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John … the creation evangelistIt was the year AD 90 or thereabouts, some 60 years after the death and resurrection of Jesus, and a generation since the death of Paul. John, the ‘beloved disciple’, was now the last Apostle alive. For a score or more years he had seen false teaching, more sinister than persecution, infiltrating the first-century Church—a white-ant process which, if left unchecked, could ultimately have destroyed it. There were those who taught that Jesus Christ was not the Son of God (and hence could not be Creator, Saviour and Judge), that sin was not a serious matter, and that true knowledge was gained only through enlightened intermediaries. To counter this propagation of error, the aged John put pen to papyrus and wrote the gospel that bears his name. His purpose was specific: ‘These are written, that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing ye might have life through his name.’1 John the evangelistJohn the evangelist begins his soulwinning message and answer to the false teachers of his day with an assertion of the deity of Jesus and of His great role as Creator: ‘In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by him, and without him was not anything made that was made.’2 John thus takes us back to the moment when the universe came into existence. His expression for Jesus—‘the Word’ (Greek: Logos)—reminds us of the means God used to create the universe and all things in it, that is, ‘And God said…’ or, as Peter puts it, ‘By the Word of God the heavens were of old’.3 In the incarnation, this Logos became both visible and audible—‘the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, and we beheld his glory…’,4 wrote John; ‘we were eyewitnesses of his majesty’,5 affirmed Peter, referring also to His visible transfiguration. 6 Light and darknessJohn, having laid the foundation that Jesus is the Creator God, then proceeds to show that when men and women respond to this truth with trust and obedience they walk in increasing light, until that light leads them to acknowledge Christ as Lord and God. He does this by tracing the growth of faith in Jesus’ disciples. John the Baptist’s testimony had been, ‘Behold the Lamb of God’,7 and the disciples’ first tentative response was, ‘Master, where dwellest thou?’8 But it was enough; it was a beginning. They followed, and they found their faith growing as they observed His miracles (‘This beginning of miracles did Jesus in Cana of Galilee…and his disciples believed on him ’),9 heard His preaching (‘Lord to whom shall we go? thou hast the words of eternal life’),10 came to understand His relationship with God the Father (‘by this we believe that thou camest forth from God’)11, and finally met the resurrected Christ in His omniscient glory. All of this culminated in Thomas’ great cry of faith and joy, ‘My Lord and my God.’12 However, there were others who heard that first testimony of John the Baptist and rejected it (‘What sign showest thou?’)13 as they rejected Jesus’ miracles and teaching.14 These John shows to be walking more and more in the darkness. There were those who ‘went back, and walked no more with him’,15 and those who attempted to stone Jesus because of His testimony.16 There were the Pharisees who asked, ‘Are we blind also?’, only to be told, ‘If ye were blind, ye should have no sin: but now ye say, We see; therefore your sin remaineth.’ 17 There was Judas, the betrayer, whom ‘Satan entered into’,18 and ultimately there were the chief priests whose response to the Son of God culminated in their having Him crucified. False teachingToday, false teaching is again infiltrating the Church and, if left unchecked, has the potential to severely damage it.19 In this century, the truth about the Creator God, who came to earth to be the Saviour of the world, has become muddied by the philosophy of evolution. If a Creator was not needed in the beginning, why should a Saviour be needed now? If there was death before Adam, how could the wages of sin be death? If the world has always been struggling and groaning with death and bloodshed as evolution teaches, what will it be restored to?20 And if the account of creation given in the opening chapters of the Bible is myth, fiction, or theological poetry, why should the account of the final great judgment of all men, recorded in the closing chapters of the Bible, not be regarded likewise? This false teaching comes in the form of textbooks, TV programs, and magazine articles which assure us that this universe made itself without the help of any Creator, that there is no such thing as ‘sin’ because there are no God-given standards of right and wrong, and that, given enough time, man will one day know all there is to know about everything. Those churches which embrace this false teaching and allow its anti-Creator philosophy to direct their interpretation of Scripture, end up with little more than the opinion-based religion of humanism. This is a white-anting process as inevitably destructive as any which threatened the first-century Church, or which Jesus warned about in His message to the seven churches mentioned in Revelation. But the first-century Church survived. The Apostle John’s inspired book called men and women back to faith in Jesus Christ—back to the Creator God who died on the cross and rose again to be our Saviour and Lord. ConclusionToday there is more reason and evidence than ever before to believe the account of creation and the Fall. If these foundational truths are followed, they lead inevitably to Jesus Christ—and this in turn leads us all to the choice of whether we live in light or darkness. References
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