Shepherds Field Nativity by Munir |
John 1:1-18
Revised Standard Version Catholic Edition (RSVCE)
The Word Became Flesh
1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.[a] 2 He was in the beginning with God; 3 all things were made through him, and without him was not anything made that was made. 4 In him was life,[b]and the life was the light of men. 5 The light shines in the darkness,[c] and the darkness has not overcome it.
6 There was a man sent from God, whose name was John. 7 He came for testimony, to bear witness to the light, that all might believe through him. 8 He was not the light, but came to bear witness to the light.
9 The true light that enlightens every man was coming into the world. 10 He was in the world, and the world was made through him, yet the world knew him not. 11 He came to his own home, and his own people received him not. 12 But to all who received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children of God; 13 who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.
14 And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, full of grace and truth; we have beheld his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father. 15 (John bore witness to him, and cried, “This was he of whom I said, ‘He who comes after me ranks before me, for he was before me.’”) 16 And from his fullness have we all received, grace upon grace. 17 For the law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. 18 No one has ever seen God; the only Son,[d] who is in the bosom of the Father, he has made him known.
Footnotes:
- 1.1 John begins by giving his Gospel a theological background. By speaking at once of “the Word” he implies that his readers are familiar with the term. To Gentiles it indicated some form of divine revelation or self-expression. Jews would equate it with the divine Wisdom described in Proverbs, which already appears as something more than a divine quality and has some relationship with the visible world. In Sirach and Wisdom the idea is further developed. In the last-named book, Wisdom appears as a pre-existing person, taking part in the creation of the world and having a mission to reveal God to his creatures; cf. Wis 7.22–8.1.
Cited in the Catechism: In promulgating the Catechism of the Catholic Church, Blessed John Paul II explained that the Catechism "is a statement of the Church's faith and of catholic doctrine, attested to or illumined by Sacred Scripture, the Apostolic Tradition and the Church's Magisterium." He went on to "declare it to be a sure norm for teaching the faith and thus a valid and legitimate instrument for ecclesial communion" (Fidei Depositum). Passages from this Gospel reading are cited in the Catechism, paragraph 54, 102, 151, 241, 268, 291, 423, 445, 454, 461, 473, 496, 504, 505, 526, 530, 594, 612, 705 and 706.
Commentary
1:1. The sacred text calls the Son of God “the Word”. The following comparison may help us understand the notion of “Word”: just as a person becoming conscious of himself forms an image of himself in his mind, in the same way God the Father on knowing himself begets the eternal Word. This Word of God is singular, unique; no other can exist because in him is expressed the entire essence of God. Therefore, the Gospel does not call him simply “Word”, but “the Word”. Three truths are affirmed regarding the Word—that he is eternal, that he is distinct from the Father, and that he is God. “Affirming that he existed in the beginning is equivalent to saying that he existed before all things” (St Augustine, De Trinitate, 6, 2). Also, the text says that he was with God, that is, with the Father, which means that the person of the Word is distinct from that of the Father and yet the Word is so intimately related to the Father that he even shares his divine nature: he is one in substance with the Father (cf. Nicene Creed).
To mark the Year of Faith (1967–1968) Pope Paul VI summed up this truth concerning the most Holy Trinity in what is called the Creed of the People of God (n. 11) in these words: “We believe in our Lord Jesus Christ, who is the Son of God. He is the eternal Word, born of the Father before time began, and one in substance with the Father, homoousios to Patri, and through him all things were made. He was incarnate of the Virgin Mary by the power of the Holy Spirit, and was made man: equal therefore to the Father according to his divinity, and inferior to the Father according to his humanity and himself one, not by some impossible confusion of his natures, but by the unity of his person.”
“In the beginning”: “what this means is that he always was, and that he is eternal. […] For if he is God, as indeed he is, there is nothing prior to him; if he is creator of all things, then he is the First; if he is Lord of all, then everything comes after him—created things and time” (St John Chrysostom, Hom. on St John, 2, 4).
1:3. After showing that the Word is in the bosom of the Father, the prologue goes on to deal with his relationship to created things. Already in the Old Testament the Word of God is shown as a creative power (cf. Is 55:10–11), as Wisdom present at the creation of the world (cf. Prov 8:22–26). Now Revelation is extended: we are shown that creation was caused by the Word; this does not mean that the Word is an instrument subordinate and inferior to the Father: he is an active principle along with the Father and the Holy Spirit. The work of creation is an activity common to the three divine Persons of the Blessed Trinity: “the Father generating, the Son being born, the Holy Spirit proceeding; consubstantial, co-equal, co-omnipotent and co-eternal; one origin of all things: the creator of all things visible and invisible, spiritual and corporal” (Fourth Lateran Council, De fide catholica, Dz-Sch, 800). From this can be deduced, among other things, the hand of the Trinity in the work of creation and, therefore, the fact that all created things are basically good.
1:4. The prologue now goes on to expound two basic truths about the Word—that he is Life and that he is Light. The Life referred to here is divine life, the primary source of all life, natural and supernatural. And that Life is the light of men, for from God we receive the light of reason, the Light of truth and the light of glory, which are a participation in God’s mind. Only a rational creature is capable of having knowledge of God in this world and of later contemplating him joyfully in heaven for all eternity. Also the Life (the Word) is the Light of men because he brings them out of the darkness of sin and error (cf. Is 9:1–2; Mt 4:15–16; Lk 1:79). Later on Jesus will say: “I am the light of the world; he who follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life” (Jn 8:12; cf. 12:46).
Verses 3 and 4 can be read with another punctuation, now generally abandoned but which had its supporters in ancient times: “All things were made through him, and without him nothing was made; in so far as anything was made in him, he was the life and the life was the light of men.” This reading would suggest that everything that has been created is life in the Word, that is, that all things receive their being and activity, their life, through the Word: without him they cannot possibly exist.
1:5. “And the darkness has not overcome it”: the original Greek verb, given in Latin as comprehenderunt, means to embrace or contain as if putting one’s arms around it—an action which can be done with good dispositions (a friendly embrace) or with hostility (the action of smothering or crushing someone). So there are two possible translations: the former is that given in the Navarre Spanish, the latter that in the RSV. The RSV option would indicate that Christ and the Gospel continue to shine among men despite the world’s opposition, indeed overcoming it, as Jesus later says: “Be of good cheer, I have overcome the world” (Jn 16:33; cf. 12:31; 1 Jn 5:4). Either way, the verse expresses the darkness’ resistance to, repugnance for, the light. As his Gospel proceeds, St John explains further about the light and darkness: soon, in vv. 9–11, he refers to the struggle between them; later he will describe evil and the powers of the evil one, as a darkness enveloping man’s mind and preventing him from knowing God (cf. Jn 12:15–46; 1 Jn 5:6).
St Augustine (In Ioann. Evang., 1, 19) comments on this passage as follows: “But, it may be, the dull hearts of some cannot yet receive this light. Their sins weigh them down, and they cannot discern it. Let them not think, however, that, because they cannot discern it, therefore it is not present with them. For they themselves, because of their sins, are darkness. Just as if you place a blind person in the sunshine, although the sun is present to him, yet he is absent from the sun; in the same way, every foolish man, every unrighteous man, every ungodly man, is blind in heart. […] What course then ought such a one to take? Let him cleanse the eyes of his heart, that he may be able to see God. He will see Wisdom, for God is Wisdom itself, and it is written: ‘Blessed are the clean of heart, for they shall see God.’ ” There is no doubt that sin obscures man’s spiritual vision, rendering him unable to see and enjoy the things of God.
1:6–8. After considering the divinity of the Lord, the text moves on to deal with his incarnation, and begins by speaking of John the Baptist, who makes his appearance at a precise point in history to bear direct witness before man to Jesus Christ (Jn 1:15, 19–36; 3:22ff). As St Augustine comments: “For as much as he [the Word Incarnate] was man and his Godhead was concealed, there was sent before him a great man, through whose testimony he might be found to be more than man” (In Ioann. Evang., 2, 5).
All of the Old Testament was a preparation for the coming of Christ. Thus, the patriarchs and prophets announced, in different ways, the salvation the Messiah would bring. But John the Baptist, the greatest of those born of woman (cf. Mt 11:11), was actually able to point out the Messiah himself; his testimony marked the culmination of all the previous prophecies.
So important is John the Baptist’s mission to bear witness to Jesus Christ that the Synoptic Gospels start their account of the public ministry with John’s testimony. The discourses of St Peter and St Paul recorded in the Acts of the Apostles also refer to this testimony (Acts 1:22; 10:37; 12:24). The Fourth Gospel mentions it as many as seven times (1:6, 15, 19, 29, 36; 3:27; 5:33). We know, of course, that St John the apostle was a disciple of the Baptist before becoming a disciple of Jesus, and that it was in fact the Baptist who showed him the way to Christ (cf. 1:37ff).
The New Testament, then, shows us the importance of the Baptist’s mission, as also his own awareness that he is merely the immediate Precursor of the Messiah, whose sandals he is unworthy to untie (cf. Mk 1:7): the Baptist stresses his role as witness to Christ and his mission as preparer of the way for the Messiah (cf. Lk 1:15–17; Mt 3:3–12). John the Baptist’s testimony is undiminished by time: he invites people in every generation to have faith in Jesus, the true Light.
1:9. “The true light …”. The Spanish translation of this verse is along these lines: “It was the true light that enlightens every man who comes into the world.” The Fathers, early translations and most modern commentators see “the Word” as being the subject of this sentence, which could therefore be translated as “the Word was the true light that enlightens every man who comes into the world …”. Another interpretation favoured by many modern scholars makes “the light” the subject, in which case it would read “the true light existed, which enlightens …”. Either way, the meaning is much the same.
“Coming into the world”: it is not clear in the Greek whether these words refer to “the light” or to “every man”. In the first case it is the Light (the Word) that is coming into this world to enlighten all men; in the second it is the men who, on coming into this world, on being born, are enlightened by the Word; the RSV and the New Vulgate opt for the first interpretation. The Word is called “the true light” because he is the original light from which every other light or revelation of God derives. By the Word’s coming, the world is fully lit up by the authentic Light. The prophets and all the other messengers of God, including John the Baptist, were not the true light but his reflection, attesting to the Light of the Word.
Apropos of the fulness of light which the Word is, St John Chrysostom asks: “If he enlightens every man who comes into the world, how is it that so many have remained unenlightened? For not all, to be sure, have recognized the high dignity of Christ. How, then, does he enlighten every man? As much as he is permitted to do so. But if some, deliberately closing the eyes of their minds, do not wish to receive the beams of this light, darkness is theirs. This is not because of the nature of the light, but is a result of the wickedness of men who deliberately deprive themselves of the gift of grace” (Hom. on St John, 8, 1).
1:10. The Word is in this world as the maker who controls what he has made (cf. St Augustine, In Ioann. Evang., 2, 10). In St John’s Gospel the term “world” means “all creation, all created things (including all mankind)”; thus, Christ came to save all mankind: “For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. For God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him” (Jn 3:16–17). But insofar as many people have rejected the Light, that is, rejected Christ, “world” also means everything opposed to God (cf. Jn 17:14–15). Blinded by their sins, men do not recognize in the world the hand of the Creator (cf. Rom 1:18–20; Wis 13:1–15): “they become attached to the world and relish only the things that are of the world” (St John Chrysostom, Hom. on St John, 7). But the Word, “the true light”, comes to show us the truth about the world (cf. Jn 1:9; 18:37) and to save us.
1:11. “His own home, his own people”: this means, in the first place, the Jewish people, who were chosen by God as his own personal “property”, to be the people from whom Christ would be born. It can also mean all mankind, for mankind is also his: he created it and his work of redemption extends to everyone. So the reproach that they did not receive the Word made man should be understood as addressed not only to the Jews but to all those who rejected God despite his calling them to be his friends: “Christ came; but by a mysterious and terrible misfortune, not everyone accepted him. […] It is the picture of humanity before us today, after twenty centuries of Christianity. How did this happen? What shall we say? We do not claim to fathom a reality immersed in mysteries that transcend us—the mystery of good and evil. But we can recall that the economy of Christ, for its light to spread, requires a subordinate but necessary cooperation on the part of man—the cooperation of evangelization, of the apostolic and missionary Church. If there is still work to be done, it is all the more necessary for everyone to help her” (Paul VI, General Audience, 4 December 1974).
1:12. Receiving the Word means accepting him through faith, for it is through faith that Christ dwells in our hearts (cf. Eph 3:17). Believing in his name means believing in his Person, in Jesus as the Christ, the Son of God. In other words, “those who believe in his name are those who fully hold the name of Christ, not in any way lessening his divinity or his humanity” (St Thomas Aquinas, Comm. on St John, in loc.).
“He gave power [to them]” is the same as saying “he gave them a free gift”—sanctifying grace—“because it is not in our power to make ourselves sons of God” (ibid.). This gift is extended through Baptism to everyone, whatever his race, age, education etc. (cf. Acts 10:45; Gal 3:28). The only condition is that we have faith.
“The Son of God became man”, St Athanasius explains, “in order that the sons of men, the sons of Adam, might become sons of God. […] He is the Son of God by nature; we, by grace” (De incarnatione contra arrianos). What is referred to here is birth to supernatural life: in which “Whether they be slaves or freemen, whether Greeks or barbarians or Scythians, foolish or wise, female or male, children or old men, honourable or without honour, rich or poor, rulers or private citizens, all, he meant, would merit the same honour. […] Such is the power of faith in him; such the greatness of his grace” (St John Chrysostom, Hom. on St John, 10, 2).
“Christ’s union with man is power and the source of power, as St John stated so incisively in the prologue of his Gospel: ‘(The Word) gave power to become children of God.’ Man is transformed inwardly by this power as the source of a new life that does not disappear and pass away but lasts to eternal life (cf. Jn 4:14)” (John Paul II, Redemptor hominis, 18).
1:13. The birth spoken about here is a real, spiritual type of generation which is effected in Baptism (cf. 3:6ff). Instead of the plural adopted here, referring to the supernatural birth of men, some Fathers and early translations read it in the singular: “who was born, not of blood … but of God”, in which case the text would refer to the eternal generation of the Word and to Jesus’ generation through the Holy Spirit in the pure womb of the Virgin Mary. Although the second reading is very attractive, the documents (Greek manuscripts, early translations, references in the works of ecclesiastical writers, etc.) show the plural text to be the more usual, and the one that prevailed from the fourth century forward. Besides, in St John’s writings we frequently find reference to believers as being born of God (cf. Jn 3:3–6; 1 Jn 2:29; 3:9; 4:7; 5:1, 4, 18).
The contrast between man’s natural birth (by blood and the will of man) and his supernatural birth (which comes from God) shows that those who believe in Jesus Christ are made children of God not only by their creation but above all by the free gift of faith and grace.
1:14. This is a text central to the mystery of Christ. It expresses in a very condensed form the unfathomable fact of the incarnation of the Son of God. “When the time had fully come, God sent forth his Son, born of woman” (Gal 4:4).
The word “flesh” means man in his totality (cf. Jn 3:6; 17:2; Gen 6:3; Ps 56:4); so the sentence “the Word became flesh” means the same as “the Word became man.” The theological term “incarnation” arose mainly out of this text. The noun “flesh” carries a great deal of force against heresies which deny that Christ is truly man. The word also accentuates that our Saviour, who dwelt among us and shared our nature, was capable of suffering and dying, and it evokes the “Book of the Consolation of Israel” (Is 40:1–11), where the fragility of the flesh is contrasted with the permanence of the Word of God: “The grass withers, the flower fades; but the word of our God will stand for ever” (Is 40:8). This does not mean that the Word’s taking on human nature is something precarious and temporary.
“And dwelt among us”: the Greek verb which St John uses originally means “to pitch one’s tent”, hence, to live in a place. The careful reader of Scripture will immediately think of the tabernacle, or tent, in the period of the exodus from Egypt, where God showed his presence before all the people of Israel through certain sights of his glory such as the cloud covering the tent (cf., for example, Ex 25:8; 40:34–35). In many passages of the Old Testament it is announced that God “will dwell in the midst of the people” (cf., for example, Jer 7:3; Ezek 43:9; Sir 24:8). These signs of God’s presence, first in the pilgrim tent of the Ark in the desert and then in the temple of Jerusalem, are followed by the most wonderful form of God’s presence among us—Jesus Christ, perfect God and perfect Man, in whom the ancient promise is fulfilled in a way that far exceeded men’s greatest expectations. Also the promise made through Isaiah about the “Immanuel” or “God-with-us” (Is 7:14; cf. Mt 1:23) is completely fulfilled through this dwelling of the Incarnate Son of God among us. Therefore, when we devoutly read these words of the Gospel “and dwelt among us” or pray them during the Angelus, we have a good opportunity to make an act of deep faith and gratitude and to adore our Lord’s most holy human nature.
“Remembering that ‘the Word became flesh’, that is, that the Son of God became man, we must become conscious of how great each man has become through this mystery, through the Incarnation of the Son of God! Christ, in fact, was conceived in the womb of Mary and became man to reveal the eternal love of the Creator and Father and to make known the dignity of each one of us” (John Paul II, Angelus Address at Jasna Gora Shrine, 5 June 1979).
Although the Word’s self-emptying by assuming a human nature concealed in some way his divine nature, of which he never divested himself, the Apostles did see the glory of his divinity through his human nature: it was revealed in the transfiguration (Lk 9:32–35), in his miracles (Jn 2:11; 11:40), and especially in his resurrection (cf. Jn 3:11; 1 Jn 1:1). The glory of God, which shone out in the early tabernacle in the desert and in the temple at Jerusalem, was nothing but an imperfect anticipation of the reality of God’s glory revealed through the holy human nature of the Only-begotten of the Father. St John the Apostle speaks in a very formal way in the first person plural: “we have beheld his glory”, because he counts himself among the witnesses who lived with Christ and, in particular, were present at his transfiguration and saw the glory of his resurrection.
The words “only Son” (“Only-begotten”) convey very well the eternal and unique generation of the Word by the Father. The first three Gospels stressed Christ’s birth in time; St John complements this by emphasizing his eternal generation.
The words “grace and truth” are synonyms of “goodness and fidelity”, two attributes which, in the Old Testament, are constantly applied to Yahweh (cf., e.g., Ex 34:6; Ps 118; Ps 136; Hos 2:16–20): so, grace is the expression of God’s love for men, the way he expresses his goodness and mercy. Truth implies permanence, loyalty, constancy, fidelity. Jesus, who is the Word of God made man, that is, God himself, is therefore “the only Son of the Father, full of grace and truth”; he is the “merciful and faithful high priest” (Heb 2:17). These two qualities, being good and faithful, are a kind of compendium or summary of Christ’s greatness. And they also parallel, though on an infinitely lower level, the quality essential to every Christian, as stated expressly by our Lord when he praised the “good and faithful servant” (Mt 25:21).
As Chrysostom explains: “Having declared that they who received him were ‘born of God’ and ‘become sons of God,’ he then set forth the cause and reason for this ineffable honour. It is that ‘the Word became flesh’ and the Master took on the form of a slave. He became the Son of Man, though he was the true Son of God, in order that he might make the sons of men children of God” (Hom. on St John, 11,1).
The profound mystery of Christ was solemnly defined by the Church’s Magisterium in the famous text of the ecumenical Council of Chalcedon (in the year 451): “Following the holy Fathers, therefore, we all with one accord teach the profession of faith in the one identical Son, our Lord Jesus Christ. We declare that he is perfect both in his divinity and in his humanity, truly God and truly man, composed of body and rational soul; that he is consubstantial with the Father in his divinity, consubstantial with us in his humanity, like us in every respect except for sin (cf. Heb 4:15). We declare that in his divinity he was begotten in this last age of Mary the Virgin, the Mother of God, for us and for our salvation” (Dz-Sch, 301).
1:15. Further on (Jn 1:19–36) the Gospel tells us more about John the Baptist’s mission as a witness to the messiahship and divinity of Jesus. Just as God planned that the apostles should bear witness to Jesus after the resurrection, so he planned that the Baptist would be the witness chosen to proclaim Jesus at the very outset of his public ministry (cf. the note on Jn 1:6–8).
1:16. “Grace upon grace”: this can be understood, as it was by Chrysostom and other Fathers, as “grace for grace”, the Old Testament economy of salvation giving way to the new economy of grace brought by Christ. It can also mean (as the RSV suggests) that Jesus brings a superabundance of gifts, adding on, to existing graces, others—all of which pour out of the one inexhaustible source, Christ, who is for ever full of grace. “Not by sharing with us, says the Evangelist, does Christ possess the gift, but he himself is both fountain and root of all virtues. He himself is life, and light, and truth, not keeping within himself the wealth of these blessings, but pouring it forth upon all others, and even after the outpouring still remaining full. He suffers no loss by giving his wealth to others, but, while always pouring out and sharing these virtues with all men, he remains in the same state of perfection” (St John Chrysostom, Hom. on St John, 14, 1).
1:17. Here, for the first time in St John’s Gospel, the name of Jesus Christ appears, identified with the Word of whom John has been speaking.
Whereas the Law given by Moses went no further than indicate the way man ought follow (cf. Rom 8:7–10), the grace brought by Jesus has the power to save those who receive it (cf. Rom 7:25). Through grace “we have become dear to God, no longer merely as servants, but as sons and friends” (St John Chrysostom, Hom. on St John, 14, 2).
On “grace and truth” see the note on Jn 1:14.
1:18. “No one has ever seen God”: in this world men have never seen God other than indirectly: all that they could contemplate was God’s “glory”, that is, the aura of his greatness: for example, Moses saw the burning bush (Ex 3:2); Elijah felt the breeze on Mount Horeb—the “still small voice” (1 Kings 19:11–13). But in the fulness of time God comes much closer to man and reveals himself almost directly, for Jesus Christ is the visible image of the invisible God (cf. Col 1:15), the maximum revelation of God in this world, to such an extent that he assures us that “he who has seen me has seen the Father” (Jn 14:9). “The most intimate truth which this revelation gives us about God and the salvation of man shines forth in Christ, who is himself both the mediator and the sum total of Revelation” (Vatican II, Dei Verbum, 2).
There is no greater revelation God could make of himself than the incarnation of his eternal Word. As St John of the Cross puts it so well: “In giving to us, as he has done, his Son, who is his only Word, he has spoken to us once and for all by his own and only Word, and has nothing further to reveal” (Ascent of Mount Carmel, book II, chap. 22).
“The only Son”: the RSV note says that “other ancient authorities read God” (for Son); the Navarre Spanish has “the Only-begotten God” and comments as follows: some Greek manuscripts and some translations give “the Only-begotten Son” or “the Only-begotten”. “The Only-begotten God” is preferable because it finds best support in the codexes. Besides, although the meaning does not change substantially, this translation has a richer content because it again explicitly reveals Christ’s divinity.
Source: The Navarre Bible: Text and Commentaries. Biblical text from the Revised Standard Version and New Vulgate. Commentaries by members of the Faculty of Theology, University of Navarre, Spain.
Published by Four Courts Press, Kill Lane, Blackrock, Co. Dublin, Ireland, and by Scepter Publishers in the United States. We encourage readers to purchase The Navarre Bible for personal study. See Scepter Publishers for details.
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