All things were created through Him, and without Him
nothing was created that was created.
John 1:3, Modern English Version (MEV)
In Barclay’s Study Bible we find the following:
“It may seem strange to us that John so stresses the way
in which the world was created; and it may seem strange that he so definitely
connects Jesus with the work of creation. But he had to do this because of a
certain tendency in the thought of his day.
“In the time of John there was a kind of heresy called
Gnosticism. Its characteristic was that it was an intellectual and
philosophical approach to Christianity. To the Gnostics the simple beliefs of
the ordinary Christian were not enough. They tried to construct a philosophic
system out of Christianity. They were troubled about the existence of sin and
evil and sorrow and suffering in this world, so they worked out a theory to
explain it. The theory was this.
“In the beginning two things existed--the one was God and
the other was matter. Matter was always there and was the raw material out of
which the world was made. The Gnostics held that this original matter was
flawed and imperfect. We might put it that the world got off to a bad start. It
was made of material which had the seeds of corruption in it.
“The Gnostics went further. God, they said, is pure
spirit, and pure spirit can never touch matter at an, still less matter which
is imperfect. Therefore it was not possible for God to carry out the work of
creation himself So he put out from himself a series of emanations. Each
emanation was further and further away from God and as the emanations got
further and further away from him, they knew less and less about him. About
halfway down the series there was an emanation which knew nothing at all about God.
Beyond that stage the emanations began to be not only ignorant of but actually
hostile to God. Finally in the series there was an emanation which was so
distant from God that it was totally ignorant of him and totally hostile to
him--and that emanation was the power which created the world, because it was
so distant from God that it was possible for it to touch this flawed and evil
matter. The creator god was utterly divorced from and utterly at enmity with
the real God.
“The Gnostics took one step further. They identified the
creator god with the God of the Old Testament; and they held that the God of
the Old Testament was quite different from, quite ignorant of and quite hostile
to the God and Father of Jesus Christ.
“In the time of John this kind of belief was widespread.
Men believed that the world was evil and that an evil God had created it. It is
to combat this teaching that John here lays down two basic Christian truths. In
point of fact the connection of Jesus with creation is repeatedly laid down in
the New Testament, just because of this background of thought which divorced
God from the world in which we live. In Colossians 1:16 Paul writes: "For
in him all things were created, in heaven and on earth ... all things were
created through him and for him." In 1 Corinthians 8:6 he writes of the
Lord Jesus Christ "through whom are all things." The writer to the
Hebrews speaks of the one who was the Son, "through whom also God created
the world" ( Hebrews 1:2). John and the other New Testament writers who
spoke like this were stressing two great truths.
“(i) Christianity has always believed in what is called
creation out of nothing. We do not believe that in his creation of the world
God had to work with alien and evil matter. We do not believe that the world
began with an essential flaw in it. We do not believe that the world began with
God and something else. It is our belief that behind everything there is God
and God alone.
“(ii) Christianity has always believed that this is God's
world. So far from being so detached from the world that he could have nothing
to do with it, God is intimately involved in it. The Gnostics tried to put the
blame for the evil of the world on the shoulders of its creator. Christianity
believes that what is wrong with the world is due to man's sin. But even though
sin has injured the world and kept it from being what it might have been, we
can never despise the world, because it is essentially God's. If we believe
this it gives us a new sense of the value of the world and a new sense of
responsibility to it.
“There is a story of a child from the back streets of a
great city who was taken for a day in the country. When she saw the bluebells
in the woods, she asked: "Do you think God would mind if I picked some of
his flowers?" This is God's world; because of that nothing is out of his
control; and because of that we must use all things in the awareness that they
belong to God. The Christian does not belittle the world by thinking that it
was created by an ignorant and a hostile god; he glorifies it by remembering
that everywhere God is behind it and in it. He believes that the Christ who
re-creates the world was the co-worker of God when the world was first created,
and that, in the act of redemption, God is seeking to win back that which was
always his own.”
John 1:3, Modern English Version (MEV)
In Barclay’s Study Bible we find the following:
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