Gospel of John in Easton's Bible Dictionary
The genuineness of this Gospel, i.e., the fact that the
apostle
John was its author, is beyond all reasonable doubt.
In recent
times, from about 1820, many attempts have been made
to impugn
its genuineness, but without success.
The design of John in writing this Gospel is stated
by himself
(John 20:31). It was at one time supposed that he
wrote for the
purpose of supplying the omissions of the
synoptical, i.e., of
the first three, Gospels, but there is no evidence
for this.
"There is here no history of Jesus and his teaching
after the
manner of the other evangelists. But there is in
historical form
a representation of the Christian faith in relation
to the
person of Christ as its central point; and in this
representation there is a picture on the one hand of
the
antagonism of the world to the truth revealed in
him, and on the
other of the spiritual blessedness of the few who
yield
themselves to him as the Light of life" (Reuss).
After the prologue (1:1-5), the historical part of
the book
begins with verse 6, and consists of two parts. The
first part
(1:6-ch. 12) contains the history of our Lord's
public ministry
from the time of his introduction to it by John the
Baptist to
its close. The second part (ch. 13-21) presents our
Lord in the
retirement of private life and in his intercourse
with his
immediate followers (13-17), and gives an account of
his
sufferings and of his appearances to the disciples
after his
resurrection (18-21).
The peculiarities of this Gospel are the place it
gives (1) to
the mystical relation of the Son to the Father, and
(2) of the
Redeemer to believers; (3) the announcement of the
Holy Ghost as
the Comforter; (4) the prominence given to love as
an element in
the Christian character. It was obviously addressed
primarily to
Christians.
It was probably written at Ephesus, which, after the
destruction of Jerusalem (A.D. 70), became the
centre of
Christian life and activity in the East, about A.D.
90.
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