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Janie Fountain New Library
Luther W. New Junior Theological College

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Jesus as God's Word(s) : Aurality, Epistemology and Embodiment in the Gospel of John / by Deborah Forger

By: Material type: TextTextDescription: 274-302pSubject(s): In: Journal for the Study of the New TestamentSummary: The prologue of the Gospel of John famously depicts Jesus as the divine λόγος made flesh. Ancient evidence and insights from sensory analysis support that John also presents Jesus as materializing Israel's God through λόγος he speaks. Because the physical act of speaking creates sound becomes perceptible to persons through the auditory sense, Jesus' words render the God of Israel accessible in the somatic realm. John presents the Father as remote and inaccessible, yet suggests that Jesus uniquely shares in his divinity, so Jesus' speech functions to make the ineffable thoughts of the Father God both heard and thus corporeally known. The materiality of Jesus' speech underscores an important distinction between the divinity of Jesus and that of his transcendent Father; its corporeal connection to audition also reveals how John presents persons coming to believe in and know God tangibly, and, ultimately, to acquire eternal life.
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Item type Current library Call number Vol info Status Date due Barcode
Continuing Resources (Periodicals) Continuing Resources (Periodicals) New Theological College On Display Vol. 42, No. 03 (Mar 2020) Available JSNT4203

The prologue of the Gospel of John famously depicts Jesus as the divine λόγος made flesh. Ancient evidence and insights from sensory analysis support that John also presents Jesus as materializing Israel's God through λόγος he speaks. Because the physical act of speaking creates sound becomes perceptible to persons through the auditory sense, Jesus' words render the God of Israel accessible in the somatic realm. John presents the Father as remote and inaccessible, yet suggests that Jesus uniquely shares in his divinity, so Jesus' speech functions to make the ineffable thoughts of the Father God both heard and thus corporeally known. The materiality of Jesus' speech underscores an important distinction between the divinity of Jesus and that of his transcendent Father; its corporeal connection to audition also reveals how John presents persons coming to believe in and know God tangibly, and, ultimately, to acquire eternal life.

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