1:43-51. Nathanael
Jesus decided to move to Galilee but first he called
a fourth man, Philip, to join him (1:43). Philip came from the same town as
Andrew and Simon Peter (l: 44). Philip, in turn, looked for Nathanael, who is
not mentioned in the synoptic gospels, and witnessed to him that he and the
others had found the 'one of whom Moses wrote' (Deuteronomy 18: 15, 18), who
was 'Jesus son of Joseph, from Nazareth' (1:45). By the end of this passage it
is clear that the author wants his readers to see that Nathanael's description
of Jesus was inadequate and only the beginning of understanding about him.
Nathanael's response to Philip's witness was sarcastic but honest; he was not a
man to be deceived by false prophets. No one expected the Messiah to come from
Galilee. When Jesus saw Nathanael approaching, he saw the honesty in the man (l:
47). In John's gospel Jesus is portrayed as knowing the inner mind and
character of those he met, as we see in passages such as 2 :25,4: 17-19, 5 :6,
13: 10,21,26. As soon as Nathanael had spoken directly with Jesus, he knew that
he had met 'the Son of God and the King of Israel' (l: 48-49) because Jesus had
seen into his thoughts and character. What Philip had told him about Jesus was
quite inadequate to describe him. Jesus then predicted the greater truth that
the disciples would come to know; he used of himself the title used in the
synoptic gospels, 'Son of Man.' This title, found in all four gospels, shows
Jesus as being of divine origin but fully sharing and representing human life.
That Jesus is the Mediator between God and man can be understood from 1:51. The
angels symbolize the continual flow of divine love and help from God to man,
and the flow of intercession from man to God to which God responds.
From 1:35-51, it can be understood that the first
five disciples to join Jesus before he left the Jordan valley to return to
Galilee, his home area, were all disciples or followers of John the Baptist.
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