John
1: Has consumer capitalism[1]
displaced the Word? Nomads don’t seem to think so.
Guide: CJB emphasis in bold (CJB online),
text in green; NIV in magenta ; Nomads* discussion in yellow; and my comments in gray. I use endnotes to cite outside
literature or extensive comment.
*Participative
Sunday-school-class at UBC led by Ken Tipton. My continually improved statement
about Genesis 1:26-28 is at the end of this. Today, I perceive that Paul’s
letters to early churches preceded the 4 gospels and refute Genesis 1:26-28. I
prefer Yeshua’s civic influence and discourage Pauline arrogance.
Major
concerns from John 1
1.
“In the beginning was the Word . . .”
expresses mystery on mystery. Does “the Word” precede The God? In time, by necessity,
or other basis? Does an infant desire goodness before they pursue The God? Once
necessary goodness is the intention, does mystery play a role? Does The God
relieve the mystery? See V38.
2.
I support open-minded and openhearted
Sunday school. And I think maintaining a list of interpretations of “the Word”
would aid imagination, which is necessary for discovery. See a starter
list in yellow highlight after V5.
3. In
several instances I think CJB increases comprehension, such as,
a. V3
“nothing . . . had being” suggests activation of what was created
b. V12
I prefer “trust in his person and power” rather than believe in his name.
c. V13
The God draws the person to the V12 trust [and commitment] yet the person must
respond.
d. V14
human being (noun) is more than flesh [and blood].
e. V16
I prefer humility on humility.
4. Is
John the Baptizer a projection on to Jewish scripture? Is Yeshua the mediator
for both Old Testament and New Testament Gods?
a. V15
and other details about 6 month older John the Baptizer seem trivial.
b. V23
projecting John onto Isaiah phrases but equating Adonai and Yeshua.
5. V9,
light “to everyone entering the world”. If an infant is never informed about
Yeshua, what light does he or she possess? The potential to choose necessary
goodness?
6. V14,
what if The God’s grace is humility and The God’s truth cannot be avoided or
changed or resisted? Can canon stand the test of time?
7. V17,
Yeshua said he came to fulfill the law.
8. V18,
Yeshua’s psychology rather than flesh images The God.
9. V31,
why to Israel only; see V29.
10. V34,
why not The God incarnate?
11. V38,
I prefer “What are you looking for?” I think human beings want to know how to
practice necessary goodness: arrogance must be acquired and nourished.
12. V49-50.
I doubt Yeshua, political philosopher to humankind, accepts demotion to “King
of Israel”.
The
CJB text follows with some NIV phrases:
1:1 In the
beginning was the Word[2],
and the
Word was with God,
and the
Word was God.
2 He was with God in the
beginning.
3 All
things came to be through him,
and without
him nothing made had being
was made that has
been made.
4 In him
was life,
and the
life was the light of mankind.
5 The
light shines in the darkness,
and the darkness has not suppressed it.
[V1-5 literally describes
“the Word” as with God, God, creator, activator, life, light, and overcoming
dark. But what is “light”? Is it a metaphor for knowledge; goodness[3]; wisdom; power; authority;
responsibility; self-control; awareness?]
6 There
was a man sent from God whose name was Yochanan John. 7 He came to be
a testimony, to bear witness concerning the light; so that through him,
everyone might put his trust in God and be faithful to him. 8 He
himself was not that light; no, he came to bear witness concerning the light. [Is this projection of John the
Baptizer onto Isaiah 40:3-5 and Malachi 3:1?]
9 This was
the true light,
which
gives light to everyone
entering the world. [What
does every newborn possess? Is it opportunity to think in self-reliance? Can their
opportunity be constrained by the infant’s caretaker(s) and environment? If the
caretaker imparts hate, can the infant discover and adopt appreciation then
develop goodness? Is goodness so necessary that it attracts “everyone entering
the world”? Does “die young” mean died before they appreciated necessary
goodness?]
10 He was
in the world — the world came to be through him —
yet the
world did not know him.
11 He came
to his own homeland,
yet his
own people did not receive him.
12 But to
as many as did receive him, to those who put their trust in his person and power believed in his name, he
gave the right to become children of God, 13 not
because of bloodline, physical impulse or human intention, but because of God born of God.
14 The Word
became a human being flesh
and lived with us,
and we
saw his Sh’khinah [glory],
the Sh’khinah of the Father’s only Son,
full of
grace and truth. [Is this “grace”
humility, and does “truth” need the modifier ineluctable (together unavoidable,
unchangeable, and irresistible)?]
15 Yochanan
witnessed concerning him when he cried out, “This is the man I was talking
about when I said, ‘The one coming after me has come to rank ahead of surpassed me, because he existed before me.’”
[Chronologically, John was
about 6 months older. What is the chronology of soul-mystery? If I have a soul
rather than just a person, how old is it?]
16 We have
all received from his fullness,
yes,
grace upon grace. Out of his fullness we have all received grace in
place of grace already given. [I like the suggestion that I can pursue humility on par with The God’s
humility.]
17 For
the Torah was given through Moshe;
grace
and truth came through Yeshua the Messiah. [In Nomads I learned that James thought Moses’ law and
Yeshua’s influence were both critical to salvation in life; I think Yeshua
agreed with James. And in Acts Paul argued Christ saves elect souls in the
afterdeath. And Hebrews 9 mystifies God, Christ, and blood. I doubt all of it,
preferring necessary goodness in life through discussing Yeshua’s civic
influence to the current generation.]
18 No one
has ever seen God; but the only and unique Son, who is identical with God and is at the Father’s side
— he has made him known.
19 Here is
Yochanan’s John’s
testimony: when the Judeans Jewish leaders in Jerusalem sent cohanim and L’vi’im priests and Levites from
Yerushalayim to ask him, “Who are you?” 20 he was
very straightforward and stated clearly, “I am not the Messiah.” 21 “Then
who are you?” they asked him. “Are you Eliyahu?” “No, I am not,” he said. “Are
you ‘the prophet,’ the one we’re expecting?” “No,” he replied. 22 So
they said to him, “Who are you? — so that we can give an answer to the people who
sent us. What do you have to say about yourself?” 23 He
answered in the words of Yesha‘yahu the prophet, “I am
The
voice of someone crying out:
‘In the desert make the way of Adonai straight!’”[Isaiah 40:3, “A voice cries out:
“Clear a road
through the desert for Adonai!
Level a highway in the ‘Aravah for our God!”]
24 Some of
those who had been sent were P’rushim Pharisees. 25 They
asked him, “If you are neither the Messiah nor Eliyahu nor ‘the prophet,’ then
why are you immersing baptizing people?” 26 To
them Yochanan replied, “I am immersing people in water, but among you is
standing someone whom you don’t know. 27 He is the
one coming after me — I’m not good enough even to untie his sandal!” 28 All
this took place in Beit-Anyah Bethany, east
of the Yarden Jordan, where
Yochanan was immersing.
29 The next
day, Yochanan saw Yeshua coming toward him and said, “Look! God’s lamb! [Carrier of blood for sacrifice
per Hebrews 9.] The one who is taking away the sin of the world! 30 This
is the man I was talking about when I said, ‘After me is coming someone who has
come to rank above me, because he existed before me.’ 31 I
myself did not know who he was, but the reason I came immersing with water was
so that he might be made known to Isra’el. [Why not to the world as in V29?]” 32 Then
Yochanan gave this testimony: “I saw the Spirit coming down from heaven like a dove, and remaining on
him. 33 I myself did not know who he was, but the
one who sent me to immerse in water said to me, ‘The one on whom you see the
Spirit descending and remaining, this is the one who immerses in the Ruach
HaKodesh Holy
Spirit.’ 34 And I have seen and borne
witness that this is the Son of God God’s Chosen One.” [Why not God incarnate?]
35 The next
day, Yochanan was again standing with two of his talmidim disciples. 36 On
seeing Yeshua walking by, he said, “Look! God’s lamb! [blood sacrifice per Hebrews 9]” 37 His
two talmidim heard him speaking, and they followed
Yeshua. 38 Yeshua turned and saw them following
him, and he asked them, “What are you looking for? What do you want?” They
said to him, “Rabbi!” (which means “Teacher!”) “Where are you staying?” 39 He
said to them, “Come and see.” So they went and saw where he was staying, and
remained with him the rest of the day — it was about four o’clock in the
afternoon. 40 One of the two who had heard Yochanan
and had followed Yeshua was Andrew the brother of Shim‘on Kefa Peter.
41 The
first thing he did was to find his brother Shim‘on and tell him, “We’ve found
the Mashiach!” Messiah” (that is, the Christ) (The word means “one who
has been anointed.”) 42 He took him to Yeshua. Looking
at him, Yeshua said, “You are Shim‘on Bar-Yochanan Simon son of John; you
will be known as Kefa Cephas” (which,
when translated, is Peter).” (The name means “rock.”)
43 The next
day, having decided to leave for the Galil Galilee, Yeshua found Philip and
said, “Follow me!” 44 Philip was from Beit-Tzaidah,
the town where Andrew and Kefa lived. 45 Philip
found Natan’el and told him, “We’ve found the one that Moshe wrote about in
the Torah, also the Prophets — it’s Yeshua Ben-Yosef from
Natzeret!” 46 Natan’el answered him, “Natzeret? Can anything good come from there?”
[This could be as innocent
as the village having only about 200 inhabitants, mostly Aramaic-speaking.]
“Come and see,” Philip said to him. 47 Yeshua saw
Natan’el coming toward him and remarked about him, “Here’s a true son of
Isra’el — nothing false in him!” 48 Natan’el said
to him, “How do you know me?” Yeshua answered him, “Before Philip called you,
when you were under the fig
tree[4], I saw
you.” 49 Natan’el said, “Rabbi, you are the Son of
God! You are the King of
Isra’el!” 50 Yeshua answered him, “you
believe all this just because I told you I saw you under the fig tree? You will
see greater things than that!” 51 Then he said to
him, “Yes indeed! I tell you that you will see heaven opened
and the angels of God going up and coming down[Genesis 28:12, “He dreamt that there
before him was a ladder resting on the ground with its top reaching to
heaven, and the angels of Adonai were going up and
down on it. ”] on the Son of Man!”] [This seems a typical projection of the person Yeshua onto the writer’s
opinion about Old Testament opinion.]
[John 1 reminds me of evidence that affirms Yeshua’s
sincerity in saying, “Before Abraham was born I am” (John 8:58). Perhaps Yeshua
mysteriously revealed himself to Agathon, 500 years before Yeshua was born.[5] Or perhaps “the word” is necessary
goodness. And that brings to mind the Euthyphro Dilemma.]
[My opinion is that Genesis 1:26-28 informs humankind to flourish in necessary goodness rather
than accommodate badness and allow evil:
Then God said, “Let us make
mankind in our image, in our
likeness, so that
they may rule over
the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock and all
the wild animals, and over all the creatures that move along the ground.”
So God
created mankind in his own image, in the image of
God he created them; male and female he created them.
God blessed them and said to them, “Be
fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish in
the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on
the ground.
This,
the conclusion of the first chapter of the Holy Bible informs Today that
humankind may and can rule on earth. Acceptance of this power, authority, and
responsibility is human being (verb). Human-beings pursue necessary-goodness to
actual-reality. The rest of the Bible discloses the chaos that ensues if most
individuals choose wanton behavior -- neglect the laws of physics and progeny;
progeny reaches psychology.
The
civic collective cannot rule if most fellow citizens practice/accommodate
badness and allow evil. It’s a matter of personal choice: either pursue human
being (verb) or yield to evil.
Political
and religious philosopher Yeshua affirmed Genesis 1:26-28, e.g. in Matt 5:48
(be as perfect as goodness), 18:18 (don’t expect error-correction), and 19:4-6
(don’t divide/lessen goodness).
Today there are more than
8,000 religions and 45,000 Christian sects on earth. Today is time for individuals to accept the
power, the authority, and the responsibility to practice civic integrity.
“Ourselves” may either continue to leave reliable
responsibility to “our Posterity”, referring to the preamble to the US
Constitution, or practice necessary goodness.
Notes
re modern perspective:
1. Since monotheism is a human construct, I use
“The God, whatever it may be”, to express objection to any doctrinal God yet
reserve humility.
a. Blue highlight is to emphasize the pronoun
usages, our and we.
b. Perhaps the “we” infers an androgynous pair,
like a married couple
c. It seems human choice may and can conform to
the laws of physics and progeny
d. Yet human inspiration and motivation are
driven by goodness
e. When goodness is uncertain, humility
prevails.
2. Scholars understand that humankind in its
present mutation is Homo sapiens (HS)
a. Distinguished by brains with synapses and
neurons with speed and capacity to handle exponential complexities
b. Indeed the dominant species on
earth and extensions
c. Yet HS is challenged-to,
perhaps will-not, control earth as much as possible.
i. Remarkably after 200,000
years, sexual-attraction dominates society.
3. The rest of the Holy Bible
expresses the validity of Genesis 1:26-28: Humankind may and can
rule on earth, hoping to control it.
a. Genesis 1 predates the
existence of Israel by at least 1500 years.
b. About 2000 years have passed
since Yeshua lived.
c. Yet war in the Middle East
threatens humankind’s opportunity.
d. It seems time to pay more attention
to primitive thought – psychological and civic discovery during the period 8000
years ago to 4000 years ago.]
[2] Nomads briefly
discussed the meaning of “the Word” and Yeshua (the person who is media-hidden
as Jesus) was among the suggestions. It seems obvious that knowledge, goodness,
and wisdom existed before they were discovered. The writer of the mysterious-phantasy
of Hebrews 19, in V15, calls Yeshua mediator rather than grantor of the will
that terminated the covenants and negated the tabernacle on earth. V14 suggests
the Holy Spirit, and V17 suggests The God died to complete the will that
replaced the covenants.
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euthyphro_dilemma
: The Euthyphro dilemma is
found in Plato's dialogue Euthyphro, in which Socrates asks Euthyphro, "Is the pious (τὸ ὅσιον) loved by the gods because
it is pious, or is it pious because it is loved by the gods?"If “pious”
means “devout”, perhaps “loved” means “cherished”. In my life, I appreciate
necessary goodness.
[4] The fig tree, 80 million
years old, is featured in Greek and other mythical traditions. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syceus
and https://folklorethursday.com/folktales/five-reasons-fig-trees-folklore-royalty/#:~:text=Fig%20trees%20%EE%80%80feature%EE%80%81%20in%20%EE%80%80origin%20stories%EE%80%81%20from
.
[5] http://faculty.sgc.edu/rkelley/SYMPOSIUM.pdf
“[AGATHON SPEAKS] The previous speakers, instead of praising the god Eros, or
unfolding his nature, appear to have congratulated mankind on the benefits
which he confers upon them. But I would rather praise the god first, and then
speak of his gifts; this is always the right way of praising everything.” The
rest of the speech reminds me of Yeshua.
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