BarnesPrefaceJn1:1
Barnes' Notes on the New Testament
|
|
Search This
Resource |
|||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
Navigator |
||||||||
|
Previous |
Next |
|||||||
|
|
|
|||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
|
Additional
Resources |
|||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
|
• Adam
Clark Commentary |
|||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
|
Buy This Resource |
|||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||
PREFACE -- Barnes' New Testament----
http://www.studylight.org/com/bnn/view.cgi?book=joh&chapter=001&verse=001#Joh1_1
TO THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO JOHN.
John,
the writer of this Gospel, was the son of Zebedee and Salome; compare Matthew 27:56 with Mark 15:40,41. His father was a fisherman of
He
was the youngest of the apostles when called, and lived to the greatest age,
and is the only one who is supposed to have died a peaceful death. He was
called to be a follower of Jesus while engaged with his father and his elder
brother James mending their nets at the
John
was admitted by our Saviour to peculiar favour and friendship. One of the ancient fathers (Theophylact) says that he was related to him.
"Joseph," he says, "had seven children by a
former wife, four sons and three daughters, Martha, Esther, and Salome,
whose son John was; therefore Salome was reckoned our Lord's sister, and John
was his nephew."
If this was the case it may explain the reason why James
and John sought and expected the first places in his kingdom, Matthew 20:20,21. These may also possibly be the persons who were
called our Lord's "brethren" and "sisters," Matthew 13:55,56. This may also explain the reason why our Saviour committed his mother to the care of John on the
cross, John 19:27.
The two brothers, James and John, with Peter, were several times admitted to
peculiar favours by our Lord. They were the only
disciples that were permitted to be present at the raising of the daughter of Jairus, Mark 5:37; Luke 8:51; they only
were permitted to attend the Saviour to the mount
where he was transfigured, Matthew 17:1; Mark 9:2. The same
three were permitted to be present at his sufferings in the garden of
To
John was committed the care of Mary, the mother of Jesus. After the ascension
of Christ he remained some time at
At
what time he went first among the Gentiles to preach the gospel is not
certainly known. It has commonly been supposed that he resided in
Ecclesiastical
history informs us that he spent the latter part of his life in
Many
anecdotes are related of him while he remained at
Learned
men have been much divided about the time when this Gospel was written. Wetstein supposed it was written just after our Saviour's ascension; Mill and Le Clerc,
that it was written in 97; Dr. Lardner, that it was about the year 68, just
before the destruction of
There
is no doubt that it was written by John. This is abundantly confirmed by the
ancient fathers, and was not questioned by Celsus,
Porphyry, or Julian, the acutest enemies of revelation in the early ages. It
has never been extensively questioned to have been the work of John, and is one
of the books of the New Testament whose canonical authority was never disputed.
See Lardner, or Paley's Evidences.
The
design of writing it John himself states, John 20:31. It was
to show that Jesus was the Christ, the Son of God, and that those who believed
might have life through his name. This design is kept in view through
the whole Gospel, and should be remembered in our attempts to explain it.
Various attempts have been made to show that he wrote it to confute the
followers of Cerinthus and the Gnostics, but no
satisfactory evidence of such a design has been furnished.
As
he wrote after the other evangelists, he has recorded many things which they
omitted. He dwells much more fully than they do on the divine character
of Jesus; relates many things pertaining to the early part of his ministry
which they had omitted; records many more of his discourses than they have
done, and particularly the interesting discourse at the institution of the
Supper. See chapters 14-17.
It
has been remarked that there are evidences in this Gospel that it was not
written for the Jews. The author explains words and customs which to a Jew
would have needed no explanation. See John 1:38,41 John 5:1,2; 7:2; 4:9. The style in
the Greek indicates that he was an unlearned man. It is simple, plain,
unpolished, such as we should suppose would be used by one in his
circumstances. At the same time it is dignified, containing pure and profound
sentiments, and is on many accounts the most difficult of all the books of the
New Testament to interpret. It contains more about Christ, his person,
design, and work, than any of the other Gospels. The other evangelists were
employed more in recording the miracles, and giving external
evidence of the divine mission of Jesus. John is employed chiefly in telling us
what he was, and what was his peculiar doctrine. His
aim was to show,
1st.
That Jesus was the Messiah.
2nd.
To show, from the words of Jesus himself, what
the Messiah was. The other evangelists record his parables, his miracles, his debates with the Scribes and Pharisees; John records
chiefly his discourses about himself. If anyone wishes to learn the true
doctrine respecting the Messiah, the Son of God, expressed in simple
language, but with most sublime conceptions; to learn the true nature and
character of God, and the way of approach to his mercy-seat; to see the true
nature of Christian piety, or the source and character of religious
consolation; to have perpetually before him the purest model of character the
world has seen, and to contemplate the purest precepts that have ever been
delivered to man, he cannot better do it than by a prayerful study of the
Gospel by John. It may be added that this Gospel is of itself proof that cannot
be overthrown of the truth of revelation. John was a fisherman, unhonoured and unlearned, Acts 4:13. What man
in that rank of life now could compose a book like this? Can it be conceived
that any man of that rank, unless under the influence of inspiration, could
conceive so sublime notions of God, could present so pure views of morals, and
could draw a character so inimitably lovely and pure
as that of Jesus Christ? To ask these questions is to answer them. And this
Gospel will stand to the end of time as an unanswerable demonstration that the
fisherman who wrote it was under a more than human guidance, and was, according
to the promise that he has recorded (John 16:13 comp. John 14:26), guided
into all truth. It will also remain as an unanswerable proof that the
character which he has described--the character of the Lord Jesus--was real. It
is a perfect character. It has not a flaw. How has this happened? The attempt
has often been made to draw a perfect character--and as often, in every other
instance, failed. How is it, when Homer and Virgil, and the ancient historians,
have all failed to describe a perfect character, with the purest models before
them, and with all the aid of imagination, that in every instance they have
failed? How is it that this has at last been accomplished only by a Jewish
fisherman? The difficulty is vastly increased if another idea is borne in mind.
John describes one who he believed had a divine nature, John 1:1. It is an
attempt to describe God in human nature, or to show how the Divine Being
acts when united with man, or when appearing in human form. And the description
is complete. There is not a word expressed by the Lord Jesus, or an emotion ascribed
to him, inconsistent with such a supposition. But this same attempt was often
made, and as often failed. Homer and Virgil, and all the ancient poets, have
undertaken to show what the gods would be if they came down and conversed with
man. And what were they? What were Jupiter, and Juno, and Venus, and Mars, and
Vulcan? Beings of lust, and envy, and contention, and blood.
How has it happened that the only successful account which has been given of
the divine nature united with the human, and of living and acting as became
such a union, has been given by a Jewish fisherman? How, unless the character
was real, and the writer under a guidance far superior to the genius of Homer
and the imagination of Virgil--the guidance of the Holy Spirit?
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO JOHN.