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- In his book, John reveals Jesus’ divinity by saying that, in the beginning, Jesus was the word who was with God, and the word was God through whom all things were created (John 1:1-3). As he narrates his encounter with Jesus, he shows Him as a normal human with emotions through the story of the raising of Lazarus.
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John tells us that Jesus is the Messiah and Christ, as predicted in the Old Testament. Jesus teaches about faith and how one can enter the kingdom of God for eternal life. John calls Him the son of God who was sent by Father by whom all things were made. Jesus always tells the truth.
Sep 30, 2015 · One of John’s unique methods is to picture Jesus through collections of seven. John carefully hangs his picture of Jesus on seven miraculous signs and seven meaningful names. This is not surprising from the writer who also gave us the book of Revelation in which the number seven plays a significant role.
- The Gospel of Matthew. Mattewpresents Jesus as the promised Messiah (Christ, Matt 1:1), the coming King (Matt 2:2). The Gospel of Matthew is very Jewish in its message, revealing Jesus as the Star that would come out of Jacob, the Scepter that would rise out of Israel (Num 24:17-19), and the One who would sit on David’s throne (Isa 9:7).
- The Gospel of Mark. Mark presents Jesus as the Suffering Servant, prophesied in Isaiah 53. Jesus humbled Himself and came to do the will of His Father and to reveal the amazing love and grace of God.
- The Gospel of Luke. Luke presents Jesus as the Son of Man, a messianic title from the prophecy of Daniel (Dan 7:13), and as the son of David (Luke 3:31).
- The Gospel of John. John presents Jesus as the Son of God, the second person of the Trinity, co-equal and co-eternal with the Father and the Spirit. John’s record is beautiful in revealing Jesus’ divinity.
Sep 18, 2024 · John’s Gospel differs from the Synoptic Gospels in several ways: it covers a different time span than the others; it locates much of Jesus’ ministry in Judaea; and it portrays Jesus discoursing at length on theological matters. The major difference, however, lies in John’s overall purpose.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Tim says that the point is that John has reflected the Jewish Shema in Jesus and God the Father’s relationship intentionally. In part two (13:30-23:30), Tim and John look at the divine name. John 8:56-59" “Your father Abraham rejoiced to see My day, and he saw it and was glad.”
Portraits of Jesus in John’s Gospel. John—the beloved disciple of Jesus—writes so that people may believe that Jesus is the Son of God (20:31). John is a Jesus lover. And Jesus loves John too. This mutual love is seen in the way that John writes about Jesus. It’s as if he paints beautiful and endearing portraits of Jesus each able to ...
Jesus Christ was God in a body—the Lord of glory. As he closes his Gospel, John relates how the resurrected Christ comforted, prepared, encouraged, and restored His followers. He appeared to several disciples and breathed His Spirit into them to prepare them for ministry.
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