“There was a man sent from God, whose name was John.”
There was a man sent from God whose name was John — the transition from Logos theology to historical narrative introduces John the Baptist, whose sole function is testimonial. The phrase "sent from God" (apostellō) establishes John's role as witness rather than savior, clarifying the Baptist's ministry in light of the Prologue's cosmic claims. Unlike Matthew and Luke, John's Gospel defers biographical detail about the Baptist, immediately subordinating him to his witness-bearing role.
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John 1:6
“There was a man sent from God, whose name was John.”
There was a man sent from God whose name was John — the transition from Logos theology to historical narrative introduces John the Baptist, whose sole function is testimonial. The phrase "sent from God" (apostellō) establishes John's role as witness rather than savior, clarifying the Baptist's ministry in light of the Prologue's cosmic claims. Unlike Matthew and Luke, John's Gospel defers biographical detail about the Baptist, immediately subordinating him to his witness-bearing role.
There was a man sent from God whose name was John — the transition from Logos theology to historical narrative introduces John the Baptist, whose sole function is testimonial. The phrase "sent from God" (apostellō) establishes John's role as witness rather than savior, clarifying the Baptist's ministry in light of the Prologue's cosmic claims. Unlike Matthew and Luke, John's Gospel defers biographical detail about the Baptist, immediately subordinating him to his witness-bearing role.