The Universal Light, or the Only Way to the Father? Universalism and Exclusivism in John’s Provocative Christology
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Origins of John’s Theological Tensions
3. The Universalism and Particularity of Johannine Christology
3.1. Jesus as Word, the Life, and the Light
3.1.1. Jesus as the Word
3.1.2. Jesus as the Life of All Humanity
3.1.3. Jesus as the Light of the World
3.2. Jesus as Way, the Truth, and the Life
3.2.1. Jesus as the Way
3.2.2. Jesus as the Truth
3.2.3. Jesus as the Life
3.3. No One Can Come to the Father except Being Drawn by God
4. Does the Gospel of John Supplant or Restore Judaism?
4.1. Furthering the Prophetic Mission of John the Baptist
There was a man sent from God whose name was John. He came as a witness to testify to the light, so that all might believe through him. (He himself was not the light, but he came to testify to the light.)
John testified to him and cried out, “This was he of whom I said, He who comes after me ranks ahead of me because he was before me.”
4.2. Prophetic Demonstrations of Justice, Truth, and Love
But the hour is coming and is now here when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father seeks such as these to worship him. God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.
4.3. Fulfilling Jewish Scriptures and Embracing the Typologies of Elijah and Moses
4.3.1. Biblical Motifs
4.3.2. Biblical Texts
4.3.3. Biblical Tyopologies
5. The True Johannine Offence: Exclusivism, Supersessionism, or Continuing Revelation?
5.1. Universalism versus Exclusivism
5.1.1. The Galilean Prophet and the Jerusalem Elite—Loving Concern as An Affront to Legal Observance
5.1.2. Jewish Outreach in a Diaspora Context—Synagogue Conservatism versus the Liberalism of Gentile Believers
5.1.3. Offensive Christomorphic Universalism Today
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Source and redaction critics are known for inferring tensions within the Fourth Gospel as reflecting disagreements between alien sources, the evangelist, and an intrusive redactor, but evidence for such inferences is totally lacking. (Anderson 1996, 1997, 2010, pp. 48–136). |
2 | |
3 | John Ashton described the genius of Bultmann’s paradigm as addressing the two great Johannine riddles: the socio-religious character of the Johannine situation, introducing the Jewish Messiah to the Hellenistic world, and the evangelist’s central theological thrust, revelation and its uneven responses by the world. Ashton (1991, pp. 62–66). In my view, we have six or seven issues faced within seven decades of the Johannine situation, four of which are also reflected in the Johannine Epistles and Apocalypse. Anderson (1997, 2006, 2007). |
4 | |
5 | |
6 | In that sense, the Johannine evangel is seen to be continuing the Pauline iteration of the gospel-message, that saving grace is attained by faith—as it as in the case of Abraham—a charism extended liberally to the world, not simply to an ethnic group or a particular religious movement. On John’s universalism and exclusivism, see Culpepper (2002). |
7 | For an overall view of John’s dialogical autonomy, see Anderson (2011, pp. 125–55). |
8 | John’s key theological tensions include the humanity/divinity of Jesus as the Christ; the Son’s egalitarian/subordinationist relation to the Father; the embellished/existentialist presentation of the signs; John’s present/futuristic eschatology Anderson (1996, 1997, 2010, pp. 252–65). |
9 | Note the epistemological origins of each of John’s thirty-six theological tensions, historical problems, and literary perplexities: Anderson (2011, pp. 157–69). |
10 | Anderson (1999). Note that in presenting Jesus as the Father’s agent within the Mosaic agency schema, the Father–Son relationship is crafted rhetorically—exposing miscomprehending religious leaders as fallacious in their views—and John’s apologetic thrust is targeted at emerging audiences—both Jewish and Gentile—within the larger Johannine situation. |
11 | For a clear overview of the Fourth Evangelist’s dialectical thought and tensive presentation of most issues in the Gospel of John, see C. K. Barrett (1972). For an analysis of the Cognitive–Critical origins of the Johannine evangelist’s dialectical thinking, see Anderson (2004). |
12 | For an overall analysis of John’s polyvalent theological, historical, and literary dialectical features, see this extensive application of Bakhtin’s dialogism: Anderson (2008). Conversely, the work of Ruth Sheridan (2013) suffers from reading only one feature of John’s presentations of Judaism-related issues—the negative only—seeing the evangelist’s narrative as Bakhtinian monologism rather than acknowledging any of John’s theological tensions. See also Anderson (2007) for an overall view of the dialectical Johannine situation, applying Bakhtin’s rhetorical analysis of narratological miscomprehension as a means of understanding a number of pressing issues in the first century, not simply one. |
13 | Heraclitus, Frag. pp. 1–2, 11–12, 34, 78, 90–91, 111–15. |
14 | In Bultmann’s (2014, pp. 45–83, 218–37) view, the existential crisis of humanity, as put forth in the Gospel of John, is that it forces persons to lay aside their religious and political platforms, responding in faith to the Divine Initiative, which Jesus as the divine emissary from the Father claims to be and is. |
15 | |
16 | |
17 | |
18 | Plato, Crat. 402; Symp.187; Aristotle, Rhet. iii. 5; Philo, Leg. Alleg. iii. 3. |
19 | |
20 | Note the Priene calendar inscription, citing “the birthday of the god Augustus” as “the beginning of the gospel” in Smyrna. Later, Domitian (81–96 CE) required people to reference him as “Lord and God” (Dio Cassius, Hist. 67.4.7; 67.13.4; Suetonius, Life of Domitian 13.3). For the acutely political functions of the Christ-hymns of the New Testament in cross-cultural perspective, see Anderson (2016). |
21 | |
22 | Thus, not only is the word of God’s prophet the Lord’s truth (1 Kings 17:24; 22:16), but to know God’s ways is to be instructed in the Lord’s truth (Psa 25:4–5). |
23 | |
24 | God breathes life into humans (Gen 2:7; Job 33:4; Sirach 1:12), and God’s promise gives life (Psa 119:50). |
25 | In Bultmann’s view, the reference to eating and drinking the flesh and blood of Jesus in John 6:51c-58 must have been an interpolation by the “ecclesiastical redactor,” as an instrumentalist form of theophagy—the eating of divine food—as a ritualistic requirement for salvation, citing Ignatius. However, for a historically contextual analysis of the “medicine of immortality” (Ignatius, Ephesians 20.2) as an appeal for corporate unity under the single worship service and leader, rather than Egyptian theophagy (partaking of one loaf versus a loaf), casting historical light on the martyrological thrust of John 6: Anderson (1996, 1997, 2010, pp. 119–36). |
26 | |
27 | |
28 | |
29 | |
30 | On the Prophet like Moses agency schema in the Gospel of John, rooted in Deuteronomy 18:15-222, see Borgen ([1968] 1997) and Reinhartz (1992). |
31 | |
32 | |
33 | For information on Social Identity Complexity Theory, see Roccas and Brewer (2002). |
34 | See the work of Robert J. Banks (2020), who builds a compelling case regarding house churches as constituting the primary sociological setting of early Pauline believers in the Diaspora; those settings likely continued within the second-generation Pauline mission, within which Johannine communities developed between 70 and 100 CE in Asia Minor or elsewhere. |
35 | |
36 | Thus, those denying that Jesus came in the flesh in 1 John 4:1–3 and 2 John 7 were not Gnostics; they refused to believe that Jesus suffered, so as to excuse themselves from the Way of the Cross under the new requirements of Domitian’s imperial cult. Cassidy ([1992] 2015), Carter (2008), Thatcher (2008). |
37 | |
38 | For an in-depth analysis of the two Antichrist-related threats in the Johannine situation—the first being Jewish secessions back into local synagogues, and the second representing the threat of Hellenizing traveling ministers teaching cheap grace and assimilation to Greco-Roman cultures, see Anderson (2007). |
39 | On different views regarding the parting of the ways between Christianity and Judaism—with regards to the Johannine churches in particular—see Becker and Reed (2007), Blumhofer (2020), Charlesworth (2013), Cirafesi (2022), Byers (2021), Katz (1984), Martyn (1968, 1978, 2003), and Meeks (1972). In my judgment, the Johannine Jesus movement seeks to be centered within Judaism and has not departed by the end of the first century CE, and that is why there are tensions with local Jewish family and friends. Anderson (2017). Territoriality exists only between members of the same species. |
40 | For the spectrum of treatments of John and Judaism, see the full slate of issues in Anderson and Culpepper (2017, esp. 265–311). See also Barrett (1975), Bauckham (2008), Beck (1994), Becker and Reed (2007), Blumhofer (2020), Bratcher (1974), Byers (2021), Charlesworth (2013), Cirafesi (2022), Davies (1996), Dodd (1953), Fortes (2021), Freyne (1985), Friesen (2006), Gager (1983), Johnson (1989), Knight (1968), Leibig (1983), Lieu (2008), Mason (2007), Motyer (2008), Moxnes (2015), Reinhartz (2001, 2017, 2020), and Sheridan (2012). |
41 | On the cost of discipleship, see Bonhoeffer ([1948] 2001, p. 44). |
42 | On Christ the center, see Bonhoeffer (1978, p. 35). |
43 | Note, for sure, the polyvalent aspect of the Johannine presentation of Jesus and his mission, as represented within the dialectical and transformative thinking of the Johannine evangelist, designed also to create such in the experiential lives of the Johannine audiences: Anderson (2004, 2008). See also Kluska (2020). |
44 | In Käsemann ([1968] 2017)’s terms, “…the Fourth Gospel itself has no conception of closed revelation, but rather advocates, even against itself, the ongoing operation of the Spirit’s witness.” The Testament of Jesus: A Study of the Gospel of John in the Light of Chapter 17, The Johannine Monograph Series 6, translated by Gerhard Krodel, edited by Paul N. Anderson, p. 76. |
45 | And, as typified in the Jerusalem Council of Acts 15, such is the goal of authentic Christian leadership from one generation to the next. As an addition to the Wesleyan Quadrilateral, the addition of corporate discernment adds the conciliar work of Acts 15 to the process (Anderson 2006). |
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Anderson, P.N. The Universal Light, or the Only Way to the Father? Universalism and Exclusivism in John’s Provocative Christology. Religions 2024, 15, 204. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020204
Anderson PN. The Universal Light, or the Only Way to the Father? Universalism and Exclusivism in John’s Provocative Christology. Religions. 2024; 15(2):204. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020204
Chicago/Turabian StyleAnderson, Paul N. 2024. "The Universal Light, or the Only Way to the Father? Universalism and Exclusivism in John’s Provocative Christology" Religions 15, no. 2: 204. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020204
APA StyleAnderson, P. N. (2024). The Universal Light, or the Only Way to the Father? Universalism and Exclusivism in John’s Provocative Christology. Religions, 15(2), 204. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020204