Digital Logos Edition
The text of John 14:2–3 bristles with difficulties. It describes the redemptive work of Christ in terms which pertain to the family and its intimate personal relationships. However, careful examination also reveals significant temple implications. The text states equivalently that the New Temple of the risen Jesus is the way of access to the heavenly temple of the Father’s house. Moreover, the term “place” is taken to mean sanctuary or temple.
Extensive arguments support this interpretation by the use of a method which distinguishes two levels of meaning in the text, a pre-Paschal and a post-Paschal respectively. Part 1 of this study treats directly of the Jewish background, with a preliminary chapter which opens up the rich possibilities of the text. Part 2 deals with the Johannine context, the deeper post-Paschal meaning, and the links with other Johannine temple texts. A final chapter shows the unity between the two levels of understanding. Such an interpretation points to the temple as an important theme of the Johannine farewell discourses which cannot be adequately explained without reference to it.
In the Logos edition, all Scripture passages in The House with Many Rooms are tagged and appear on mouseover, and all Scripture passages link to your favorite Bible translation in your library. With Logos’ advanced features, you can perform powerful searches by topic or Scripture reference—finding, for example, every mention of “the Promised Land” or “victory over sin.”
“Indeed to understand 14:2–3 in this sense would be to go beyond the spatial imagery of the text to the deeper reality of a spiritual ‘temple’, or ‘sanctuary’, like the risen body of Jesus.” (Page 38)
“New Temple of the risen Jesus is the way of access to the heavenly temple of the Father’s house.” (Page 21)
“The Goal of the Disciples’ Journey: Reunion with Jesus in the Father’s House” (Page 43)
“Some kind of at-one-ment with Jesus is clearly promised.” (Page 43)