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Written decades after Matthew, Mark, and Luke, the Gospel of John contains several accounts not found in the synoptic gospels. John stresses Jesus' identity as the Son of God, and addresses His position and role within the Trinity. In John, Jesus speaks more of His own deity than in any other gospel.
Run length: 1 hour, 54 minutes
Reader: Dale McConachie
Translation: New American Standard Bible®
Copyright © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972,
1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation
Topics include:
- The Deity of Christ (Ch. 1)
- The Ministry of John the Baptist (Ch. 1)
- Jesus Turns Water into Wine (Ch. 2)
- First Cleansing of the Temple (Ch. 2)
- Jesus Meets With Nicodemus (Ch. 3)
- The Samaritan Woman (Ch. 4)
- Teachings & Miracles (Ch. 4-11)
- Lazarus Raised From the Dead (Ch. 11)
- The Triumphal Entry (Ch. 12)
- The Last Supper (Ch. 13-16)
- The High Priestly Prayer (Ch. 17)
- Betrayal, Arrest, Trial (Ch. 18)
- Scourging, Crucifixion (Ch. 19)
- Resurrection, Doubting Thomas (Ch. 20)
- Jesus Appears to the Disciples at the Sea of Galilee (Ch.
21)
From Matthew Henry's Commentary:
"...John goes on to perfection (Heb. 6:1), not laying again the foundation, but building upon it, leading us more within the veil. Some of the ancients observe that the other evangelists wrote more of the ta soµmatika—the bodily things of Christ; but John writes of the ta pneumatika—the spiritual things of the gospel, the life and soul of it; therefore some have called this gospel the key of the evangelists. Here is it that a door is opened in heaven, and the first voice we hear is, Come up hither, come up higher. Some of the ancients, that supposed the four living creatures in John's vision to represent the four evangelists, make John himself to be the flying eagle, so high does he soar, and so clearly does he see into divine and heavenly things."
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