AN
It is not material to enquire when and
where this gospel was written; we are sure that it was given by
inspiration of God to John, the brother of James, one of the twelve
apostles, distinguished by the honourable character of that
disciple whom Jesus loved, one of the first three of the
worthies of the Son of David, whom he took to be the witnesses of
his retirements, particularly of his transfiguration and his agony.
The ancients tell us that John lived longest of all the twelve
apostles, and was the only one of them that died a natural death,
all the rest suffering martyrdom; and some of them say that he
wrote this gospel at Ephesus, at the request of the ministers of
the several churches of Asia, in opposition to the heresy of
Corinthus and the Ebionites, who held that our Lord was a mere
man. It seems most probable that he wrote it before his
banishment into the isle of Patmos, for there he wrote his
Apocalypse, the close of which seems designed for the
closing up of the canon of scripture; and, if so, this gospel was
not written after. I cannot therefore give credit to those later
fathers, who say that he wrote it in his banishment, or after his
return from it, many years after the destruction of Jerusalem; when
he was ninety years old, saith one of them; when he was a hundred,
saith another of them. However, it is clear that he wrote last of
the four evangelists, and, comparing his gospel with theirs, we may
observe, 1. That he relates what they had omitted; he
brings up the rear, and his gospel is as the rearward
or gathering host; it gleans up what they has passed by.
Thus there was a later collection of Solomon's wise sayings
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