Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Brittany E. Wilson on the Visibility of God the Father in the Gospel of John

  

 

Seeing and Not Seeing God in John

 

Before turning to how John applies the language of divine visibility to Jesus, it is first important to demonstrate that John does not present God as an invisible entity in a strictly Platonic sense. Although John does arguably adapt Platonic principles when it suits his purposes, on the whole, he seems unconcerned to craft his portrayal of God in accordance with firm Platonic notions of divine transcendence and invisibility. For one, John never calls God “invisible” (αορατος) unlike Philo who frequently speaks of God’s invisibility, or even unlike texts such as Colossians 1:15, 1 Timothy 1:17, and Hebrews 11:27. Moreover, the statement at the end of John’s prologue, which echoed in 1 John (1 John 4:12, 20), does not claim that God cannot be seen (cf. 1 Tim 6:16). Instead, John 1:18 simply says that “no one has ever seen God.” In other words, John 1:18 says that God is unseen by human eyes, not that God is invisible in an ontological sense or that God is empirically unavailable to human sight. Jesus’s statement in chapter 5 about how his interlocuters have never seen God’s form reflects a similar idea, for Jesus does not claim that God lacks a form. He instead continues his critique of his Jewish interlocuters by asserting that they have never seen God’s form, not heard God’s voice (5:37). The fact that he even mentions God’s “form” (ειδος) suggests that God does have a form that can be seen, just as God has a voice that can be heard. Again, his point is that his headers simply have not seen that form.

 

Second, John’s ostensible denial that specific people from Israel’s past saw God does not “prove” God’s invisibility in the Fourth Gospel. As I noted earlier, John situates his two references to people not seeing God within the context of John situates his two references to people not seeing God within the context of Sinai allusions. John mentions Moses and the law (which was given to Moses on Sinai) in both of these contexts (John 1:17; 5:45-47), and in his prologue, he says that “we have seen his Glory [δοξαν]” (1:14), referring, however, not to God’s Glory, which was seen on Sinai, but to “the Word’s” Glory. In chapter 5, John’s statement that Jesus’s Jewish hearers have never heard God’s voice nor seen God’s form may also allude to Deuteronomy 4:12 LXX, where Moses explains to the Israelites that they are prohibited from making “idols” because “you saw no likeness [ομοιωμα] when the Lord spoke to you at Horeb [or Mount Sinai] out of the fire.” With this latter potential allusion to Deuteronomy 4:12, it is important to note that, once again, the text does not say that God lacks a form, Moses instead claims that the Israelites did not see God’s form, or more precisely God’s “likeness” (ομοιωμα). According to Moses and Jesus, God may be hidden from their hearers’ eyes, but this does not mean there is nothing to see. More importantly, with both of the allusions to Sinai in the prologue and in chapter 5, John seems less concerned to refute the idea that Moses and the Israelites saw God and more concerned to situate Moses as a witness to Jesus, or someone who can testify to Jesus’s claims. Moses’s role as a witness to Jesus is especially clear in chapter 5, since Jesus says, “If you believed Moses, you would believe me, for he wrote about me” (John 5:46), and the reference to the law being given through Moses in the prologue may serve a similar function (1:17). It is not necessarily the case, then, that John is rejecting scriptural accounts of seeing God, for he marshals Moses and Scripture (e.g., 10:35) in an effort to support Jesus’s claims about himself. (Brittany E. Wilson, “Seeing Jesus, Seeing God: Theophany and Divine Visibility in the Gospel of John,” in John Among the New Testament Writers: Early High Christology, ed. Christopher M. Blumhofer, Diane G. Chen, and Joel B. Green [Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2024], 55-56)

 

 

 

To Support this Blog:

 

Patreon

Paypal

Amazon Wishlist

Email for Amazon Gift card: ScripturalMormonism@gmail.com

Blog Archive