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John 1:1: The Greek Meaning of “Word” That Changes Everything

30:535,125 words · ~26 min readUrduTranscribed May 15, 2026
AI Summary

John 1:1 identifies Jesus as the eternal 'Logos'—not merely a spoken sound or an abstract principle, but the personal Creator who is distinct from the Father yet shares the same divine identity.

Understanding the Johannine 'Logos' bridges the gap between Genesis and Greek philosophy, grounding Trinitarian orthodoxy in the specific linguistic and historical context of the first century.

Section summaries

0:00-4:00

The Meaning of Logos

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Essential definition of terms and the primary thesis of the video.

4:00-9:00

Genesis and Old Testament Context

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Crucial for understanding how John 1:1 functions as a 'new' Genesis.

9:00-12:00

Greek Philosophical Background

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Interesting for history buffs, but less critical if you only care about the theology.

12:00-15:00

Trinitarian Grammar (The Bridge)

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This is the core theological triage regarding the deity and distinction of Christ.

15:00-29:00

Incarnation to Resurrection

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Narrative arc showing how the 'Logos' theology plays out in the Gospel story.

29:00-30:00

Summary and Conclusion

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A synthesis of the main points and a concluding pastoral exhortation.

Key points

  • The Dual Identity of the Logos — John uses 'Logos' to navigate a narrow path: Jesus was 'with' God (personal distinction/relationship) and 'was' God (shared divine essence), preventing mistakes like Modalism or Arianism.
  • Genesis Echoes and Creative Authority — By starting with 'In the beginning,' John invokes the Genesis creation narrative to show that the Logos is not a creature but the agent through whom all things exist.
  • Contextualizing for Jews and Greeks — The term 'Logos' resonated with Jews thinking of the 'Word of the Lord' in the Psalms and Greeks thinking of the rational order of the universe, yet John redefined it as a person with a face.
  • The Tabernacle of Flesh — The phrase 'dwelt among us' (eskenosen) literally means 'pitched a tent,' drawing a direct parallel to the Tabernacle in Exodus where God's presence resided with Israel.
John's opening is not designed to decorate a doctrine. It is designed to locate Jesus before every rival claim can get its hands on him. Narrator
The meaning behind all things is not finally an equation, a force, a theory, or an abstract order. The meaning behind all things has a face. Narrator

AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.

0:00

A reader opens the Gospel of John and

0:02

expects a story, maybe a birth, maybe a

0:06

miracle, maybe a man walking beside the

0:08

Sea of Galilee calling fishermen to

0:10

follow him. But John does not begin with

0:12

Bethlehem. He does not begin with Mary.

0:15

He does not begin with Joseph,

0:17

shepherds, angels, or a manger. He

0:20

begins with a word. In the beginning was

0:22

the word, and that word in Greek is

0:25

logos. If you clicked on this because

0:28

you want to know what John 1 really

0:30

means, this is the place to start. Logos

0:33

can mean word, message, account, reason,

0:37

expression, or meaningful communication.

0:40

The exact shade depends on context. But

0:43

in John 1, it cannot mean merely a

0:45

spoken sound. John is not saying Jesus

0:48

is a noise God made or a sentence

0:50

floating in the air or a religious

0:52

slogan written on a page. John says the

0:55

logos was already there in the

0:56

beginning. He says the logos was with

0:58

God. And then he says the sentence that

1:00

makes this verse one of the most

1:02

explosive claims in scripture and the

1:04

word was God. So the question is not

1:07

just what does logos mean in Greek. The

1:10

question is why would John choose that

1:12

word echoes speak into a Greekeaking

1:15

world and then say this word became

1:17

flesh. That is the path we are going to

1:20

walk. We are going to start with the

1:21

word itself. Then move back to Genesis,

1:24

then through Israel's scriptures, then

1:27

into the first century world where logos

1:29

was already a loaded term. Then we will

1:32

slow down over with God and was God. And

1:35

only after that will we follow John's

1:37

sentence into the world, into flesh, and

1:40

toward the place where God's

1:41

self-revelation becomes impossible to

1:44

ignore. Because if John is right, then

1:46

the deepest question is not only what

1:48

Logos means. The deepest question is

1:51

what God has shown us in Jesus Christ.

1:53

Start with the room where John is first

1:55

heard. A lamp is burning low. Someone is

1:58

reading aloud. A few believers are

2:00

gathered close enough to hear every

2:02

phrase. One person knows the scriptures

2:04

from childhood. Another grew up around

2:07

idols. Another has heard philosophers

2:09

talk about reason, order, and the

2:11

meaning behind the world. Another is new

2:13

to all of this and is still trying to

2:16

understand who Jesus is. Then the reader

2:18

speaks. In the beginning was the word.

2:21

Nobody in that room is being handed an

2:23

abstract religious slogan. They are

2:25

being confronted with a claim. The

2:27

Jewish listener hears Genesis wake up.

2:30

The Greekeaking listener hears logos and

2:32

leans forward. The former idol

2:34

worshipper hears that the true God is

2:36

not silent. The new believer hears that

2:38

Jesus is not merely a teacher who

2:40

appeared in history. He is being placed

2:43

before history. Most modern readers do

2:45

not stumble over word because it sounds

2:48

simple. A word is something you speak. A

2:51

word is something you read. A word is a

2:53

small piece of language. So the verse

2:55

can become smaller in our minds than it

2:57

is on the page. But John does not write.

3:00

In the beginning, God spoke about the

3:02

word. He writes, "In the beginning was

3:04

the word. The word is already there."

3:07

Then John says, "The word was with God.

3:10

Now the word is not an impersonal sound.

3:13

The word is in relationship. Then John

3:16

says the word was God. Now the word is

3:19

not a creature delivering information

3:20

from far away. The word shares the

3:23

divine identity. John's opening is not

3:26

designed to decorate a doctrine. It is

3:29

designed to locate Jesus before every

3:31

rival claim can get its hands on him.

3:33

Before Caesar makes his claims, the word

3:35

was. Before idols receive incense, the

3:38

word was. Before philosophers name the

3:41

order of the world, the word was. Before

3:44

your fear gives God a false face, the

3:46

word was. A human word reveals something

3:49

hidden. If a father sits in silence, the

3:52

child can only guess what he thinks. If

3:55

a king never speaks, the court reads his

3:57

face and fears the worst. If a friend

4:00

refuses to answer, silence becomes a

4:02

room full of assumptions. But when

4:05

someone speaks truthfully, what was

4:07

hidden begins to come out. John reaches

4:09

for something greater than human speech.

4:12

The logos is God giving himself to be

4:14

known, but John does not let the

4:16

listener stay in that room for long. The

4:18

first phrase opens a door behind them,

4:20

and behind that door is the first

4:22

darkness the Bible ever describes. In

4:25

the beginning, every Jewish listener

4:27

knew where those words came from.

4:30

Genesis opens before there is a city, a

4:33

temple, a nation, a prophet, a priest,

4:36

or a king. There is no Jerusalem, no

4:39

Bethlehem, no cross, no church. The

4:43

earth is without form and void. Darkness

4:46

is over the face of the deep. Then God

4:48

speaks, "Let there be light and there

4:51

was light." That is not just a beautiful

4:54

beginning. It is the first crisis in the

4:56

Bible answered by the voice of God.

4:59

There is darkness. There is disorder.

5:02

There is no human being to fix it, no

5:04

army to organize it, no philosopher to

5:07

explain it, no priest to bless it.

5:09

Creation begins because God speaks and

5:12

reality obeys. Now John opens his gospel

5:15

with the same doorway. In the beginning

5:18

was the word. He wants Genesis ringing

5:21

in your ears. But he is not merely

5:23

repeating Moses. He is revealing

5:25

something about the one who will walk

5:26

through the rest of the gospel. John 1:3

5:29

says, "All things were made through him,

5:32

and without him, nothing was made that

5:34

was made." That sentence draws a line

5:36

through everything that exists. On one

5:39

side is everything made, stars, oceans,

5:42

cedar trees, human hands, breath, blood,

5:46

memory, language, light. On the other

5:50

side is the word through whom all of it

5:52

was made. John does not place the word

5:54

inside creation. He places the word

5:56

before creation and over creation. This

5:59

is why John does not start with Jesus

6:01

birth. Matthew and Luke tell us about

6:03

the birth of Christ and the church needs

6:06

those accounts. But John begins earlier

6:08

because he wants you to know that the

6:10

son did not begin to exist at Bethlehem.

6:12

Bethlehem is not the origin of the word.

6:15

It is the arrival of the word in flesh.

6:18

The child in the manger is truly born.

6:21

But the son is not newly created. That

6:24

is the shock John places on the first

6:26

line. Before the first sunrise, before

6:28

the first human voice, before the first

6:30

page of human history, the word was. And

6:33

once Genesis is open, the next scene is

6:36

not a classroom. It is a world full of

6:39

silent gods. Picture ancient Israel

6:41

surrounded by nations with temples full

6:43

of images. A carved mouth, painted eyes,

6:48

polished metal, a statue lifted into

6:51

place by human hands, guarded by

6:53

priests, dressed by servants, carried

6:55

when the city is afraid. The idol has a

6:58

mouth, but it cannot speak. Israel's God

7:01

is different. He cannot be reduced to an

7:03

image. No chisel can capture him. No

7:06

shrine can contain him. No human being

7:09

can climb up and bring him under

7:10

control. That creates pressure. If God

7:13

is invisible, how can he be known? If

7:16

God is holy, how can anyone approach

7:18

him? If God cannot be carved, carried,

7:21

or seen in his fullness, how does he

7:23

reveal himself? Scriptures answer is

7:25

that the living God speaks. Psalm 33:6

7:29

says, "By the word of the Lord, the

7:31

heavens were made, and all the host of

7:33

them by the breath of his mouth." God's

7:35

word is not weak. It is not a wish sent

7:38

into empty air. When God's word goes

7:41

out, something happens. A prophet stands

7:44

before a king who does not want

7:45

correction. A prophet has no army, no

7:48

throne, no sword in his hand. Only a

7:51

word from the Lord. And in scripture,

7:53

that word is heavier than the king's

7:55

crown. A terrified people stand beside a

7:58

sea with Egypt behind them and death in

8:00

front of them. God commands.

8:04

Waters move. Exiles sit under foreign

8:06

power wondering whether their story is

8:09

over. A word of promise comes to them

8:11

and hope survives in a place where hope

8:13

should have died. Isaiah 55 gives the

8:17

image with startling force. God says,

8:20

"So shall my word be that goes forth

8:22

from my mouth. It shall not return to me

8:24

void, but it shall accomplish what I

8:27

please." God's word does not merely

8:29

comment on history. God's word moves

8:32

history. That does not mean every Old

8:35

Testament mention of word is

8:36

automatically a direct explicit

8:38

reference to Christ in the same way John

8:40

1 is. Scripture unfolds over time.

8:44

The prophets spoke real words into real

8:46

moments.

8:48

The promises had real force for their

8:50

first hearers. But when John opens his

8:52

gospel, he shows where the whole pattern

8:55

was always heading. The God who creates

8:57

by his word, confronts by his word,

9:00

promises by his word, and reveals

9:02

himself by his word has now made himself

9:04

known in the word who is personal,

9:06

eternal, and divine. The idol's mouth is

9:09

silent. The living God speaks. And John

9:13

says his fullest speech is the sun. But

9:15

John wrote that claim in Greek. And that

9:18

brings another crowd into the room.

9:20

Imagine a first century port city before

9:23

sunrise. A Jewish father walks his son

9:25

towards synagogue where Moses will be

9:27

read in Greek because many Jews of the

9:30

diaspora know the scriptures through

9:31

translation. Across the street, a

9:34

gentile woman passes an idol shrine she

9:36

used to fear. Near the market, an

9:39

educated man talks about the logos as

9:41

the rational order behind the universe.

9:44

A Roman official cares less about

9:46

theology than loyalty, taxes, and public

9:48

peace.

9:50

Now, put John's first sentence in the

9:52

middle of that city. In the beginning

9:54

was the logos. Each person hears a

9:56

different danger. The synagogue trained

9:59

listener could hear Genesis and still

10:01

wonder whether Jesus is being placed too

10:02

close to the creator. The gentile

10:05

convert could hear logos and think of an

10:06

impersonal cosmic principle, something

10:09

grand but distant. The former idol

10:11

worshipper could hear divine language

10:13

and fear that Christians have simply

10:15

added another being to the crowded

10:16

heavens. The Roman world could hear Lord

10:19

and God and sense a loyalty deeper than

10:21

Caesar. John's word choice walks into

10:24

that pressure. In parts of Greek

10:26

philosophical discussion, logos could be

10:28

used for reason, order, rational

10:31

principle, or meaningful structure. The

10:33

details differ depending on which

10:35

thinker or school you are talking about.

10:37

And John does not tell us he is

10:38

borrowing from one of them. Among some

10:40

Jewish writers using Greek, Logos

10:43

language could also help speak about how

10:44

the transcendent God relates to

10:46

creation. That background is real, but

10:49

it does not control J's meaning. John is

10:51

not kneeling before Greek philosophy. He

10:54

is not saying Jesus is an impersonal

10:56

principle. He is not taking a vague

10:59

cosmic idea and giving it a Christian

11:01

name. He is taking a word his world

11:03

could recognize and then he is filling

11:05

it with Genesis, Israel's scriptures and

11:08

the living person of Jesus Christ. A

11:10

philosopher may be searching for order.

11:12

John says the order has spoken. A former

11:15

idol worshipper may be afraid of many

11:17

gods. John says the word is not another

11:19

idol in the room. He is the one through

11:21

whom the room exists. A Jewish listener

11:24

may be guarding the confession that

11:26

there is one God. John does not abandon

11:29

that confession. He drives deeper into

11:31

it. The logos was with God. The logos

11:34

was God. The logos became flesh. That is

11:38

what makes John's use of the word so

11:40

powerful. He lets different listeners

11:42

lean in, but he will not let any of them

11:45

domesticate Jesus. The meaning behind

11:47

all things is not finally an equation, a

11:50

force, a theory, or an abstract order.

11:53

The meaning behind all things has a

11:55

face. And now the room gets quiet

11:57

because John's sentence puts pressure on

11:59

every easy answer. In the beginning was

12:02

the word and the word was with God and

12:04

the word was God. A confused reader can

12:07

shrink Jesus in two opposite directions.

12:10

One person says, "If the word was with

12:12

God, then maybe Jesus is near God, sent

12:16

by God, loved by God, but not truly

12:19

God." Another person says, "If the word

12:22

was God, then maybe the father and the

12:24

son are simply the same person under

12:26

different names." John will not let

12:28

either mistake survive the sentence. The

12:31

word was with God. That is relationship.

12:34

Communion.

12:36

Personal distinction. The word is not

12:39

the father. Later in this gospel, the

12:41

son prays to the father, is sent by the

12:44

father, loves the father, obeys the

12:46

father, and returns to the father. John

12:49

is not presenting one divine person

12:51

acting out different roles. But then

12:53

John says, "And the word was God." That

12:56

is deity. Not a lesser god, not a

13:00

created angel, not merely a spiritual

13:02

teacher, not a being who became divine

13:05

after a life of obedience. The word was

13:08

God. Imagine the verse like a narrow

13:10

bridge with cliffs on both sides. Fall

13:13

one way and Jesus becomes less than God.

13:17

Fall the other way and the personal

13:18

relationship of father and son

13:20

disappears. John's wording keeps you on

13:23

the bridge. The Greek phrase at the end

13:24

is commonly translated and the word was

13:27

God. Grammar has been discussed for

13:29

centuries and there is more that could

13:31

be said, but the basic force is clear

13:33

enough for the purpose of this passage.

13:35

John's wording does not identify the

13:37

word as the same person as the father

13:39

because he has just said the word was

13:41

with God. But it also does not reduce

13:43

the word to something merely godlike.

13:46

John is ascribing deity to the word

13:48

while preserving personal distinction.

13:50

That is why later Christians reached for

13:52

trinitarian language. The later creeds

13:54

use later vocabulary but they are trying

13:56

to guard the pressure already present in

13:58

the text. The father is God. The son is

14:03

God. The son is with the father. The son

14:06

is not the father. And Christians

14:08

confess this without abandoning the

14:09

biblical truth that there is one god.

14:12

John returns to the same depth near the

14:14

end of the prologue. No one has seen god

14:17

at any time. The only begotten son who

14:20

is in the bosom of the father. He has

14:22

declared him. Different English

14:24

translations handle only begotten in

14:26

different ways often with phrases like

14:28

only son or one and only son. But the

14:31

force in John is clear. The son uniquely

14:34

reveals the father because he comes from

14:36

the father's own presence. And later in

14:39

John 17:5, Jesus prays, "And now, oh

14:43

father, glorify me together with

14:45

yourself, with the glory which I had

14:47

with you before the world was." Before

14:50

the world was, John's first line was not

14:53

decorative. He means it. Genesis has

14:56

opened. The idols have gone silent. The

14:59

philosophers have been answered but not

15:01

obeyed. The two cliffs have appeared and

15:04

John's sentence has kept us on the

15:06

bridge. The word was with God. The word

15:10

was God before the world was. If this is

15:13

helping John 1:1 come alive for you,

15:15

subscribe and share this with someone

15:17

who has heard the verse but never slowed

15:19

down over what John is actually saying.

15:21

And stay with me because the next

15:23

sentence is where the eternal word steps

15:25

into flesh. The camera drops from

15:28

eternity into streets. John has just

15:30

said all things were made through him.

15:33

Then he writes one of the saddest lines

15:34

in the chapter. He was in the world and

15:37

the world was made through him and the

15:39

world did not know him. The one through

15:41

whom trees exist walks beneath trees.

15:44

The one through whom water exists asks

15:46

for a drink beside a well. The one

15:49

through whom human eyes exist looks into

15:51

human faces and they do not recognize

15:54

him. This is not just irony. It is

15:57

tragedy. The creator enters his own

16:00

house and the house treats him like a

16:02

stranger. John continues, "He came to

16:05

his own and his own did not receive

16:07

him." That sentence has been used

16:09

wrongly in Christian history, so it has

16:11

to be handled with care.

16:14

John is not giving anyone permission for

16:16

contempt toward Jewish people. Jesus is

16:18

Jewish. Mary is Jewish. John is Jewish.

16:23

The apostles are Jewish. The earliest

16:26

believers are Jewish. Many Jewish people

16:29

did receive Jesus. Many did not. And in

16:32

John's gospel, the rejection of Jesus

16:34

becomes part of a larger human darkness,

16:37

not a weapon against one people. The

16:39

crisis is wider than one crowd in one

16:41

century. The light comes into the world

16:43

and the world resists the light. John

16:46

1:4 and4 and 5 says, "In him was life

16:50

and the life was the light of men and

16:52

the light shines in the darkness and the

16:55

darkness did not comprehend it." Some

16:57

translations say the darkness did not

16:59

overcome it. The Greek word can carry

17:02

the sense of grasping, seizing,

17:04

mastering, or overcoming. John's line

17:06

lets us feel both the blindness of

17:08

darkness and its failure to conquer the

17:11

light. Picture a village at dusk. Lamps

17:15

are being lit inside small homes.

17:17

Children are being called in from the

17:18

street. Red is being placed on a table.

17:22

People are living ordinary lives under

17:24

an ordinary sky. And somewhere in that

17:26

ordinary world stands the one through

17:28

whom the sky exists. Most do not know.

17:32

Not because God has failed to speak

17:34

clearly. Not because the light is dim,

17:37

but because light does more than

17:38

comfort. Light exposes.

17:42

That is why John's gospel is not a

17:43

simple story about people needing more

17:45

information. Darkness in John is not

17:47

only intellectual confusion.

17:50

It has moral weight. People turn from

17:53

light because light reveals what

17:55

darkness wants hidden. But John does not

17:57

leave the viewer standing in rejection.

18:00

Verse 12 opens like a door in a dark

18:02

hallway. But as many as received him, to

18:05

them he gave the right to become

18:07

children of God to those who believe in

18:09

his name, not distant admirers,

18:12

children. The creator is not gathering

18:15

an audience. He is forming a family. And

18:18

now comes the sentence where the whole

18:19

room changes and the word became flesh

18:22

and dwelt among us and we beheld his

18:24

glory. The word became flesh. Not the

18:27

word appeared to be flesh. Not the word

18:30

borrowed a body for a short assignment.

18:32

Not the word hovered above human pain

18:34

while pretending to enter it. Flesh

18:36

means real embodied human life. hands,

18:40

hunger, weariness, tears, skin that can

18:44

be touched, a back that can be struck,

18:46

blood that can be shed. John does not

18:48

give the birth narrative here like

18:50

Matthew and Luke do. He does not mention

18:52

the manger, shepherds, or angelic

18:54

announcement. But in one sentence, he

18:56

gives the meaning behind all of it. The

18:59

eternal word truly entered human life. A

19:02

mother holds him. A village watches him

19:04

grow. Dust clings to his feet. He sits

19:08

at tables with people who do not know

19:09

what to do with him. He gets tired

19:11

beside a well. He weeps outside a tomb.

19:15

The word became flesh means God's

19:17

self-revelation got skin. The word dwelt

19:20

carries the sense of pitching a tent.

19:22

And many Christians have heard a strong

19:24

echo of the tabernacle, the place of

19:26

God's presence among Israel in the

19:28

wilderness. John does not pause to

19:30

explain the whole tabernacle system. So

19:32

the echo should not be forced beyond

19:34

what the text will bear. But the

19:36

direction is hard to miss. The God who

19:38

made himself present among his people

19:40

has now made himself known in Christ. In

19:43

Exodus, God's glory is associated with

19:46

cloud, fire, mountain, and tabernacle.

19:49

Moses asks to see God's glory. And God

19:52

reveals his name and character,

19:54

merciful, gracious, long-suffering,

19:57

abounding in goodness and truth. John

20:00

says we beheld his glory where in Jesus

20:05

not glory as Rome defined it not banners

20:08

armies marble and public applause John's

20:12

gospel will show glory and signs

20:14

obedience truth love and finally in an

20:18

hour that looks nothing like human

20:19

victory but the first shock is nearness

20:23

people often imagine God as far away

20:27

powerful maybe holy Certainly, but

20:31

distant. Somewhere above the clouds,

20:33

behind a locked door, speaking in

20:35

thunder while ordinary people try to

20:37

survive hospital rooms, unpaid bills,

20:40

grief, shame, and prayers that seem to

20:42

hit the ceiling. Then John says, "The

20:45

word became flesh and dwelt among us.

20:47

The God who cannot be captured by an

20:50

idol comes near enough to be rejected by

20:52

neighbors. The God no image can contain

20:55

comes near enough to be seen in a human

20:56

face. The God whose word creates the

20:59

world comes near enough to be

21:00

interrupted, questioned, touched, and

21:03

eventually wounded. Christian faith has

21:06

had to speak carefully about this

21:07

because the mystery is deep. The divine

21:10

nature does not stop being divine. The

21:13

son does not become a creature in his

21:14

deity. John is telling us that the

21:16

eternal word truly takes on human

21:18

nature, fully divine, truly human. And

21:23

once the word becomes flesh, the world

21:25

no longer has only rumors, shadows,

21:28

guesses, and partial glimpses. Now

21:31

people have to deal with Jesus. A woman

21:34

sits alone after being hurt by someone

21:36

who used scripture like a weapon. She

21:38

hears the word God and feels fear before

21:40

she feels hope. A man loses someone he

21:42

loves and quietly decides God must be

21:45

either absent or cruel. A child grows up

21:48

with religious language, but never

21:50

tenderness, rules, but no mercy.

21:52

correction but no compassion. Someone

21:55

else wants a god who never judges, never

21:57

confronts, never calls anything evil

22:00

because a holy God would threaten the

22:01

life they are trying to protect. People

22:03

are always building pictures of God.

22:06

Some are built from pain, some from

22:08

pride, some from fear, some from

22:10

preference. John steps into all of that

22:13

and writes, "No one has seen God at any

22:16

time." That sentence humbles everybody.

22:19

No one has mastered God. No philosopher

22:22

has climbed high enough. No mystic

22:24

experience, no religious system, no

22:27

private imagination, no emotional

22:29

instinct can give a complete vision of

22:31

God on its own. But John does not stop

22:34

there. The only begotten son who is in

22:37

the bosom of the father, he has declared

22:39

him. The word translated declared means

22:41

to make known, to explain, to set forth.

22:44

It is related to the term from which we

22:46

get the word exugesus. So Christians

22:49

sometimes say Jesus exettes God. That is

22:52

not a gimmick. It means Jesus makes the

22:54

father known from a distance from the

22:57

father's own presence. This does not

23:00

make the old testament false or inferior

23:02

in a careless way. The god Jesus reveals

23:05

is the god of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob,

23:08

Moses, David, and the prophets. Jesus is

23:12

not correcting the father's character.

23:14

He is revealing him fully. Later, Philip

23:18

speaks for every human heart that has

23:19

ever wanted certainty. He says, "Lord,

23:22

show us the Father, and it is sufficient

23:24

for us." And Jesus answers in John 14:9,

23:28

"He who has seen me has seen the

23:30

Father." Imagine the room after that

23:32

sentence. No one moves too quickly past

23:35

it. Philip asks to see God. Jesus points

23:39

to himself, not to a theory, not to a

23:42

force, not to a safer, softer version of

23:45

the father, to himself. So the question

23:48

changes again. If Jesus reveals the

23:51

father, then every scene in John becomes

23:54

a window. Mercy is no longer vague when

23:56

Jesus forgives. Holiness is no longer

23:59

abstract when Jesus confronts sin.

24:01

Compassion is no longer sentimental when

24:03

Jesus weeps at a tomb. Truth is no

24:06

longer detached when Jesus stands before

24:08

Pilate and refuses to lie. Jesus is not

24:11

God's mask.

24:13

Jesus is God's face turned toward us.

24:16

But John has one more road to walk and

24:18

it goes outside the city before Jesus

24:21

ministry fills with signs and

24:22

conversations. John the Baptist sees him

24:25

coming and says, "Behold

24:27

the lamb of God who takes away the sin

24:29

of the world." The sentence lands early,

24:32

but its shadow stretches over the whole

24:34

gospel. The logos is not only the word

24:36

of creation. He is the lamb of

24:38

redemption. John does not pause there to

24:41

explain every dimension of atonement.

24:42

Christians have used several biblical

24:44

images to speak about the cross,

24:46

sacrifice, victory, substitution,

24:49

ransom, reconciliation. John's own

24:52

language is clear enough for this

24:53

moment. Sin is real. The world needs

24:57

saving. Jesus is the lamb who takes sin

25:00

away. The light shines and darkness

25:03

gathers. Leaders plot. Crowds

25:07

misunderstand.

25:08

Friends grow afraid. Judas leaves the

25:11

table. And John says, "And it was

25:13

night." Soldiers come with lanterns and

25:16

weapons to arrest the light of the

25:18

world. The one through whom all things

25:20

were made stands before rulers who think

25:22

they own the final word. Pilate

25:24

questions him. the crowd shouts. A crown

25:28

of thorns is pushed onto his head. The

25:31

word who gave human beings mouths is

25:32

mocked by human mouths. The hands

25:35

through which creation came are nailed

25:36

to wood. And John wants us to know this

25:39

is not a collapse of the plan. Jesus

25:41

says in John 12:32

25:44

and I if I am lifted up from the earth

25:46

will draw all peoples to myself. John

25:49

tells us Jesus said this to indicate the

25:51

kind of death he would die. Lifted up

25:54

means crucified. But in John's gospel,

25:57

the phrase also carries the strange

25:59

force of exaltation. The place of shame

26:02

becomes the place where glory is

26:03

revealed. That does not make the cross

26:06

less brutal. It makes it more

26:08

staggering. At the cross, God's

26:11

self-revelation becomes God's

26:12

self-giving.

26:14

The unity of God's saving purpose has to

26:16

be protected here. The cross is not an

26:19

angry father against a loving son. John

26:22

3:16 says, "For God so loved the world

26:25

that he gave his only begotten son. The

26:28

father sends in love. The son gives

26:31

himself willingly." The spirit, as the

26:33

wider New Testament shows, is not absent

26:36

from the saving work of God. The cross

26:39

is not division inside God. It is the

26:41

love of God revealed through the sun.

26:44

Nor should we speak as though the divine

26:46

nature itself dies. The incarnate son

26:49

truly dies in his humanity. The word

26:52

became flesh and in that flesh he enters

26:54

death for us. Near the end Jesus says in

26:58

John 19:30, "It is finished." Not, "I am

27:01

finished. It is finished. The work is

27:04

complete. The lamb has given himself.

27:07

Sin has been answered by sacrifice." The

27:09

word has not only explained God with

27:11

sentences. He has revealed God in

27:13

obedience, suffering, love, and blood.

27:17

Then silence, a body taken down, lean

27:21

and wrapped, a tomb closed, a garden

27:24

quiet. For a moment, it looks as if

27:27

darkness has swallowed the light. But

27:29

John told us at the beginning how

27:31

darkness fares against this light. It

27:33

does not overcome it. The resurrection

27:36

is not a decorative ending added to a

27:38

tragic story. It is the vindication of

27:41

everything John has been saying from the

27:43

first line. The word who was in the

27:45

beginning, the word through whom all

27:46

things were made, the word who became

27:49

flesh, the word who was rejected,

27:51

crucified, and buried lives. John does

27:55

not end his gospel with an idea floating

27:57

in the air. He gives you a man with

27:59

wounds. Thomas was not in the room when

28:01

the risen Jesus first appeared to the

28:03

disciples. The others told him, "We have

28:06

seen the Lord." But Thomas had watched

28:09

hope get crucified, and secondhand joy

28:11

was not enough. He said he would not

28:13

believe unless he saw the mark of the

28:15

nails and placed his hand in Jesus's

28:17

side. 8 days later, Jesus came to him.

28:20

He did not crush Thomas for wanting

28:22

proof. He showed him the wounds. And

28:25

Thomas answered with one of the clearest

28:27

confessions in the gospel. My Lord and

28:30

my God. John began by saying, "The word

28:34

was God." Near the end, a wounded

28:37

disciple looks at the risen Jesus and

28:39

says, "My God." The confession has

28:42

traveled from the opening line into a

28:44

locked room through fear, through

28:46

wounds, into worship. Now come back one

28:50

last time to the reader at the table.

28:52

The same line is still on the page. In

28:55

the beginning was the word, but it does

28:58

not feel like a small sentence anymore.

29:00

At first, word may have sounded like a

29:02

religious term. Now it carries the road

29:05

we have walked. A dark creation waiting

29:07

for God to speak. A world of silent

29:10

idols. A prophet's word heavier than a

29:12

king's crown. A Greek speakaking city

29:15

searching for meaning. A sentence that

29:17

refuses to let Jesus be reduced. A

29:20

creator unrecognized in his own world. A

29:23

body tired beside a well. Tears outside

29:26

a tomb. A lamb lifted up outside the

29:28

city. A wounded lord standing in a

29:31

locked room. And maybe now the real

29:33

crisis is not ancient at all. Maybe it

29:35

is sitting beside you. You are in the

29:37

car after the appointment, or at the

29:40

kitchen table after everyone else has

29:42

gone to bed, or in the church seat where

29:44

you know the songs but are no longer

29:45

sure what you believe, or in the quiet

29:47

after someone you trusted made God feel

29:49

unsafe. The question comes without

29:52

sounding academic. What is God like?

29:55

John does not tell you to start

29:56

guessing. He does not tell you to invent

29:59

a god out of your pain. He does not tell

30:01

you to measure God by the worst person

30:03

who claimed to represent him. He does

30:05

not tell you to climb into heaven and

30:07

bring back a report. John points to

30:10

Jesus. Look at the word made flesh. Look

30:13

at the son who reveals the father. Look

30:15

at the lamb who takes away sin. Look at

30:18

the risen Lord who still has wounds. The

30:20

word was in the beginning. The word was

30:22

with God. The word was God. The word

30:26

became flesh. And the word has made God

30:29

known. You do not have to guess what God

30:31

is like while looking away from Jesus.

30:33

Look at Christ. The invisible God has

30:36

not left himself unexplained. If this

30:39

helped you stop guessing and look more

30:40

clearly at Christ, subscribe, share it

30:43

with someone who needs to know what God

30:45

is like, and comment which phrase from

30:48

John 1 you want unpacked next.

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