The gospels according to Matthew...
Illustration
The gospels according to Matthew, Mark and Luke have painstakingly provided us with as accurate an account of the life of Jesus as was possible. John's gospel, however, provides history and something missing in the synoptics, allegory. John provides a new and exciting look at Jesus, a view from the spiritual side. John, says Clement of Alexandria (200 A.D.), "having observed that the bodily things (i.e. the bare historic facts) had been sufficiently set forth by the earlier gospels ... produced a spiritual Gospel (Euseb. 'HE.' 6.14).
John sits down to write not a biography, but an interpretation of the life of Christ. The result is that this gospel possesses a mystical charm that directs us to understand God's gift to us this first Sunday in Christmas in a new way.
Nothing is closer to a woman or man than his or her own thoughts. The thoughts live within her or him and they are a part of that person. So, nothing is so close to God as God's own eternal Word. That Word is one with God. Christ is also God's outward Word. Through Christ God comes to us in skin and bones to be a part of who we are. Christ is the wonderful outward expression of God's hiddenness.
Jesus is God spelling himself out
in language that man can understand.
S. D. Gordon
--Clarke
John sits down to write not a biography, but an interpretation of the life of Christ. The result is that this gospel possesses a mystical charm that directs us to understand God's gift to us this first Sunday in Christmas in a new way.
Nothing is closer to a woman or man than his or her own thoughts. The thoughts live within her or him and they are a part of that person. So, nothing is so close to God as God's own eternal Word. That Word is one with God. Christ is also God's outward Word. Through Christ God comes to us in skin and bones to be a part of who we are. Christ is the wonderful outward expression of God's hiddenness.
Jesus is God spelling himself out
in language that man can understand.
S. D. Gordon
--Clarke
