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The Logos in John's Prologue

The Logos in John's Prologue

Excerpt

‎John’s use of logos drew on a wide-range of Jewish and Greek concepts, evoking associations with the OT, Hellenistic Jewish literature, and Greek philosophy. Using the title “the Wordfor Jesus simultaneously invoked and subverted the assumptions of his Jewish and Greek audiences. His use of the term was a deliberate attempt to persuade them of the divinity of Jesus using categories of thought they would have been familiar with.

‎For Jews, John’s use of logos would have evoked the phrase, the “[Word] of Yahweh.” This title was an important part of biblical traditions about Yahweh and His effective power over the universe. The phrase was regularly used to refer to Scripture as divine law (Isa 2:3), written instruction (Psa 119:11), and prophetic revelation (Hos 4:1; Ezek 6:1). More important, the “Word of Yahweh” was depicted as an active force at work in the world to accomplish Yahweh’s will (Isa 55:11; Jer 23:29). This force was the agent through which Yahweh created the world (Psa 33:6, 9; Gen 1:3, 6, 11).

A Jewish audience in the first century AD would also have accepted “the Wordas a divine title based on the regular substitution of memra (Aramaic for “the Word) for the divine name in Aramaic translations of the OT, also called targums. The Aramaic translators used this title to avoid instances where Yahweh was described in human terms (i.e., with an arm or hand). This tradition connected “the Word with creation even more: The targum for Isa 48:13a reads “By my word I have founded the earth” (replacing “my hand” in the Hebrew text with memra).

For Greeks, the idea of “the Word as God’s active agent on earth resonated with the Greek notion that the Logos was the stabilizing principle of the universe. In Greek, logos can mean “reason,” or rational thought. In Greek philosophy, logos referred to the ordering principle behind the universe, the all-pervasive creative energy at the source of all things. The philosopher Heraclitus (sixth century BC) declared this principle always existed and was responsible for all things. The Logos was ultimate reality, the ever-present wisdom organizing the universe. The Stoic philosophers developed this idea further in the third century BC, and envisioned the Logos as the rational principle of the universe that made everything understandable. The Logos was the impersonal power that originated, permeated, and directed everything.

John’s use of the term logos does not appear to be indebted to Greek philosophy, however. His presentation of the Logos as a personal Creator involved in His creation and incarnated in the person of Jesus completely subverted the philosophical idea of the Logos as an impersonal force. A Greek audience would have recognized the concept as important, even if they did not fully understand it. John’s usage combines Jewish and Greek concepts about the universe and ultimate reality. The first century AD Jewish philosopher Philo of Alexandria also explicitly combined these two worlds of thought, describing the Logos as the rationality of the mind of God and the template for the divine ordering of creation.

John’s assignment of “the Wordto the role of the active agent in creation (John 1:3) connects with the biblical picture of creation through the divine word (Gen 1:3; Psa 33:6), and creation through divine wisdom (Prov 3:19, 8:22–31). Proverbs 3:19 describes “wisdom” as Yahweh’s agent in creation. Wisdom is regularly personified in Proverbs 1–9 and takes an active role in creation in Prov 8. Just like divine wisdom, “the Wordwas also life-giving (compare Prov 3:18 and John 1:4).

Creation is the central concept of the message of John’s Gospel. Both the Jewish and the Greek associations of “the Wordfind their ultimate meaning in creation. The Greeks were searching for knowledge, for a way to understand the impersonal principle bringing order to the universe. John proclaims that the one who gives order to creation is personal and divine. For the Jews, the connection between “the Word and creation was natural since the role of Creator inherently belongs to God. But neither the Jews nor the Greeks would have expected John’s conclusion. He took a familiar concept, rich with meaning, and gave it a surprising twist. “The Word was God, not an impersonal force, not just a tool God used to accomplish His purpose. “The Wordwas personal. “The Word was God, and God came in human form as Jesus (John 1:14).

John puts it all together. Jesus is none other than God’s creative, life-giving, light-giving Word. Jesus is the power of God that created the world and the reason of God that sustains the world—come to earth in the flesh. Using the term logos to communicate this prepared John’s hearers to accept the validity of his message.

DOUGLAS MANGUM

Barry, John D. et al. Faithlife Study Bible. Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2012. Print.

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