Hanul Ancutei

“fericirea mea este sa ma apropii de Dumnezeu” :) Psalmi 73:28

La inceput era Cuvantul …

Posted by ancutamaria on June 2, 2008

Ioan 1:1-4
La inceput era Cuvantul, si Cuvantul era cu Dumnezeu, si Cuvantul era Dumnezeu.
El era la inceput cu Dumnezeu.
Toate lucrurile au fost facute prin El; si nimic din ce a fost facut, n-a fost facut fara El.
In El era viata, si viata era lumina oamenilor.

Ioan 1:14 Si Cuvantul S-a facut trup, si a locuit printre noi, plin de har, si de adevar. Si noi am privit slava Lui, o slava intocmai ca slava singurului nascut din Tatal.

V-ati intrebat vreodata de ce Ioan Il numeste pe Isus Cuvant?

Incepand azi sa studiez Evanghelia dupa Ioan dupa planul unei carticele .. am gasit urmatoarea intrebare:
La cine se refera termenul “Cuvantul” din primele propozitii ale cartii lui Ioan si de ce crezi ca a ales apostolul acest termen?
Raspunsul la prima parte a intrebarii .. a venit de la sine .. direct din verset … clar, direct ..
.. insa raspunsul la a doua parte … “de ce crezi ca a ales apostolul acest termen” .. s-a lasat asteptat ..

Insa am gasit un comentariu interesant pe internet :

John 1:1-18 - The Prologue

The prologue is marked by the themes of the Word and the witness of John. Clustered around the “Word” are a series of abstract words and concepts. They include: beginning, creation, light, life, truth, grace, glory, and the world. This is the high language of theology and philosophy. Yet moving among these terms is a man sent from God who testifies (i.e. gives evidence) about this “Word.”

John’s use of these abstract terms is part of his scheme to paint a picture of Jesus that is very different from that found in the Synoptic gospels. Mark introduces Jesus at the beginning of his ministry. Matthew places Jesus in the context of Jewish history by his opening genealogy and birth narrative. Luke sets Jesus at the intersection of Judaism’s pious hopes and the Roman Empire’s march through history. As valid and interesting as those introductions may be they all allow the reader to say, “All that’s very nice, but Jesus doesn’t really concern me and my life.”

John, however, sets Jesus in the context of the creation and meaning of the world. Verse 3 indicates that reality is dependent upon Jesus. The meaning of life (v. 4) and truth (v. 14) are somehow connected to Jesus. No one can accept John’s picture of Jesus and walk away saying, “That doesn’t matter to me.” But to really understand John’s picture of Jesus we need insight into his use of the word, “Word.”
John 1:1-5 - The Word Introduced

The most significant word in the prologue is “Word” which is used as a title for Jesus. The Greek word for “Word” would be written in English letters as logos (from which we get logic, logo, and related words). But a Greek dictionary would not have given all that John means to say about Jesus when he called him the logos.

Jesus is rarely called the “Word” outside this prologue. Perhaps its unusualness is proportional to its significance. To describe Jesus as the Word of God points to a basic truth. A word is a message, a communication. Jesus is the communication of a message from God. A word expresses the thoughts of the innermost person. Jesus is the expression of the heart of God. A person’s word is a statement of that person’s nature or character. Jesus is the perfect expression of the nature and character of God.

That much is common to the way every culture understands a word. The author and first readers of the fourth gospel would have understood much more by designating Jesus as the Word. In Jewish thought a word was a powerful and effective thing. Words accomplished things. Genesis 1 describes God as creating simply by means of a word. To say a blessing was to create a blessing. Likewise, to pronounce a curse was to actually bring evil upon the cursed one. In Genesis 27:30-40 when Esau asked his father, Isaac, to retract the blessing given to Jacob Isaac refused - the blessing had already been spoken and was effective - it could not be retracted. To call Jesus the “word” was to attribute to him the ability to make things happen.

Intertestamental Judaism and especially the Targums (paraphrases of the Old Testament from the Hebrew language into the Aramaic language) used the expression “word of God” as a circumlocution for the name of God. Because of their extreme reverence for the name of God they avoided pronouncing it and would use substitutions instead such as “heaven” or “the word of God.” This meant that the phrase, “Word of God,” did not mean Scripture for the Jews of Jesus’ time as it does for us. Rather, it was a reference to God himself.

Another clue to the meaning of the word logos in John’s prologue comes from the Wisdom literature of the Old Testament (Proverbs, Job, Ecclesiastes) and the Wisdom literature of the intertestamental period (Ecclesiasticus and Wisdom of Solomon especially). This Wisdom literature often personified wisdom. Wisdom was spoken of as a person who was present with God in creation, providing life and light for the world. The apocryphal book of Ecclesiasticus even describes Wisdom as being created before all things (created before creation). Wisdom was seen as almost eternally pre-existent with God. The intertestamental book, The Wisdom of Solomon, actually identified the Wisdom of God and the Word of God (Wisdom of Solomon 9:1-2). Thus, for Jews in the time of John, the phrase, “Word of God,” would have pointed to the personified Wisdom of God who was eternally co-existent with God and God’s active co-worker in Creation. Even though the Jews were ferociously monotheistic “the Word of God” spoke to them of a person who was with God and almost was God.

The logos also was a word that would communicate very profound concepts to the Greek world. Greek philosophy had come to use logos for some profound ideas. Logos meant more than just single words; it also referred to Reason and to the principle of order that held the Universe together. In some ways the Logos was the mind of God that controlled the totality of the world. It was logos that made the world orderly rather than chaotic. Further, Logos should control individual persons. The Reason of the Universe should enable the individual to reasonably decide between right and wrong. Philo of Alexandria, writing at the very time of Jesus, described Logos as the tiller with which God, the Pilot of the Universe, steers all things. In that sense the “Word” was an intermediary by which God related to the world and worked in it.

Thus both the Greek and Jewish patterns of thought attributed profound significance to the “Word.” In both the Word was associated with God in the creation or maintenance of the world. In both the Word was almost a substitute expression for God Himself. In Greek thought the Word related God and the world to the individual. We can draw further conclusions about the way logos would have communicated in the first century world. Perhaps no other concept could have been chosen by the gospel writer to so broadly express the awesome significance of Jesus.

Verse 1 describes the Word in three ways. The existence of the Word at the beginning is affirmed. The relationship of the Word to God is described. Finally, the actual character or nature of the Word is declared. The first affirmation is of the existence of the Word in the beginning. By doing this the gospel echoes almost exactly the opening words of Genesis 1:1, “In the beginning God . . . .” Thus Jesus is paced at God’s side as far back in time as the Bible goes. The next phrase, however, refines the relationship between Jesus and God. “The Word was with God” does not pick up a significant implication of the Greek text. It might be better translated, “The Word was face to face with God.” The relationship of Jesus and God was more than side-by-side; it was a face to face relationship indicating far more intimacy than that of simply being co-workers. This prepares for the final phrase, “The Word was God.”

The affirmation that Jesus is God is not a startling or difficult thought for present day Christians. It may not have been for John’s readers, but it was difficult for many first century Christians of Jewish heritage. Every Jew began every morning with these words in prayer, “Hear, O Israel, the LORD our God is one.” To claim that Jesus was God would be a very difficult idea for Jews to assimilate. Perhaps the point that we should understand is not just that Jesus was (and is) God, but that when Jesus is seen, God is seen. The Logos provides us access and understanding into the very nature of God.

That does not mean that the Logos exhausts the being of God. John does not say God was the Logos. We struggle with the mystery of this verse. Jesus is said both to be with God and to be God. That speaks of Jesus being distinguishable and yet identical with God. Our minds cannot hold the ultimate logic of both statements together. We believe, but there is a limit to our understanding. John could have easily said as Paul did in Ephesians 5:32, “This is a great mystery.”

Verses 2 and 3 return to the eternal existence of the Logos with God and the role of the “Word” in creation. “And apart from Him not even one thing was made.” This emphasis on Christ as creator reflects an important insight from Jewish thought. To affirm that nothing was made apart from Christ is to affirm that His imprint is stamped on all creation. All creation owes a certain accountability to the Creator. As modern science pursues the mystery of life in physical and chemical terms, the Bible-believing Christian cannot evade the meaning of John 1:2-3. We are responsible for the life we live to Christ as our Creator. The meaning of our life will never be embraced by DNA studies. The imprint of Christ on our neighbor and our universe will always be a part of our pursuit of understanding. The creation can never be considered evil from a Christian standpoint, but we must be the people most concerned that evil does not corrupt it.

Verse 4 introduces the terms, “life” and “light,” in relation to Jesus. Life was in the logos. The energy and vitality, the creativity and feeling that we call life has its source in Christ. If life has its existence in the logos then if there is no logos there is no life. John wants to make Christ absolutely the essence and meaning of life. No Christ - no life. We are too tempted to spiritualize this truth. No Christ - no spiritual life. For John the difference between life and mere existence is Christ. If we agree with John the way we spend our time and money, the things we think important and funny, and commitments of our energy and interest will all be changed. We have let the world define life for us too long. Life is in Christ.

Verse 4 goes on to declare that this Life was also the light of mankind. Verse 5 declares that Jesus is involved in a great struggle against darkness. Here is an example of John’s black and white thinking that we may not be able to appreciate like the people of the first century did. The flick of a light switch has made light so easy for us that most of us do not really understand darkness. We do not have to deal with its terror, its unknown character, its evil-cloaking nature.

The people of the first century understood the fearfulness, the insecurity, the lurking of evil that went with darkness. Darkness was a metaphor that spoke very realistically to them of the way sin worked. In contrast light dispelled darkness; light overcame darkness; light exposed and defeated sin. And John tells us that Jesus was that light. Darkness struggled to overpower the light, to hold it down, to extinguish it, but the darkness failed. The Greek text notes that the Light we know as Jesus continuously shines and the darkness cannot knock it out.

Domnul sa va binecuvanteze!!

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Isaia 53

Posted by ancutamaria on April 26, 2008

Ioan 3:16 Fiindca atat de mult a iubit Dumnezeu lumea, ca a dat pe singurul Lui Fiu, pentru ca oricine crede in El, sa nu piara, ci sa aiba viata vesnica.

Versetele urmatoare sunt scrise cu sute de ani inainte de nasterea Domnului Isus! Observati cat de detaliat s-a prevestit viata, moartea si invierea Domnului pentru a plati pentru pacatele noastre si pt ca noi, cei care credem in El, sa avem viata vesnica alaturi de Dumnezeul cel viu ! Sa nu uitam niciodata ca Dumnezeul nostru este un Dumnezeu viu, care este omniscient, omniprezent, si omnipotent! Laudat sa fie numele Lui pe tot pamantul !

Vechiul Testament - Cartea Isaia

1 Cine a crezut in ceea ce ni se vestise? Cine a cunoscut bratul Domnului?

2 El a crescut inaintea Lui ca o odrasla slaba, ca un Lastar care iese dintr-un pamant uscat. N-avea nici frumusete, nici stralucire ca sa ne atraga privirile, si infatisarea Lui n-avea nimic care sa ne placa.

3 Dispretuit si parasit de oameni, om al durerii si obisnuit cu suferinta, era asa de dispretuit ca iti intorceai fata de la El, si noi nu L-am bagat in seama.

4 Totusi, El suferintele noastre le-a purtat, si durerile noastre le-a luat asupra Lui, si noi am crezut ca este pedepsit, lovit de Dumnezeu, si smerit.

5 Dar El era strapuns pentru pacatele noastre, zdrobit pentru faradelegile noastre. Pedeapsa, care ne da pacea, a cazut peste El, si prin ranile Lui suntem tamaduiti.

6 Noi rataceam cu totii ca niste oi, fiecare isi vedea de drumul lui; dar Domnul a facut sa cada asupra Lui nelegiuirea noastra a tuturor.

7 Cand a fost chinuit si asuprit, n-a deschis gura deloc, ca un miel pe care-l duci la macelarie, si ca o oaie muta inaintea celor ce o tund: n-a deschis gura.

8 El a fost luat prin apasare si judecata; dar cine din cei de pe vremea Lui a crezut ca El fusese sters de pe pamantul celor vii si lovit de moarte pentru pacatele poporului meu?

9 Groapa Lui a fost pusa intre cei rai, si mormantul Lui la un loc cu cel bogat, macar ca nu savarsise nici o nelegiuire si nu se gasise nici un viclesug in gura Lui.

10 Domnul a gasit cu cale sa-L zdrobeasca prin suferinta… Dar, dupa ce Isi va da viata ca jertfa pentru pacat, va vedea o samanta de urmasi, va trai multe zile, si lucrarea Domnului va propasi in mainile Lui.

11 Va vedea rodul muncii sufletului Lui si se va inviora. Prin cunostinta Lui, Robul Meu cel neprihanit va pune pe multi oameni intr-o stare dupa voia lui Dumnezeu, si va lua asupra Lui povara nelegiuirilor lor.

12 De aceea Ii voi da partea Lui la un loc cu cei mari, si va imparti prada cu cei puternici, pentru ca S-a dat pe Sine insusi la moarte, si a fost pus in numarul celor faradelege, pentru ca a purtat pacatele multora si S-a rugat pentru cei vinovati.

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Psalm 139!

Posted by ancutamaria on April 9, 2008

Doamne, Tu ma cercetezi de aproape si ma cunosti,

stii cand stau jos si cand ma scol, si de departe imi patrunzi gandul.

Stii cand umblu si cand ma culc, si cunosti toate caile mele.

Caci nu-mi ajunge cuvantul pe limba, si Tu, Doamne, il si cunosti in totul.

Tu ma inconjori pe dinapoi si pe dinainte, si-Ti pui mana peste mine.

O stiinta atat de minunata este mai presus de puterile mele: este prea inalta ca s-o pot prinde.

Unde ma voi duce departe de Duhul Tau, si unde voi fugi departe de Fata Ta?

Daca ma voi sui in cer, Tu esti acolo; daca ma voi culca in locuinta mortilor, iata-Te si acolo;

Daca voi lua aripile zorilor, si ma voi duce sa locuiesc la marginea marii,

si acolo mana Ta ma va calauzi, si dreapta Ta ma va apuca.

Daca voi zice: “Cel putin intunericul ma va acoperi, - si se va face noapte lumina dimprejurul meu!” Iata ca nici chiar intunericul nu este intunecos pentru Tine; ci noaptea straluceste ca ziua, si intunericul ca lumina.

Tu mi-ai intocmit rarunchii, Tu m-ai tesut in pantecele mamei mele:

Te laud ca sunt o faptura asa de minunata. Minunate sunt lucrarile Tale, si ce bine vede sufletul meu lucrul acesta!

Trupul meu nu era ascuns de Tine, cand am fost facut intr-un loc tainic, tesut in chip ciudat, ca in adancimile pamantului.

Cand nu eram decat un plod fara chip, ochii Tai ma vedeau; si in cartea Ta erau scrise toate zilele care-mi erau randuite, mai inainte de a fi fost vreuna din ele.

Cat de nepatrunse mi se par gandurile Tale, Dumnezeule, si cat de mare este numarul lor!

Daca le numar, sunt mai multe decat boabele de nisip. Cand ma trezesc, sunt tot cu Tine.

O, Dumnezeule, de ai ucide pe cel rau! Departati-va de la mine, oameni setosi de sange!

Ei vorbesc despre Tine in chip nelegiuit, Iti iau Numele ca sa minta, ei, vrajmasii Tai!

Sa nu urasc eu, Doamne, pe cei ce Te urasc, si sa nu-mi fie scarba de cei ce se ridica impotriva Ta?

Da, ii urasc cu o ura desavarsita; ii privesc ca pe vrajmasi ai mei.

Cerceteaza-ma, Dumnezeule, si cunoaste-mi inima! Incearca-ma, si cunoaste-mi gandurile!

Vezi daca sunt pe o cale rea, si du-ma pe calea vesniciei!

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Filipeni 4:4-8

Posted by ancutamaria on March 1, 2008

Bucurati-va totdeauna in Domnul! Iarasi zic: Bucurati-va!

Blandetea voastra sa fie cunoscuta de toti oamenii. Domnul este aproape.

Nu va ingrijorati de nimic; ci in orice lucru, aduceti cererile voastre la cunostinta lui Dumnezeu, prin rugaciuni si cereri, cu multumiri.
Si pacea lui Dumnezeu, care intrece orice pricepere, va va pazi inimile si gandurile in Hristos Isus.
Incolo, fratii mei, tot ce este adevarat, tot ce este vrednic de cinste, tot ce este drept, tot ce este curat, tot ce este vrednic de iubit, tot ce este vrednic de primit, orice fapta buna, si orice lauda, aceea sa va insufleteasca.
Domnul sa va binecuvanteze!

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Psalmi 32:8

Posted by ancutamaria on February 15, 2008

“Eu - zice Domnul - te voi invata, si-ti voi arata calea pe care trebuie s-o urmezi, te voi sfatui, si voi avea privirea indreptata asupra ta.”

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