The Life of Yeshua Bible Study

WEEK 2 : The Eternal Word

1. SCRIPTURE

1:1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
1:2 He was with God in the beginning.
1:3 Through Him all things were made; and without Him nothing was made that was made.
1:4 In Him was life, and that life was the light of men.
1:5 The light shines in darkness but the darkness has not understood it.
1:6 There came a man who was sent from God; his name was John.
1:7 He came as a witness to testify concerning the light; so that through him all men might believe.
1:8 He himself was not that light; he came only as a witness to the light.
1:9 The true light that gives light to every man was coming into the world.
1:10 He was in the world, and though the world was made through Him, the world did not recognize Him.
1:11 He came to that which was His own, but His own did not receive Him.
1:12 Yet to all who received Him, to those who believed in His name, He gave the right to become the children of God.
1:13 Children not born of natural descent, or of human decision nor a husband’s will, but of God.
1:14 The Word became flesh and made His dwelling among us. We have seen His glory, the glory of the One and only who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.
1:15 John testifies concerning Him. He cries out, saying, “This is He of who I said, ‘Her who comes after me has surpassed me because He was before me.’”
1:16 “From the fullness of His grace we have all received one blessing after another.”
1:17 “For the Law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Yeshua the Messiah.”
1:18 For no one has ever seen God, but God the One and only, who is at the Father’s side, has made Him known.

John 1:1-18 (NKJV) Other versions ...

2. COMMENTARY

Introduction

Virtually all commentaries try to claim that Yochanan’s writing on the Logos was based on Greek philosophy. The “Logos” in Greek philosophy meant reason and speech. The commentators claim that what Yochanan was saying is that by reason Yeshua was the very idea of God, and by speech He was the very expression of God. These ideas sound good and may even have some merit. But, what they fail to realize is that Yochanan was not a Greek philosopher but a Jewish priest. What he had to say about the “Logos” was not so much about Greek philosophy, but Jewish theology. While the Greek term behind the idea of “Word” is “Logos,” it is a reflection of a Rabbinic concept known as Memra.

The most common Hebrew expression for “word" Is davar. Davar implies content and reality in one’s words. Since God is somehow”untouchable,” it is necessary to provide a link between YHWH and His earthly creation. One of the most important links regarded in ancient Rabbinical thought was “the word,” called Memra in Aramaic (from the Hebrew and Aramaic root “mr” which means “to say.”) The Memra concept — that of divine mediator between the unapproachable God and the creature man — occurs hundreds of times in the Aramaic Targums. The ancient Jews believed the Messiah to have the attributes of the Memra. This explains the writings of John’s Gospel, chapter one, showing that Yeshua met the six requirements of the Memra.

Why did God bother to speak during creation? Why didn’t the Creator just do His work silently without utterance or sound? To who, or for whom, was He speaking when He said “Let there be light.” It is clear that there is a creative, dynamic force in the Almighty’s voice, a power and energy in His words; a tangible release of divine life. His word is an extension of His nature. A movement of His will — alive, powerful, and effective — not just letters, symbols, and sound. There is a vigor and action in God’s words extending far beyond the application of thought and communication.

The Jewish theologians had six things to say about the Memra and they are all found in Yochanan’s prologue. What Yochanan is saying is that everything that the Rabbis taught about the Memra is true about Yeshua the Messiah.

Vs. 1: The first thing the Rabbis said about the Memra is that sometimes it was the same as God and sometimes distinct from God. Two passages from Isaiah demonstrate this concept. “By Myself have I sworn, the Word has gone forth from My mouth in righteousness, it shall not return, that unto Me every knee shall bow, every tongue swear” (Isaiah 45:23). “So that My Word be that goes forth from My mouth: it shall not return to Me voice, but it shall accomplish that which I please, it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it” (Isaiah 55:11). This first concept speaks of the dual nature of the Messiah – both God and man.

Vs. 2: The “Word” of God is not named as such in Genesis, but it is immediately seen in action: “And God said...” (Genesis 1:3,6,9,11,14,20,24,26). God gave man His Word in order to reveal Himself to man; for God and His Word are inseparable. Starting in Genesis and going throughout the Bible, God uses His Word to first create and then reveal Himself to His creation. This is one of the two primary themes of the entire Bible. The other is His justice and mercy and their part in the salvation of mankind.

We learn in this verse that the Word was not a created being. Rabbinically speaking if the Word was in the beginning with God, and there is but one God, then the Word is God. This attests to the deity of Yeshua the Messiah, the Incarnate Word. This verse was also used by the early church fathers to contradict a heresy called Arianism. Arius, a fourth century presbyter in Alexandria, Egypt, taught that the “Word,” or son of God, was not eternal, but rather first of all creatures. The slogan, “There was a time when He (the Word) was not” expressed Arius’ position in a nutshell. This same doctrine is taught by the Jehovah Witnesses today.

Vs. 3: Secondly, the Rabbis said the Memra was the agent of creation. All that was made was made by the Word. The book of Psalms says, “By the Word of YHVH were the heavens made; and all the host of the by the breath of His mouth” (Psalms 33:6). The purpose of creation was to show forth the glory of God through Yeshua the Messiah. God alone created the universe. Isaiah 44:24 says, “Thus said the Lord your Redeemer, who formed you in the womb. It is I, the Lord, who made everything, who alone stretched out the heavens and unaided spread out the earth.”

Before He even started creation, the Lord purposed in His heart that one day Yeshua would go to the cross to die for the sins of all mankind. Everything in creation, including man, was created to fulfill this purpose. In order for salvation to be completely a free gift, the Lord had to put it into place before He created man with the free choice of rejecting it.The Apostle Peter said it this way: “Knowing that you were not redeemed with corruptible things, like silver or gold, from your aimless conduct received by tradition from your fathers, but with the precious blood of the Messiah, as a lamb without blemish and without spot. He indeed was foreordained before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last times for you” (I Peter 1:18-20).

Vs. 4,5: Verses 4 and 5 tie together in a very unique and profound way. Verses 4 and 6 speak of a great light which refers back to some Old Testament passages. Isaiah the prophet wrote: “The people who walked in darkness have seen a brilliant light; on those who dwelt in a land of gloom a light has dawned” (Isaiah 9:1). The Jewish Study Bible gives the explanation that the verbs used in these verses are in the past tense. Some interpreters view them as examples of the prophetic past, which predicts future events using the past tense because they are as good as already accomplished.

The future event being predicted here is found in Isaiah 9:5, 6. “For a child has been born to us, a son has been given us. And authority has settled on His shoulders. He has been named ‘the mighty God is planning grace,’ the eternal Father, a peaceable ruler” — in token of abundant authority and of
peace without limit upon David’s throne and kingdom, that it may be firmly established in justice and equity now and evermore.” Most later readers (both Jewish and Christian) understand verses 5 and 6 to describe an ideal ruler, i.e. the Messiah.

The Lord said through the prophet Malachi, “But to you who revere My name the sun of righteousness shall rise with healing in His wings” (Malachi 4:2). The Jewish Study Bible says the background of this verse is mythological. The rising of the “sun of righteousness” is a metaphor for the dawn of a new day, i.e., an era of history. Both of these verses have to do with a great light and both are Messianic verses. The “light” used in this particular context in Yochanan’s Gospel is a direct reference to the Messiah.

Both of these Scriptures speak of a Messiah that was conceived in the mind of God from before creation that comes forth to issue the Kingdom of God on this earth. In his letter to the church at Ephesus the Apostle Paul explained it this way: “To make all people to see what is the fellowship of the mystery, which from the beginning of the ages has been hidden in God who created all things through Yeshua the Messiah” (Eph. 3:9).

To add force to this identity, the Jewish people know that light (fire) is one of the central elements of theophany, — a temporary physical manifestation of God to man. At the covenant with Abraham, “a smoking oven and a flaming torch passed between the halves of the animal” (Genesis 15:17). God appeared to Moses from a burning bush (Exod. 3:2). He went before Israel in a pillar of fire to guide them by night (Exod. 13:21,22; 14:24; Num. 9:15,16). One of the most prominent images associated with the Shekhinah is that of light. All these things serve to remind the Jewish listener of the supernatural characteristics of the “light.” This is not a reference to ordinary light, but to Deity being revealed to mankind.

Vs. 6-9: The Yochanan named here is Yochanan haMatbil. He is the harbinger, the one who goes before the Messiah.

The terms Shekhinah and Ruach haKodesh (Holy Spirit) are sometimes used interchangeably in the form of revelation of the Divine Presence. In Talmudic Midrashic literature, the anthropomorphic expressions of the Bible are avoided as much as possible, and terms like Memra, Dibbur, Yekara, and Kavod (speech, glory) are employed instead. Depicted under the figure of light, the Divine Presence is often presented as coming into intimate contact with human beings.

Vs. 10,11: These two verses together have probably been used more than any other to build a case for the Jews rejecting Yeshua. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth. This subject will be dealt with at another time where the proper context can be established.

Vs. 12,13: Thirdly, the Rabbis taught that the Memra was the agent of salvation. This was based on Hosea 1:7 which says, “I, YHVH, will save them by the Word of YHVH.”

Vs. 14-16: Fourthly, the Memra was the means by which God became visible. The Rabbis referred to this Divine Presence in the O.T. as the Shekhinah Glory. And now this Word that was God took upon Himself flesh, and so He became visible. The Bible reports many instances of God’s appearing to man: to Abraham (Gen. 18), to Jacob (Gen. 32:25-33), to Moses (Exod. 3), to Joshua (Josh. 5:13-6:5), and to the people of Israel (Judges 2:1-5). In all these passages the term “Adonai” and “the angel of the Lord” are used interchangeable. In some of them the “angel of Adonai” is spoken of as a man. The Bible thus itself teaches that the All-powerful God has the power, if He chooses, to appear among men as a man. The N.T. carries this Jewish idea one step further: not only can God “appear” in human form, but the Word of God can “become” a human being — and did so.

This verse also contradicted the heresy of Gnosticism. Gnosticism is a philosophical view that understands that the knowledge (gnosis) of reality was to be attained only by divine disclosure and which sees the goal of human existence as the liberation of the soul from this physical body. The concept of a Holy God indwelling a flesh body completely contradicted what they taught .

Philo identified the Logos with an individual called the Metatron. The Metatron was a Rabbinical name for the angel of YHVH, that unique angel that crops up in the O.T. Philo says the Logos, or Memra, was the Metatron, but some Rabbis did not agree with this. Metatron is said in Jewish lore to be the angel that led the tribes through the wilderness (as Shekhinah), and may have been the dark angel who wrestled with Jacob. Others talk of him as the angel that stayed the hand of Abraham as he was about to sacrifice his son, Isaac, and also as the angel that gave warning of the flood. The medieval philosophers treating the belief in angels in a spirit more rationalistic than Philo, who spoke of the Metatron asd the great archangel with seventy-two names, claimed for man a rank higher than that of angels (Saadyah Gaon).

Vs. 17: Fifthly, the Memra was the means by which God sealed His covenants. “The Law was given by Moses” (according to Genesis 15), indicates the covenant was sealed by the Word of God given to Moses. “Grace and truth came by Yeshua the Messiah” indicates the New Covenant through Yeshua was sealed by His blood, showing that He was the covenant signer. Grace and truth are personal attributes of God which Yeshua not only revealed in a unique way during His brief earthly lifetime, but in His eternal capacity as the Word of God. He, as God, has been continually bestowing upon humanity since the dawn of creation. Grace, truth, and the Torah are all from God, supreme expressions of who He is.

The term “covenant” translates a Hebrew word in the O.T. whose primary meaning is “a binding pact.” It is used to describe alliances between people, and it most often refers to an agreement between God and humans. All such covenants are conditional, being predicated on stipulated terms at the time of ratification. In the cases between God and man, the stipulations are made by God, and the people have the choice of accepting or rejecting them. They do not have the right to offer alternative conditions. If people accept the conditions they will be blessed according to the terms of the agreement as long as they keep it, or be cursed if they violate it.

Vs. 18: Sixthly, according to Jewish theology, the Memra was the means of revelation, and God revealed Himself by means of the Memra. Many who saw the “Angel of the Lord” saw God in a veiled form. In Exodus 33:20-23 it says, “but, He said, ‘you cannot see My face and live.’” Although this verse says that man cannot see God’s face and live, the Bible records several instances where men did see God and live. Moses saw “God’s back.” Isaiah saw the Lord sitting on a throne “high and lifted up.” The seventy elders of Israel “saw the God of Israel ..... and ate and drank.” Jacob saw and wrestled with a “divine being.” Gideon saw an “Angel of the Lord.” Other temporary manifestations (theophanies) can be found appearing to Abraham at the oakes of Mamre, to Moses at the burning bush, and the prophet Elijah in the cave at Horeb. Therefore these passages must be taken to means the ultimate glory and nature of God are hidden from a sinful humanity.

A theophany is a temporary manifestation, showing, revelation, or appearance of God to people. In the Old Testament there are frequent examples of theophanies, especially in times before the Babylonian Captivity. Sometimes the Lord seems to appear bodily, in visible form, sometimes as an angel or messenger, often as a cloud or fire relating to a glorious and majestic presence. These are usually referred to as the “Shekhinah”, although another term that is used interchangeably is the Ruach haKodesh (Holy Spirit). The most frequent and awesome theophanies are those related to the Tem Commandments, the Ark of the Covenant, the Tabernacle, and the crossing of the Red Sea.

3. QUESTIONS

Goodness me - this is a heavy one! There's a lot here that may confuse and our advice to you is that, if there are concepts that you are having difficulty in understanding, ask a question in the forum (you will need to register with us first, if you haven't already). MOST IMPORTANTLY - PERSEVERE, EVEN IF YOU DON'T FOLLOW EVERYTHING THIS WEEK! Be Blessed!

Here are some discussion starters. They may or may not be useful to you, but we have to start somewhere ...

1. What is your understanding of the logos? discuss ..
2. Is it valid to use the writings of the (non Christian) rabbis to add to our understanding of Jesus? discuss ..
3. How do these 18 verses speak to you personally about Jesus? discuss ..

4. DISCUSSIONS

To take part in the Bible study - to see what others have said and add your comments or questions - go to forum. (You will only be able to take part if you have registered your details on this website).

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Life of Yeshua

Bless you for these studies. They came at a time when I felt I needed to follow a deeper study of Yeshua. I am still amazed at how I can have read these words most of my life and only now are lights coming on and the words taking on new meaning. Hallelujah! And yes, after doing the John 1 study my brain screamed but oh how welcome it was.
Keep up the good work, an answer to prayer.

Bravo

Bravo and well done. This is a SOLID article!

Life of Yeshua

Excellent study. I have been a member of a Messianic Congregation for nearly 3 years now, after 26 years in the Charismatic churches. Each Sabbath (Sat) we study the weekly Torah readings along with the study notes for the readings.This is done in the morning. After lunch, we study the New Testament readings. I have discovered that with the knowledge we have gained through doing the Torah readings, we have a greater and more accurate understanding of the New Testament (Re-newed Covenant)

Your study is very good and not heavy at all. It is very well researched and accurate in its teachings.
I would recommend that ALL believers subscribe to your site. Well done.

Shalom,
Norman Collis

Many Thanks

What inspirational commentary. There sure is healing in the wings of the Morning Star, and how beautiful and encouraging to be able to view the Scriptures from a Hebrew viewpoint. With this understanding, as it is Spirit driven and Spirit given, you have given me so much more than a study could. Oh how much it means - learning what turns Yeshua's head, what burns in His heart and what His soul yearns for - commune with each one of us. To come just as we are to his feet, and to be lifted onto his shoulders as a lamb, saved and loved.

My prayers are with you for relief and healing, in whatever area you need, as you have sacrificed time, effort and have poured out your understanding.

Shalom, Shalom, Brother.

Bible study.

Thank You, Thank You. This is going to be one of the best studies that I have done for a long while. Thanks for the commentary, Bob. I am really looking forward to the rest of the study. Questions will arise and I will post them as I recieve them. WOW !!!

You say' "But, what they fail

You say' "But, what they fail to realize is that Yochanan was not a Greek philosopher but a Jewish priest." I assume that Yochanan the Baptist was priest since his father was one. I have never heard that Yochanan the Aposle was a priest although we are told he was acquainted with the High Priest. Please clarify.

John the Priest

There will be plenty of evidence of this given all through the commentary as we progress, especially in John's Gospel.

Thank you

Great teaching here. This is foundational.

We need to interpret from a Jewish Roots perspective; the Messiah and his apostles were all Jewish. It is not wise to read Greek philosophy into the Second Testament.

Thank you!

John 1

These are the basic tenants of our faith in Y'shua. I see this is going to be good.