THE
LOGOS OF THE PROLOG.
The
opening verses of the Gospel according to St. John have given occasion
to
numerous expositions which refuse to distinguish between inspiration
and
philosophy. John's choice of a name for Christ especially has brought
on a
veritable flood of opinions concerning the influence of pagan
philosophy upon
the doctrine of Christianity. It has been stated that the evangelist
tried to
effect a compromise between Platonic and Stoic ideas, on the one hand,
and the
fundamentals of Christianity, on the other. The old Greek philosopher
Plato had
written much about nous and logos, and the later
schools of
philosophy had carried out the ideas and founded a philosophical system
which,
about the time that John wrote his gospel, began to be known as the
Neo-Platonic. One man especially made use of the terms of Plato in the
attempt
to harmonize Jewish theology and Greek philosophy. That was the Greek
Jew Philo,
of Alexandria, Egypt, who lived from about 20 B. C. to about 42 A. D.
He makes
use of the term logos throughout his writings, sometimes in a
definite,
then again in a vague way, to bring out his mystical speculations. For
this
reason many critics have stated that John borrowed the term from Philo,
together
with many of the latter's philosophical deductions.9J But a careful
comparison
of the works of Philo with the gospel of John and with all other New
Testament
books shows that Philo's logos is a vague, shadowy conception,
as unreal
to himself, perhaps, as it is to anyone else, that it is merely a
philosophic
conception, the joint product of a peculiar theory respecting the
nature of the
Deity and the fact of the existence of the material universe. "The mere
thought of an incarnation of the Logos would have been in the highest
degree
abhorrent to the tastes and sensibilities of the Alexandrians." 10)
Other
critics have identified the Logos of John with the merman of
Jewish
philosophical reflections. They refer to the Targum of Onkelos on Gen.
3, 8, who
substitutes "The voice of the word of the Lord" for "The voice of
the Lord God"; the Jerusalem Targum, which has, on Gen. 22, 14:
"Abraham invoked in the name of the word of the Lord," and many
others. Critics have even found many parallels in the Persian
Zend-Avesta of
Zoroastrian and in other writings. But the memra of the Jews
in their
Chaldee paraphrases of the Old Testament is nothing more than the
product of
theological reflection, just as that of Philo is the result of
philosophic
speculation. It is a device invented in order to render the notion of
revelation
conceivable to Jewish thought. Hilt of such an idea there is nowhere a
trace in
the prolog of John.11)
The
conclusion that the believing commentator is bound to reach is "that,
inspired by God, the Apostle John fixed on the word Logos (which was
entirely
familiar to him from the inspired writings of the Old Testament,
especially from
Gen. 1, Ps. 33, and others) as a designation of Jesus Christ, not only
because
the teaching of the Old Testament suggested it as singularly
appropriate, but
also in order to expose the futility of the Logos theories that had
sprung up in
the soil of pagan and semi pagan philosophy." "Where among Christians
Logos was mentioned without further restriction, nothing else could
have been
meant and understood, nor intended so, than the Word which was now
preached and
believed.... But this Word is now Christ Himself: He personally is the
Word
which God has sent into the world, He is personally the essential, not
only the
final revelation. For in both respects He may be called the Word,
inasmuch as He
is spoken by God into the world, and inasmuch as He is now preached in
the
world.... Only one Word the apostles brought, but a Word of whom they
could
testify that He was with God and was God, before the world came into
existence,
because this is true of Christ whom they preach, and who is even now,
wherever
He permits Himself to be preached, the Word intended for the world, to
be
believed by the world, just as it was in the days of His flesh…. Since
John
begins his book with a statement concerning the Word, he surely means
the Word
which is now in the world for the purpose of being believed and for
giving to
the believers eternal life." 12)
"Further we should know that there is a Word in God, unlike my word or thy word. For we also have a word, especially the word of the heart, as the holy fathers call it, as, when a person meditates upon something and diligently searches, then he has a word or conversation with himself of which no one knows but he alone, ...Thus God also in eternity, in His majesty and divine essence, had a word, speech, conversation, and thought in His divine heart with Himself, unknown to all angels and men. That is called His Word, which was from eternity in His fatherly heart, by which God has determined to create heaven and earth, But of such will of God no person ever knew until that same Word became flesh and declared it, as is stated afterwards: The Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared Him." 13)