CHAPTER 1
Joh 1:1-14.
THE
WORD
MADE
FLESH.
1. In the beginning--of all time and created existence, for this
Word gave it being
(Joh 1:3, 10);
therefore, "before the world was"
(Joh 17:5, 24);
or, from all eternity.
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was the Word--He who is to God what man's word is to himself,
the manifestation or expression of himself to those without him.
(See on
Joh 1:18).
On the origin of this most lofty and now for ever consecrated
title of Christ, this is not the place to speak. It occurs only in the
writings of this seraphic apostle.
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was with God--having a conscious personal existence
distinct from God (as one is from the person he is "with"), but
inseparable from Him and associated with Him
(Joh 1:18;
Joh 17:5;
1Jo 1:2),
where "THE FATHER" is used in
the same sense as "GOD" here.
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was God--in substance and essence GOD;
or was possessed of essential
or proper divinity. Thus, each of these brief but pregnant statements is
the complement of the other, correcting any misapprehensions which the
others might occasion. Was the Word eternal? It was not the
eternity of "the Father," but of a conscious personal existence
distinct from Him and associated with Him. Was the Word thus "with
God?" It was not the distinctness and the fellowship of
another being, as if there were more Gods than one, but of One
who was Himself God--in such sense that the absolute unity of
the God head, the great principle of all religion, is only transferred
from the region of shadowy abstraction to the region of essential life
and love. But why all this definition? Not to give us any
abstract information about certain mysterious distinctions in the
Godhead, but solely to let the reader know who it was that in the
fulness of time "was made flesh." After each verse, then, the reader
must say, "It was He who is thus, and thus, and thus described, who was
made flesh."
2. The same, &c.--See what property of the Word the stress is laid
upon--His eternal distinctness, in unity, from God--the Father
(Joh 1:2).
3. All things, &c.--all things absolutely (as is evident from
Joh 1:10;
1Co 8:6;
Col 1:16, 17;
but put beyond question by what follows).
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without Him was not any thing--not one thing.
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made--brought into being.
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that was made--This is a denial of the eternity and
non-creation of matter, which was held by the whole thinking world
outside of Judaism and Christianity: or rather, its proper
creation was never so much as dreamt of save by the children of
revealed religion.
4. In Him was life--essentially and originally, as the
previous verses show to be the meaning. Thus He is the Living Word,
or, as He is called in
1Jo 1:1, 2,
"the Word of Life."
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the life . . . the light of men--All that in men which is
true light--knowledge, integrity, intelligent, willing subjection to
God, love to Him and to their fellow creatures, wisdom, purity, holy
joy, rational happiness--all this "light of men" has its fountain in the
essential original "life" of "the Word"
(1Jo 1:5-7;
Ps 36:9).
5. shineth in darkness, &c.--in this dark, fallen world, or in
mankind "sitting in darkness and the shadow of death,"
with no ability to find the way either of truth or of holiness. In
this thick darkness, and consequent intellectual and moral obliquity,
"the light of the Word" shineth--by all the rays whether of natural or
revealed teaching which men (apart from the Incarnation of the Word)
are favored with.
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the darkness comprehended it not--did not take it in, a brief
summary of the effect of all the strivings of this unincarnate Word
throughout this wide world from the beginning, and a hint of the
necessity of His putting on flesh, if any recovery of men was to be
effected
(1Co 1:21).
6-9. The Evangelist here approaches his grand thesis, so paving
his way for the full statement of it in
Joh 1:14,
that we may be able to bear the bright light of it, and take in its
length and breadth and depth and height.
7. through him--John.
8. not that Light--(See on
Joh 5:35).
What a testimony to John to have to explain that "he was not
that Light!" Yet was he but a foil to set it off, his night-taper
dwindling before the Dayspring from on high
(Joh 3:30).
9. lighteth every man, &c.--rather, "which, coming into the world,
enlighteneth every man"; or, is "the Light of the world"
(Joh 9:5).
"Coming into the world" is a superfluous and quite unusual description
of "every man"; but it is of all descriptions of Christ amongst the most
familiar, especially in the writings of this Evangelist
(Joh 12:46; 16:28; 18:37;
1Jo 4:9;
1Ti 1:15,
&c.).
10-13. He was in the world, &c.--The language here is nearly as
wonderful as the thought. Observe its compact simplicity, its
sonorousness--"the world" resounding in each of its three members--and
the enigmatic form in which it is couched, startling the reader and
setting his ingenuity a-working to solve the stupendous enigma of
Christ ignored in His own world. "The world," in the first two
clauses, plainly means the created world, into which He
came, says
Joh 1:9;
"in it He was," says this verse. By His Incarnation, He became
an inhabitant of it, and bound up with it. Yet it "was made by
Him"
(Joh 1:3-5).
Here, then, it is merely alluded to, in contrast partly with His being
in it, but still more with the reception He met with from it.
"The world that knew Him not"
(1Jo 3:1)
is of course the intelligent world of mankind. (See on
Joh 1:11,12).
Taking the first two clauses as one statement,
we try to apprehend it by thinking of the infant Christ conceived in the
womb and born in the arms of His own creature, and of the Man Christ
Jesus breathing His own air, treading His own ground, supported by
substances to which He Himself gave being, and the Creator of the very
men whom He came to save. But the most vivid commentary on this entire
verse will be got by tracing (in His matchless history) Him of whom it
speaks walking amidst all the elements of nature, the diseases of men
and death itself, the secrets of the human heart, and "the rulers of the
darkness of this world" in all their number, subtlety, and malignity,
not only with absolute ease, as their conscious Lord, but, as we might
say, with full consciousness on their part of the presence of their
Maker, whose will to one and all of them was law. And this is He of whom
it is added, "the world knew Him not!"
11. his own--"His own" (property or possession), for the word is in
the neuter gender. It means His own land, city, temple, Messianic
rights and possessions.
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and his own--"His own (people)"; for now the word is masculine. It means the Jews, as the "peculiar people." Both
they and their
land, with all that this included, were "HIS OWN,"
not so much as
part of "the world which was made by Him," but as "THE HEIR" of the
inheritance
(Lu 20:14;
see also on
Mt 22:1).
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received him not--nationally, as God's chosen witnesses.
12. But as many--individuals, of the "disobedient and gainsaying
people."
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gave he power--The word signifies both authority and ability, and both are certainly meant here.
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to become--Mark these words: Jesus is the Son of God; He is never
said to have become such.
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the sons--or more simply, "sons of God," in name and in
nature.
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believe on his name--a phrase never used in Scripture of any mere creature, to express
the credit given to human testimony, even of prophets or apostles,
inasmuch it carries with it the idea of trust proper only towards
GOD. In this sense of supreme faith, as due to Him who "gives those
that believe in Himself power to become sons of God," it is
manifestly used here.
13. Which were born--a sonship therefore not of mere title and
privilege, but of nature, the soul being made conscious of the vital
capacities, perceptions, and emotions of a child of God, before
unknown.
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not of blood, &c.--not of superior human descent, not of human
generation at all, not of man in any manner of way. By this elaborate
threefold denial of the human source of this sonship, immense force
is given to what follows,
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but of God--Right royal gift, and He who confers must be absolutely
divine. For who would not worship Him who can bring him into the
family, and evoke within him the very life, of the sons of God?
14. And the Word, &c.--To raise the reader to the altitude of this
climax were the thirteen foregoing verses written.
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was made flesh--BECAME MAN,
in man's present frail, mortal condition,
denoted by the word "flesh"
(Isa 40:6;
1Pe 1:24).
It is directed probably against the Docetæ, who held that
Christ was not really but only apparently man; against whom this
gentle spirit is vehement in his Epistles
(1Jo 4:3;
2Jo 7, 10, 11),
[LUCKE, &c.]. Nor could He be too much so, for
with the verity of the Incarnation all substantial Christianity
vanishes. But now, married to our nature, henceforth He is as
personally conscious of all that is strictly human as of all that is
properly divine; and our nature is in His Person redeemed and
quickened, ennobled and transfigured.
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and dwelt--tabernacled or pitched his tent; a word peculiar to John,
who uses it four times, all in the sense of a permanent stay
(Re 7:15; 12:12; 13:6; 21:3).
For ever wedded to our "flesh," He has entered this tabernacle
to "go no more out." The allusion is to that tabernacle where dwelt the
Shekinah (see on
Mt 23:38, 39),
or manifested
"GLORY OF THE
LORD,"
and with reference to God's permanent dwelling among His people
(Le 26:11;
Ps 68:18; 132:13, 14;
Eze 37:27).
This is put almost beyond doubt by what immediately follows, "And we
beheld his glory"
[LUCKE,
MEYER,
DE
WETTE
which last critic, rising higher than usual, says that thus were
perfected all former partial manifestations of God in an essentially
Personal and historically Human manifestation].
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full of grace and truth--So it should read: "He dwelt among us full
of grace and truth"; or, in Old Testament phrase, "Mercy and truth,"
denoting the whole fruit of God's purposes of love towards sinners of
mankind, which until now existed only in promise, and the
fulfilment at length of that promise in Christ; in one great word,
"the SURE MERCIES of David"
(Isa 55:3;
Ac 13:34;
compare
2Sa 23:5).
In His Person all that Grace and Truth which had been floating so long
in shadowy forms, and darting into the souls of the poor and needy its
broken beams, took everlasting possession of human flesh and filled it
full. By this Incarnation of Grace and Truth, the teaching of thousands
of years was at once transcended and beggared, and the family of God
sprang into Manhood.
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and we beheld his glory--not by the eye of sense, which saw in
Him only "the carpenter." His glory was "spiritually discerned"
(1Co 2:7-15;
2Co 3:18; 4:4, 6; 5:16)
--the glory of surpassing grace, love, tenderness, wisdom, purity,
spirituality; majesty and meekness, richness and poverty, power and
weakness, meeting together in unique contrast; ever attracting and at
times ravishing the "babes" that followed and forsook all for Him.
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the glory as of the only begotten of the Father--(See on
Lu 1:35);
not like, but "such as (belongs to)," such as became or
was befitting the only begotten of the Father [CHRYSOSTOM in LUCKE, CALVIN, &c.], according to a well-known use of the word
"as."
Joh 1:15.
A
SAYING OF THE
BAPTIST
CONFIRMATORY OF
THIS.
15. after me--in official manifestation.
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before me--in rank and dignity.
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for he was before me--in existence; "His goings forth being from
of old, from everlasting"
(Mic 5:2).
(Anything lower than this His words cannot mean); that is, "My
Successor is my Superior, for He was my Predecessor." This enigmatic
play upon the different senses of the words "before" and "after" was
doubtless employed by the Baptist to arrest attention, and rivet the
thought; and the Evangelist introduces it just to clinch his own
statements.
Joh 1:16-18.
SAME
SUBJECT
CONTINUED.
16. of his fulness--of "grace and truth," resuming the thread of
Joh 1:14.
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grace for grace--that is, grace upon grace (so all the best
interpreters), in successive communications and larger measures, as each
was able to take it in. Observe, the word "truth" is here dropped.
"Grace" being the chosen New Testament word for the whole fulness of the
new covenant, all that dwells in Christ for men.
17. For, &c.--The Law elicits the consciousness of sin and the need