| That you may believe: background to John's gospel |
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Philip Fogarty SJ takes a look at the circumstances behind the writing of the Gospel of St John, which emerged from the tension between early Christian communities and Jewish leaders.
Towards the end of the first century AD, the great city of Ephesus, in what is now Turkey, had a population of about 250,000, and was famous for its philosophers, artists, poets, historians, and rhetoricians as well as the grandeur of its gymnasium, its stadium or racecourse, its great theatre and, above all, for its Temple of Artemis. Cult of Artemis St. Paul had visited the city in the fifties and sixties, and his preaching had resulted in a riot among the silversmiths who made religious artefacts connected with the cult of Artemis (Acts 19:2141). Gospel writers One man - never named - an insignificant figure during the ministry of Jesus, came to be known as the Beloved Disciple (Jn.19:26 and 21:7), and he may well have been the community's founding figure. He could be the source of much of the material in the fourth gospel that is quite different from what we find in the other three. A mixed group Jews regarded the Samaritans as a group of spurious worshippers of the God of Israel and they were detested even more than pagans. The origins of the distrust lie deep in early Israelite history but there was no deeper breach of human relations in the contemporary world than the feud between Jews and Samaritans. The breadth and depth of Jesus' teaching on love would demand no greater act of a Jew than to accept a Samaritan as a brother or sister. Jewish hostility However, when the Johannine Christians spoke of Jesus in terms of his pre-existence with the Father and as the incarnate Word of God who revealed the Father to humanity (Jn. 1:1-2), there were fierce debates with those Jews who thought that the followers of Jesus were abandoning the Jewish belief in the one, true God by making Jesus a second God (Jn.5:18). In the end, the Jewish leaders had the Johannine Christians expelled from the synagogue (Jn.9:22). The invective against 'the Jews', that runs through John's gospel, arose out of this conflict situation. It is important to remember, as many later Christians did not, that 'the Jews' referred to here were not Jews in general but rather those leaders who expelled the early Christians from the synagogue or Jews who were extremely hostile to the Johannine community. Anti-Semitism does a profound disservice to the memory of Jesus, himself a believing and practising Jew. Process of separation John's gospel tends to lay such heavy stress on Christ's divinity that at times it seems to underplay his humanity. (The First Epistle of John tries to correct this over-emphasis.) This provoked deep divisions, even within the community itself. Some people left and finally the community split with some members linking themselves to the broader Christian community while others joined groups that held that Jesus was not truly human or that the world was so distorted that it was not God's creation. Context of scripture In reading the gospel, one has to remember that John was writing after a period of fifty or sixty years of community reflection on the life, death and resurrection of Jesus, and so the words he puts in Jesus' mouth are interspersed with reflections that may not be the actual words that Jesus used during his ministry but rather theological elaborations on what he had said. This accounts for the difference we find between how Jesus speaks in the other gospels and in John's gospel. Gospel writers always had to translate Jesus' words and deeds from that of a village culture to a wider and more sophisticated Greekspeaking culture, and this goes further in John than in the synoptic gospels. Levels of meaning In John's gospel such misunderstandings of what Jesus means are frequent. The author uses these to provide Jesus with the occasion to explain what he means more fully and to engage his audience and us in the unfolding drama. John's gospel uses this technique over and over again. Drama
This article first appeared in the Messenger (July 2004), a publication of the Irish Jesuits. |







