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Saturday, April 6, 2019

The Book of John: Authorship, Purpose & Provenance


Internal & External Evidence of Johannine Authorship 
It is important to establish John as the author of the Gospel bearing his name primarily for apostolic eyewitness and authorship. This especially during a period of Gnostic influences. Köstenberger aptly puts it this way: “John’s Gospel claims to represent apostolic eyewitness testimony regarding Jesus’ earthly ministry.”[1]  There is ample internal and external evidence in support of Johannine authorship with John being “John, the son of Zebedee,”  one of Jesus’ disciples. The internal evidence is as follows:
·         The author is identified in Jn. 13:23 as “the disciple whom Jesus loved.” That he is “the disciple whom Jesus loved” is also mentioned in 21:2, 23, and stated as the “one who “testified to these things and wrote them down” (21:24). The author also has close connections to Peter and part of Jesus’ inner circle (Lk. 5:8-10,8:51; Mk. 3:16-17, 5:37; Mat. 17:1-2). Of noteworthy mention is the visit to Jesus’ tomb on Resurrection Sunday, where the author is identified as “the one whom Jesus loved” (20:1-8).


·         We know the author is not Peter nor James (these men have authored other books as affirmed by patristic testimonies). Peter died before him (21:23) and James was also martyred before John passed on (Acts 12:2).
·         That John has firsthand testimony of the life of Christ is mentioned in 19:35, 18:15, 19:26-27, 21:7). The author also places himself in prominent mentions throughout the Gospel as a matter of “historic fact.”[2]
·         A process of elimination can be applied to all the other disciples in regards to authorship. Also important is that the early church fathers have given “unanimous support of Johannine authorship.”[3]
The external evidence of authorship includes[4]:
·         The testimonies of church fathers Irenaeus, Polycarp, Clement and Eusebius. Polycarp claimed to be one of John’s disciples and “affirmed the author of John to be “the disciple whom Jesus loved.” Clement stated “John composed a spiritual Gospel.”
In an age of relativism presently and of past questions to the apostolicity of New Testament writings, establishing John as author to this Gospel “safeguards this Gospel’s character” and attests to the veracity of the Scriptures. This book has post-apostolic authority as it was written by a follower of Jesus (John, the son of Zebedee).

The Purpose & Provenance of John’s Gospel 
It is “virtually unanimous” that John the son of Zebedee wrote the Gospel of John, as supported by both internal ( Jn. 21:24-25) and external evidence (not limited to the testimonies of Irenaeus, Polycarp and Eusebius.)[5] Drilling down on the date of authorship, internal evidence such as Jn. 21:19 affirms an eyewitness account of a prediction of Peter’s death, which did not occur until AD 64-5. The author alludes to an historical fact in reference to a “Sheep Gate” (Jn. 5:2) which was still standing before the destruction of AD 70. Carson provides additional support for a late first century authorship:[6] (1) agreement among theologians of the book being written during the reign of Emperor Domitian (AD 81-96); (2) Church father Jerome “places John’s death sixty-eight years after Jesus’ death” (making it approx. AD 98); and (3) strong Christocentric theology available in the Gospel of John more than any other Gospel and in language from that contemporary culture. There is also a post-resurrection emphasis found in John attesting to the time period. The above-mentioned evidence favor a late first century date, approximately AD 80-95.
While many places have been suggested for provenance including Alexandria, Antioch and even Palestine, there is considerable patristic consensus that the book was written in Ephesus. Irenaeus’ statement that “John was published while he was a resident at Ephesus in Asia”[7] to the Jewish Diaspora and Eusebius’ account of John being stationed in western Asia-Minor remains the traditional view of the church.
Now, while John was written primarily to a Jewish Diaspora, for the modern reader it continues to be true to its original purpose – evangelism and edification. John’s thesis statement (20:30-31) provides the big picture for his readers. His wish is to present the Messiah, his ministry, to encourage faith  (“initial and continuing”[8]) in the Messiah and in so doing, provide solid theological footing for corporate edification (keep in mind that the original audience was facing the challenge of post AD 70). Rather than being a supplementary Gospel, the book of John stands on its own (said to be the most theological of the Gospels), providing discourses aimed at spiritual maturity and conversion. This makes it an essential read for both believers and non-believers in this present age. John explains very pointedly what it means to be a Christian and what it takes to remain one (apostolic themes of later New Testament writings). In a grand mix of Old Testament allusions and echoes, warnings and Christo-centric narratives, John will stress the Messiah’s humanity and his mission that provides eternal hope for those who accepts Messiah’s message (Jn. 1:29, 4:22, 14:6, 1 Jn. 5:13).





[1] Köstenberger, Encountering John, 4.
[2] Ibid., 6.
[3]  Ibid., 5.
[4] Ibid., 7-8.
[5] D. A. Carson, The Gospel According to John, (Grand Rapids, MI: W.B. E. Publishing Company, 1991), 68, 86.
[6] Carson, John, 83-5.
[7] Andreas J. Köstenberger, Encountering John: The Gospel in Historic, Literary, and Theological Perspective, (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2013), 7-8. 
[8] Carson, John, 90.
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Written by Kevin A. Hall

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