29 April 2011

the artist formally known as John …(QºM #10)

Pt1Pt2Pt3aPt3bPt3cPt4 — Pt5 — Pt6 — Pt7Pt8Pt9 —Pt10— Pt11 — Pt12
The fourth gospel is foremost a work of art. Like most great works of art, its aim is not a representational one. Art, though often achieving a remarkable resemblance with what it seeks to represent, is not primarily about representation, it is about hyperbole. It is about using symbols to evoke psychical and/or emotional responses in an audient. The Gospel of John is the most poetic and symbolical gospell. It has by far the highest christology. Here, Jesus is not just some guy who heals and impresses folks with his prophetic acumen, he is the very Son, sent by the Father, who is simultaneously in mystical union with this Father. For a clear example of this hyper-exaltation, consider that whereas Mark’s gospel pictures Jesus as having received his messianic vocation at his baptism, and the Pauline epistles think it came at the moment of resurrection (Philippians 2), and Matthew’s gospel pictures it happening at his conception. John’s gospel raises the bar. Its author pictures Jesus as the Logos, that is, as a manifestation of the pre-existing, eternal logic of God. The use of this term in the book's opening hymn recalls Philo of Alexandria’s early (he was a contemporary of Jesus) attempts to systematize the Hebrew faith into a Hellenized form. But logos is in fact a Greek concept which informed the philosophical understanding of God and transcendence. What Philo postulated as an attribute of God, John fleshed out. John creates a poetic incarnation of this facet of God, intending to convince the early Christian communities in the eastern provinces of the empire of the divinity of Jesus. John thereby emphasizes Jesus’ “son-of-god”-ship more than the other evangelists. While the others certainly use this term for Jesus, John’s gospel elaborates on this concept, and even goes as far as to subtly equate the Son with the Father. To see the son is to see the father. To accept the son is to accept the father. This identity is one of the central motifs in the book.
While in Mark and the synoptics Jesus refuses to perform signs, the structure of John centers on the performance of these signs. These signs serve to reveal Jesus’ true identity as God himself. Through these signs, Jesus is revealed as the fulfillment of certain Jewish ideals or festivals. The previous gospels also emphasize that Jesus is the fulfillment of Judaism, but John steps it up a notch or two.
The vast majority of John is NOT paralleled in the synoptic gospels. There are no exorcisms in John. There are also no parables in John. Parables, of great importance to the synoptics as representing Jesus’ idiomatic didactic style, are completely absent in John. But perhaps the most striking dissimilarity between John and the synoptic gospels is the fact that in John’s gospel Jesus dies on the day of preparation for the Passover festival, that is, on the day that the lambs are slaughtered. In the synoptics, the last supper IS the Passover meal. This is an irreconcilable contradiction.
Despite apologist claims to the contrary, the gospel never actually claims to be authored by the beloved disciple. The author claims to have the eyewitness testimony of the beloved disciple (John 19:35), which is quite a different thing.

Who was his audience?

The primacy which this gospel had in the eastern provinces suggests that it came either from Asia Minor or possibly Alexandria. Valentinus and his disciples knew this gospel in 160 or so.1
Three times in John characters are thrown “out of the synagogue.” This repetitive motif might reflect the friction around the turn of the first century, when the authorities in the synagogues distinguish themselves from the “Nazarenes,” who were attending the synagogues up until this point (as Jews or as god-fearers?) One of the prayers read at synagogue services was even changed at this point to reject these Nazarenes.

For the apostates, let there be no hope. Let the arrogant government be speedily uprooted in our day. Let the Nazarenes and the heretics be destroyed in a moment … "

It distinguishes between the Nazarenes and the heretics, perhaps indicating that the Christians were never regarded as part of the “in-crowd” in the first place. It calls them “arrogant.” Commentators have suggested that these stories about getting thrown out of the synagogue are references to this emerging rabbinical antagonism.
John’s teachings about Jesus are laid out in long philosophical discourses. The emphasis on the “kingdom of God” is missing from John. As in Luke, the “spirit” plays a role, but in John, it is magnified. A distinctive feature of John‘s gospel is the emphasis on loving one another. The synoptics touch on this love when they refer to the Law (love the Lord your god, etc), but the emphasis on love, however, is not characteristic of Matthew or Luke. (It is in Paul - 1st Cor 13, however.)
The opening prologue in the Gospel of John contains many of the recurring themes throughout the gospel. Jesus is the Logos, the “word” of god, the logic of god, the self-expression of god, the wisdom of god, the utterance of god, an emanation from god. Though not so much thematically, the prologue recalls the framing of the creation story in Genesis (“In the beginning…” . . . in Genesis, god creates by uttering words). This Jesus can thus be identified with the utterance of god that was active in the creation of the world. To the Jew . . . God’s utterance IS the Torah. Thus, this is amazingly high christology compared to that of Mark‘s gospel. This prologue reflects a Hellenistic background to the gospel. The use of the Logos metaphor would have been familiar to anyone who was educated and familiar with stoic philosophy. (e.g. the god-fearers) Logos is the organizing principle of the universe. Logos is reason - rationality. Already in this prologue the themes of “life”, “light” are being unpacked (Gnostic allusions?). Jesus is an emissary sent from god, coexisting with him.
The interaction between John the Baptizer and Jesus is unique in John as well. “Here is the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world,” he has the Baptizer say. This introduces the concept of Jesus as redeemer for human sin. We saw previously this idea in the Pauline corpus. In John, this is a key interpretation. It corresponds with John’s interpretation of Jesus as the fulfillment of the Passover festival (at least in his chronology of the last supper incident- thematically, the celebration of Passover is not about this redemption. That is more the purview of the Atonement feast - perhaps this is why the scapegoat theme is introduced - that is, as a way to bridge the gap between Atonement and Passover). The lamb, after all, denoted the emancipation of the Jews from captivity . . . More later. This also introduce the concept of the Eucharist in a way . . . For the lamb gets eaten as part of the ritual.
In the first chapter of john, you can find pretty much every single title of Jesus given in individual gospels: Son of god, son of man, the light, the messiah, the Logos. There is NO messianic secret in John. Far from it, John boasts his divine status. The structure of the gospel revolves around the “signs” which prove his divinity, and which he performs openly..
The festival of Tabernacles (tents —booths) takes place in the fall. There is drawing of water on each of the seven days during the feast of Tabernacles. Also, there is a use of Lamps and of light interfused into the celebration. On one of Jesus’ visits to Jerusalem during this festival, on the last day, Jesus proclaims, “let anyone who is thirsty come to me.” He’s not just the light, he the water of life too. These are proto-gnostic terms.
At (8:39) . . . . Jesus is accused of having a demon. He replies:
I do not have a demon, but I honor my father and you dishonor me. Yet I do not seek my own glory. There is one who seeks it and he is the judge. Very truly I tell you that whoever keeps my word will never see death.# The Jews said to him, “Now we know that you have a demon. Abraham died and so did the prophets, yet you say, ‘whoever keeps my word will never taste death; are you greater than our father Abraham, who died? The prophets also died. Who do you claim to be? If I glorify myself, my glory is nothing. It is my father who glorifies me. He of who you say, ‘He is our god,’ though you do not know him. But I know him. If I would say that I do not know him, I would be a liar like you, but I do know him and I keep His word. Your ancestor Abraham rejoiced that he might see my day. He saw it and was glad.’ Then the Judeans said to him, ‘you are not yet fifty years old, and have you seen Abraham?’ Jesus said to them, ‘Very truly, I say to you, before Abraham was, I am!’ … "
“I Am” was the name of God as told to Moses by the burning bush on Mt Sinai. Jesus’ little paroxysm is a poetic alliteration on this same theme. This is the christological high water mark in the Gospel of John. If the prologue wasn‘t enough to convince the reader of Jesus‘ divine element, here’s an explicit self-proclamation of Jesus as God Himself! The entire gospel seems like a succession of Jesus’ christological proclamations. After one of these, the Judean took up stones to stone him. Why didn’t they? What stops them? I mean . . . . If talking this way is what made them crucify him, . . . Why could they just stone him like they stoned any other blasphemer? Right then and there, like they did Stephen. Is there a hole in the plot here?
His last discourse at the last supper: “Truly I tell you that whoever receives one who I send receives me, and whoever receives me receives He who sent me.” He seems to like to remind them of his emissary status. This last discourse establishes a chain of command from God through Jesus through the disciples. They are now heirs to Jesus’ majesty by proxy. (does it not follow that the disciples are also equivalent to God in the same way? It's an interesting question)
In the fourth gospel, Jesus keeps repeating this self-identification with the father—ad nauseum … (Something’s wrong with this guy) But then . . . Suddenly . . . Some humility to lessen the smugness:. 'Those who believe will do greater things than me.'
Then comes the paraclete bit. In the gospel of John, Jesus descends from the father, then ascends to him and sends the paraclete (helper, comforter, spirit) on his behalf (to help with what? - it seems like the mission is the message, to borrow a phrase from Marshall McLuhan.) — Chap 17 verse 18 . . .
As you have sent me to the world, so I have sent them . . . . This is preemptively adding credibility to the apostles (the "sent-out" ones).
Next comes the arrest and execution of Jesus.
Like we already saw, Jesus dies on the day of preparation.
Question: if Jesus is the Passover lamb, what does painting the door lintel with his blood protect Israel from? If the answer is “sin” then there are mixed metaphors at work, as I hinted at earlier. The lamb doesn’t die (in other words) to make up for the sins of the people. The lamb dies to limit the angel of death’s killing spree to the Egyptians. This is a little confusing. Why mix these metaphors without explanation? It could be just the result of misunderstood Judaism.
The pattern that John uses is this: Jesus does a sign, and then he discourses on the significance of it. The elders get pissed because he’s healing on the Sabbath (this was already allowed by Torah . . . thus this charge from the authorities is highly unlikely to have been historically based). The Judean authorities were seeking to kill him, so the author of this gospel asserts, for healing people on the Sabbath and for calling god his own father. This, I think, is ridiculous, and it reflects an inadequate hyper-legalistic understanding of the Pharisees, who were used to this kind of thing and had never (not in any surviving record we have) sought the execution of a man for these things. One could imagine that they thought he was making himself equal to god, I guess, but the way it is expressed so casually and without any exposition, it seems an unlikely reaction, especially in light of Jesus saying, “I can do nothing on my own.”


I'll end for now by pointing out that there is no mention of James in the Gospel According to John.

for now …

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1 - Heracleon wrote the first known commentary on this gospel circa 170.

2 comments:

  1. "I'll end for now by pointing out that there is no mention of James in the Gospel According to John."

    If James is the brother of the lord (Jesus), and Mary is the mother of Jesus, then it could be implied that the beloved disciple is James.

    Look at John chapter 19:

    25 Near the cross of Jesus stood his mother, his mother's sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene. 26 When Jesus saw his mother there, and the disciple whom he loved standing nearby, he said to his mother, "Dear woman, here is your son," 27 and to the disciple, "Here is your mother." From that time on, this disciple took her into his home.

    I don't see any reason why this scene was inserted into John's gospel, other than to make some sort of (adopted) familial connection between Jesus and the beloved disciple.

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  2. This is a puzzling scene otherwise, isn't it?
    But then, why wouldn't the author who just a few verses later vouches for the eyewitness veracity of his story not mention James by name? This would have put to rest all doubts about its authenticity. The fact that it was in question at all might indicate that they simply could not in the East have attributed the tradition to James —or even John—without the Western branch calling them out on it. It would have been too a grandiose claim .
    If it IS james . . .
    How did he go from "he whom J loved" (a term that, to my ears, does not sound "brotherly") status to simply "brother of the Lord"? At first glance, it it kinda calls to mind a Borgian (pre/post)-Easter thing.

    Ó

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