John. Jey J. Kanagaraj

John - Jey J. Kanagaraj


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“God’s new community,” that is bound to God by the new covenant made in Jesus.4

      Who Wrote John’s Gospel and Where?

      John’s Gospel declares that it was written by “the disciple whom Jesus loved,” who “has seen” the crucified Jesus and has borne witness (19:35), not merely by verbal proclamation, but also by putting the Jesus tradition in writing. What this disciple spoke and wrote is categorically attested by a community as “true” (21:24).

      Dionysius of Alexandria (the third century CE) indicates that there are in Ephesus tombs of two Johns (see Eccl. Hist. 3.23.6; 7.25.16; cf. 3.31.3; 3.39.6; 5.24.3 for Polycrates’ confirmation that the resting place of John was in Ephesus). The Apostolic Constitutions (third century CE) mentions that the apostle John installed another John in Ephesus as his successor. Papias refers to two Johns in his writing (125–35 CE), in the context of his enquiry with those who had contacts with some of the disciples of Jesus about “what John and Matthew said” and about “the things which Aristion and John the elder, the disciples of the Lord, say” (Eccl. Hist. 3.39.4).

      We may also see the hand of an editor in the final stage of the writing the Gospel in the glosses, comments, and explanations, including the translations of Hebrew/Aramaic words into Greek. The addition of chapter 21 after a proper conclusion in 20:30–31, with a final conclusion in 21:24–25, confirms the additional work of an editor. While the phrase “I suppose” (21:25) implies the editor as an individual, the phrase “we know” (21:24) refers to a community on whose behalf the editor gave final shape to the Gospel.

      When Was John’s Gospel Composed and Published?


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