Saturday, July 11, 2020

JESUS’ GLORY

1 The next (third) day there was a wedding celebration in the village of Cana in Galilee…. 2 and Jesus and His disciples were also invited to the celebration. 3 The wine supply ran out during the festivities, … 7 Jesus told the servants, “Fill the jars with water.” When the jars had been filled, 8 He said, “Now dip some out, and take it to the master of ceremonies.” … 9 When the master of ceremonies tasted the water that was now wine, … he called the bridegroom over. 10 “A host always serves the best wine first,” he said. “Then, when everyone has had a lot to drink, he brings out the less expensive wine. But you have kept the best until now!” 11 This miraculous sign at Cana in Galilee was the first time Jesus revealed His glory. And His disciples believed (placed their faith) in Him. John 2:1-3, 7-11, New Living Translation 2nd Edition

 

I.             Introduction

 

Chapter 2 of John’s Gospel begins the Book of Signs. The Book of Signs begins the public ministry of Jesus that starts at Cana, located in Galilee. By way of background, John’s Gospel is divided or organized into four sections. The first section of John’s Gospel is the Prologue, and the Prologue is found at John 1 verses 1 through 18. In the Prologue, John sets the background for Jesus and His public ministry. Next, John gives a long transitional section between the end of the Prologue of verse 18 and the Book of Signs. This long transitional section includes verses 19 through 51. These transitional verses center around John the Baptist. John gives more details about John the Baptist that are not included in the Synoptic Gospels – Matthew, Mark, and Luke.

 

Chapter 2 of John’s Gospel officially starts the Book of Signs and Jesus’ public ministry in Galilee. The Book of Signs goes from John 2:1 through John 12:50. This section is often called the Book of Signs because of the seven miracles Jesus performed. Jesus did more than seven miracles (e.g., see John 20:30; John 21:25). However, John identified seven miraculous signs of Jesus to reveal Jesus’ identity and glory (e.g., see John 17:4). In this section, John revealed through Jesus’ signs how Jesus fulfilled the Old Testament and the intent of Judaism.

 

Starting at chapter 13 of John’s Gospel, John records Jesus’ Passion story with His trial, execution, and resurrection. Significantly, John’s Passion story from chapters 18 through 20 are mostly the same storyline given in the Synoptic Gospels – Matthew, Mark, and Luke.[1] However, John begins Jesus’ Passion story in chapters 13 through 17 with Jesus’ Upper Room speech (discourse) to His disciples. In the Upper Room, Jesus taught His closest disciples, who have accepted and believed in Him.

 

The final section of John’s Gospel is the Epilogue found at chapter 21. In chapter 21, the Resurrected Jesus meets His disciples in Galilee, like the Synoptic Gospels – Matthew, Mark, and Luke. However, in chapter 21 of John’s Gospel, Jesus feeds His disciples and instructs Peter also to feed and care for His sheep and lambs.

 

I.        Prologue:  John 1:1-18

II.       Book of Signs:  John 1:19 through John 12:50

III.      Book of Passion: John 13 through 20

a.            John 13 through 17 is Jesus’ teaching His disciples in the Upper Room (Upper Room Discourse)

b.           John 18 through 20 is Jesus’s trial, execution, and resurrection

IV.     Epilogue

 

Chapter 2 of John’s Gospel records the first of Jesus’ seven miraculous signs. John’s Gospel builds Jesus’ public ministry around His seven miraculous signs.[2] The seven miracles were as follows:

 

·         John 2:1-11 where Jesus turned water to wine

·         John 4:46-54 when Jesus healed the royal official’s son

·         John 5:1-15 when Jesus healed the diseased man at Bethesda       

·         John 6:1-15 where Jesus fed the 5,000

·         John 6:16-21 Jesus walked on the water

·         John 9:1-41 Jesus gave sight to the blindman

·         John 11:1-44 where Jesus raised Lazarus from complete death

 

Some biblical scholars include Jesus’ large catch of fish at John 21:1 through 14 as Jesus’ eighth and final miracle.

 

II.           The Uniqueness of John’s Gospel

 

Most of John’s miraculous signs are unique to his Gospel and not found in the Synoptic Gospels – Matthew, Mark, and Luke. John used Jesus’ miraculous signs to reveal Jesus’ nature, character, and identity as the glorious Son of God and the long-awaited Messiah (Christ) (e.g., see John 1:1-5, 14, 18; John 20:30-31). Apart from John the Baptist in chapter 1, nothing in the first five chapters of John’s Gospel is found in the Synoptics. Moreover, John used Jesus’ miraculous signs to reveal the nature of the Kingdom that Jesus ushered into the world (see also Mark 1:14-15).[3]

 

The structure and style of John’s Gospel are different from the Synoptic Gospels. John’s Gospel contains no parables and only seven miracles (five of which are not recorded elsewhere in the New Testament). Moreover, John’s Gospel includes Jesus’ long discourses or speeches such as the Upper Room discourse found at John chapters 13 through 17 that are not included in the Synoptic Gospels. Furthermore, John’s Gospel emphasized Jesus’ hunger, thirst, weariness, pain, and death to reveal Jesus as not only the Son of God but also Jesus’ true human nature (e.g., see John 4:6; John 17:35; John 19:28). Additionally, John’s Gospel includes other important themes such as the Holy Spirit (e.g., see John 14:26; John 15:26; John 16:7-14), Satan and the world (e.g., see John 8:44; John 12:31; John 17:15), Jesus as the Word (see John 1:1-14), and the new birth (see John 3:1-12).

 

III.         Book of Signs

 

As discussed earlier, the Book of Signs begins at chapter 2 of John’s Gospel. The Book of Signs begins the public ministry of Jesus that starts at Cana, located in Galilee. The Book of Signs covers chapters 2 through 12. However, this section naturally subdivides into two sections: chapters 2 through 4 and chapters 5 through 12.

 

Chapters 2 through 4 of John’s Gospel start with Jesus’ miracle in Cana of Galilee, and this section ends in Cana of Galilee, where Jesus performs another miracle with Jesus’ healing of an official’s son. Chapters 2 through 4 of John’s Gospel is often called the Cana to Cana cycle (see John 2:1-11; John 4:46-54). John identifies Jesus’ two miracles with changing the water to wine at chapter 2 and the healing of an official’s son at chapter 4 as the first and second signs (see John 2:11; John 4:54).

 

In chapters 5 through 12 of the Book of Signs, John revealed the increasing Jewish resistance and hostility to Jesus’ ministry. Jesus had some resistance in chapters 2 through 4 of John’s Gospel. However, chapters 5 through 12 reveal open and growing hostility against Jesus from the Jewish religious leaders (e.g., see John 11:47). This Jewish resistance against Jesus intensified and climaxed with the resurrection of Lazarus, which was Jesus’s seventh sign (see John 11:38-44). With this seventh sign, the Jews leadership established a plot to kill Jesus (see John 11:47-53).

 

IV.         Jesus’s First Miracle

 

a.    Background

 

Chapter 2 of John’s Gospel opens with a wedding celebration in Cana's village in the Galilee region (see John 2:1). John records this as the third day of Jesus’s public ministry (John 2:1; see also John 1:29, 35, 43). Some scholars see chapter 2 of John’s Gospel as a tale of two cities: Cana and Jerusalem with an interlude in the middle at verse 12. These two cities react to Jesus in different ways. At Cana, the people rejoiced with Jesus’ first miracle, changing water into wine (see John 2:1-11). Afterward, the people of Jerusalem become angry with Jesus as He cleansed and rejected the Temple with the Temple’s moneychangers and business activities (see John 2:13-22).

 

Interestingly, John begins and ends Jesus’ public ministry in the Galilee region like the Synoptic Gospels (John 2:1; John 21:2; e.g., see Matthew 4:12-16; Matthew 28:16). In the Synoptic Gospels, Jesus’ public ministry centered in Galilee, and Jesus entered Judea at the end of His ministry. Significantly, John’s account of Jesus’ public ministry centers in Jerusalem, and John recorded Jesus ministering back and forth from Galilee to Judea.

 

The Synoptic Gospels do not record the Cana miracle. However, the geographic location of Galilee is significant. Galilee is in northern Israel, and this region is often called “Galilee of Gentiles” (e.g., see Matthew 4:15). In the first century, many devout Jews saw the Galilean region as unclean because many Gentiles lived in Galilee (see Matthew 4:15). Yet, Jesus devoted most of His earthly ministry to Galilee, and therefore He became known as a Galilean (e.g., see Matthew 26:69). Jesus’ ministry fulfilled the prophecy of Isaiah 9:1-2, which states that the Messiah (Christ) would be a light to the land of Zebulun and Naphtali, which are located in the northern Israel region of Galilee (Isaiah 9:1-2; see also Matthew 4:12-17; John 1:4-5, 9). After the fall of Jerusalem, located in southern Israel in AD 70, Galilee became the major center of Pharisaic Judaism.

 

b.   The Wedding Miracle

 

In Cana of Galilee, Jesus was attending a wedding feast with this mother and His disciples (John 2:1-2; see also John 1:37-49). In first-century Judaism, the wedding feast was a weeklong celebration spent celebrating the married couple's new life. A wedding feast was a joyous occasion with abundant eating, drinking, dancing, and playing music for a week. Often the whole town was invited Significantly, Jesus was on a mission to save the world (e.g., see John 1:29). Yet, Jesus and His disciples took time to attend a wedding and take part in its festivities. Jesus loves people, and He was never too busy to come when invited (see John 2:2).

 

Next, John says that the wine supply suddenly ran out during the marriage feast (see John 2:3). To run out of wine during the weeklong celebration broke hospitality in the first century, and the host family faced embarrassment. So, Jesus’s mother, who is Mary, came to Jesus and told Him that the marriage feast had no more wine (John 2:3, see also Matthew 1:16; Luke 1:27). At first, Jesus refused to respond to His mother’s demand because His mission from His Heavenly Father had not yet come (John 2:4; see also Matthew 26:18; John 12:23, 27; John 13:1; John 17:1). Jesus knew He had come into the world to redeem and save the world of their sins through His sacrificial death as the Passover Lamb of God (e.g., see Matthew 17:22-23; John 1:29, 36; John 3:16-17; 1 John 3:5; 1 John 4:14). Notably, Jesus’s mother informed the wedding’s servants to do whatever Jesus said to them (see John 2:5). Although Mary did not fully understand Jesus’s mission, Mary trusted and submitted to her Son Jesus, and Jesus responds to our heartfelt needs. Jesus helps others!

 

At the marriage celebration, there were six stone water jars that the Jews used for their ritual washing and purification ceremony (John 2:6; e.g., see Mark 7:1-4; Luke 11:37-38; John 3:25).[4] When full, each jar held about 20 to 30 gallons of water (or 75 to 113 liters) (see John 2:6). For Jews, they wanted to stay in a state of ritual cleansing, and the most important part of one’s body was their hands. According to the Jewish ceremonial laws, people became symbolically unclean by touching objects of everyday life. Before eating, the Jews would pour water over their hands to cleanse themselves of any bad influences associated with what they had touched.

 

Jesus instructed the wedding’s servants to fill the six stone jars with water (see John 2:7). The servants filled the stone jars with water up to the brim up to the very top (see John 2:7). Then, Jesus instructed the wedding’s servants to take some of the water from the jars to the master of ceremonies (also known as the headwaiter, governor, or ruler of the feast) (see John 2:8). When the master of ceremonies tasted the water that was now wine, not knowing where it had come from (though, of course, the servants knew), he called the bridegroom (see John 2:9). The ruler of the feast said to the bridegroom that he had saved the BEST wine for last (see John 2:10). Usually, the bridegroom always served the best wine first, and then when everyone had a lot to drink, he would bring out the less expensive or inferior wine (see John 2:10). Unbeknown to the master of ceremonies and the bridegroom, Jesus gave everyone the good new wine (see John 2:10).[5]

 

Changing water into wine was the first of Jesus’ miraculous signs (John 2:11; see also John 4:46). This first miracle of Jesus displayed His glory (John 2:11; e.g., see also John 1:14; John 11:4, 40). Jesus is the very radiance of God’s glory that He received from His Father, the living LORD God of heaven and earth, at the creation of the world (e.g., see John 17:24; Hebrews 1:3). Sadly, the lawless one – Satan also uses all sorts of displays of power through signs and wonders that serve his evil deception and lies to lead people away from the truth and faith in the living LORD God and His Son Jesus (e.g., see 2 Thessalonians 2:9-12). Always love TRUTH and FAITH in God the Father and His Son, Jesus (e.g., see 1 John 3:23).

 

Jesus’s disciples believed on Him (see John 2:11). Many people saw Jesus’ miraculous signs He performed and believed in His Name (e.g., see John 2:23; John 4:53; John 6:1-2, 14; John 7:31; John 9{31; John 12:18). For some like Nicodemus, Jesus’ miraculous signs proved that the living LORD God was with Him (John 3:2; see also John 10:30, 38; John 14:10-11; Acts 2:22; Acts 10:38). Jesus’ miracles revealed there was transforming power associated with Him. Nevertheless, even after Jesus had performed so many signs in their presence, some people, including some Jewish religious leaders, refused to believe in Him (e.g., see John 11:45-48; John 12:37). Remarkedly, Jesus’ first miracle was a quiet event at a wedding celebration (see John 2:1-11). However, Jesus’ last miracle recorded by John was a public event with Lazarus’s resurrection from complete death (see John 11:1-44).

 

c.    Revealing God’s Kingdom

 

Importantly, Jesus’ first miracle at the wedding feast symbolized the Kingdom and that the Messianic times had arrived in Jesus (e.g., see Amos 9:13-15; Matthew 9:15; Mark 2:19; Luke 5:33-24; John 3:27-29). The dominant symbol for the coming Kingdom in the Gospels and Jewish apocalyptic literature is a great feast or banquet with food, drink, and joy (e.g., see Matthew 8:11; Matthew 22:1-14; Matthew 25:1-13; Luke 12:35-36; Luke 13:29; Luke 14:16-24). One of the key features of the Messianic times is an abundance of food, drink, and joy (e.g., see John 10:10)! Joy is different from happiness. Joy is what one receives from God and almost always comes by God’s grace and mercy (e.g., see John 17:13). At the Kingdom feast or banquet, the living LORD God will give abundant food and drink and the Kingdom will be filled with joy. HERE IS THE GOOD NEWS: Jesus promised that we can receive that Kingdom joy NOW through faith and obedience to Him (e.g., see John 15:10-12; John 16:24).

 

Thus, John uses Jesus’ first miraculous sign to prove that Jesus brings God’s Kingdom NOW and in the FUTURE as a gift of His grace to those who believe and accept Him (e.g., see John 1:12-14). Jesus gives to EVERYONE that obeys and believes in Him an abundant life, peace, joy, and God’s grace (e.g., see John 1:4, 16-18; John 10:9-11; John 15:5, 11; John 16:24, 33; John 17:13). Jesus is God’s grace. NO ONE can receive the living LORD God’s goodness, healing, and grace without accepting and obeying His only begotten Son Jesus (e.g., see John 1:14, 16-18). Jesus is the stairway and only connection to the living LORD God of heaven and earth (e.g., see John 1:51; John 14:6; John 15:1-5; Ephesians 2:18; Ephesians 3:12). Through faith in Jesus, WE FIND TRUE, ABUNDANT, and a RESTORED LIFE both NOW and for all ETERNITY because Jesus is the Author and Savior of Life (e.g., see John 1:4; John 10:9-10; John 11:25; John 14:6; John 20:30-31; Acts 3:15; Acts 4:12; Acts 5:31).

 

Significantly, Jesus’s first miracle was performed in Cana, located in the region Galilee where many Gentiles (non-Jews) lived (see Matthew 4:15). With this miracle, John revealed that God’s Kingdom is for ALL PEOPLE and not just the Jews, who believe and accept God’s only Son, Jesus (e.g., see John 1:17-18; John 3:3-8; John 12:20-26). Jesus and His public ministry revealed and made known God and His Kingdom because Jesus is the stairway to heaven (e.g., see John 1:18, 51; John 14:6). The clearest picture of God is not the Law of Moses, not the Jerusalem Temple, not the created order of nature, but only in Jesus of Nazareth! The Gospel message gives Jesus’ life, and Jesus’ life gives the clearest picture of God. Jesus made God known and explained God and His Kingdom for all humankind (e.g., see Matthew 11:27; Luke 10:22; John 17:6, 26).

 

d.   Interlude

 

After Jesus’s first recorded miracle at Cana, Jesus went down to Capernaum with His mother Mary, His brothers and sisters, and His disciples, and they stayed there in Capernaum for a few days (John 2:12; see also Matthew 12:46; Mark 6:3; Acts 1:14). During His public ministry, Jesus moved from Nazareth, his hometown, and lived in Capernaum, which was in the Galilee region of northern Israel (see Matthew 4:12-13; Mark 1:21; Luke 4:31). Capernaum became Jesus’ home base during His public ministry in the Galilee region (e.g., see Matthew 9:1; Mark 2:1).

 

V.           Jesus and the Temple

 

a.    Passover

 

Next, John explains that Jesus left Capernaum located in northern Israel and traveled to Jerusalem to attend the Jewish Passover celebration (see John 2:13, 23).[6] Notably, John’s Gospel refers to three Passover celebrations Jesus attended (see John 2:13; John 6:4; John 11:55). Because John refers to three Passover festivals, many experts conclude that Jesus had a three-year public ministry.

 

In the Gospel of John, Jesus traveled routinely from the Galilee region in northern Israel to Jerusalem, located in southern Israel, to celebrate the Jewish Passover celebration and other Jewish festivals and holidays (e.g., see John 2:13; John 5:1; John 6:4; John 7:2; John 10:22; John 11:55; John 12:1; John 13:1).[7] In fact, John builds his Gospel message about Jesus around the Jewish feast days and other Jewish traditions. John wanted his readers to know that Jesus not only recognized Judaism, but Jesus fulfilled the intent of Judaism. Jesus upholds the essentials of Judaism, and He never devalued Judaism. John’s Gospel presents Jesus as the heart and the very fulfillment of Judaism by presenting Jesus not as Moses but as the Word of God, and then Jesus the Word became flesh (see John 1:1-5, 14, 17). THERE IS MORE GOOD NEWS:  Jesus brings the new teaching of God’s grace and truth that cannot be contained within the old forms of the Law (e.g., see Luke 5:36-39; John 1:14, 16-17).

 

b.   Jesus Rejects and Cleanses the Temple

 

John records that when Jesus arrived to the Jerusalem Temple, He saw merchants selling cattle, sheep, and doves for sacrifices (John 2:14; see also Malachi 3:1-3).[8] Instead of people coming to worship His Father, the living LORD God of heaven and earth, the Sadducees, along with their high priests that operated the Temple, had turned the Temple into a marketplace with business and money-making activities. The Temple was the most powerful symbolism in Judaism, and the Temple was controlled by the Sadducees. Sadly, in Jesus’ day, the primary purpose of the Temple was economics and business. The Jewish priests had established a lucrative commercial enterprise of exchanging foreign money for Jewish currency, and selling the animals needed for the sacrifices. Furthermore, Jews brought to the Temple their Temple tax. The many pilgrims that came to Jerusalem for the Jewish Passover celebration brought a variety of currency and no animals for sacrifice. Thus, the Temple’s outer courts became a noisy market for changing money and selling animals like a flea market, and not a wholehearted and sincere place where the nations of the world could worship Jesus’ Father, the living LORD God of heaven and earth (Matthew 21:12-13; Mark 11:17; Luke 19:46; see also Isaiah 56:7).[9] This “religious market” with greedy business dealings made a mockery of God’s house of worship where ALL NATIONS were to worship the living LORD God. Worship was the main purpose for the Temple. The Temple was to be a place of worship along with prayer, instruction, and sacrifice to the living LORD God. These greedy business dealings revealed the poor spiritual condition of the religious leaders and the people (see also Jeremiah 7:8-15; Ezekiel 8:7-18). No wonder Jesus was angry!

 

When entering His Father’s Temple, Jesus saw dealers at tables exchanging foreign money in the Temple area and found people selling cattle, sheep, and doves (John 2:14; see also Matthew 21:12-13; Mark 11:15-17; Luke 19:45-46). Seeing the Temple’s money-making marketplace, Jesus made a whip from some ropes and chased the wicked merchants out of the Temple (see John 2:15). Jesus drove out the sheep and cattle, poured out the changers’ money onto the floor, and turned over their tables (see John 2:15). Then, going over to the merchants who sold doves, Jesus told them, “Get these things out of here. Stop turning My Father’s house into a marketplace of merchandise, business, and trade” (John 2:16; see also Luke 2:49).

 

In this scene, John revealed Jesus’ anger, rage, and frustration! Jesus had a wholehearted passion and zeal for the holiness and worship of His Father’s house, and He saw these money-making business dealings as an insult against His Father, the living LORD God of heaven and earth, and His Temple (John 2:17; see also Psalm 69:9; Luke 2:49). Jesus would not allow this “religious market” to misuse and pollute God’s house with money-making, self-indulgent, and greedy business enterprises (e.g., see also Luke 11:39-40; Luke 16:14). When Jesus cleansed the Temple, He “declared war” on the phony, hedonistic, and profit-seeking religious leaders that exploited the people and turn them away from worship (Matthew 23:1-7, 25-26; see also Ezekiel 34:1-4).

 

Notably, the prophet Jeremiah made a similar statement about Jerusalem before the Babylonian’s attack and destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple in 586 BC. Before 586 BC, the Jews had turned the Temple – God’s House – into a den of robbers and thieves and not a place of holiness and worship (Jeremiah 7:11; see also Matthew 21:13; Mark 11:17; Luke 19:46). The people followed a worship ritual but maintained a sinful lifestyle against God and His covenant (see Jeremiah 7:2-3). Jerusalem and the Temple had become corrupted and filled with theft, murder, adultery, hypocrisy, lies, idolatry, and rebellion (Jeremiah 7:1-11; see also Matthew 23:37). The people did not love one another, and they oppressed and exploited the foreigners, the fatherless, the widows, and the innocent (Jeremiah 5:26-28; Jeremiah 7:5-6; see also Exodus 22:21-22; Leviticus 25:17; Deuteronomy 24:14-15; Isaiah 1:15-17). Idolatry filled Jerusalem, and the people did not wholeheartedly love the living LORD God and obey His commands (Jeremiah 7:6; Jeremiah 13:10; Jeremiah 25:6; see also Deuteronomy 6:4-6, 14). In chapter 2, John revealed Jesus’ cleansing and rejection of the Temple and the Temple’s religious corruption (see John 2:13-17). Significantly, the prophet Zechariah predicted that the living LORD would again seek the holiness of God’s House at His second coming (e.g., see Zechariah 14:5-7, 9, 17, 20-21).

 

c.    Jesus Is God’s Temple

 

After the Jewish leadership saw Jesus’ cleansing and rejection of the Temple, they demanded Jesus give the reason and the authority for cleansing the Temple (see John 2:18). Jesus had God’s authority because Jesus is ONE and EQUAL with His Father, the living LORD God (e.g., see John 5:18; John 10:30; John 12:45; John 14:9-10). Also, the Jewish leaders requested Jesus to show them a miraculous sign to prove His authority (John 2:18; see also 1 Corinthians 1:22). Oftentimes during Jesus’ ministry, the Jewish religious leaders asked Jesus to give them a sign (e.g., see Matthew 12:38; John 4:48; John 6:30). Great crowds of people followed Jesus because they saw the signs Jesus had performed, yet some people still did not believe in Him as the Son of God and the Messiah (e.g., see John 3:2; John 6:2, 14; John 12:37; John 20:30-31).

 

Jesus said to the Jewish leaders that if they destroyed this Temple, in three days, He would raise the Temple up from destruction (John 2:19; see also Matthew 12:38-40; Matthew 16:21; Luke 9:22).[10] In the Synoptic Gospels, Jesus gave the Jewish religious leaders the sign of John (see Matthew 12:38-40; Luke 11:29-30). The “sign of Jonah” was Jesus’ death, burial, and resurrection. The Jewish leadership scoffed at Jesus and said to Jesus that it had taken forty-six years to build the Temple (see John 2:20).[11] In this cryptic expression, Jesus informed the Jewish leaders that He is now the Temple of God, and He would raise again in three days if His body were destroyed (John 2:19-22; see also Psalm 16:10; Luke 24:5-8). Remarkedly, Jesus’ statement would be used against Him at His trial during Passion week (e.g., see Matthew 26:60-61; Matthew 27:39-40; Mark 14:57-59; Mark 15:29; John 10:18).

 

John wrote his Gospel so that everyone would know that God’s grace and truth have now come through Jesus (e.g., see John 1:14, 16-17). Jesus is the new sacrifice that takes away our sins (e.g., see John 1:29, 36). Even more, Jesus is God’s new Temple that gives everyone access to God through Him (e.g., see John 2:19; Ephesians 2:18; Ephesians 3:12). Even more, John’s Gospel teaches that the new worship will depend on inward truthfulness and not outward geography (see John 4:19-24).

 

At first glance, John 2:13-22 passage seems out of place. John’s Gospel placed the cleansing of the Temple near the beginning of Jesus’ public ministry after the Cana wedding feast. In a sense, John 2:13-22 reveals Jesus experienced hostility throughout His public ministry on earth and not just at the end of His life (see also John 1:10-11). However, the Synoptic Gospels – Matthew, Mark, and Luke – record Jesus’ cleansing the Temple during the last week of Jesus’ life before His death at Calvary (see Matthew 21:12-16; Mark 11:15-18; Luke 19:45-47). There have been many attempts to reconcile these two accounts as possibly two different cleansings by Jesus. Many biblical scholars believe it was unlikely there were two cleansings. Many scholars believe it was highly unlikely Jesus would have survived two cleansings, so this cleansing probably occurred during the last week of Jesus’ life, but John placed Jesus’ cleansing at the beginning of his Gospel. John simply placed Jesus’ cleansing out of chronological order. In John’s Gospel, the chronology was not as important as John’s theology about Jesus as God (e.g., see John 10:30). In the Synoptic Gospels, Jesus’ direct assault and rejection of the Temple and their money-making schemes ultimately led to His death (see Matthew 21:46; Mark 11:18; Mark 12:12; Luke 20:19).

 

Importantly, chapter 2 of John’s Gospel contrasts the Kingdom of God in Cana of Galilee of the Gentiles versus the Jerusalem Temple. In this chapter, John reveals no resistance to the Kingdom of God in Galilee of the Gentiles in northern Israel, because the Galileans welcomed God’s Kingdom found in Jesus (see John 2:1-11). However supposedly the most holiness place on earth – the Jerusalem Temple – rejected God’s Kingdom found in Jesus (see also John 1:10-11). In southern Israel, Jerusalem has become filled with religious evil! The Temple was supposed to be where the nations of the world come and worship God. However, Jerusalem had become a marketplace and rejected God’s Kingdom found in God’s Son, Jesus. Therefore, Jesus rejected the Jerusalem Temple and their wicked actions of trade and money (see Matthew 21:12-16; Mark 11:15-18; Luke 19:45-47; John 2:13-22).

 

All four Gospels reveal that the Temple has become a barrier to God. At Jesus’ death on Calvary, the massive, thick curtain (or veil) in the Temple in Jerusalem was split and ripped in two (see Matthew 27:51; Mark 15:38; Luke 23:45).[12] The Temple’s veil was split, symbolizing the Temple had NO MORE importance in God’s eye with Jesus’ sacrificial death at Calvary (see Hebrews 10:19-20). The Temple's essence was to be holy, but the veil was split because the Temple had become defiled and corrupted with evil. Thus, Jesus’ cleansing of the Temple was Jesus’ rejection of the Temple since the Temple no longer provided access to God for worship. Now, the Temple has become Jesus’ Himself, and Jesus gives everyone access to God through faith in Him (John 2:21; see also 1:51; John 14:6; Romans 5:1-2; Ephesians 2:18; Ephesians 3:12). As the Temple, Jesus is where the living LORD God is present!

 

VI.         Conclusion

 

Because of the miraculous signs Jesus did in Jerusalem at the Passover celebration, many began to follow Him and believe in His Name (John 2:23; e.g., see John 2:11; John 7:31; John 10:41; John 11:45; John 12:42). Jesus performed many miraculous signs and healing the sick during His public ministry on earth (e.g., see Matthew 4:23-25; Luke 6:17-19: John 3:2; John 6:1-2, 14-15; John 21:25; John 20:30). Despite His many miraculous signs, not everyone believed and accepted Jesus as from God (e.g., see 6:36, 64, 66; John 7:5).

 

Nevertheless, Jesus did not trust people’s belief in Him (see John 2:24). Sadly, three years later, many of these same people would reject Jesus as their King and Messiah and shout “crucify Him!” (e.g., see Matthew 27:22-23, 31; Mark 15:13-14, 20; Luke 23:21; John 19:6, 15). Besides, Jesus knows EVERYONE’S hearts and thoughts (John 2:24-25; see also e.g., Jeremiah 17:9-10; Matthew 9:4; John 1:48-49; John 5:41-42; John 6:61, 64; John 13:11; John 16:30). No one needed to tell Jesus what humankind was really like inside their hearts because He was the Author of life (John 2:25; see also Acts 1:24; Acts 3:17; Acts 5:31).

 

References

Apologetics Study Bible: Understanding Why You Believe (Nashville, TN: Holman Bible Publishers, 2012).

ESV Study Bible, English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2008).

Life Application Study Bible (Carol Stream, IL: Tyndale House, 1971).

New Student Bible (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1992).

Ryrie Study Bible (Chicago, IL: Moody, 1995).

The Living Bible Paraphrase (Tyndale House, 1971).

Zondervan NIV Study Bible (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2008).

Morris, Leon. The Gospel According to John, Revised Edition (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1995).

Dr. Loyd Melton, Ph.D., Senior Professor of the New Testament (Due West, SC: Erskine Theological Seminary, Summer 2020).

Wiersbe, Warren W. Bible Exposition Commentary – New Testament (Victor Books, 1989).



[1] Biblical scholars refer to Matthew, Mark, and Luke as the Synoptic Gospels. The Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke tell essentially the same storyline of Jesus that begins with Jesus’ public ministry in Galilee and ends with Jesus’ Passion story in Jerusalem. However, John’s Gospel does not follow the same storyline as the Synoptic Gospels. Instead, John’s Gospel supplements Jesus’ public ministry in Galilee with Jesus’ many activities in Jerusalem and Jesus’ attendance of several Jewish festivals.

[2] Significantly, “seven” is a good Jewish number that represents completion or perfection. Moreover, “seven” symbolizes God. John also uses “seven” in the book of Revelation, the other book he wrote.

[3] The Kingdom of God means the rule and reign of God is already present throughout the world and the future Kingdom at Jesus’ Second Coming (e.g., see Psalm 10:16-18; Matthew 24:1-51). Jesus is the clearest expression of the rule of God. In Jesus, the reign and rule of God was a Person (e.g., see Mark 1:14-15). Jesus revealed the reign and rule of God over sickness, disease, and evil. Jesus always gave salvation, healing, goodness, and deliverance through faith in Him (e.g., see Matthew 4:23-25; Luke 4:18-19; John 2:10; John 10:9-11).

[4] Jesus never condemned the Jews’ ritual washing before eating. However, Jesus wanted His fellow Jews and non-Jews (Gentiles or pagans) to wash the inside and outside of their hands and bodies with good deeds and actions (e.g., see Luke 11:37-44). Remarkedly, the four Gospel writers never discounted Judaism. In fact, the Gospels show Jesus’s continuity with Judaism (e.g., see Matthew 5:17-20). Therefore, Christians have continuity with Judaism. The only significant difference between Christianity and Judaism is that Christians believe the Messiah has come with Jesus, and Jesus will come again at the end of the age (e.g., see Matthew 1:1, 16-17; Matthew 24:30-31; John 1:41; John 4:25; Acts 1:11).

[5] In first-century Palestine, wine was the normal drink of the people. Therefore, NO ONE must use Jesus’s miracle as an argument for the abuse of alcoholic beverages and other illegal drugs.

[6] The Passover festival is one of Israel’s three great yearly festivals, the other two were Pentecost, and Tabernacles (see Deuteronomy 16:16). Passover celebrated the Jews’ deliverance and redemption from Egyptian slavery by God. At Passover, God “passed over” the Jews’ homes during God’s tenth and final plague against the Egyptians, and He brought death to the Egyptians’ firstborn. The Passover celebration took place yearly at the Temple in Jerusalem. This was a weeklong festival — the Passover was one day, and the Festival of Unleavened Bread lasted the rest of the week. To learn more about the annual Jewish Passover celebration, read Exodus 12:14-40; Exodus 23:15; Leviticus 23:4-8; Numbers 28:16-25; and Deuteronomy 16:1-8.

[7] As mentioned earlier, Jesus was a devout Jew, and He did not condemn the Jewish cultural (e.g., see Matthew 27:11, 37; John 4:22; John 19:19-20, 40). The Gospels reveal that Jesus deliberately violated the man-made religious traditions of the Pharisees. However, Jesus ALWAYS obeyed the written statutes of the Law and was faithful to uphold the Law. The Law of Moses came from His Father, the living LORD God, and not from humans. However, EVERYONE – Jews and non-Jews – are saved not by obeying the Law but by God’s grace when we humbly, wholeheartedly, and dependently in trust Him (e.g., see Acts 15:10-11, 19-21; Ephesians 2:8-9).

[8] In the Jerusalem Temple, the complex included the sanctuary (the Holy Place and the Holy of Holies), at least four courtyards (for the priest, Jews, women, and Gentiles), numerous gates, and several covered walkways.

[9] The Temple in Jerusalem was majestic and overlooked the city. King Solomon built the first Temple in approximately 959 BC, but Solomon’s Temple was destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 BC (see 2 Kings 25). The Jerusalem Temple was rebuilt in 515 BC led by Zerubbabel and the prophets Haggai and Zechariah and Herod had enlarged and remodeled the Temple during Jesus’ public time on earth. Sadly, the Jerusalem Temple was destroyed in AD 70 by the Roman army, and the Temple’s destruction officially ended the Jewish sacrificial system.

[10] Some biblical translations use “sanctuary” instead of Temple.

[11] This Temple had been built by Zerubbabel over 500 years earlier and completed in approximately 515 BC. The first Temple built by Solomon was destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 BC. Then, the living LORD God instructed Zerubbabel to rebuild the Temple destroyed by the Babylonians. Zerubbabel’s Temple is often called the Second Temple. Herod remodeled Zerubbabel’s Temple to expand the Temple beginning in 20 BC, and this Temple was present during Jesus’ times.

[12] This thick curtain or veil sealed off the Most Holy Place. No one except the high priest was allowed into the presence of God in that Most Holy Place. The high priest was permitted into the Most Holy Place only once a year, on a special day called the Day of Atonement or Yom Kippur.


Saturday, June 27, 2020

What Is A Gospel?


16 For I am not ashamed of the Gospel (Good News about God and His Son, Jesus Christ), for it is the power of God (Spirit at work) for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and to the Greek (Gentiles or non-Jews). 17 For in it (the Gospel) the righteousness of God (how God makes us right in His sight) is revealed from faith for faith, as it is written, “The righteous shall live by faith.” Romans 1:16-17, English Standard Version

As we study the Gospel of John, many people may ask, "What is a Gospel?" For centuries, scholars have debated the meaning of a gospel. In the New Testament, there are four kinds of literature: (1) Gospels; (2) book of Acts; (3) the Letters, also known as Epistles, from Paul and other authors; (4) the book of Revelation, also known as apocalyptic literature. The New Testament defines the "Gospel" as both the Gospel of God and the Gospel of Christ (e.g., see Romans 15:16; 2 Corinthians 2:12; 1 Thessalonians 3:2). God promised this Good News long ago through His Old Testament prophets because the Gospel is about God's only begotten Son, Jesus the Messiah (see Romans 1:2-4).

In the Old Testament, the word "bisar" is the Hebrew verb which means "to proclaim good news." Bisar was used to describe the report of victory in battle (e.g., see 2 Samuel 4:9-10). The ancient Israelites believed the living God reigns and rules as King (e.g., see Psalm 24:1-2, 7-10), and the living God was actively involved in their lives (including battles and wars) to deliver then out of all their troubles, hardships, and pain and to bring them into salvation and ultimate victory (e.g., see 1 Samuel 17:45-47; 2 Kings 6:16-18; Psalm 40:9-10; Isaiah 52:7). Then in the Old Testament, the Gospel also meant the coming deliverance, victory, and salvation of God through the Messiah (Christ, Anointed One)[1] (e.g., see 2 Samuel 7:12-16; Isaiah 11:1-10; Jeremiah 23:5-6; Ezekiel 34:23-24).

The Greek word most used for bisar was euangelizesthai. Like the Hebrew word bisar, euangelizesthai was a word used to announce and proclaim victory in battle. Christians increasingly used euanggelion (the noun derived from euangelizesthai) to describe the Good News of Jesus. The English editions of the Bible used the Anglo-Saxon word "godspell" to translate the noun euaggelion. Godspell was used because the story about Jesus was Good News. As English developed, the term was shortened to "Gospel." Today, the Gospel and the Good News are used interchangeably when referring to Jesus the Messiah (Christ). Christians use the word Gospel or Good News as the message of God's saving activity through the life, ministry, death, and resurrection of God's unique Son, Jesus.

Through faith in Jesus the Messiah (Christ), the living God has given EVERYONE (Jews, Gentiles, blacks, whites, Muslins, Hindus, gay, straight, young, old, rich, poor, male and female) the privilege and power to become His children and to be made right in His sight (e.g., see John 1:12-13; Romans 1:16-17). Even more through Jesus the Messiah, we receive God's grace and connection to heaven (e.g., see John 1:14, 16-17; John 14:6; John 15:1-8).

Jesus announced this Good News when He came into the first century Roman-occupied Palestine. In Palestine, Jesus proclaimed that His Father, the living LORD God of heaven and earth, and God's Kingdom had come into the world through Him (e.g., see Mark 1:14-15; John 1:1-5, 18). Jesus the Messiah and His Father, the living LORD God, are One (e.g., see John 10:30; John 14:9-10). Furthermore, Jesus declared that everyone must REPENT (turn from their sins) and TURN to His Father, the living LORD God, who reigns and rules the whole universe (e.g., see Matthew 4:17). Then, Jesus announced that through faith in Him everyone would receive God and the goodness of God's Kingdom NOW, which includes God's healing, forgiveness, and salvation, and in the future at His second return to earth (e.g., see Matthew 4:23-25; Luke 6:17-20; Matthew 25:31-46).

The four Gospels were written primarily for first-century churches that were facing certain problems and hardships. Many of these issues in the first century are the same issues that today's churches are facing. The Gospels, then and now, are pastoral (caring) documents designed to encourage, teach, rebuke, as well as comfort believers in God and His Son Jesus dealing with everyday problems and situations. Thus, the message of the Gospels is timeless. 

There are four Gospels that declare the message of Jesus. These Gospels are Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. In the second century, Tatian sought to combine and harmonize the four Gospels — Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John — into one story of Jesus's life and death and create one Gospel narrative. This collapsed Gospel written by Tatian was called the Diatessaron. The Diatessaron was widely circulated in the early churches. Eventually, the early churches rejected the Diatessaron by Tatian. They believed the Gospels about Jesus should not be collapsed and should be preserved as a four-fold collection of Jesus' life and death.

Throughout the years, the Gospel message about Jesus has been defined in many ways. For centuries, many scholars taught the Gospels were a straightforward biography of Jesus's life and history. But by the 18th century, many scholars began rejecting the notion that the Gospel was a biography of Jesus because the four Gospels omitted the first 30 years of Jesus' life. Even more, these scholars noted the four Gospels give little biographical information about Jesus. The four Gospels provide few details about Jesus' family life, and only two Gospels – Matthew and Luke, give Jesus' birth, and even then, Matthew and Luke's birth story about Jesus vary and differ.

Mark begins his Gospel with Jesus' public ministry in first-century Palestine, while John's Gospel begins his message about Jesus with eternity. John's Gospel begins his Gospel with the same words as Genesis with "In the beginning." For the most part, the public ministry of Jesus is where all four Gospels center their story starting with Jesus' baptism by John the Baptizer (see Matthew 3:13-17; Mark 1:9-11; Luke 3:21-22; John 1:29-34) and ending with Jesus' death, resurrection, and ascension as Savior of the world (see Matthew 28:1-10; Mark 16:1-11; Luke 24:1-12; John 20:1-18).

However, some scholars argue that the four Gospels are simply a collection of the teaching and preaching of the church. Radical form critics such as Rudolf Bultmann, a German theologian, argued the Gospels have little historical value of Jesus as a historical person but only give what the early church had come to believe about Jesus during the period of oral traditions. This view was popular from 1900 through 1950. Such form critics argued the Gospel writers used mostly oral and some written sources about Jesus that were shaped and modified by the early church to create the Gospels. Form critics such as Rudolph Bultmann argued the oral traditions about Jesus from the early church were substantially changed during the period of oral transmission. By the time of the first Gospel in approximately A.D. 70, these form critics believed the Gospels gave very little about the historical Jesus in the four Gospels.

For many years, the stories and teachings of Jesus were communicated primarily by word of mouth. Literacy was uncommon in the ancient world. Books and writing equipment were expensive, and the education needed to use them was usually reserved for the rich. Such an oral system may seem fragile and unreliable by modern standards, but ancient societies trusted the methods and forms they developed to sustain the process. Thus, scholars such as Joachim Jeremias argued that the Gospels with the stories about Jesus maintained a sacred nature and not merely rumors and gossips, as contended by Rudolf Bultmann. The teaching of Jesus possessed an authority by the early church, and the early church did not modify the oral teachings of Jesus. Such scholars as Joachim Jeremias argued that those who passed on the oral traditions of Jesus in the early church were faithful to those oral traditions. These early believers of Jesus did not radically modify nor create traditions about Jesus.

Some scholars have argued that the Gospels are like Roman biographies. In Roman biographies, the authors would write about the Roman Emperors' long discourses or speeches, and the character of the Emperor was revealed through their words and statements. Similarly, the Gospels, particularly Luke and John's Gospels, are filled with Jesus' long discourses, sermons, or speeches. The heart of John's Gospel is the speeches and lectures from Jesus. Thus, some scholars have argued that the Gospels are an imitation of the Greco-Roman biographies of Roman Emperors.

Nonetheless, some scholars see the Gospel as a unique creation with similarities and parallels to Greco-Roman biographies. However, in the Greco-Roman biographies, everyone praised the Emperor. In the Gospels, Jesus is ultimately rejected, and Jesus' enemies seemed victories.

Therefore, most scholars today see the Gospels as merely a theological portrait of Jesus. A theological portrait is an interpretation of Jesus by each Gospel writer. Most scholars now believe the four Gospel writers used both written and oral traditions about Jesus' life and ministry during the forty years after Jesus' ascension to heaven in approximately A.D. 30 to create their theological portrait of Jesus (e.g., see Luke 1:1-4). The four Gospel writers retell the story of Jesus, and each writer emphasized aspects of Jesus to guide, care, or shepherd the early church. John's Gospel states that there were many stories and miracles about Jesus. Like other Gospel writers, John gave only selected stories and miracles of Jesus to help his congregation (see John 20:30; John 21:25). Each Gospel writer created Jesus from a bias that Jesus is the Messiah (Christ) and the Son of God (e.g., see Matthew 16:16; Matthew 17:5; Mark 1:1; Luke 1:29-37; John 1:41, 49; John 20:31).

The four Gospels were probably sent to early Christian churches that met in small house churches. These early Christians lived in a hostile environment and suffered persecution from both their fellow Jews and the Romans. For the most part, the Gospels were pastoral documents to help believers of God and His Son Jesus handle difficult discriminations, false teaching, and the Gospels were sent to teach, rebuke, and encourage Jesus' followers.

The four Gospels do not give a daily travel log of Jesus' public ministry nor a complete history of Jesus' life. Interestingly, the New Testament writers do not give an objective biographical account of Jesus. The four Gospel writers were evangelists that presented a story of Jesus to influence and convince faith on Him. The content of the Gospels discusses the historical Jesus, and the Gospels are sacred stories about Jesus. However, each Gospel writer gives their portrait of Jesus' public life, teaching, and ministry.

The first written Gospel appeared around A.D. 70, which was 40 years after Jesus' ascension and return to heaven in approximately A.D. 30 (see Acts 1:9-11). The Gospels simply did not drop from the sky! In A.D. 70, the first Gospel appeared, and many scholars believe the Gospel of Mark was the first Gospel written. Mark, who was a second-generation Christian, was not an eyewitness of Jesus. However, the early church believes Mark used Apostle Peter, an original eyewitness of Jesus' public ministry on earth, as his source for his Gospel. Mark's Gospel record the life and message of Jesus as he heard it from Apostle Peter. Many scholars believe the Gospel of John, written by the Apostle John, was the last Gospel written. Between these Mark and John's Gospels, the Gospels of Matthew was written by Apostle Matthew, and then the Gospel of Luke was written. The Gospel of Matthew is the most Jewish of the Gospels, and Matthew regularly presented Jesus as the fulfillment of Hebrew prophecy. For instance, the purpose of the nativity story in Matthew is to present Jesus as the royal Messiah from the family of David (see Matthew 1:1-17). The Sermon on the Mount portrays Jesus as a new Moses who teaches God's Law (see Matthew 5:1-20). Luke was a travel companion of the Apostle Paul and the only Gentile author. The Gospel of Luke is generally accepted as the only Gospel written by a Gentile (non-Jew). As a non-Jew, Luke wanted to explain that Jesus was the Savior of all people. The Gospel of John was the last Gospel written. John's Gospel is undoubtedly the most insightful and the most theological of the four Gospels. John wrote his Gospel to both a Jewish and Gentile (Greek) audience. These four Gospels were eventually becoming canonized as Scriptures. The early church recognized God's Holy Spirit in the four Gospels to proclaim the message of salvation and victory through Jesus!

However, there were other gospels written about Jesus that circulated during the church's early history. These rejected "gospels" often lacked Jewish interpretations of Jesus, or Gnostic heretics heavily influenced them. Some of these other gospels were written much later than the four Gospels included in the New Testament. Most of these other gospels were written between A.D. 120 and 150. Nevertheless, these other stories of Jesus would eventually become written down into the Apocrypha gospels. The Apocrypha gospels are several writings by early Christians that give accounts of Jesus, and many of these gospels were written up into the 5th century and written by authors who were not eyewitnesses of Jesus' public ministry.

From the time of Jesus' death and ascension into heaven in A.D. 30, the stories, teachings, and miracles of Jesus were circulated orally by His disciples. In addition to the fact of limited learning, members of the early church believed Jesus would return soon, so they felt no urgency to write down His teachings for the future. Jesus' disciples who eyewitness His public ministry expected Jesus to return to earth soon to establish His military Kingdom as reflected in Acts 1 at Jesus' ascension into heaven.

About thirty years after Jesus' ascension, three interrelated crises began to impact the church. First, there was persecution by Nero and other Romans against Christians that led to the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple in A.D. 70, which ended the Jewish sacrificial system and Temple worship. Second, the eyewitnesses of Jesus' public ministry started were dying. The early church placed a high value on the eyewitnesses of Jesus' miracles, teachings, and life (e.g., see Luke 1:2; 1 John 1:1-3). Third, many Christians began to realize that Christ would not return soon to earth, and they needed to preserve Jesus' message. As a result, individuals responded to the leadership of God's Spirit to write down the teachings, stories, and message of Jesus into what we call the Gospels. Because Jesus had not yet returned, early Christians believed there was a need for the traditions of Jesus to be written down by Jesus' eyewitnesses.

From approximately A.D. 70 until A.D. 90, four individuals responded to the inspiration of God's Spirit by writing down the message about Jesus. These four individuals wanted to strengthen, educate, comfort, and encourage those suffering from persecution with the Good News of God's protection through Jesus. Moreover, these four individuals wanted to use a written form of the Gospel as an additional tool for evangelism to spread faith in Jesus as the Messiah (Christ) and the Son of God (e.g., see John 20:30-31). Many people wished the four Gospel writers included additional information about Jesus' home life, His youth and teen years, or some other area of interest. However, the Gospel writers' primary interest was not to produce great works of literature, nor was their intention to write a biography about Jesus. Their principal goal was to persuade, convince, and lead people to faith in Jesus as the Messiah (Christ) and the Son of God (e.g., see Matthew 28:16-20; Mark 1:1). Each Gospel writer gave a theological portrait of Jesus as influenced by each writer's personality and first-century audience. Out of several gospels and other accounts of the life of Jesus, God led the early church to choose four which He had inspired – Matthew; Mark; Luke; John (e.g., see Luke 1:1-2).


References
Butler, Trent C. Holman Bible Dictionary (Nashville, TN: Broadman and Holman Publishers, 1991).
Dr. Loyd Melton, Ph.D., Senior Professor of the New Testament (Due West, SC: Erskine Theological Seminary, Summer 2020).


[1]   The word Messiah (Hebrew term) and Christ (Greek term) both means "Anointed One" (Matthew 1:17; John 1:41; John 4:25).