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Monday, 23 February 2026

Too good to not post it

 When we read the Gospel of John, we quickly notice that Jesus does not merely speak; he acts. John does not even primarily call these acts “miracles.” He calls them “signs.” They are not random displays of power meant to impress a crowd. They are testimony. They are heaven’s witness. They are the Father’s public affirmation that what the Son claims about himself is true. And when we read these signs alongside the “I am” statements, especially in light of Psalm 82, something powerful emerges: every claim Jesus makes is backed by visible evidence that God Himself stands behind him.

Psalm 82 presents a courtroom scene. God stands in the assembly and addresses rulers who were called “gods,” sons of the Most High, because they were entrusted with authority. They were meant to defend the weak, protect the vulnerable, and administer justice. Instead, they walked in darkness. They misused their authority. And God declared judgment: though they were called gods, they would die like men. The psalm establishes a pattern that runs through Scripture—authority is delegated, but it is accountable. Those who represent God must reflect His justice.

When Jesus steps onto the scene in John’s Gospel and says, “I am,” he is stepping into that pattern. But unlike the rulers condemned in Psalm 82, he fulfills perfectly what they failed to do. And the signs he performs are God’s own confirmation that this is the faithful Son.

Consider the feeding of the five thousand. Before Jesus declares, “I am the bread of life,” he takes loaves and multiplies them until thousands are satisfied. The sign comes before the claim. In Psalm 82, the rulers are condemned for failing the needy. They did not defend the poor or sustain the weak. But here is one who not only feeds the hungry but does so abundantly. The miracle is not just compassion; it is testimony. It says, “This is the ruler who truly sustains God’s people.” The sign validates the statement. He is not merely speaking about life; he is giving it.

The same pattern appears when Jesus says, “I am the light of the world.” In the very next chapter, he heals a man born blind. Psalm 82 describes corrupt leaders who walk about in darkness, shaking the foundations of the earth through injustice. Jesus restores sight—both physically and spiritually. He exposes the blindness of those who claim to see and gives light to the humble. The healing is not a random act of kindness; it is embodied theology. It is God’s testimony that this one truly brings light into moral and spiritual darkness. The works confirm the words.

When Jesus calls himself the door and the good shepherd, the context again matters. The religious leaders have cast out the man who was healed. They exclude and condemn. Jesus seeks him out and restores him. In Psalm 82, the shepherds failed the flock. They did not defend the vulnerable. Here stands the faithful shepherd who lays down his life for the sheep. His authority is not exploitative but sacrificial. The miracle of restored sight becomes evidence in the courtroom of heaven: these rulers have failed, but this Son has not. His works demonstrate that he embodies the very justice Psalm 82 demanded.

The raising of Lazarus perhaps makes the point most dramatically. Psalm 82 ends with a sobering sentence: “You will die like men.” Those who misuse delegated authority face mortality and judgment. But when Jesus stands before Lazarus’ tomb and declares, “I am the resurrection and the life,” he does not merely speak hope into grief. He calls a dead man out of the grave. The miracle is divine validation. It is as though God Himself is saying, “This is the one who holds authority even over death.” And when Jesus himself is raised from the dead, the testimony becomes final and undeniable. The faithful Son does not die in shame like corrupt rulers; he is vindicated and enthroned, just as anticipated in Psalm 2 and envisioned in the Book of Daniel. Resurrection is God’s public declaration that this Son has fulfilled His will.

Even when Jesus says, “I am the way, the truth, and the life,” the testimony of God is woven through all his works. He repeatedly insists that he does nothing on his own but only what he sees the Father doing. His miracles are not independent acts of power; they are acts of obedience. This is the critical difference between the failed “gods” of Psalm 82 and the faithful Son in John. The former misused authority. The latter exercises authority in perfect submission. The works testify because they reveal harmony between the Father and the Son.

And when Jesus declares, “I am the true vine,” the pattern of accountability becomes even clearer. Branches that do not bear fruit are cut off. Throughout John’s Gospel, the signs produce division. Some believe. Others harden their hearts. The miracles themselves become the dividing line. Revelation demands response. Authority brings responsibility. The testimony of God through the signs confirms who Jesus is and simultaneously exposes the hearts of those who witness them.

John tells us plainly why he records these signs: so that we may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing we may have life in his name. The miracles are the Father’s voice in action. They are not separate from the “I am” statements; they are inseparable from them. The words declare identity. The works confirm it.

Anyone can claim to be light. Only the one backed by God can open blind eyes. Anyone can claim to give life. Only the one vindicated by resurrection can command the grave. Anyone can call himself shepherd. Only the one who lays down his life and takes it up again proves it.

In the end, the greatest sign is the resurrection of Jesus himself. It gathers all the others into one final testimony. The bread of life conquers death. The light of the world is not extinguished. The good shepherd is vindicated. The way is opened. The faithful Son stands confirmed.

And through him, we are invited not merely to admire the signs, but to know the One who sent him. The miracles point beyond themselves. They testify that the Most High has spoken through His obedient and faithful Son. The courtroom of Psalm 82 finds its answer in the Gospel of John: where others failed in their delegated authority, Jesus succeeded. And God bore witness through signs, wonders, and ultimately through resurrection.

The “I am” statements are not unsupported claims. They are declared in words and sealed in power. The Father testified through the works. The Son obeyed in faithfulness. And together they reveal the glory of God—justice restored, life given, light shining in darkness, and the way opened for all who believe.

One of the most beautiful threads running through Scripture is this: God is deeply concerned with the honor of His own name. Not because He is insecure, but because His name represents His character—His justice, His mercy, His faithfulness, His truth. When His appointed representatives misrepresent Him, it is not merely a political failure; it is a distortion of who He is in the eyes of the world.

In Psalm 82, the “sons of the Most High” are rebuked because they failed to defend the weak and uphold justice. They bore God’s authority, but they did not reflect God’s character. They were called “gods” because they acted in His name. When they judged unjustly, it was as though God Himself were unjust in the sight of the nations. When they oppressed the vulnerable, it seemed as though the Most High did not care for the poor. Their failure did not diminish God’s true nature—but it tarnished His reputation among those who only saw Him through them.

Throughout the Hebrew Scriptures, this theme repeats. Israel is chosen to bear God’s name among the nations. The kings are meant to reflect His justice. The priests are meant to reflect His holiness. Yet again and again, those entrusted with divine authority fail. The result is exile, shame, and the profaning of God’s name among the nations. The prophets cry out that the nations mock and say, “Where is their God?” The issue is not only covenant disobedience; it is the dishonoring of the Most High’s name through the failure of His sons.

And this is where the sending of Jesus becomes so profound.

In the Gospel of John, Jesus repeatedly describes himself as the one whom the Father has sent. That language is not casual. To be “sent” is to act as an authorized representative. The one sent carries the name, authority, and reputation of the sender. If he fails, the sender is shamed. If he succeeds, the sender is honored.

Jesus says he has come in the Father’s name. He does not seek his own glory but the glory of the One who sent him. He does nothing on his own but only what he sees the Father doing. In other words, where the previous “sons of the Most High” misrepresented God, this Son represents Him perfectly.

The miracles and the “I am” statements are not merely about establishing Jesus’ identity. They are about restoring the Father’s honor.

When unjust rulers failed to feed the poor, the world could conclude that the Most High does not care for the hungry. But when Jesus multiplies bread and says, “I am the bread of life,” the Father’s compassion is put on display. God is not indifferent. He provides abundantly.

When corrupt leaders walked in darkness, the world could assume that God Himself operates in secrecy and injustice. But when Jesus opens blind eyes and declares, “I am the light of the world,” the Father’s truth and purity shine visibly. God is not the author of darkness. He exposes it.

When shepherds exploited the flock, it reflected poorly on the Shepherd of Israel. But when Jesus lays down his life as the good shepherd, the Father’s heart is revealed as self-giving and protective. The world sees what divine authority truly looks like.

Even the cross, which at first glance appears to be shame, becomes the ultimate restoration of honor. In John’s Gospel, Jesus speaks of the cross as glorification. Why? Because in his obedience unto death, he reveals the Father’s steadfast love and unwavering commitment to justice and mercy. He absorbs violence rather than perpetuating it. He forgives rather than retaliates. He trusts rather than rebels. In that obedience, the Father’s character is vindicated.

And when God raises him from the dead, it is not only a validation of the Son—it is a declaration about Himself. The resurrection proclaims that the Most High stands behind this life, this obedience, this revelation. The faithful Son does not “die like men” in disgrace as the corrupt rulers of Psalm 82 did. Instead, he is vindicated and enthroned, as anticipated in Psalm 2. In him, the Father’s name is publicly honored.

What the failed sons tarnished through injustice, the faithful Son restores through obedience.

This means that when we look at Jesus, we are not only seeing who Jesus is—we are seeing who God has always been. Jesus does not improve upon the Father’s character; he reveals it clearly. He does not compete with the Most High; he glorifies Him. “He who has seen me has seen the Father,” Jesus says, not because he replaces the Father, but because he perfectly reflects Him.

There is something deeply comforting here. The story of Scripture is not a story of a distant God frustrated by failed representatives. It is the story of a faithful God who, when His name was dishonored by unjust rulers and unfaithful sons, sent His own beloved Son to bear that name without blemish. The Father did not abandon His purpose. He fulfilled it personally through the one who would never distort His character.

And this restoration of honor is not abstract theology. It shapes our worship. When we praise Jesus, we are glorifying the Father who sent Him. When we trust the Son, we are trusting the goodness of the Most High. When we proclaim Christ to the world, we are declaring that God is not unjust, not indifferent, not corrupt—but righteous, compassionate, and faithful.

The sending of the Son is, therefore, both revelation and vindication. Revelation, because it shows us what God is truly like. Vindication, because it answers every accusation raised by the failures of previous “sons.”

Where they failed, He succeeded.
Where they darkened God’s name, He illuminated it.
Where they oppressed, He delivered.
Where they died in judgment, He rose in glory.

And through that faithful Son, the honor of the Most High shines again before the nations.

This theme becomes especially important when we turn to John 10, because it is there that the debate over Jesus’ divinity becomes explicit. In that chapter of the Gospel of John, Jesus declares, “I and the Father are one.” His hearers immediately accuse him of blasphemy: “You, being a man, make yourself God.” It is precisely at this moment that Jesus reaches back to Psalm 82 and quotes it: “Is it not written in your Law, ‘I said, you are gods’?”

That move is not evasive. It is revelatory.

Psalm 82 had already established that those appointed by the Most High to act in His name could be called “gods”—not because they were the Most High Himself, but because they bore delegated authority. They were agents. Representatives. They were to reflect His justice and carry out His will. Their tragedy was not that they claimed too much divinity, but that they failed to represent the Most High faithfully.

When Jesus appeals to Psalm 82, he is not lowering his claim; he is clarifying its category. He continues: “If he called them gods to whom the word of God came—and Scripture cannot be broken—do you say of him whom the Father sanctified and sent into the world, ‘You are blaspheming,’ because I said, ‘I am the Son of God’?”

Notice the emphasis: sanctified and sent.

To be sanctified is to be set apart. To be sent is to be commissioned. These are agency words. They speak of authorization and representation. Jesus grounds his claim not in abstract metaphysics but in mission. He is the one uniquely set apart and commissioned by the Father. If lesser judges, who received the word of God, could be called “gods” in Psalm 82, how much more appropriate is the title for the one whom the Father has consecrated and sent?

This reframes the entire apologetic discussion. The issue in John 10 is not whether Jesus is claiming to be the Father—the Most High, Elyon. Throughout the Gospel, Jesus carefully distinguishes himself from the Father. He says the Father is greater than he. He prays to the Father. He speaks of returning to the Father. He does not collapse the distinction between the Sender and the Sent. The Father remains the source, the origin, the One whom Jesus calls “the only true God.”

Rather, the issue is representation. If the Father’s name had been tarnished by unjust sons, then the coming of the faithful Son is the restoration of that name. Jesus’ unity with the Father—“I and the Father are one”—is unity of will, purpose, and action. The very next line clarifies this: “The works that I do in my Father’s name bear witness about me.” The unity is visible in works. It is functional, relational, covenantal.

This does not reduce Jesus’ divinity; it defines it within biblical categories. Divinity in this context is not first about metaphysical essence but about divine agency. It is about carrying God’s authority faithfully and perfectly. In the ancient world, an authorized agent could act fully in the name of the one who sent him. To receive the agent was to receive the sender. To reject the agent was to reject the sender. That is precisely the language Jesus uses.

If anything, this strengthens the claim rather than weakening it. For no previous son of the Most High had ever embodied this role without failure. All others fell short. All others died “like men” under judgment. But here is one who does not misuse authority, who does not distort the Father’s character, who does not seek his own glory. He says plainly, “If I am not doing the works of my Father, then do not believe me.” His divinity is inseparable from obedience.

This understanding also safeguards the supremacy of the Father as Elyon, the Most High. The Father is never displaced. He is never overshadowed. In fact, the more clearly we see Jesus as the faithful divine agent, the more brightly the Father’s glory shines. Jesus does not compete for glory; he returns it. He does not undermine the Most High; he reveals Him.

To say that Jesus possesses a real but derivative divinity—rooted in agency, representation, and sanctified mission—is not to diminish him. It is to honor the biblical framework he himself invokes. He stands above all previous sons because he fulfills perfectly what they failed to do. He bears the name without staining it. He carries authority without abusing it. He reflects the Most High without distorting Him.

And this has profound apologetic force. When critics claim that affirming Jesus’ divinity undermines monotheism, we can answer that the Gospel of John preserves both divine agency and divine supremacy. The Father remains the one true God, the source of all authority. The Son is the uniquely sanctified and sent representative who perfectly manifests that authority. His divinity is not rivalry; it is revelation.

Indeed, the glory of the Son is the glory of faithful obedience. It is the glory of one who carries the name of the Most High worthily. It is the glory of perfect representation.

In sending him, the Father did not multiply gods; He restored His name. He did not divide His glory; He displayed it. Through the faithful Son, the world sees what the Most High is truly like. And in honoring the Son, we honor the Father who sanctified and sent him.

At this point, thoughtful objections usually arise. Some will say, “But John 1:1 settles the matter. It plainly says the Word was God.” Others will respond, “No, the Greek allows it to mean ‘a god.’” Still others will argue that John 1:18 calls Jesus the only God, and therefore collapses all distinction between Father and Son. These are not trivial questions. They go to the heart of how we read the opening of the Gospel of John and whether it coheres with the framework Jesus himself invokes in Psalm 82.

If we are to respond apologetically and faithfully, we must look carefully at the Greek text itself and read it in the light of the scriptural categories John assumes.

John 1:1 reads: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” In Greek, it is: En archē ēn ho Logos, kai ho Logos ēn pros ton Theon, kai Theos ēn ho Logos.

The second clause is crucial: ho Logos ēn pros ton Theon. Here “God” appears as ton Theon—with the definite article. This clearly refers to a specific person: the God with whom the Word was. In the narrative of the Gospel, this is unmistakably the Father. The Word is “with” Him, in relationship to Him.

But in the third clause, the order shifts: kai Theos ēn ho Logos. Here “Theos” lacks the definite article. John does not write ho Theos ēn ho Logos (“the God was the Word”), which would equate the Word exhaustively with the one he just mentioned. Instead, he places Theos first in the sentence, without the article, emphasizing quality or category.

This grammatical distinction is not accidental. Greek has ways of expressing identity and ways of expressing nature. By omitting the article, John avoids saying that the Word is identical to the Father (which would collapse the distinction he just made), while still affirming that the Word truly belongs in the category of “God.”

This is precisely where the Psalm 82 framework becomes illuminating. In Hebrew Scripture, there is a clear distinction between the Most High—Elyon—and those who are called elohim because they bear His authority. There is one who is supreme, and there are those who participate derivatively in divine authority. The term elohim can function both for the Most High and for His appointed representatives, depending on context.

John’s Greek mirrors this flexibility. Ho Theos—“the God”—in John consistently refers to the Father as the ultimate source. But Theoswithout the article can describe the Word as truly divine in nature, without equating Him with the Father as the Most High.

Thus, the text neither reduces Jesus to “a god” in the sense of a rival deity, nor collapses Him into the person of the Father. It affirms that the Word shares in divine reality, yet stands in relationship to the One who is “the God.” This fits perfectly within the category Jesus himself invokes in John 10: a divinity grounded in sanctification, sending, and faithful representation.

Objections also arise around John 1:18. Many modern translations render it, “No one has ever seen God; the only begotten God, who is at the Father’s side, he has made him known.” The Greek phrase is monogenēs Theos in some manuscripts, and monogenēs huios(“only begotten Son”) in others. The textual discussion is complex, but even if we take monogenēs Theos as original, the structure remains significant.

Again, “God” in the first clause—“No one has ever seen God”—refers to the unseen Father. Throughout John, the Father is invisible, transcendent, the source. Then comes the contrast: the uniquely begotten one, who is in the bosom of the Father, has explained Him.

Even if John calls this one Theos, he immediately distinguishes Him from the Father. He is “at the Father’s side.” He is not the one whom no one has seen; He is the revealer of the one no one has seen. His role is interpretive and mediatorial. He “makes Him known.”

This is not metaphysical competition. It is revelatory agency.

Within the Psalm 82 lens, this makes profound sense. The faithful Son stands uniquely in the category of divine representative—far above all previous “sons of the Most High”—yet still oriented toward and deriving from the Father. His divinity is not self-originating. It is relational and commissioned. He is uniquely begotten, uniquely sanctified, uniquely sent.

Thus John 1:1 and John 1:18, read carefully, do not undermine the Father as Elyon, the Most High. Rather, they safeguard both truths simultaneously: the Father is the one true God, the source whom no one has seen; and the Word is truly divine, sharing in God’s nature and authority, yet distinct from and in perfect relationship with the Father.

In apologetic debate, this allows us to avoid two extremes. On one side is a flattening view that erases distinction and effectively makes the Son identical to the Father in person. On the other side is a reductionist view that strips the Son of true divinity and treats Him as a mere creature. John’s Greek—subtle, deliberate, precise—holds a middle course that reflects the scriptural pattern: one Most High God, and a uniquely sanctified Son who fully and faithfully bears His name.

And this brings us back to the heart of the matter. John is not engaging in speculative metaphysics. He is proclaiming good news. The unseen God has been perfectly revealed. The dishonored name has been restored. The faithful Son has come, not to rival the Father, but to make Him known.

When we look at the Word who was with God and was God, we are not seeing a second Most High. We are seeing the perfect image and authorized agent of the Most High. And in honoring Him, we honor the Father who sent Him.

Further objections often arise at this point. Some will say, “If you place Jesus within a Psalm 82 category of divinity—derivative, representative, sent—are you not diminishing Him? Does this not fall short of the high Christology that John clearly presents?” Others will insist, “If John wished merely to speak of agency, he could have done so without calling the Word Theos at all.” Still others will point to statements such as Thomas’s confession, “My Lord and my God,” and argue that this language demands absolute identification of Jesus with the Most High.

These are serious questions, and they deserve careful answers.

First, to say that Jesus’ divinity is grounded in agency and representation is not to reduce Him to a mere creature or prophet. In the framework we have traced—from Psalm 82 through John 10—agency is not a minor concept. It is the very means by which the Most High governs and reveals Himself. The scandal in Psalm 82 is not that the “gods” existed; it is that they failed in their commission. The glory of Jesus in the Gospel of John is that He does not fail.

John’s Gospel consistently heightens Jesus above all previous sons. He is not simply another recipient of the word of God; He is the Word made flesh. He does not merely hear God’s will; He perfectly shares and enacts it. He does not judge unjustly; He judges as the Father judges. He does not die under condemnation for corruption; He lays down His life voluntarily and takes it up again by the Father’s authority.

Thus, the category of agency is not flattening; it is exalted. Jesus is the unique, sanctified, preeminent Son. His divinity is not competitive with the Father’s supremacy but expressive of it.

Another objection suggests that this reading weakens John 1:1 by overemphasizing the absence of the article before Theos. Yet the distinction remains undeniable in the Greek text. John deliberately writes ho Logos ēn pros ton Theon—the Word was with “the God”—and then Theos ēn ho Logos. The shift matters. Had John written ho Theos ēn ho Logos, he would have eliminated the relational distinction he had just established. Instead, he affirms both proximity and participation: the Word is distinct from the Father and yet truly divine.

Others will say that this approach risks dividing worship or undermining devotion to Christ. Yet John’s Gospel never presents honoring the Son as rivaling the Father. In fact, Jesus explicitly says that all must honor the Son just as they honor the Father, because the Father has granted Him that authority. The honor given to the Son returns to the Sender. The devotion is not competitive; it is directional. To see the Son is to see the Father’s glory manifested.

Even Thomas’s confession at the end of the Gospel—“My Lord and my God”—does not collapse the Father into the Son. By that point, the narrative has consistently distinguished between Jesus and “my Father and your Father, my God and your God.” Thomas’s confession recognizes the risen Christ as fully sharing in the divine authority and presence of God. It is the climactic acknowledgment that the faithful Son truly bears the name of God without remainder. Yet the Father remains the one whom Jesus calls “my God.” The relational order is preserved.

And this brings us to the Gospel’s stated purpose. Near its conclusion, John tells us why he has written: “These are written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.”

Notice what John does not say. He does not say he has written so that we may believe Jesus is the Father. He does not frame the goal in abstract metaphysical terms. He directs us to confess that Jesus is the Christ—the anointed one of Psalm 2—and the Son of God, the uniquely sanctified and sent representative of the Most High.

To believe that Jesus is the Christ is to recognize that He fulfills Israel’s hopes: the righteous king, the faithful shepherd, the obedient Son. To believe that He is the Son of God is to acknowledge that He uniquely bears the divine name and authority. And to believe in His name is to entrust ourselves to the authority and saving power granted to Him by the Father.

Life, in John’s Gospel, is not found in solving metaphysical puzzles. It is found in relational trust. It is found in recognizing that the Father has acted decisively through His faithful Son to restore His honor and to reveal His character. It is found in coming through the Son to the Father, whom He makes known.

Thus the apologetic force of this reading is profound. It preserves monotheism by upholding the Father as the Most High, the unseen source of all. It affirms the true divinity of the Son as the uniquely begotten, sanctified, and sent revealer. It makes sense of John’s careful Greek distinctions. It honors Jesus’ own appeal to Psalm 82. And it keeps the Gospel’s purpose in view.

John did not write to provoke endless ontological speculation. He wrote so that men and women might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God—and, believing, might have life in His name. The faithful Son has come. The name of the Most High has been vindicated. The invisible God has been made known.

And the invitation remains: to believe, to behold, and to live.

In the name of the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.


AI prompted by Stephen D Green, February 2026.