By Alfred E. Garvie
Parts VI - IX
VI. THE INTERVIEW WITH NICODEMUS
(iii. 1-2).
IN this narrative there are two
issues quite subordinate for our
present purpose and one of
primary importance:
(1)
Nicodemus. has often been
regarded as an individual
anxious inquirer; but Jesus does
not treat him with the
gentleness that in such a case
we might expect; and He
addresses him as representing a
class, while Nicodemus passes
from condescension to
incredulity. It is probable that
Nicodemus was sent by a section
of the Pharisaic party, who, as
religious leaders of the people,
felt their influence imperilled
by the growing popularity of the
new Teacher, and thought it
might be for their advantage to
come, if practicable, to some
sort of understanding and
alliance with Him. Jesus sternly
rejects the proferred patronage,
and severely demands an entire
change of attitude as the first
condition of understanding or
taking part in the movement. As
He had tested the Sadducees by
the cleansing of the temple, so
He tested the Pharisees by the
demand for the new birth, or the
birth of water and the Spirit;
and both parties failed to stand
the test, even as the people
failed to offer the belief which
He desired.
(2)
If our exegesis is to be at all
historical, we cannot find in
Jesus' words about the new
birth, or the birth of water and
the Spirit, any allusion to the
ecclesiastical dogma of
regeneration, to the Christian
ordinance of baptism, or to the
Christian experience of the
descent of the Spirit at
Pentecost. For Jesus was not
speaking to Nicodemus in
riddles. His reference was to
the baptism of repentance John
administered, and the gift of
the Spirit which John announced
as the Messiah's prerogative.
Let the Pharisees come to Him in
penitence, and with expectation
of blessing,
and they would both see and
enter into the kingdom. The
teaching here is in no way in
truth at variance with, although
in terms it may be different
from the Synoptic; and in this
interview with Nicodemus one
feels oneself on the solid
ground of reminiscence.
(3) But it is generally
acknowledged that reminiscence
passes soon into reflexion,
although there is difference of
opinion as regards the exact
point of transition. (a) The
Revised Version begins a new
paragraph at verse sixteen, and
the writer welcomes the
opportunity of quoting so
conservative a scholar as
Westcott in support of this
view.
"This section," he says, "is a
commentary on the nature of the
mission of the Son, which has
been indicated in Christ's words
(vv. 13, 14), and unfolds its
design (16, 17), its historic
completion (18, 19), the cause
of its apparent failure (20,
21). It adds no new thoughts,
but brings out the force of the
revelation already given in
outline (1-15) by the light of
Christian experience. It is
therefore likely from its
secondary character, apart from
all other considerations, that
it contains the reflections of
the Evangelist, and is not a
continuation of the words of
the Lord. This conclusion
appears to be firmly established
from details of expression "
(Gospel of St. John, p. 54). The
case need not be argued further.
(b) The writer is convinced,
however, that the narrative of
the interview with Nicodemus
does not extend to verse
fifteen. Is it at all likely
that Jesus would have spoken to
Nicodemus about His heavenly
descent, or His heavenward
ascent by way of the Cross and
the Resurrection, when He even
with His disciples exercised
such reserve of utterance? There seems no doubt that at
least verses thirteen to fifteen
must be excluded from the story
of the meeting with Nicodemus.
But are they to be at once
reckoned to the evangelist's
reflexions? To use Westcott's
phrase, "details of expression "
bar this hasty judgment. The Son
of Man is a term used of Himself
in the Gospels by Jesus only;
the evangelist speaks of the Son
as the Son of God (vv. 17, 18).
If Jesus did speak of
pre-existence at all, it is not
improbable that He described
the entrance into the world as a
descent from heaven. " Many
ancient authorities omit which
is in heaven" (R.V.·marg.),
and, whatever may be the balance
of the textual evidence, if we
are to accept the saying at all
as an authentic utterance of
Jesus, these words must
manifestly be rejected as a
gloss, as they are entirely
inconsistent with Jesus'
conception of His earthly life
as relatively a separation from
His Father, and His death and
resurrection as a return to His
Father (John xiv. 12, 28;
xvi. 5-7, etc.). The descent is
contrasted with the ascent in
the lifting up. And the whole
thought is quite congruous to
the other teaching of Jesus. It
bears a resemblance in idea to
the saying in i. 51. We may
conclude that here we have a
genuine logion of Jesus, but
belonging to another context, at
a later stage of the ministry,
which has been attracted to this
place by association of ideas
with the reference in the
preceding verse to the earthly
and heavenly things. (c) Do
verses eleven and twelve belong
to the story of the meeting? The question in verse ten would
form a deserved dismissal of
Nicodemus. It is true that the
plural is used in verse seven,
so that Nicodemus is treated as
representative of a class; but
in verses 3, 5, 7, 10, the
singular is used. Accordingly,
these verses in their whole
tone, as well as mode of
address, seem more appropriate
to a public discourse than to
an individual interview. If
without any irreverence the
illustration may be used, we may
recall Queen Victoria's
complaint that Mr. Gladstone
addressed her as if she were a
public meeting. A similar
incongruity seems to obtrude
itself here. That the words are
authentic utterances of Jesus
need not be doubted, only by an
association of ideas not hard
to discover they have been
attracted
here from some other context. We
may summarise the results of our
inquiry thus: the interview
with Nicodemus is reported in
verses 1-10; sayings of Jesus
from another context have been
attracted by an association of
ideas in· verses 11-15; the
evangelist offers his comments
on his report in verses 16-21.
This is one of the most helpful
passages for the study of the
mode of composition of the
Fourth Gospel.
(4)
Accordingly, at this point we
may digress from the detailed
discussion to a general
statement as to the way in which
we may correctly represent the
growth of the Gospel.
(a)
It has already been suggested,
and reasons have been offered
for the suggestion, that the
Gospel is a scholar's report of
the teaching of the evangelist.
Either in a small band of
disciples, or in the public
assembly of the Christian
community, the evangelist dealt
with the life and teaching of
Jesus. He began with an account
of events or report of
discourses, just as the modern
preacher starts with his text;
and then he went on to comment
on what he had reported. We
cannot throughout the Gospel
analyse this teaching or
preaching into its components,
as we have been able to do in
this passage, but we may assume
a similar process of
composition even where the
analysis cannot be made so
distinctly and confidently. It is
quite probable that neither the
hearer nor even the speaker was
a ware of the passage from
reminiscence to reflexion. The
scholar reporting his teacher
would feel no need for
indicating the points of
transition; and his conscience
would not trouble him for thus
blending, or, as the modern
critic conscious of his own
integrity would possibly say,
confusing history and doctrine.
So much in extenuation of the
reporter's offence, if offence
it be; what of the evangelist
himself? (b) We may conceive
the process in his mind as follows: He had not merely a
retentive memory, but also an active intelligence; he
meditated on
what he remembered; and so
gradually, inevitably, and
insensibly reflexions attached
themselves to, or even modified
reminiscences. A non-thinking
person is more likely to retain
the ipsissima verba of a
remembered conversation than a
thoughtful one; the more active
the intelligence, the stronger
the influence of meditation on
recollection. It is quite
credible that when preaching or
teaching the evangelist could
not always have distinguished
the original germ of
reminiscence from the subsequent
development of reflexion.
(c) Would he have made the
attempt or felt any obligation
to make it? He was not a modern
scholar, aiming at historical
accuracy, but an ancient
teacher, conscious of the
guidance into all the truth of
the Spirit of God, promised by
the Master. His reflexions
would be to him as much part of
the given revelation as His
reminiscence. He would
confidently claim with Paul
that he had the mind of Christ.
And great as for us is the
significance of the earthly life
of Jesus, can we confine the
divine revelation through Him to
His spoken words alone? We must
include the experience of His
truth and grace through the
Spirit, which has been given to
seers and saints. The value of
the revelation of Christ in the
evangelist is fully tested by
the influence the Fourth Gospel
has exercised on Christians of
all lands and ages. If we may
make a comparison, we may
confidently affirm that it has
probably been more of a
spiritual treasure than any of
the others have been. We can
recover, if not with absolute
certainty, yet with adequate
accuracy, the history, and we
can retain the theology as a
valid interpretation of the
history of the Word who became
flesh.
VII. THE SECOND TESTIMONY OF THE
BAPTIST
(iii. 22-36).
This section requires only a few
words. The interview with
Nicodemus shows that the need of
penitence as & preparation for the blessings of
the kingdom had not been
adequately recognised; and it is
probable that Jesus did at first
continue the work of His
forerunner, although the actual
baptizing may have been done by
the disciples. It is also
probable that the success of
Jesus in attracting the
multitudes would arouse the
jealousy of those disciples of
John, who had not left him for
Jesus. Whether his second
testimony is given verbatim, or
has been a little coloured by
the channel of its transmission,
the mind of the evangelist,
there is nothing in his words
inconsistent with what we know
of him from the other sources.
For a former disciple of the
Baptist, the renewed witness to
Jesus would be of special
interest; and his former
associates may have been ready
to convey it to him. The Revised
Version in the division of the
paragraphs recognises that at
verse 31 the reflexions of the
evangelist begin, and both as
regards the thought and the
language there seems to be no
doubt as to the necessity of
that conclusion. The Baptist's
testimony to the superiority of
the Christ, and his consequent
greater success, naturally
suggests these reflexions on the
greater value of the witness of
Him Who has descended from
heaven than of any earth-born.
While the thoughts are the
evangelist's, they are rooted in
and draw their nourishment from
the truth as it is in Jesus; the
self-witness of the Son is their
source and warrant.
VIII. THE JOURNEY THROUGH
SAMARIA (iv. 1-42).
(1) The
narrative of the journey through
Samaria bears all the marks of
verisimilitude. If it is not a
record of fact, it is a
masterpiece of literary realism.
The conversation moves from
point to point naturally. The
great truth about the universal
spiritual worship of God (vv. 21
and 23) arises
in the mind, and falls from the
lips of Jesus almost inevitably
in the reaction of His spirit
against the religious
exclusiveness of the woman (and
it may be, of His own disciples,
who may have expressed some
hesitation about taking this
route to Galilee, to which,
though shorter, some very strict
Jews took exception). The
declaration in verse 22 is not
an instance of Jewish
exclusiveness, but an appeal to
the woman to recognise the
inferiority of her own religious
standpoint, of which she was so
confident, so that she might be
prepared to receive the
instruction which Jesus, whom
she had repelled as a Jew,
desired to impart to her. Since
the woman, with her countrymen,
thought of the Messiah as the "
Converter " or the " Guide," and
did not, at the time at least,
seem to cherish the political
expectations of the Jews, Jesus
could reveal Himself to her as
the Messiah without fear of the
political complications that
such an avowal would have
involved in Judea and Galilee.
Josephus does tell us (Ant.
xviii. 4, 1) of a subsequent
Messianic insurrection on Mount Gerizim; but that fact does not
prove that the conditions were
the same at the earlier and the
later date.
The way in which the narrative
passes from one circumstance to
another as determining Jesus'
spirit and action shows that a
ministry in Samaria was as
remote from His purpose as a
mission to the Gentiles, not, as
the words here (confirmed
elsewhere) show, because of
Jewish exclusiveness, but
because He was dominated by the
consciousness of His vocation as
the Jewish Messiah, through the
fulfilment of which alone He
could reach forth to the wider
function of the Saviour of the
world. Accordingly, He does not
embrace the opportunity which
Samaria offered, but leaves it
to His disciples to enter
afterwards into the harvest of
which His ministry now was the
seed-sowing (see Acts viii.).
Ready as had been the response
to the Samaritans, Jesus had the
insight to perceive that the
soil was not so wellprepared
for the seed of the Word as in
Judea or Galilee among those
who were waiting for the
consolation of Israel.
The historical probability lends
support to the trustworthiness
of the record before us.
(2) There are, however, a few
points demanding explanation.
(a) As Jesus was alone with the
woman, the record of the
conversation may have come to
the evangelist either from
Jesus, or from the woman; or it
may be the evangelist included
parts of the story the woman was
so eagerly telling in the
instruction Jesus Himself
repeated to His disciples as the
explanation of His unusual
action, and its still more
surprising results. In verse
eighteen there is a statement
which raises a difficulty. Moral
and spiritual insight, however
exceptional, does not include
the knowledge of a fact such as
that the woman had had five
husbands. Jesus was doubtless
aware, as He spoke to her, of
her moral degradation, and the
discomfort that on account of it
she may in His presence have
been feeling, since her frank
confession, "I have no husband,"
shows that her conscience had
been stirred; but the ability to
know how often she had been
divorced does not seem to fall
within the scope of His
supernatural endowment.
Possibly the evangelist, having
afterwards learned the fact
from the woman herself may have
quite unconsciously, under the
influence of his tendency to
emphasise the super-naturalness
of Jesus' knowledge, repeated
this later information as part
of Jesus' own speech to her. Or,
more probably, the woman herself
in her excitement may have
failed to distinguish what Jesus
said, and what her own
conscience spoke in His
presence. His words in verse
twenty-nine show that she
thought Jesus had laid bare all
the secrets of her life. (b)
While verses twenty-one and
twenty-three, as also
twenty-two, arise spontaneously
from the context, the more
abstract statement in verse twentyfour, which does not add
anything to the substance of
Jesus' teaching, may be a
reflexion of the evangelist's.
Further, the title the Saviour
of the World used by the Samaritans (verse 42) goes beyond
anything that the previous
record has prepared for us, and
may well reflect the faith of a
later age and not of this
historical occasion.
IX. THE SECOND VISIT TO CANA
(iv. 43-54).
(1) This passage calls for little comment. (a) Does
verse forty-four mean that Jesus
Himself quoted the proverb, "A
prophet hath no honour in his
own country," as a reason for
leaving Judea, and going to
Galilee, or did Jesus' action in
the judgment of the evangelist
in so doing confirm the truth of
the proverb? In other words,
are we to interpret the proverb
from the standpoint of Jesus or
the evangelist? If from the
former, the conclusion would be
inevitable that Jesus meant by
His own country Galilee, but
that would be a reason for
leaving Galilee, and not for
returning to it; and so the
saying would not suit the
context. If from the latter,
then the proverb reveals the
evangelist's conviction that as
Jewish Messiah Jesus, wherever
His early home may have been,
properly belonged to Judea; and
this intensified the tragedy of
His having to turn from Judea
to Galilee. A parallel thought
is in i. 11: " He came unto His
own place (τὰ ἴδια) and His own
people (οι ̔ἴδιοι) received Him
not." Does not this standpoint
suggest a Judean rather than a
Galilean author? (b) There is
no need of assuming that the
story in verses 46-54 is a
variant tradition of the healing
of the nobleman's son (Matt.
viii. 5-13= Luke vii. 2-10), as
all the details are so different
; nor is there any ground for
the suggestion that the
evangelist is exaggerating the super-naturalness of the cure by
representing it as at a
distance. If Jesus wrought His
miracles in dependence on God,
if not always with explicit
prayer to God (xi. 41-42), His
bodily presence or absence does
not affect at all the
credibility of the narrative. It
is assuredly the modem scholar's
standpoint, and not the
evangelist's, for which the one
kind of cure would appear more
miraculous than the other. (c)
The answer of Jesus to the
request (verse 48) suggests that
He was unwilling to repeat in
Galilee the kind of ministry
which had proved so fruitless in
Judea, the working of miracles
which evoked an untrustworthy
belief. If we now turn to Mark
i. 14 for the continuation of
the story after verse 54 in this
chapter, we may infer that
Jesus' plan was to avoid the
working of miracles as far as
possible, and to undertake with
a few chosen companions a
preaching tour in the synagogues
of Galilee. For this work the
two pairs of brothers were first
called, and then Matthew.
(2)
We may at this point ask, if
John the son of Zebedee was the
beloved disciple (the fourth
evangelist), and accordingly
had been with Jesus in Jerusalem
and Samaria, an eyewitness of
the ministry there, and had come
back to Cana on this second
visit, how is it that he was
only now called (Mark
i.
19-20) from his fishing and his
home to follow Jesus and become
a fisher of men? Is it not much
more probable that one of
several Judean. disciples went
with Jesus to Cana in Galilee,
and remained with Him as long as
his companionship was needed;
but, when the Galilean disciples
had been called to help in the
work of Galilee, returned to his
own home to continue the work
begun in Galilee, and rejoined
the Master only when He came up
at the feasts to Jerusalem? (a)
It is to be noted that while
"disciples" are mentioned in
chapters two, three and four, no
names at all are given, and it
is only in chapter vi., when we
are in Galilee that the familiar
names, Philip, Andrew, Simon
Peter (of chapter one) occur. If
that fact does not warrant us in
confidently asserting that these
" disciples " did not include
any of the twelve, it forbids
our confidently assuming, as is
usually done, that they must
have been some of the twelve. It
is possible that all these were
Judean disciples, who
afterwards, except one, fell
from their faith, or at least
shrank
back from continued
companionship, and that the one
''faithful among the faithless''
in loving-kindness and tender
mercy made no mention of their
names. Let these suggestions
not be dismissed as rash
conjectures; for the call as
recorded in the Synoptists is
unintelligible if it was
addressed to men who had for
months been close companions.
The truth is that we have formed
our conception of the disciple
company from the Synoptic
records, and when we come to the
Fourth Gospel we assume without
any warrant in the narrative
itself, and contrary to the
plain meaning of the Synoptic
story of the call, that the
disciples there mentioned must
be some of the twelve.
(3) (b) To maintain the
historical accuracy of both the Johannine and the Synoptic
records, it seems to me
necessary to venture on the
following historical
reconstruction. The ministry of
the Baptist had attracted the
Galileans mentioned in chapter
i. By their contact with Jesus
they had been won to a measure
of faith in Him sufficient to
detach them from the Baptist,
and to attach them to Him. The
unnamed disciple was the
evangelist. Other disciples
there may have been brought in
the same way; but these only are
mentioned by name because they
were afterwards included in the
chosen company of the twelve.
This first call was to a less
constant companionship than the
call recorded in the Synoptics.
While it is probable that all
these men were included in the
company who went with Jesus to
the marriage at Cana (ii. 2), it
is possible that the Galileans
went to their homes. It is to be
observed that while " His
disciples " are mentioned as
going down with Jesus to
Capernaum (verse 12), where we
meet the two pairs of brothers
in the beginning of the Synoptic
story, only Jesus is mentioned
as going up to Jerusalem for the
passover (verse 13). Must the
phrase " They abode not many
days " necessarily include
Andrew and Peter (Philip,
Nathanael),
and must they too necessarily
be included in " the disciple!!!
'' mentioned in verses 17 and 22? Is it not possible that they
remained in Capernaum, and only
rejoined Jesus when called to
constant companionship, as
recorded in Mark i. 16-20? During this interval of time,
between the first visit to
Capernaum (John ii. 12) and the
second (Mark i. 14) the
evangelist and other Judean
disciples alone may have been
Jesus' companions, and may have
left them when He decided on
Galilee as the scene of His
further ministry. Does not this
help to explain what otherwise
is so inexplicable, on the one
hand the silence of Mark (with
Peter as his teacher) regarding
the early Judean ministry, and
on the other the silence of the
Fourth Gospel regarding most of
the Galilean ministry, and its
almost exclusive attention to
work in Judea?
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