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Published byBriana Rogers Modified over 9 years ago
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Jesus: The Word of God
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“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God” (John 1:1)
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Tradition – John (the Apostle) John the Apostle (beginning with Irenaeus in AD 180) “The Beloved Disciple” in the Gospel of John Traditionally considered the same author of the 3 Epistles of John and the Book of Revelation John considered to have written gospel towards the end of his life at Ephesus Modern Scholarship May be confused with another John, a Church elder, or a disciple of John. May be written in stages and edited by several people
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Most likely written sometime between AD 90- 100 Likely written for Jewish-Christians who were expelled from synagogues after the Roman Revolt The Roberts Papyrus (c. AD 125-140) The oldest fragment of any New Testament text. John 18:31-33 on one side and 18:37-38 on the other.
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Contact with Synoptic Gospels likely May have shared some traditions with Mark’s Gospel, and was likely aware of some traditions from Luke. Did not rely heavily on them Independent oral traditions preserved in the churches that contribute to its creation Collection of miracles – Signs Source Version of the Passion and Resurrection Narratives
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Written “so that you may come to believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God” (20:31) Christology “from above” Conflicts (e.g. light vs. darkness, truth vs. untruth) “Who is Jesus?” Jesus as Cosmic Redeemer Scholars tend to agree on two purposes in the writing of John: 1. To combat false ideas about Jesus’ divinity or humanity 2. To oppose followers of John the Baptist who believed he was the Messiah
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Contains 3 (possibly 4) trips to Jerusalem, unlike Synoptics. Structure: Prologue (1:1-18) Book of Signs (1:19 – 12:50) Book of Glory (13:1 – 20:31) Epilogue (21)
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New Characters – Nicodemus, Lazarus, etc. Some differences in events More interested in chronology Longer discourses and conversations, each thematically related to an episode of Jesus’ life More poetic and metaphorical More explicitly theological – Evangelist includes His own explanations Jesus as Logos vs. Messianic Secret
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