Becoming Children of God (John 1:12-13)
The apostle John, in his prologue to his Gospel, informs his readers about the coming of Jesus into the world (John 1:1-18). He, who calls the Word in verse 1 and the Son of God in verse 14, became man and revealed his divine glory in a life marked by grace and truth. People responded to him by either receiving him or rejecting him. Why should they have received Jesus? John gives two reasons. First, Jesus, as the Son of God, participated in the work of creation; it was through him that the world had been created, but they had not recognised who he was. Second, he came as the Messiah to his own people of Israel, but in the main they did not receive him as such. So he was rejected despite giving evidence that he was both the Creator and the Messiah, with the evidence being the miracles that he performed. Yet there were some who received him, and they were given by him the right to become children of God. John is describing those who responded to Jesus while he was here on earth, that is,