New Testament

John

The Gospel of John bears ordered eyewitness witness that Jesus is the eternal Son made flesh, sent by the Father to give eternal life through His death and resurrection to all who believe.

Why this book matters

John matters because it presses the reader beyond admiration of Jesus into saving faith in him as the Son sent from the Father. It refuses to let Jesus be reduced to a teacher, miracle worker, moral example, or national deliverer; his words and works reveal the glory of the incarnate Word who gives life through his death and resurrection.

How to read it

Read John as theological eyewitness testimony, not as a loose collection of favorite sayings. Track the signs, the repeated misunderstandings, the feast settings, the 'hour' language, the Father-Son mission, the conflict with unbelief, and the movement from public witness to private preparation to crucifixion and resurrection.

21 Chapters

  1. 1 The Word Made Flesh, Witnessed, and Followed
  2. 2 The First Sign, the True Temple, and the Glory of Jesus Revealed
  3. 3 New Birth, Lifted-Up Son, and the Love of God for the World
  4. 4 Living Water, True Worship, and the Savior of the World
  5. 5 The Son Who Gives Life, Judges, and Is Witnessed by the Father
  6. 6 The Bread of Life, the Words of Eternal Life, and the Crisis of True Discipleship
  7. 7 The Feast, the Divided Crowd, and the Living Water of Jesus
  8. 8 The Light of the World, True Freedom, and the I AM Before Abraham
  9. 9 The Man Born Blind, the Light of the World, and the Blindness of Religious Unbelief
  10. 10 The Good Shepherd, the Door, and the Son One with the Father
  11. 11 The Resurrection and the Life, the Raising of Lazarus, and the Plot to Kill Jesus
  12. 12 The Anointed King, the Lifted-Up Son of Man, and the Hour of Glory
  13. 13 The Servant-Lord, the Washed Disciples, and the New Command of Love
  14. 14 The Way, the Truth, and the Life, the Father Revealed in the Son, and the Promise of the Spirit
  15. 15 The True Vine, Abiding Fruitfulness, Christlike Love, and the World’s Hatred
  16. 16 The Spirit’s Convicting Witness, the Disciples’ Sorrow Turned to Joy, and Christ’s Victory over the World
  17. 17 The Son’s High Priestly Prayer: Glory, Preservation, Sanctification, Unity, Mission, and Love
  18. 18 The Arrested King: Betrayal, Sovereign Surrender, Denial, Trial, and the Kingdom Not of This World
  19. 19 The Crucified King: Behold the Man, Behold Your King, It Is Finished, and the Pierced Son
  20. 20 The Risen Lord: Empty Tomb, Eyewitness Faith, Peace, Mission, Spirit, Thomas, and the Purpose of the Gospel
  21. 21 The Risen Lord Restores, Commissions, Shepherds, and Testifies through His Witness

Book Structure

John 1:1-18
The Word Became Flesh
The prologue identifies Jesus as the eternal Word, creator, life, light, incarnate glory, and the unique Son who makes the Father known.
John 1:19-4:54
Witness, New Birth, Living Water, and the Beginning of Signs
John the Baptist, early disciples, Cana, the temple sign, Nicodemus, the Samaritan woman, and the official's son introduce the varied responses to Jesus' identity and mission.
John 5:1-10:42
The Son's Authority amid Feast Controversies
Jesus heals, feeds, teaches, and reveals himself as the bread of life, light of the world, door, and good shepherd while opposition intensifies.
John 11:1-12:50
Resurrection Life and the Hour of Glory
The raising of Lazarus reveals Jesus as the resurrection and the life, precipitates the plot to kill him, and leads into his public announcement that the hour has come.
John 13:1-17:26
The Son Prepares His Own
Jesus washes the disciples' feet, commands love, promises the Spirit-Paraclete, teaches abiding fruitfulness, prepares them for hatred, and prays for his own.
John 18:1-19:42
The King Lifted Up
Jesus is arrested, tried, crucified, pierced, and buried, yet John presents the passion as the sovereign completion of Scripture and the hour of the Son's glorification.
John 20:1-21:25
Life in the Risen Son
The risen Jesus appears to Mary Magdalene, the disciples, Thomas, and the disciples by the sea, bringing peace, commissioning witnesses, restoring Peter, and confirming the beloved disciple's testimony.

Where to Start

John 1:1-18
The Word Became Flesh
The prologue establishes the Gospel's vocabulary for Word, life, light, witness, incarnation, glory, grace, truth, Sonship, and revelation of the Father.
John 3:1-21
New Birth and the Lifted-Up Son
This passage joins new birth, the Spirit, the lifting up of the Son of Man, God's love for the world, saving faith, judgment, and light-versus-darkness response.
John 6:22-59
The Bread of Life Discourse
The discourse forces careful attention to faith, manna, life, flesh, blood, death, resurrection, and the danger of reducing Jesus to a supplier of earthly bread.
John 11:1-44
The Resurrection and the Life
The raising of Lazarus is the climactic sign that reveals Jesus' authority over death and moves the narrative toward the plot that leads to the cross.
John 13:1-17:26
The Farewell Discourse
These chapters form John's deepest discipleship block, covering love, service, the Spirit, abiding, mission, opposition, joy, sanctification, and Jesus' prayer for his people.
John 18:1-20:31
The Cross and Resurrection Witness
The passion and resurrection bring together Scripture fulfillment, kingship, truth, completed work, eyewitness testimony, faith, and life in Jesus' name.

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Book Storyline

Canonical Context

Incarnation & Ministry
John contributes to the incarnation-and-ministry arc by making explicit that Jesus' earthly ministry is the mission of the eternal Word who became flesh and uniquely reveals the Father. The signs and discourses do not merely prove power; they unveil glory, expose unbelief, and summon saving faith. John also presses the arc forward by showing that Jesus' 'hour' is not defeat but the cross-resurrection glorification through which eternal life is secured and the Spirit-bearing mission of the church is prepared.
Purpose
John writes so that readers may believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that by believing they may have life in his name.
Previous
Luke gives an orderly account of Jesus' ministry that flows naturally into Acts and emphasizes salvation reaching the nations. John follows the Synoptic witness with a theologically concentrated Gospel that selects signs and discourses to unveil Jesus' divine Sonship, incarnate glory, and life-giving mission.
Next
Acts narrates the risen Jesus continuing his work by the Spirit through apostolic witness from Jerusalem to the nations. John prepares that movement by promising the Spirit-Paraclete, commissioning the disciples after the resurrection, and grounding mission in the Son's own sending from the Father.

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Key Terms

Word logos word, expression, message, divine self-disclosure
Life zōē life, especially life from God, eternal life
Light phōs light, revelation, divine illumination over against darkness
Believe pisteuō believe, trust, entrust oneself
Sign sēmeion sign, attesting miracle pointing beyond itself
Glory doxa glory, honor, manifested divine splendor
Truth alētheia truth, reality, faithfulness
World kosmos world, ordered creation, humanity in rebellion or need
Love agapaō love, covenantal and self-giving action
Paraclete paraklētos Advocate, Helper, Counselor, one called alongside
Witness martyria testimony, witness, attestation
Abide / Remain menō remain, abide, continue, dwell
Hour hōra hour, appointed time