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Why the Gospel of John Is Nothing Like the Other Three

17:382,482 words · ~12 min readUrduTranscribed May 14, 2026
AI Summary

The Gospel of John functions as a theological companion rather than a historical summary, intentionally omitting iconic synoptic elements to focus on Christ's divine identity and internal spiritual life. It offers a unique chronological framework and high Christology that suggests Jesus is not just the Messiah, but the 'I Am' of the Old Testament.

Understanding the distinct nature of John’s Gospel is crucial for biblical literacy, as it provides the primary historical basis for the three-year ministry of Jesus and the most explicit biblical foundation for the doctrine of the Trinity.

Section summaries

0:00-2:00

The Four Men by the Fire (Metaphorical Intro)

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A creative personification of the four gospel writers to establish their distinct 'voices'.

2:00-4:00

The Synoptic Framework

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Essential definition of the 'Synoptic' gospels to provide a baseline for comparison.

4:00-6:00

Geography and Timeline Discrepancies

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Critical for understanding the historical arguments for a three-year ministry.

6:00-7:00

What is Missing in John

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Surprising list of major Christian elements (Lord's Prayer, Parables) that John excludes.

7:00-10:00

Unique Johannine Stories

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Summarizes specific stories like Nicodemus and Lazarus; useful if you aren't familiar with these texts.

10:00-14:00

Theological Core: I Am & Farewell Discourse

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The heart of the video's theological argument regarding Christology and the Holy Spirit.

14:00-17:00

Authorship and Conclusion

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Discusses the identity of the 'Beloved Disciple' and the specific purpose of the text.

Key points

  • The Synoptic vs. Johannine Chronology — While the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke) suggest a one-year ministry centered in Galilee, John records multiple Passovers and frequent trips to Jerusalem, indicating a three-year timeline.
  • Intentional Omissions and the 'Theological Companion' Theory — John excludes the Lord’s Prayer, the Beatitudes, the Eucharist institution, and all parables, likely because he was writing for a community that already possessed the Synoptic accounts.
  • The 'I Am' Statements and High Christology — Unlike the 'Messianic Secret' in Mark where Jesus is indirect, John’s Jesus uses 'Ego Eimi' (I Am) to explicitly claim the divine name revealed to Moses at the burning bush.
  • The Farewell Discourse as Sacramental Mystery — Chapters 13-17 provide an intimate, five-chapter look at the Last Supper, including the foot washing and the High Priestly Prayer, which are absent in other gospels.
John wasn't trying to write history the way we mean it today. None of them were. They were writing testimony. Narrator
John's Jesus is not being subtle. He is making an explicit unmistakable worldshaking claim not just to be the Messiah but to share in the very identity of God. Narrator

AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.

0:00

Imagine you're sitting around a fire

0:02

late at night somewhere in the ancient

0:04

world. There are four men there, each of

0:07

whom knew Jesus or knew people who did.

0:11

And someone says, "Tell me about him.

0:14

Tell me who he was." The first man leans

0:17

forward and starts talking fast. He's

0:21

urgent, breathless almost. Every

0:24

sentence feels like it's rushing to the

0:26

next one. And immediately and

0:29

immediately and immediately. He wants

0:33

you to feel the momentum of it, the

0:35

miracles, the movement, the sheer

0:38

unstoppable force of this man, Jesus,

0:41

moving through Galilee. He paints with

0:44

broad brush strokes, bold colors. He

0:47

wants you to follow. The second man is

0:50

more careful, more organized. He's

0:53

clearly thought about this a long time.

0:56

He lays things out in a structure almost

0:59

like a teacher would. He talks about

1:02

Jesus fulfilling things, ancient

1:04

promises, old prophecies. He's writing

1:07

for a community that knows the

1:09

scriptures and he wants them to see the

1:11

throughine. The third man, he's

1:14

different from the first two. He has a

1:16

heart for the people no one else is

1:18

writing about. The poor, the women, the

1:21

outsiders, the ones everyone else

1:23

overlooked. His stories have a warmth to

1:26

them, a tenderness. He weeps with

1:29

people. He notices them. And then

1:32

there's the fourth man.

1:35

He's been quiet this whole time. He's

1:38

older now. He's had decades to sit with

1:40

everything he saw and heard. And when he

1:43

finally speaks, he doesn't start with a

1:46

birth. He doesn't start with a baptism.

1:49

He doesn't start with history at all. He

1:52

starts at the beginning of everything.

1:54

In the beginning was the word and the

1:57

word was with God and the word was God.

2:00

That's the gospel of John. And from that

2:03

first sentence, you already know this is

2:06

not like the other three.

2:09

The synoptic world. To understand what

2:11

makes John so different, we have to

2:13

first understand what the other three

2:15

gospels share. Matthew, Mark, and Luke

2:18

are called the synoptic gospels.

2:21

That word synoptic comes from a Greek

2:24

phrase meaning seen together. And

2:26

scholars use it precisely because these

2:28

three can be laid side by side and

2:31

compared. They overlap. They borrow from

2:34

each other. They tell many of the same

2:36

stories, sometimes in nearly identical

2:38

language. They share a common skeleton.

2:41

Jesus is baptized by John the Baptist.

2:44

He's tempted in the wilderness. He calls

2:47

his disciples. He teaches in parables.

2:50

the sewer, the prodigal son, the mustard

2:53

seed. He heals the sick. He feeds 5,000

2:57

people with almost nothing. He enters

3:00

Jerusalem on a donkey. He's betrayed,

3:03

arrested, crucified, and raised. That's

3:06

the ark. And all three synoptic writers

3:09

follow it with remarkable consistency.

3:12

They also share a common geography. In

3:15

the synoptics, Jesus spends most of his

3:18

ministry in Galilee. the rural

3:20

workingclass north of the country. He

3:23

comes down to Jerusalem essentially once

3:26

at the very end for the Passover that

3:28

leads to his death. One visit, one final

3:32

week, and then it's over. Now, hold that

3:35

in your mind because John is about to

3:37

turn it upside down.

3:40

John's different map. When you open the

3:42

Gospel of John and start reading, the

3:44

first thing you notice, if you're paying

3:46

attention, is that Jesus is in Jerusalem

3:50

constantly. John's Jesus doesn't stay in

3:53

Galilee and make one dramatic final

3:55

journey south. He travels back and forth

3:58

repeatedly. He's in Jerusalem for the

4:00

Passover. Then he's in Judea. Then

4:04

Galilee. Then Jerusalem again for a

4:06

festival. Then Galilee. Then Jerusalem

4:10

again. Then across the Jordan. Then to

4:13

Bethany, then Jerusalem for his final

4:16

week.

4:17

Scholars have counted at least three,

4:20

possibly four distinct Passover

4:22

celebrations in John's gospel. That

4:25

means the ministry John describes spans

4:28

at least 3 years. The synoptics taken on

4:31

their own could be read as a ministry of

4:33

only one year, maybe less.

4:37

This isn't a small discrepancy. This is

4:40

a fundamentally different picture of

4:43

what Jesus's life looked like, and it

4:45

raises a question that has fascinated

4:48

historians and theologians for 2,000

4:51

years, which is historically accurate.

4:55

Did Jesus visit Jerusalem once or many

4:58

times? Was his ministry one year or

5:01

three? Most historians when they try to

5:04

reconstruct a timeline actually lean on

5:07

John for the duration.

5:10

The three-year framework fits better

5:12

with what we know about the rhythms of

5:15

Jewish life, the Passover calendar, the

5:18

way movements grow and develop. The

5:21

synoptics may have collapsed the

5:23

timeline for literary and theological

5:26

reasons, but here's the thing. John

5:28

wasn't trying to write history the way

5:30

we mean it today. None of them were.

5:33

They were writing testimony. They were

5:35

writing meaning. And John was doing that

5:38

more deliberately, more consciously,

5:41

more theologically than any of the

5:43

others. The missing stories.

5:46

Here's something that will surprise you

5:48

if you've never noticed it before. The

5:51

Gospel of John does not contain the

5:53

Lord's Prayer. Think about that. The

5:56

prayer that billions of Christians have

5:58

prayed for 2,000 years. Our father who

6:01

art in heaven. It's not in John. Not a

6:05

single word of it. John also doesn't

6:08

have the sermon on the mount. He has no

6:10

biatitudes. No blessed are the poor in

6:13

spirit. No blessed are the meek.

6:16

Nothing. He has no parables. Not one.

6:19

The good Samaritan. Not in John. The

6:22

prodigal son. Not in John. the lost

6:25

sheep, the 10 virgins, the talents, the

6:28

laborers in the vineyard. None of it. He

6:31

doesn't have the transfiguration where

6:34

Jesus' face shines like the sun on the

6:36

mountaintop.

6:38

He doesn't have the institution of the

6:40

eukarist at the last supper. No, this is

6:43

my body. This is my blood. He doesn't

6:46

have the agony in the garden of

6:48

Gethsemane where Jesus sweats blood and

6:51

begs the father to take the cup away.

6:54

These are some of the most iconic scenes

6:57

in the Christian story, and John leaves

7:00

them all out. Why?

7:03

The most likely explanation is also the

7:06

most fascinating one. John probably knew

7:09

the other gospels existed. He was

7:11

probably writing for a community that

7:13

already had access to them. He didn't

7:16

need to repeat what had already been

7:18

told. He was writing to go deeper, to

7:21

add what the others hadn't said, to

7:23

illuminate what the others had only

7:25

hinted at. He was writing a theological

7:28

companion, not a historical summary. The

7:31

stories only John tells.

7:34

In exchange for everything he leaves

7:36

out, John gives us things no one else

7:39

does. He gives us the wedding at Kaa,

7:42

the very first miracle, turning water

7:45

into wine at a feast. It's such a human

7:48

intimate scene. A family embarrassed

7:51

because the wine has run out. A mother

7:54

nudging her son. And Jesus quietly

7:58

transforming the ordinary into something

8:01

extraordinary.

8:03

The other three never mention it. He

8:05

gives us Nicodemus, a Pharisee, a

8:08

powerful religious leader who comes to

8:11

Jesus secretly in the night. There's

8:14

something so real about that detail. He

8:17

wants to know, but he's afraid to be

8:20

seen wanting to know. And in that

8:23

nighttime conversation, Jesus says one

8:26

of the most quoted lines in all of

8:28

scripture. You must be born again. He

8:31

gives us the woman at the well, a

8:34

Samaritan woman, which meant she was

8:36

doubly an outsider, both by ethnicity

8:39

and by reputation.

8:41

five husbands drawing water alone in the

8:45

heat of the day when no one else would

8:47

be there. And Jesus sits down with her

8:50

and has the longest recorded one-on-one

8:53

conversation in any of the four gospels.

8:56

He doesn't avoid her. He doesn't

8:58

condescend to her. He tells her quietly

9:02

who he is. He gives us the man born

9:05

blind. a whole chapter dedicated to one

9:08

healing, one man, and the long messy

9:11

aftermath of what happens when a miracle

9:14

disrupts the social order. It's almost

9:17

novelistic in its detail, the neighbors

9:20

arguing, the Pharisees interrogating,

9:23

the parents afraid to speak, and the man

9:26

himself growing bolder and bolder,

9:30

refusing to back down. He gives us

9:32

Lazarus, the most dramatic resurrection

9:35

story in any gospel. Four days dead,

9:39

wrapped in burial cloths, called out of

9:42

the tomb by name. And before it happens,

9:45

John gives us two words that have

9:47

stopped readers in their tracks for 20

9:49

centuries.

9:51

Jesus wept. Not a speech, not a

9:54

theological discourse, just grief.

9:58

raw human unashamed grief. Even knowing

10:04

what was about to happen, he wept with

10:07

the people who were weeping. That is

10:09

John's Jesus in a single image, the I am

10:13

statements.

10:15

Now, we get to the heart of what makes

10:17

John theologically unlike anything else

10:20

in the New Testament. In the synoptic

10:22

gospels, Jesus rarely makes explicit

10:25

claims about who he is. He teaches. He

10:28

heals. He calls people to follow. But

10:30

he's often indirect, speaking in

10:32

parables, deflecting questions, telling

10:35

people not to tell anyone what they've

10:37

seen. Scholars call this the messianic

10:41

secret. John's Jesus has no such secret.

10:45

In John, Jesus speaks about himself in

10:47

the most direct, stunning terms

10:50

imaginable.

10:51

And he does it through a series of

10:53

declarations that would have been

10:54

immediately explosive to any Jewish

10:57

listener. The I am statements. I am the

11:01

bread of life. I am the light of the

11:04

world. I am the gate. I am the good

11:08

shepherd. I am the resurrection and the

11:11

life. I am the way, the truth, and the

11:15

life. I am the true vine. Seven of them.

11:20

And every single one begins with those

11:22

two words. I am in Greek ego amy which

11:27

is the same phrase used in the Greek

11:29

translation of the Hebrew scriptures

11:31

when God speaks to Moses from the

11:33

burning bush and says I am who I am.

11:37

John's Jesus is not being subtle. He is

11:40

making an explicit unmistakable

11:43

worldshaking claim not just to be the

11:45

Messiah but to share in the very

11:47

identity of God. At one point in John,

11:51

Jesus says to the religious leaders,

11:53

"Before Abraham was, I am." And they

11:57

pick up stones to throw at him because

12:00

they understood exactly what he was

12:02

saying. He wasn't saying he had existed

12:05

for a long time. He was claiming the

12:07

divine name for himself. That kind of

12:10

language is simply not in Matthew, Mark,

12:13

or Luke. It belongs to John alone.

12:16

The long farewell.

12:19

There's one more section of John that

12:20

stands completely apart from anything in

12:22

the other gospels and it may be the most

12:25

extraordinary passage in the entire New

12:27

Testament. Chapters 13-1 17, the Last

12:31

Supper discourse. In the other gospels,

12:34

the Last Supper is relatively brief.

12:37

Jesus shares the bread and the cup.

12:40

There's some tension about who will

12:42

betray him. They sing a hymn and leave

12:44

for the garden. In John, it's an evening

12:48

that stretches across five full

12:50

chapters. Jesus washes his disciples

12:53

feet, an act so startling that Peter

12:56

refuses to let him do it. He talks about

12:59

going away and coming back. He talks

13:02

about the Holy Spirit whom he calls the

13:04

pariclete, the advocate, the comforter,

13:07

who will come and be with them after he

13:09

is gone. Let not your hearts be

13:12

troubled. You believe in God, believe

13:15

also in me. In my Father's house are

13:18

many rooms. Greater love has no one than

13:21

this, than to lay down one's life for

13:24

one's friends. I am the vine. You are

13:27

the branches. And then, and this is

13:30

breathtaking, he prays out loud for his

13:34

disciples, for the people who will come

13:37

after for you if you believe. He says,

13:41

"I am praying not only for these but for

13:44

all who will believe in me through their

13:46

word. It is a prayer that reaches across

13:50

time across 2,000 years." No other

13:53

gospel gives you this. No other gospel

13:57

lets you sit in the room and listen to

13:59

Jesus pray over the people who love him

14:02

on the last night of his life. John

14:05

wanted you to hear it. The author and

14:07

his purpose.

14:09

So, who wrote this? Who was sitting by

14:12

that fire? The oldest one, the one who

14:14

waited and thought and finally spoke

14:16

from the beginning of everything. The

14:19

tradition says it was John, the son of

14:21

Zebedee, one of the inner circle, one of

14:24

the fishermen Jesus called first. But

14:27

here's something beautiful. The author

14:30

never names himself in the text. He

14:33

refers to himself only as the disciple

14:36

whom Jesus loved. That phrase appears

14:39

five times. At the last supper, leaning

14:43

close to Jesus. At the foot of the

14:45

cross, where Jesus entrusts his mother

14:48

to his care at the empty tomb where he

14:51

outran Peter and arrived first. And in

14:55

the final chapter, sitting in a boat,

14:57

the first one to recognize Jesus on the

15:00

shore, the disciple whom Jesus loved. He

15:04

lets that be his whole identity. Not his

15:07

name, not his title, just the one who

15:11

was loved. And at the very end of the

15:13

gospel, he tells us plainly what he was

15:15

trying to do with all of it. He writes,

15:19

"These things are written so that you

15:22

may believe that Jesus is the Christ,

15:24

the son of God, and that by believing

15:27

you may have life in his name." That's

15:30

the whole mission, not to inform

15:34

Not just to record, but to produce

15:36

belief, to give life.

15:40

Four gospels, four voices, four

15:43

witnesses to the same impossible,

15:45

worldaltering life. Matthew, the

15:48

teacher, building a careful case. Mark

15:51

the storyteller, breathless and urgent.

15:54

Luke, the compassionate one, finding the

15:57

faces in the crowd everyone else walked

15:59

past. And John, the mystic, the

16:03

theologian, the old man who had spent a

16:05

lifetime not just remembering what Jesus

16:08

said, but asking what it meant, who

16:11

looked at everything he had seen and

16:13

heard, and came back with something that

16:16

wasn't just a biography. It was a

16:18

meditation, an invitation, a claim so

16:22

large it either changes everything or it

16:24

changes nothing. He started at the

16:27

beginning of time. He ended with a

16:30

shoreline, a fire, a fish breakfast, and

16:33

a question asked three times to a man

16:36

who had failed three times.

16:39

Do you love me? That's John. That's why

16:43

it's unlike anything else. And if you've

16:45

never read it as its own thing, not as

16:48

background noise to the other three, but

16:51

as its own complete, strange, luminous

16:54

document, I'd encourage you to try.

16:57

Start at chapter 1 verse 1. In the

16:59

beginning was the word and see where it

17:02

takes you.

17:05

If this video gave you a new perspective

17:07

on John or made you think about the

17:09

gospels differently, consider liking the

17:11

video. It helps more people discover

17:13

this content and shows it's worth

17:16

exploring further. If you're interested

17:18

in deeper insights into the Bible, early

17:20

Christianity, and overlooked questions,

17:23

subscribe and turn on notifications for

17:26

meaningful, indepth uploads, and share

17:30

your thoughts in the comments. Have you

17:32

ever read John all the way through and

17:34

what stood out or puzzled

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