The Message Described and Sent – John 1:1-14

The Message Described and Sent – John 1:1-14

Turn to John 1. John 1 talks about “the Word,” which I will call “the Message.” John 1 describes the Word, the Message, who the Message really is, that’s in the first paragraph of John 1. And the second main paragraph tells us about his arrival on earth. That’s how much we’ll do today. We’ll talk about the rest of John’s opening next Sunday.

This is Advent, the coming of our Lord. The ancient church calendar ran on a three year cycle, and the cycle more less follows Matthew, Mark, and Luke, in that order. This is the second year, the Mark year. At Christmas and at Easter, I try to follow this cycle, but the year we do Mark gets me in trouble on both Christmas and Easter, because Mark has no birth story of Jesus. And Mark has only a very brief resurrection account as well.

So on the Mark year I use John at Advent and Easter time. That’s why this Sunday and next we will read from John’s opening, and you heard from 1 John last week. John’s is not a birth story, but we get that two years out of three, and that’s enough. John’s opening gives us a bigger picture of where Jesus came from.

In the beginning was the Message, and the Message was with God, and the Message was God. He was with God in the beginning. John goes back to Genesis 1:1, In the beginning, God made the heavens and the earth.

Back there, when God made the heavens and the earth, the Message was already there. He was with God, and he was himself God, and he was with God, in the beginning. He was back there, with God, at the start.

We read once that the Message was God, and twice that he was with God, and twice that he was there at the beginning. The Message has been there all along, and the Message and God have some kind of close relationship. They are together.

Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made. Think about the first verses of Genesis. John begins with the same words, “In the beginning …” so we know he’s thinking about the start of Genesis, and he’s telling us to remember those lines.

Genesis begins this way: In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters. And God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light.

In our first creation story, Genesis 1, God makes things by speaking. In the second story, in Genesis 2, it’s different, God seems to make things with his hands. But in the first story, God creates with his words. All the way through, “Let there be light,” and it was so. “Let the ground produce plants,” and it was so. “Let the seas swarm with living things,” and it was so.

So John starts, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” John separates God from his words, and he describes the Words of God, the Speech of God having a life of its own.

John makes “the Words of God” in Genesis 1, ‘the Speech of God,” a separate Person. In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. Through him, through the Word, the Speech, the Message, all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.

In the next line, John writes about life and light. That’s what the words of God produced, in Genesis 1, light and life. We’ll not spend more time on this now, but in simple terms, that’s what the opening to this Gospel does with Genesis 1. The Words of God become a Person

In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not mastered it.

“In him was life.” Let’s stop there. In Genesis 1, God created all life. Here we learn that the Word, of God, the Message, has that in himself. Jesus said this of himself. In John 5, Jesus said, For just as the Father raises the dead, and gives them life, even so the Son gives life to whom he is pleased to give it (5:21).

John 3:16 does not end, “so that whoever believes in him would have their sins forgiven,” it says, “whoever believes in him would have eternal life.” At the end of John 6, after many followers of Jesus had left him, Jesus said to the 12, “will you leave me too?” Peter said, “where would we go? You have the words of eternal life.”

People, life and death is a big deal. Unless the Lord returns, we will all die. Telling ourselves “yes but not yet” does us no good. Our response is not “yes but later,” our response is Jesus. He overturns death to whomever he wants. The one who believes in him will live, even if they die, and in some way, we will not die at all. We need to be afraid to die before we can take to heart what John’s Gospel tells us about life.

Life pours out of Jesus. This is such good news. He himself submitted to a most unpleasant death, but it is still true. Life pours out of Jesus, and he is our answer to death.

And this life, that pours out of Jesus, was the light of all mankind. That life that pours out of Jesus is such good news, that life energy that gives Jesus the ability to overturn death is light to the world! The light shines in the darkness. The darkness cannot understand that light, can’t grasp it, and the darkness cannot put it out that light, which is the life that pours out of Jesus.

In one word, when we look at Jesus, we see Life. That’s the Word from God, the Message: look at Jesus, and see Life, find Life.

There was a man sent from God whose name was John. He came as a witness to testify concerning that light, so that through him all might believe. He himself was not the light; he came only as a witness to the light. The true light that gives light to everyone was coming into the world.

In vv4–9, the word “light” occurs seven times. The darkness comes above all from death, and Jesus is the light for the whole world, because he brings life. That’s what makes him the true light. And the true Light was coming into the world. That’s new in this opening. We’ve heard twice that he was with God. And now we hear that he’s coming into the world.

The Word, the Message, was coming into the world. Make sure you get your heads around this: that Jesus himself is the Word to us, Jesus himself, the person we call Jesus of Nazareth, Jesus Christ, that person is God’s message to us. What Jesus himself said is a part of this, but only a part. God said to the world, “I have an important message for you,” and then he sent Jesus.

There is a sense in which Jesus was God’s messenger, but when John calls Jesus “the Word” he’s going after something deeper: Jesus himself, everything about him, his birth and his teaching and his life and death and resurrection – all of this together is the Message God sent us.

He was in the world, and though the world was made through him, the world did not recognize him. He came to his own people, but his own people did not receive him.

There’s real sadness here, and real disappointment. The world did not get who he was, didn’t see that he was the Creator! And his own people, the Jews, whom he was sent to rescue, did not want him, they would not welcome him.

The true light, who offers eternal life to every person, was misunderstood and rejected. This summarizes the whole life of Jesus. The creature met the Creator and did not see who he was. The nation that should have been home to him instead rejected him.

Most of us have felt misunderstood at some point, and rejected. Sometimes very painfully, takes us a long time to get over it. That is the overwhelming story of our Lord’s life. It was so bad, they killed him, the author of life. Not recognized, not welcomed.

Yet to all who did receive him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God— children born not of natural descent, nor of human decision or a husband’s will, but born of God.

This is how Jesus, the Message of Life, brings life to us. We receive him and believe in him, and we are re-born. As soon as we receive and believe, we have a second birth. And that second birth is into an eternal life, an eternal life which death cannot put out.

I got life from my dad and mom, and when I die, the life I got from them will end. But the life I got from my second birth never ends, it is eternal life. And I will die, but the grave cannot hold me. That eternal life is tougher than the grave, and the grave cannot hold me, it cannot hold us who receive and trust God’s Message, and are re-born from God, the life that never ends.

John’s opening does not tell us that the Message is Jesus until v17. We’ll cover that part next week. But, what does it mean to believe in Jesus Christ? What does it mean to have faith?

There is a story about faith in John 20. The first time Jesus appeared to his disciples after his resurrection, Thomas was not there. They told him that they’d seen Jesus alive, but Thomas said, “Until I see him for myself, and touch his wounds, I will never believe.”

A week later Jesus appeared again to his disciples, and Thomas was there. Jesus said, “Take a good look, Thomas. Touch my scars. Don’t be unbelieving but believing.” Thomas immediately said, “My Lord and my God.” Jesus said, “Because you saw, you believed? Blessed are those who believe without seeing.”

What did Thomas say that showed his faith? Did he say, “Now I can see that you really did rise”? No. He said, “My Lord and my God.” And Jesus said, “Now you finally have faith.” Faith is not mental agreement, or feeling certain.

Faith is a relationship. “My Lord and my God.” In different words, “Jesus, you are my Lord and my God, I submit to you and I worship you.” Then, once he said that, Jesus says, “now you finally have faith.” Faith is a relationship of submission and worship.

Our society has done something with faith that is not in the Bible. Our society thinks that if you have clear evidence, then you know something, so you don’t need faith. Faith, in our society, is when you accept something as true without clear evidence. In the Bible, that’s not faith.

In Jesus’ conversation with Thomas, that understanding of faith makes no sense. Thomas now has clear evidence that Jesus rose from the dead, Jesus is standing there, Thomas can see and touch the scars. By our society’s understanding of faith, he doesn’t need it. He knows.

But knowing is not faith. Jesus does not say Thomas has believed until he said, “My Lord and my God.” Then Jesus said, “Because you saw, you believed? Blessed are those who believe without seeing.” People without clear evidence can still say to Jesus, “My Lord and my God.” We do that. We do it formally at our covenant, and often at other times too.

Agreeing that Jesus of Nazareth rose from the dead, and that he is the Savior, counts for nothing. Agreeing counts for nothing. The demons do that. When we say to Jesus, “My Lord and my God,” or words to that effect, when we submit and worship, then we have the faith that saves.

James in his letter says, “Ask for wisdom from God. But don’t ask if you don’t have faith, if you are double-minded, or unstable.” This is what James means by faith. “Don’t ask for God to give you wisdom in life if you’re not saying ‘My Lord and my God,’ don’t say ask if you are not submitting and worshipping.”

In the Bible as a whole, faith is not feeling certainty that something will happen. Faith is a relationship of submission and trust. For the most part, in the Bible the opposite of faith is not doubt about God, it is rebellion against God. To all who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God.

That is, to all who said “my Lord and my God, I submit to you and I worship you,” which means all those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God.

The Message became flesh and dwelled among us. The Word became flesh. He means that the Message became human, but by using flesh instead of human, John highlights human weakness, the things that aren’t so good about being human.

This includes the weakness of our bodies, unpleasantness and pain and sickness and death; and also the weakness of our minds and souls. We can be fooled, badly fooled, and we are prone to sin, we want things we know are not good.

So also Jesus. He was made in every way just as we are, and he was tempted in every way just as we are. He was surrounded by weakness, just like every human high priest. Hebrews says all of this. That’s what John means when he says, “God’s Message to us became flesh.”

Wrapping Up

This is Christmas, the second Sunday of Advent. We remember and celebrate that the Eternal Message became flesh. The Eternal Speech of God, who is a Separate Person with God, became human, including all the human weaknesses. God wants to rescue us, to call us, to bring us in, gather us in, so he sent the Message, and the Message became flesh, the Word became flesh.

For us who have believed, this is pure encouragement. Folks, we are so fortunate, that by some great miracle, we did eventually recognize this Person, and we did receive and welcome him, and we did believe in him, we also said, “My Lord and my God.” From this we got life and light.

Fix your eyes on Jesus, the author of our faith, who also endured the flesh, and endured such a bombardment of troubles against himself. He is now enthroned, and will come back here to get us. Let’s fix our eyes on Jesus. God wants to guide us with the One we cannot see. Let’s fix our eyes on Jesus. Life and light come from him. Amen.

PRAYER: O God, such a Message you sent us. What a thing you have done for the world, because you loved the world. What a thing you have done for us, to get us and bring us in. Thank you for Jesus of Nazareth, the Christ, who is your Eternal Message. And what a story this is. Thank you that your Eternal Message became flesh, and lived with us and just like us. Thank you for eternal life. Amen.

BENEDICTION: May our Lord Jesus Christ himself, and God our Father, who loved us, and by his grace gave us eternal encouragement and good hope, encourage our hearts and strengthen us in every good deed and word. Amen. Go in God’s peace to love and serve the Lord.