The book ends with a vision
of restoration – possibly added on. “’The days are coming now—it is Yahweh who
speaks—when harvest will follow directly after ploughing, the treading of
grapes soon after sowing, when the mountains will run with new wine and the
hills all flow with it. I mean to restore the fortunes of my people Israel;
they will rebuild the ruined cities and live in them, plant vineyards and drink
their wine, dig gardens and eat their produce. I will plant them in their own
country, never to be rooted up again out of the land I have given them, says
Yahweh, your God’” (9:13-15).
Then he speaks again, this
time just a little bit differently, of this life-giving power: “[T]he time is
coming when all the dead will hear his voice and come out of their graves:
those who have done good will rise and live, and those who have done evil will
rise and be condemned” (5:28-29).
It seems on the surface as if
he is speaking of two separate times – a spiritual resurrection that can happen
NOW and a resurrection to judgment and separation of good and evil that will
come at the end of time. It is mysterious!
The main power
Jesus has in John, the power that makes him one with the Father, is his power
to bring life out of death. And it is not just a promise of life after our
physical death; it is a promise of a life we are not fully living NOW. We think
we are living, but the natural state of man on this earth is not real life –
the life God meant us to live when He created us - but merely a physical (or
fleshly) semblance of life. In saying this, John is continuing to place
his gospel message in the context of the Genesis narrative. In Genesis 2, the second creation narrative in the redacted
text, God tells Adam, “’You may eat indeed of all the trees in the garden.
Nevertheless of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you are not to eat,
for on the day you eat of it you shall most surely die’” (Gen.2:18). When Eve
and Adam violate this “word” or commandment, they do not die physically – not
immediately – but they do die spiritually; and this spiritual death, which we
all partake in, is the death John’s gospel wrestles with. It is this death we
are already in that Christ can bring us out of.
TS Eliot also put this Johannine vision into powerful words:
But to apprehend
The point of intersection of the timeless
With time, is an occupation for the saint—
No occupation either, but something given
And taken, in a lifetime's death in love,
Ardour and selflessness and self-surrender (Eliot’s “Dry Salvages” V, 16-21)
The point of intersection of the timeless
With time, is an occupation for the saint—
No occupation either, but something given
And taken, in a lifetime's death in love,
Ardour and selflessness and self-surrender (Eliot’s “Dry Salvages” V, 16-21)
This is the dimension where Christianity reveals its unique truth –
at the crossroads of timelessness and time where the incarnation happens, where
we can become joined with our eternal Father through love of His Son.
I think George Fox and early Friends understood this dimension of
the gospel in a unique and powerful way.
That’s why they placed such urgent emphasis upon hearing the voice of
God, experiencing the judgment of Christ inwardly, and clinging to that inward
presence so it would bring you into life.
Returning
to the text, Jesus goes on to speak about John the Baptist. He says that John was “a burning and
shining lamp, and you were willing to rejoice for a while in his light. But I have a testimony greater than John’s”
(5:35-36). Then Jesus speaks of ALL the signs or testimonies that have
pointed to him, to Jesus. John the Baptist testified to Jesus’ coming; the
works Jesus performs testify to his truth, and the ancient scriptures too testify
to Jesus, but the people still do not want to believe. Jesus tells them it will
not be he who accuses them of unfaithfulness. They say they believe in what
Moses has taught, but Moses too has testified to Jesus and they do not SEE it (Deut.
18:15).
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