'Logos' (an extract from RDB files)
We are told in an article by Frederick C. Grant of the Union Theological Seminary, New York City.
"Another term found in koine [New Testament] Greek and adopted by the early Christians is Logos (Word), meaning...the divine mediator between God and the world (John 1:1-18) or the divine thought or utterance, by which - or by whom - all things hold together (Colossians 1:17); that is, the One who is God's agent in the creation and the continued existence of the universe (Hebrews 1:3). Such a term is not entirely philosophical: its real background...is not Stoicism or Stoical Platonism so much as it is the theosophical or 'mysteriosophical' theorizing of various religious cults and movements found here and there in the ancient Near East [the most influential and best-known of these being that of the Jewish theosophy of Philo - RDB]." - Encyclopedia Americana, 1957, vol. 3, p. 654.
"The outstanding Alexandrian Jew [or, 'the chief representative of Alexandrian Judaism' - J. B. Lightfoot's commentary: Epistle to the Philippians, p. 130] is, of course, Philo Judaeus (20 B.C.-A.D. 50). .... It has been said rightly that the history of Christian philosophy 'began not with a Christian but a Jew,' namely Philo of Alexandria." - p. 35, The Rise of Christianity, W. H. C. Frend (trinitarian), 1985, Fortress Press.
Eminent trinitarian scholar Dr. E. F. Scott writes:
“The prologue [of the Gospel of John] consists of a succinct statement of a Philonic doctrine of the Logos, which is forthwith identified with Jesus Christ.” - p. 54, The Fourth Gospel, Its purpose and Theology.
“…. every verse in the Prologue offers striking analogies to corresponding sayings of Philo. We have seen reason to believe that John had acquainted himself directly with the works of the Alexandrian thinker, and consciously derived from them.” - p. 154, The Fourth Gospel, Its purpose and Theology, E. F. Scott, D.D.
"Philo, the famous Jewish philosopher, .... is the most important example of the Hellenized Jews outside Palestine... he believed wholly in the Mosaic scriptures and in one God whose chief mediator with the world is the Logos" - Philo, vol. 5, Loeb Classical Library, Harvard University Press, 1988.
Speaking of theosophy and Philo,
We find that Philo Judaeus was a "Jewish philosopher: b. about 20 B.C.; d. not later than 54 A.D."
"...his philosophy was thus strictly a theosophy. It rested, as its direct foundation, on the Jewish scriptures as an inspired revelation...."
According to Philo, "Between God and the world there is an intermediate being, the Logos." And "The Logos is the most universal of all beings except God."
Philo also (unlike the pagan Greek Stoic philosophers) "gives the Logos the titles of Son of God [John 1:34], paraclete{1} ['Comforter,' 'Advocate,' 'Helper' - 1 John 2:1], and mediator between God and man [1 Tim. 2:5]." - Americana, 1957, v. 21, pp. 766, 767.
Philo also:
"differentiates the Logos from God as his work or image [2 Cor. 4:4]." Philo's Logos is also "first-born son [Ro. 8:29]....divine [a god - Jn 1:1] but not God, is with God [Jn 1:1], is light [Jn 1:4],...manna [Jn 6:31-51],...and shepherd [Jn 10:11]." - Encyclopaedia Britannica, p. 251, vol. 14, 1968. (Cf. Hastings Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics, vol. 8, p. 135.)
And,
"Philo describes the Logos in terms which often bear striking resemblance to NT descriptions of Christ .... [f.n.:] Philo distinguishes God as the cause by which [and]..., the Logos as that through which (di' hou),... the cosmos originated" [Jn 1:3; 1 Cor. 8:6. And to Philo the Logos] is "even qeoV ['a god'] in a subordinate sense" [Jn 1:1] and one "from which drawing water one may find eternal life instead of death [Jn 4:14]." - A Dictionary of the Bible, p. 135, vol. 3, Hastings, ed., Hendrickson Publ., 1988 printing.
We also see that:
"Philo....made use of it [Logos] on the basis of such passages as Ps. 33:6 to express the means whereby the transcendent God may be the Creator of the universe and the Revealer of himself to Moses and the Patriarchs. .... On the side of biblical exegesis the Logos is identified with the Angel of the Lord...and is described...as High Priest [Heb. 6:20], Captain and Steersman, Advocate (Paraclete) and the son of God." - p. 703, New Bible Dictionary.
In fact, Philo even said that
"the Logos is the eldest son [first-born or created] of God." [Ro. 8:29] - The New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology (trinitarian), p. 639, vol. 3 (also vol. 1, p. 178), 1986, Zondervan.
(Continued in part 2)
