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DAILY DEVOTIONAL

Jesus Lives and Creates

David R. Veerman 77

John and his brother James became two of Jesus’ original twelve disciples and, along with Peter, enjoyed a special relationship with Jesus. At times Jesus called just the three of them to see an important event, such as his Transfiguration.

Clearly, John wanted everyone to know Jesus was not merely a man. Jesus was the eternal, all-powerful God who existed before time, created everything, and gave life.

Clearly, John wanted everyone to know Jesus was not merely a man. Jesus was the eternal, all-powerful God who existed before time, created everything, and gave life.



Life Application Study Bible Devotional
Daily Wisdom from the Life of Jesus by Tyndale , Livingstone, and David R. Veerman

Setting the Scene
Many believe that the apostle John, writer of the Gospel bearing his name, had first been a disciple of John the Baptist, who had pointed him to Jesus.

Then John must have become an intermittent disciple of Jesus, for Scrip- ture details another time when Jesus called John along the Sea of Galilee, where he had returned to his fishing trade with his brother, James, and their father, Zebedee.

This time when Jesus called, John and James left every- thing, father and boat included, and followed him (Mark 1:19-20). At this point Jesus had already turned water into wine (John 2:1-11), cleared the Temple the first time (John 2:13-22), and been visited by Nicodemus at night (John 3:1-21).

This calling of John and James also occurred after Herod had imprisoned John the Baptist (Luke 3:19-20), Jesus had spoken with the woman at the well (John 4:1-26), and Jesus had been rejected at Nazareth (Luke 4:16-30).

So John and his brother James became two of Jesus’ original twelve disciples and, along with Peter, enjoyed a special relationship with Jesus. At times Jesus called just the three of them to see an important event, such as his Transfiguration.

John, therefore, was an eyewitness to Jesus’ life and teachings. In his letter to the church, John wrote: “We saw him with our own eyes and touched him with our own hands” (1 John 1:1, nlt). As one who had seen Jesus up close, John wanted everyone to understand Jesus’ true identity.



We learn in John 1:14 that “the Word” refers to Jesus. Theologians and philosophers, both Jews and Greeks, used the term “word” (in Greek, logos) in a variety of ways.

In the Hebrew language of the Old Testament, “the Word” is described as an agent of creation (Psalm 33:6), the source of God’s message to his people through the prophets (Hosea 1:1-2), and God’s law, his standard of holiness (Psalm 119:11).

For Greeks, “the word” could mean a person’s thoughts or reason, or might refer to a person’s speech (the expres- sion of thoughts). As a philosophical term, logos was the rational principle that governed the universe, even the creative energy that generated the universe.

In both the Jewish and Greek conceptions, logos con- veyed the idea of beginnings, as in Genesis where the expression “God said” occurs repeatedly (Genesis 1:3ff ).

John may have had these ideas in mind, but his descrip- tion shows he was speaking of Jesus as a human being he knew and loved, who was at the same time the Creator of the universe, the ultimate revelation of God, and the living picture of God’s holiness, the one who “holds all creation together” (Colossians 1:17, nlt). Jesus as the logos reveals God’s mind to us.

Clearly, John wanted everyone to know Jesus was not merely a man. Jesus was the eternal, all-powerful God who existed before time, created everything, and gave life.

Getting Personal
What qualities of Jesus convinced John that Jesus was divine, God in the flesh?

Why is Jesus’ divinity crucial to the Christian faith?

If Jesus had been just a very good man, his life and death would have provided a great example of how a person should live. We could honor him and learn from his lifestyle.

If Jesus had been only a great human teacher or orator, we could be motivated and inspired to work and achieve. But a great moral leader and powerful speaker can’t save us from our sins, can’t change us on the inside. Jesus can. As the divine Creator, he has the power to make us new.


Image of David R. Veerman

David R. Veerman

Dave Veerman is the author of more than sixty books, including Tough Parents of Tough Times, When Your Father Dies, and Letting Them Go, and he was a senior editor of the Life Application Study Bible. He holds a B.A. from Wheaton College and an M.Div. from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School.

Cover book of Jesus Lives and Creates

Life Application Study Bible Devotional

David R. Veerman
The Life Application Study Bible Devotional was developed as one answer to the question: How can we encourage the readers of God’s Word to delight in his Word? Application sounds like work—and often is. But it’s the work we were designed to do.
The only possibility of understanding the teaching of Jesus is by the light of the Spirit of God on the inside.

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

Clouds And Darkness

Oswald Chambers
If we have never had the experience of taking our commonplace religious shoes off our commonplace religious feet, and getting rid of al the undue familiarity with which we approach God, it is questionable whether we have ever stood in His presence.
You have to learn to go out of convictions, out of creeds, out of experiences, until so far as your faith is concerned, there is nothing between yourself and God.

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

Will You Go Out Without Knowing?

Oswald Chambers
One of the difficulties in Christian work is this question - "What do you expect to do?" You do not know what you are going to do; the only thing you know is that God knows what He is doing.
He brings us to the place where He asks us to be our utmost for Him.

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

Let Us Keep To The Point

Oswald Chambers
Shut out every other consideration and keep yourself before God for this one thing only - My Utmost for His Highest. I am determined to be absolutely and entirely for Him and for Him alone.
Jesus expresses the essence of God in a way that we cannot misconstrue.

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

Magnifying Glass of Faith

Philip Yancey
In my spiritual journey as well as in my writing career I have long lingered in the margins, pondering unanswerable questions about the problem of pain, the conundrums of prayer, providence versus free will, and other such matters.
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