Kategorie: Bible & Theology
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 Nick Lica
Compare and contrast the views of Christ in:
John 1:1-18; Romans 1:3-4; Acts 2:36

 

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A. John 1:1-18

The scope and design of this passage is to confirm our faith in Christ as the eternal Son of God, and the true Messiah and Savior of the world and that we may be brought to receive him, and rely upon him, as our Prophet, Priest, and King, and be saved by him1 John begins his gospel like Mathew with a “genealogy”; but his genealogy is a history of divine, not of human origins.2 Jesus is described here as being the:

 

Word - logos

The Greek term usually translated ‘word’ (especially word of God) when it occurs in the NT. Logos has a wide range of meaning, e.g., reckoning or accounting, explanation or reason, statement or discourse.

Originally employed as a technical philosophical term by the Greek philosopher Heraclitus (sixth century b.c.), logos became a particularly important concept for the Stoics (third century b.c. and later). In Stoicism, logos was the principle and pattern that gave the world or cosmos its character and coherence. The term was taken over by Philo, the Alexandrian philosophical theologian of Judaism, who was roughly a contemporary of the apostle Paul. By means of the logos, Philo sought to reconcile Greek philosophical theories about the universe (cosmology) with the biblical accounts of God’s creating the world by his spoken word. God’s logos became a clearly identifiable entity, mediating between God and the world, the mode of the divine creativity and revelation.

In both Greek and Jewish thought there existed the conception of the word. This word belonged to the heritage of both races and both could understand. The word that which is spoken, either by a human or by God. In the Bible, God’s revelation is characteristically his speaking. Therefore, the expression ‘word of God’ or ‘word of the Lord’ holds an important place in the Bible and biblical religion, usually denoting God’s revelation of his will and purpose. In the ot, God’s word is central. God speaks and thus creates (Gen. 1:3, 6, 9, 11, 14, 20, 24, 26). He utters the words of the Decalogue (Exod. 20:1). Prophets hear and speak what the Lord has spoken to them (Isa. 1:2; 6:8-10), for they are primarily recipients and transmitters of the word of the Lord (Jer. 1:2). The nt usage of the term is subject to later and extrabiblical influences but can be seen as a development of the OT. Jesus preaches the word (Mark 2:2), and the gospel of Jesus Christ is called the word of God (Acts 4:31). Eventually, Jesus himself is said to be God’s Word (John 1:1, 14; cf. Heb. 1:2). Thus, in both the ot and the nt, God’s speaking and word are of fundamental importance.

 

Characteristic of the word

John presents 5 main characteristics of the word in this passage:

B. Romans 1:3-4

The subject-matter of this epistle is what Christ has done for us. The prophets and apostles all bear witness to Jesus; he is the true treasure hid in the field of the scriptures. In these verses there is the core of Paul Christology. He gives proof of his humanity: was born; and the proof of his deity: his resurrection from the dead. Paul view of Christ here is that in Jesus there are two distinct natures:

  1. His human nature: Made of the seed of David (v. 3), that is, born of the virgin Mary, who was of the house of David (Lu. 1:27), as was Joseph his supposed father, Lu. 2:4. David is here mentioned, because of the special promises made to him concerning the Messiah, especially his kingly office; 2 Sa. 7:12; Ps. 132:11. Paul in contrast with John 1 shows Christ first as the one who was born from the royal family and then he was declared the Son of God.

  2. His divine nature: Declared to be the Son of God (v. 4), the Son of God by eternal generation. According to the flesh, that is, his human nature, he was of the seed of David; but according to the Spirit of holiness, that is, the divine nature he is the Son of God. The great proof or demonstration of this is his resurrection from the dead, which proved it effectually and undeniably. So that we have here a summary of the gospel doctrine concerning Christ’s two natures in one person.

C. Acts 2:36

The end of the Peter’s Sermon is Christocentric and emphasizes what must know every Jew about him: he is Lord and Christ. This is Peter’s view of Christ.

Conclusion:

These three texts are show Christ in different ways according to the receiver and situation and purposes for what they having been written. John is to both: Jews and Greeks that’s why he uses the term logos to bind together their thoughts and proclaim to both Jews and Gentiles that Jesus is the eternal, divine and incarnated word. Paul was eager to preach the gospel of Jesus in Rome (1:15) and before he got there he wrote to them about Jesus and his view on Jesus is that in Him are 2 natures: human and divine. Peter concludes his sermon with a challenge for all Jews: that Jesus is Lord and He is the Messiah. In other words, Messiah has come and he died and is alive, he came to destroy the power of sin and to bring salvation and eternal life for those who believe in Him

 

3The King James Version, (Cambridge: Cambridge) 1769.