marked the way he describes it.
They were amazed, they were astonished.
And it sounds like the book Mormon.
Well, some of you that heard my discussion with you
from the Psalms or read any of my books,
they're ever heard me talk.
You know, I never speak without talking about my boy Sam.
And our family has a tradition.
We read Matthew, one through two,
and Luke, one through two in December, getting ready for Christmas as part of our advent celebration.
And then between Christmas and Holy Week, we pick a gospel to read together as a family.
Well, when Sam got old enough to be part of this, whenever I'd say, Sam what gospel should we read? He would always say, let's read Mark.
Well, I always assumed it was because it was the shortest. But once he finally said, Dad, because in Mark, Jesus does stuff.
This is the gospel of action.
And Mark Goodacre, great scholar, he's got North Carolina Duke, I forget which one.
But he has great podcasts here that some of our listeners may be interested in following.
But he talks about the gospel, and he and others have done these projects where people
read the gospel of Mark aloud.
It can be done between two or three hours, the whole gospel.
And it was meant in the original Christian congregations we read aloud.
Books were very expensive.
Schools are very expensive.
So it was read aloud.
So in this new book, the Trevon and I did, we have at the beginning of each chapter for
each day of Holy Week.
We have the text that families and individuals can read together.
And they're always Mark and John.
Matthew and Luke, if there's something unique there,
but Mark is so dramatic, and I love what you said, John,
is so engaging.
So Mark has both the earliest account
of the Passion Week in resurrection,
but also the one that's the most dynamic.
And then John, who is, in fact,
anciently, they used to come John the theologian.
And as we move into John one and read those open verses,
it's because he looks at Jesus as God
and he looks at the principles.
And so I kind of framed each chapter
with Mark and John quotations.
Using Luke obviously, or Luke 22, forgets that many,
there are sometimes the Matthew and Luke
give things the other ones don't have.
So shall we talk a little bit more about John
and then move to John chapter one?
Absolutely. This is fantastic. So far I feel like you can send your excitement for the gospel itself, which I think our listeners are going to appreciate.
You got me to get ahead of myself by asking about that little book becoming the beloved disciple. We should have talked about the
authorship of the gospel, John. Now the tradition that it was John the Apostle is very old,
it goes till the late second early third century, there are a lot of pieces of internal evidence that
always convinced readers of the gospel that this was John the Son of Zebedee in the Apostle.
I think as Linerity Saints we bring in some Book of Mormon and some doctrine of Covenants
evidence and we are reinforced by that. So I think the vast majority of Laird and St. Readers
and many scholars would say that John the Apostle
was the author.
There are some modern scholars who make other arguments.
And for those who are interested in that,
you can read either my chapter in the Blumel volume
or even the introduction of becoming the blow disciple
and I talk about that and give you some things
that you can pursue.
But let's just assume for our discussion
in a church context that John the Apostle
was the source for the author of this text.
And I'll explain why I say source for author in a moment.
Why does any ever name himself?
Well, there are all these none of the gospel authors do.
All four gospels are formal anonymous.
Mark doesn't say, I marked the translator
and assistant of Peter hearing him preach
wrote this gospel of action. And Matthew doesn't say, I marked the translator and assistant of Peter hearing him preach, wrote this gospel
of action.
And the Matthew doesn't say, I had former tax collector wanted to write sermons of Jesus
or Luke, the compassion and detailed evangelist.
I want to show stories of Jesus healing people and talk about Mary's perspective in the
birth.
None of them do that.
None of them actually name themselves.
So in that sense, it's not unusual that the author doesn't name himself. But what's odd is, with the one exception of when Levi in Mark and Luke and Matthew and the
Gospel of Matthew, the public in his call to follow Jesus, you never have Matthew as a character
other than being in the Apostolic list. And yet, I've already mentioned that the author or
source of the Gospel of John is a character towards the end.
So why is he so hesitant to say who he is?
Is it modesty? What is it?
Well, I'm convinced as many scholars are,
it's because he doesn't want to distract.
I mean, for those of us who love Jesus
and if he's Jesus' best friend,
he doesn't want to take any attention away from Jesus
is about Jesus, not himself.
But by preserving his anonymity, it allows readers to see themselves in his experiences.
So if it said, John the beloved was in the arms of Jesus like, yeah, of course, he's his best friend.
John the Apostle stood at the foot of the crossing, ran to the tomb. Well, of course, he got to get
that testimony. He's an apostle. I'm just a professor or I'm just an account. That's not me, but by
remaining anonymous, he can be a type for all of disciples and as disciples, we should all be loving of
Jesus.
So the beloved disciple can be there for all of us and in my book, I actually lay out some of the other characters who are really significant
are also unnamed.
The mother of Jesus is never named Mary in this gospel.
She's always just the mother of Jesus in chapter 2 and in chapter 19.
Okay, so some other characters, and we won't go into it because we've got to get back to
John chapter 1.
The suggestion is that the author or source of this gospel did not name himself and maintain his anonymity
so that readers could identify with the experiences
he was blessed to have.
Now, why do I keep saying source or author?
At the end of John chapter 21,
there's a clear editorial edition.
This is chapter 21 versus 24 and 25. This is chapter 21, verses 24 and 25.
This is after Jesus has told Peter, the risen Lord has told Peter, don't ask about what's
happening to the disciple who's following me, the beloved disciple, you just follow me.
Anyway, there's this edition, verses 24 and 25, which most scholars think an editor
added later.
This is the disciple which testified of these things and wrote these things. We know
his testimony is true. Then goes on to say, if we wrote everything this guy knew about Jesus, the world
couldn't hold all the books. So there are two things written in that verse. He testified of these
things and he wrote them. So, during the beloved disciple, Dejon shared his testimony early for years, even decades before he wrote anything down.
When I was doing a chapter actually on Luke, not on John, for a very symposium volume we
had some years ago, Valert the Christ.
I don't know if you remember this thing.
It was the year we did Christology, New Testament Christology, the Spirit Symposium.
I did a chapter on Luke, and I found a really interesting study that suggested that the author of Luke not only had Matthew and Mark before him. I did the chapter on Luke and I found a really interesting study that suggested that
the author of Luke not only had Matthew and Mark before him, even though the gospel of John
hadn't been written yet, he had access to some of the same material as the gospel of John.
And why could it not be that Luke heard John testify of things he heard and saw the say
you do? So there's this idea that there was this long oral tradition
where the beloved disciple was traveling around, sharing his testimony, of course he would.
Now, did he write this gospel? Probably, perhaps, but does that mean that it wasn't later edited?
Now, I've already mentioned that Mark seems to have written the testimony of Peter. That's
an example of where we have a testimony of a possible,
but we name it by the guy who wrote it down.
Maybe here we have a gospel named for the person who board the testimony
and other people may have written and down and edited.
Most of your listeners don't care about this,
but if you get interested in Johanna's scholarship
and you start reading stuff about the composition of history of John,
just know that someone who spent a good 20 years doing this can read all that stuff,
find it interesting and not be threatened by it.
Let me tell you why I have no problem with compositional history.
I've got a great example in the book of Mormon,
I'm a 34.
I know it gives a rock and testimony about the infinite eternal atonement.
And I'm at some point wrote in his missionary journal or he wrote it down in his record.
And later Mormon abridges that and put that in place of more men and
joseph miff later translates that
i have no problem with compositional history with some of the stuff in
sermons or teaching that was verbal and someone else writes it down and
someone else abridges it and then someone else translates it
just know that i have a firm testimony that the person who
is the source of this material and whom I believe wrote it down at least the early versions of it,
knew Jesus, saw and heard the things. So the next question is actually established that the source
and or author of this text was a witness, an eye witness and an ear witness, is who is his original audience.
We may be oversimplified, but it's useful for students.
We say that Mark's writing for the early Saints in Rome, where Peter had been preaching,
and we talk about Matthew writing for Jewish Christians and perhaps other Jews, and we
talk about Luke writing for Gentile audience.
And we often say that John was writing for members of the church.
And that could very well be true.
There are some passages I won't go into here
where we don't know if he's talking about people who are going to begin to believe
or people who already believe.
I actually think John's writing for both.
He's writing for members to deepen their faith.
But I am of the firm conviction.
This is also a great missionary tool
that he wrote for people who didn't know Jesus.
And all you have to do is watch the Super Bowl and see some evangelical Christian friend of ours with
John 316, 17th in his forehead to know that this is a missionary track. I think it's like the book of
Mormon. Yeah, the book of Mormon is written for us, but it's written for everybody. It's written
for Laminate to get it Jews to get it, us, et cetera. The initial audience I do believe was a group of early Christians
maybe in the circle around John,
whom he wanted to deepen their faith
and help understand Jesus better.
But it very quickly was used for Jews and Gentiles
to come to a knowledge that Jesus was the Christ.
And then, of course, in this day and age people read it.
And in fact, I think the theme or the purpose of this text is found at the end of John chapter
20, which I think was the end of the book before chapter 21 was added, where it says in verses
1331, many other signs truly to Jesus do in the presence of His disciples, which are not
written in this book.
But these are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God and that
believing you might have life through his name.
Anyone who reads this book at any point is the intended audience of this text.
That's great.
The last thing I'd like to say is by way of introduction before we get to John chapter
one, now that we know a little bit about the source of the author and we know who we are
as the audience,
what is this book's structure, how is it set up? Because I think it's really important we're trying
to understand a gospel, to understand how the pieces fit together. And that's why my particular
take on John chapter one, so important. How does it fit as the prologue of the whole book?
So John chapter one, in my argument as the prologue, the whole book? So John chapter one in my argument is the prologue with the two themes,
the divinity of Jesus Christ, John 1-1-18,
and the theme of discipleship in 119-251.
And then we have a section, John 2-11,
which is called the Book of Signs by a lot of scholars.
There are only seven clear miracles in the first half of the book of John,
unlike that 19th and Mark in the 21 in Matthew and Luke.
And whereas John, you know this from my little book on the miracles of Jesus,
the common word for miracles in the synoptic gospels is dunamace,
our word dynamite comes from that.
Powerful deeds.
But John, they're always called St. Maya, which means signs. In my translation,
I usually render it as miraculous signs, but we know they're miracles. But it's not
so much the great deed that Jesus does for someone or a group of people. The miracles
are primarily for the audience, the readers in the gospel of John, to know more about
Jesus. What do they reveal about Jesus? So you've got these seven miraculous
signs changing water to wine and then you have healing the nobleman's son and the man
at the Pula Bethesda and then you have walking in water and feeding the seven thousand and
then the race, then you have healing the man born blind and you have the raising and Lazarus.
So chapters two through eleven are the book of signs. Then chapters 12 to 20,
second half of the gospel is what I like to call the book of glory. I borrowed that from a great
Johanna and scholar Raymond Brown. He was the president of the Society of Difficult Literature,
great scholar, but he was also an ordained Roman Catholic priest. So he was, what we would call
in our church of the Cypals scholar, a believing scholar. He called the book of glory because a lot of times
Jesus will start saying, my glory is I'm going to be lifted up and I'm going to
glorify the Father and the Father will glorify me. And I think Lardy sent you
to embrace that title of the book of glory because we know from Moses 139, this
is my work and my glory to bring to pass the immortality
in eternal life of man.
And that's what chapters 12 to 20 are all about.
And then chapter 21 is the epilogue.
Added later it appears this post-resurrection appearance on the shore of the Sea of Galilee,
where I would say the theme of discipleship in the second half of chapter 1 is reprised
as he appears to seven disciples by the Sea of Galley and then has that personal encounter and dialogue with Simon Peter and
that final fate and testimony of the beloved disciple in verses 20 to 25. So if you
kind of have that structure in mind as you're reading individual chapters you
can see how it fits into the whole purpose of the gospel. I love big picture
before we get close up.
How do you want to approach us?
We begin these first verses in the book of John.
Well, one of the things I'd like to point out,
and John's not unique in this,
but because of my work in John,
I see it here a lot more.
The gospel of John very consciously echoes the book of Genesis.
So there's a lot of what we call intertextuality.
So beginning of Genesis, bear a sheet. So there's a lot of what we call intertextuality. So beginning of Genesis
bear a sheet. So in the beginning God said, let there be light. So we have here in the beginning
was the word and in the Greek I just have his handy and our hay and whole logos in the beginning
was the word. So God spoke in Genesis one and how is he speaking in John 1 while he's speaking to his son Jesus.
So we have the same kind of thing.
So we have the original creation in Genesis 1 and even though this is talking about the
original creation because this is the new testament, what we're going to see is that Jesus
has come to work a new creation.
So you've got this kind of interesting thing going on. Now when we say in the beginning with the word
and our hay and halogos, a lagoos,
depending upon I want to pronounce that classic
to argue about it, the term for word, lagoos,
if you look at it up in a big dictionary,
big Greek lexicon, it will go several pages. It means all kinds of things.
So it can mean a word that we speak or a word that we write or a word that we
read, but it can also mean a thought and idea, a principle. So it has what we call a broad
semantic range. And someone reading this Greek would have known that. But the most important thing is, once again keen back to Genesis 1.1,
in the beginning God said,
God is speaking to us now through His Son.
And this is where we get the idea.
And we know this very well in the church,
the restoration to the temple and other senses,
that the God the Father works through His Son, Jesus Christ.
One of the things that Aristotle said,
distinguished humans from other animals, the rest of the
animal creation, was logos or logos. And so what Aristotle would
say is, we have a logo to thought and idea, concept in our head,
and a word, whether we speak it or write it, is how we communicate
that to someone else. And then someone else reads or hears our
words, and then translates those into thoughts
in her own head.
Word is the intermediary.
Well, suddenly you see how this works.
You have God the Father and you have us and how has God communicate interacting, affecting
things.
It is through this word that is with him at the beginning. In Greek it says,
Cahologos impostom to own.
So in our English it says,
the word was with God.
Here it's actually kind of at God's side
is one way of rendering it.
So they're there together.
And then as we've already mentioned,
and the word was God.
So he was divine from the beginning.
The same was in the beginning with God, all things were
made by him and without him was not anything made that was made. So once again, this is providing
actually, together with the book, beginning the book of Hebrews and some other text, scriptural
validation for what we know liturgically through the temple, that God creates through his son.
Now, in him was life and life was the light of men.
One of the things you have to understand in John
is that things are always conceptual.
We mentioned earlier, it's very symbolic.
So when you say life, you think of biological functioning.
And you think of light, you think of electromagnetic
illumination.
But in John, it's always more than that.
So it's not just biological life.
It's life in a spiritual sense.
It's not just light from the sun or from electric lamp.
It is illumination.
The word is much more than what we experience in this physical sphere.
And the light shines in the darkness and the darkness comprehends it not.
Now, in Greek, it says, the darkness did not comprehend it.
The word is actually,
Ka'eh-Skutia-Al-Tol-U-Katela-Ben.
Ka'eh-Rombano means literally to take down,
Lombano means to take something,
Kata'z, the adverbial prefix,
like sacking a quarterback.
Now, in Kamm-Nee,
to hold something in your mind and hence understand
it, which is what our English word comprehend usually means. But the King James translators
had meant something more than that. The darkness not only did not understand the light, it
wasn't able to suck the quarterback, it wasn't able to take him down, it wasn't able
to was restrained him. I like that. Please join us for part two of this podcast.