Context: John 1:14 is the climactic assertion of the Fourth Gospel's prologue (1:1-18): "And the Word became flesh and dwelt (ἐσκήνωσεν) among us, and we have seen his glory (δόξαν), glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth." Having opened with cosmic Logos theology ("In the beginning was the Word… and the Word was God," v. 1), John brings the prologue to its central confession: this eternal, divine Word has taken on human flesh and tabernacled among us. The verb ἐσκήνωσεν ("tabernacled," "pitched his tent") is not an accidental metaphor but a deliberate lexical choice saturated with OT sanctuary theology. John writes as a first-century Jew who has seen Christ and recognizes that what the Sinai tabernacle and Solomonic temple represented in shadow has now become embodied reality: God dwelling among His people in flesh. The first-person plural "we have seen his glory" identifies the apostolic witnesses with those Israelites who saw the kavod-cloud at Sinai (Exodus 24:16-17; 40:34-35) and at Solomon's temple dedication (1 Kings 8:11) — but with the escalating claim that what Moses and the Levitical priests saw shrouded in cloud, the apostles saw uncovered in Jesus Christ. "Grace and truth" (χάρις καὶ ἀλήθεια) deliberately renders the covenant-fidelity language of Exodus 34:6 (חֶסֶד וֶאֱמֶת) that YHWH proclaimed to Moses on Sinai — the very passage in which Moses asked to see God's glory.
Greek Key Terms:
OT Background: John 1:14 packs several OT sanctuary-streams into a single sentence. (1) Tabernacling presence: Exodus 25:8-9 states the purpose of the sanctuary — "let them make me a sanctuary (מִקְדָּשׁ), that I may dwell (שָׁכַנְתִּי) in their midst" — and Exodus 40:34-38 narrates its realization as the glory-cloud fills the tabernacle. The LXX translates שָׁכַן with σκηνόω, the very verb John uses. (2) Covenant dwelling-formula: Leviticus 26:11-12 articulates the Sinai covenant's telos — "I will make my dwelling (מִשְׁכָּן) among you… and I will walk among you and will be your God, and you shall be my people." John's "dwelt among us" maps directly onto this Levitical formula. (3) Visible kavod: Exodus 33:18 records Moses' request "show me your glory (כָּבוֹד)" — a request granted only in veiled form (33:20-23). The apostolic "we have seen his glory" (ἐθεασάμεθα τὴν δόξαν αὐτοῦ) deliberately echoes and escalates Moses' experience. (4) Grace and truth: Exodus 34:6's "abounding in steadfast love (חֶסֶד) and faithfulness (אֱמֶת)" — the content of the glory YHWH proclaimed to Moses — is now seen embodied in Christ. (5) Ezekiel's glory-return: After the departure of the glory in Ezekiel 10-11, the prophet envisions its return (43:1-5); John announces its return not to a rebuilt stone sanctuary but to a human body.
Connections:
Christological Connection: John 1:14 is the Christological center of the entire temple-ecclesiology trajectory. Everything the tabernacle and temple were designed to accomplish — God dwelling with His people, divine glory made visible, covenant fellowship restored — has reached its definitive fulfillment in the incarnation. John does not say that Christ is like the tabernacle; he says Christ is the tabernacling. The Word did not merely enter the tabernacle or fill the temple; the Word became the flesh in which God tabernacles, making the incarnate Son the locus at which all prior sanctuary arrangements converge and all subsequent sanctuary realities radiate.
The escalation over the Mosaic sanctuary is categorical on every front. Medium: the tabernacle was constructed from gold, wood, and fabric according to a heavenly pattern (Exodus 25:40); Christ is the heavenly reality itself become incarnate. Presence: the kavod filled the tabernacle intermittently and was eventually withdrawn (Ezekiel 10-11); in Christ "the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily" (Colossians 2:9), permanently and without measure. Access: the tabernacle's glory was so overwhelming that Moses could not enter (Exodus 40:35); the incarnate Word invites, "Come to me, all who are weary" (Matthew 11:28). Vision: Moses was granted only a veiled glimpse of glory (Exodus 33:18-23); the apostles "have seen his glory" face-to-face ("we have beheld," ἐθεασάμεθα). Duration: the tabernacle was portable and temporary; Christ's body, destroyed and raised (John 2:19-21), is the indestructible sanctuary.
The already/not-yet structure is built into the verse. Already, the Word has tabernacled among us and the apostolic witnesses have beheld His glory. Through the Spirit, this tabernacling continues: Christ dwells in His people (John 14:23), who are being "built together into a dwelling place for God by the Spirit" (Ephesians 2:22). Not yet, the consummation arrives when "the dwelling place of God is with man" without any veil or remainder (Revelation 21:3) and "the Lamb" is the temple of the New Jerusalem (Revelation 21:22). John 1:14 stands at the hinge of redemptive history: the moment when the sanctuary-trajectory that runs from Eden through tabernacle and temple finally arrives at its telos in a person — and begins its outward expansion into the church and new creation.
Connection Method(s): Typology (Direct, Forward-Looking — fulfillment pole) — the Jerusalem tabernacle/temple as a divinely instituted sanctuary prefigured Christ as the true dwelling place of God, and John 1:14 explicitly deploys tabernacle vocabulary (σκηνόω = שָׁכַן) and glory-language (δόξα = כָּבוֹד) to announce that Christ is the antitype. All five essential characteristics are met: (1) Analogical correspondence — Christ and the tabernacle both function as the locus of divine dwelling, glory-manifestation, and covenant presence; (2) Historicity — both the historical Mosaic tabernacle and the historical Incarnation are real events; (3) Escalation — incarnate deity vastly exceeds a gold-and-wood structure; permanent dwelling exceeds intermittent presence; open access exceeds restricted access; (4) Pointing-forwardness — the heavenly pattern of Exodus 25:40, the covenantally conditional dwelling of Leviticus 26, and Ezekiel's departed/returning glory all indicated that the sanctuary pointed beyond itself; (5) Retrospective interpretation — John 1:14 itself makes the connection explicit using the LXX's σκηνόω/δόξα lexicon. Also Longitudinal Theme — John 1:14 is a pivotal node in the canon-wide divine-dwelling motif, gathering Eden, tabernacle, and temple streams and launching the church-as-temple and new-creation-as-temple streams. Also Promise-Fulfillment — the covenantal dwelling-promise of Leviticus 26:11-12, the greater-glory promise of Haggai 2:7-9, and the eternal-sanctuary promise of Ezekiel 37:26-28 all receive their inaugurating fulfillment here. ANTI-DEFAULT CHECK: Typology is warranted as primary because John deliberately uses tabernacle vocabulary to identify Christ as the sanctuary-antitype; this is not merely a longitudinal theme passing through but a direct typological fulfillment claim. The three methods operate together, with Typology as the dominant register.
Trajectory: Temple Ecclesiology
Trajectory Table: 158 - Temple Ecclesiology (Church as God's Dwelling)