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About John Shore

A former magazine writer and editor, John Shore’s life as a Christian writer began the moment when, at 38 years old, he was very suddenly (and while in a supply closet at his job, of all places) walloped by the benevolent hand of God.

 

 

 

John's most recent book is Midlife Manual for Men, which he co-authored with Stephen Arterburn, author of the best-selling Every Man series and host of the nationally syndicated Christian radio show, New Life Live. Midlife Manual is the first of four books John and Steve will be writing together for Bethany House Publishers; the next, Being Christian, will be out in September 2008. John is also the author of I'm OK--You're Not: The Message We're Sending Non-Christians and Why We Should Stop (NavPress); Penguins, Pain and the Whole Shebang (Seabury Books); and co-author, with Richard Lederer, of Comma Sense (St. Martin's). Both Penguins and Comma Sense won San Diego Book Awards for best books in their respective categories (Religious/Spiritual, and How To/Reference).

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John Shore

Writer, Editor, Author

Thursday, October 18, 2007

John 1:1-5

Here's the NIV text of John 1:1-5:

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning.

Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made. In him was life, and that life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness, but the darkness has not understood it.

God, that's beautiful. It just rips your breath away.

Um ... but if I can say, I think that last sentence (which is verse 5) should stand alone as its own paragraph. There's a real break in thought there. It would really drive home the beauty of that sentence -- and enhance what comes before it -- if it was pulled out, and presented in isolation.

Anyway, as to the passage as a whole:  If there's denser text anywhere in the Bible, I don't know it. What Christian hasn't deeply wondered at the word "Word" in that first utterance? Why word? Why ... such a common, everyday noun, right there? Why not tree, or Core Idea, or ... footprint, or something. Why word?

John! Whatup?

Well, here's my understanding of it: What the first four sentences of John are telling us is that the trinity is real. It is describing the fact that God comes in three modes: Absolute and unchanging ("God"), exuberantly creative ("Word"), and personally and specifically inside of each and every man ("the light of men").

And there's the unutterable mystery of the three-in-one God. There, in four simple sentences, is the entirety of our religion.

See, now that's writing.

Jesus, of course, is the Word. Jesus (um ... as I see it) is the active principle of God, the phenomenon through which God's unending potential is manifested in real space and real time; he's the perfect means by which God's absolute, undifferentiated power is Actually Expressed.

And "Word" perfectly captures that extraordinary dynamic. A thing doesn't really exist -- at least, not within the human realm of experience -- until it has been named, until someone has attached a word to it that, from then on out, refers exclusively to that thing. Naming something marks the finality of the process by which something gains its own separate identity; it's how a thing transforms from vague or unknown, to specific and very known.

Putting a word to something is how, essentially and substantively, that whatever-it-is gets created.

It's how a thing moves from the world of undivided and absolute God, to the differentiated, relative, human world in which God became Jesus.

Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.

And there it is: by the power of the active, creative force of God which ultimately personified itself into the Jesus we today worship, all things that ever were or will be were created. Jesus is the Word through which God created us, and our world.

In him was life, and that life was the light of men.

And there you are.

And here we are.

 

Comment below, or here.

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Most Recent User Comments
chorton
10/21/2007 3:34 AM
These words of John sure enough do indicate to us the mystery of the greatness of Jesus Christ—those are the words I would use—and continue in the following verses to show how this great being, who created the universe and us, humbled himself to become like us whom he created. I have to say that I never thought of these words as describing the reality of the trinity, but John, I do think your thoughts toward that end are good for us to meditate on.
What has impressed me about these wonderful words over the years is how they focus on the greatness of Christ, about his being there with God as God for longer back in time than we are able to comprehend: for past eternity. Cont....
chorton
10/21/2007 3:33 AM
John seems to be the one who tells us about this greatness more than the other Gospel writers, and I especially notice this in the book of Revelation, which gives us a look at Christ in his before-human and after-human existence, as God, at the throne of God, at the right hand of God, as the Alpha and Omega, and all of those things that reveal him to be God.

As far as “the Word” goes, I love this revelation, as you do, showing Jesus as the activity of God. God spoke and it was done. John’s passage describing Jesus as the “Word of God” tells me that it was his voice that said, “Let there be light,” and it was his voice that spoke to Moses at the burning bush, it was his voice the Israelites heard in the thunder delivering the 10 commandments at the base of Mount Sinai, just like it was his voice that Paul heard on the road to Damascus. Note that Paul and his friends, just like Moses and then like the Israelites, were terrified when they first heard the voice. Cont....
chorton
10/21/2007 3:31 AM
This “Word” becomes very supernatural and all-powerful in all of these contexts, and it helps us to realize how very awesome in power and authority Jesus is, while at the same time, as all 4 Gospels tell us, he also reveals himself through his tender mercies and understanding, and is so helpful to us mere mortals, his followers, living out our temporary existence here on earth, and that he would die for us so we can share with him his joy in humility and greatness. Those words in John 1:1 and in Revelation help me to realize the magnitude of our calling to be followers of Jesus Christ. These words, “Words,” have especially deep meaning for me in both my mind and my heart. We are privileged and mightily graced to know Jesus as these things: as Wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and as Prince of Peace. I am grateful for John’s (and Isaiah’s) words as they give us a much deeper understanding of who our friend Jesus is than we would have without them.