
Teaching Summary of John 1–2
🌿 Overall Themes in John 1–2
- Jesus as the eternal Word — He is pre‑existent, divine, and the source of life and light.
- Revelation of Jesus’ identity — Lamb of God, Son of God, Messiah, Rabbi, King of Israel.
- The formation of new creation — John echoes Genesis: a new beginning dawns in Christ.
- Discipleship as seeing and staying — “Come and see,” “Follow Me,” “Remain with Him.”
- Jesus brings abundant grace — Grace upon grace replaces the old order.
- The arrival of the new covenant — Water becomes wine; the temple is redefined around Jesus Himself.
John 1 — The Word Revealed, Witnessed, and Received
1:1–5 — The Eternal Word
- “In the beginning” echoes Genesis.
- The Word (Logos) is:
- With God
- Fully God
- Creator of all things
- In Him is life and light; darkness cannot overcome Him.
1:6–13 — The Witness of John the Baptist
- John is not the light but points to it.
- The true Light gives light to everyone.
- Many reject Him; those who receive Him become children of God—born of God, not human effort.
1:14–18 — The Word Became Flesh
- The Word becomes human and dwells (“tabernacles”) among us.
- We behold His glory—full of grace and truth.
- From His fullness we receive “grace upon grace.”
- Jesus reveals the unseen God.
1:19–28 — John’s Testimony to the Religious Leaders
- John denies being the Messiah, Elijah, or the Prophet.
- He identifies himself as the voice preparing the way for the Lord.
1:29–34 — “Behold, the Lamb of God”
- John identifies Jesus as:
- The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world
- The One who baptizes with the Holy Spirit
- The Son of God
1:35–51 — The First Disciples
- John’s disciples follow Jesus after hearing, “Behold the Lamb of God.”
- Jesus invites them: “Come and see.”
- Andrew brings his brother Simon; Jesus renames him Peter.
- Philip brings Nathanael, who confesses Jesus as the Son of God and King of Israel.
- Jesus promises greater revelation: heaven opened and angels ascending and descending on the Son of Man.
Teaching angle:
Discipleship begins with witness, curiosity, encounter, and recognition of Jesus’ identity.
John 2 — The First Sign and the True Temple
2:1–12 — The Wedding at Cana: Water to Wine
- Jesus’ first sign occurs at a wedding in Cana.
- Mary brings the need; Jesus responds in His timing.
- Six stone jars (used for purification) are filled with water.
- Jesus transforms water into abundant, superior wine.
- This sign reveals His glory and leads His disciples to believe.
Teaching angle:
Jesus brings new covenant joy, replacing ritual purification with overflowing grace.
2:13–22 — Cleansing the Temple
- Jesus goes to Jerusalem for Passover.
- He drives out merchants and money changers.
- He declares, “Do not make My Father’s house a house of trade.”
- When asked for a sign, He says, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.”
- John explains: He was speaking about His body.
- After the resurrection, the disciples understand and believe Scripture and Jesus’ words.
Teaching angle:
Jesus is the true Temple—the meeting place between God and humanity.
2:23–25 — Jesus Knows What Is in Man
- Many believe because of His signs.
- Jesus does not entrust Himself to them because He knows the human heart.
- Sets up the conversation with Nicodemus in chapter 3.
🔍 Key Teaching Angles
From John 1
- Jesus is God made visible: The eternal Word becomes flesh.
- Grace replaces the old order: “Grace upon grace” flows from Christ.
- Discipleship is relational: Come, see, stay, follow.
- Witness matters: John points others to Jesus, not himself.
From John 2
- Jesus brings new creation: Water to wine signals the dawn of a new age.
- Jesus fulfills and surpasses the old covenant: Purification jars and temple imagery point to Him.
- Jesus knows the heart: He sees beyond outward belief to true faith.