This is the first detailed study of Johannine mysticism against a Palestinian Jewish background has been previously undertaken. This book investigates whether there was a "mystical" practice in first-century Palestine and whether John can be better understood in the light of such practice, if there was any. In analysis, two strands of Jewish mysticism, the early forms of Ma`aseh Merkabah and of Ma`aseh Bereshit, emerge as existing in first-century Palestine. While the former narrates by means of Ezek. 1 the experience of seeing God in His kingly glory, the latter describes the same experience by using Gen. 1. This book consists of three parts. Part one analyses Hellenistic mysticism as expressed by the Hermetica and Hellenistic-Jewish mysticism as presented by Philo. Part two traces the important elements of Merkabah mysticism from the later Hekhalot literature and the Jewish and Christian writings belonging to 2 cent. BCE - 1 cent. CE by defining the term "mysticism" in terms of the fourteen aspects of Jewish mysticism, an exegetical study of seven themes is undertaken in Part Three. The study shows that the conceptual parallels in John with Hellenistic mysticism and Hellenistic-Jewish mysticism are very slender, but indicates John's polemical motive against the Merkabah mystics of his time. He calls them to believe in Jesus as the Christ, the Son of God, by proclaiming that the divine glory, claimed by them to be revealed in human-like form on the throne, is now visible in the historical person, Jesus, particularly in his death on the Cross. Thus Jewish Throne-mysticism seems to have been reinterpreted by John as Cross-mysticism.
Jey Kanagaraj is the Professor of New Testament and the Head of the Department of Biblical Studies at Union Biblical Seminary, Pune and the Associate Pastor of St. Mary's Church (CNI), Pune, India.
ForewordPrefaceAbbreviations1. Introduction: Is John a 'Mystical' Document?Part I: Hellenistic and Hellenistic-Jewish Mysticism2. Hellenistic Mysticism3. Hellenistic-Jewish Mysticism as in PhiloPart II: Palestinian Mysticism in the First Century CE4. Mystical Features in the Hekhalot Literature5. Evidence of Merkabah Mysticism in Pre-Christian Writings6. Evidence of Merkabah Mysticism in the Christian Era7. The Apocalyptic Literature of the Late First Century8. The Yohanan Ben Zakkai Tradition9. The Influence of Key Passages from Scripture10. Conclusion (for Part II)Part III: 'Mysticism' in the Gospel of John11. Introduction12. The Ascent-Motif in John13. A Vision of God on the Throne14. The 'Sending of the Son' in John15. The Johannine Idea of Indwelling16. The Light-Motif in John17. The Johannine Logos18. The Esoteric Elements in John19. ConclusionBibliographyIndex of ReferencesIndex of Authors