Dwell in the Darkness: John's Passion Narrative, Good Friday, and the Education of Desire / David...
David Ford
51.00
2 April 2026
8 April 2026
As Christians enter the most solemn stretch of the liturgical year, theologian David Ford — who spent over twenty years writing his commentary on the Gospel of John — makes the case that no other Gospel prepares you for the cross the way John does. "The right question is not so much what happened on the cross, as who happened on the cross. All through the gospel, every chapter, John is saying — who Jesus is is the most important thing." In this episode with Macie Bridge, Ford reflects on why John's Gospel resists rushing past darkness to get to Easter. Together they discuss what the foot washing reveals about power and humble service; how John's prologue frames the entire passion through the mystery of incarnation; Jesus before Pilate and the priority of truth over empire; the horrific interpretive legacy of antisemitism in Luther, Augustine, and centuries of Christian reading; how the Gospel universalizes identity by rooting it in God rather than lineage; the scene at the cross as the seed of the church; and what Ford calls the sheer superabundance of grace — loving "utterly, intimately, vulnerably, mutually."
Episode Highlights
"The one thing one mustn't do with these days is see the resurrection as just coming down off the cross a few days later. That trivializes the cross."
"Jesus is portrayed as being utterly one with God and utterly one with us. He's mortal. He's flesh. He can weep. He suffers."
"The right question is not so much what happened on the cross, as who happened on the cross."
"We are invited into this extraordinary intensity of the divine glory — but it's a glory that is utterly, utterly realistic about darkness, sin, death, suffering, and evil."
"The whole gospel, I think, is an education of desire."
About David Ford
David F. Ford, OBE, is Regius Professor of Divinity Emeritus at the University of Cambridge, where he held the chair from 1991 to 2014, and a Fellow of Selwyn College. He is the founding director of the Cambridge Inter-Faith Programme and a co-founder of the practice of Scriptural Reasoning. He has served as theological adviser to three Archbishops of Canterbury. His books include The Gospel of John: A Theological Commentary (Christianity Today 2023 Book Award Finalist), Theology: A Very Short Introduction, The Shape of Living, and most recently Meeting God in John. His commentary on John's Gospel took over twenty years to write and has been translated into Korean. He was awarded an OBE for services to theological scholarship and inter-faith relations in 2013. (Sources: University of Cambridge Faculty of Divinity page; Center of Theological Inquiry profile, Feb. 2026.) Ford does not appear to maintain a personal website or public social media.
Helpful Links and Resources
Meeting God in John: Inspiration and Encouragement from the Fourth Gospel, by David F. Ford https://www.amazon.com/Meeting-God-John-Inspiration-Encouragement/dp/1587437066
The Gospel of John: A Theological Commentary, by David F. Ford https://www.amazon.com/Gospel-John-Theological-Commentary/dp/1540964086
For the Life of the World Episode 224: How to Read the Gospel of John / David Ford https://faith.yale.edu/media/how-to-read-the-gospel-of-john
Scriptural Reasoning http://www.scripturalreasoning.org/
Denise Levertov, "On a Theme from Julian's Chapter XX" — discussed at Image Journal https://imagejournal.org/article/denise-levertov-a-memoir-and-appreciation/
Show Notes
• Why John's Gospel is the "matured gospel" — distilled from years of meditation, eyewitness reports, and rewriting
• "From his fullness we've all received grace upon grace" — the theme of superabundance running through John
• John wrote for both beginners and the experienced — simple Greek, inexhaustible depth
• Ford's biggest hope after 20 years writing his commentary: that readers would become "habitual rereaders" of John
• The prologue as the most influential short text in the history of Christianity
• "In the beginning was the Word" — the only framework for understanding Jesus is God and the whole of reality
• "The Word was made flesh" — utterly one with God, utterly one with us
• The farewell discourses of chapters 13–17 as probably the most profound teaching in the New Testament
• Chapter 17 as the most profound chapter in the Bible — Jesus' final prayer before the passion
• The foot washing: "All things having been given into his hands — and then what the hands do is wash the feet of his disciples"
• "Loving utterly, intimately, vulnerably, mutually" — the heading Ford gave to Maundy Thursday; used as the title of the Korean translation of his commentary
• "If you want to be great, wash feet"
• The "as" in John's Gospel — love as Jesus loved, sent as the Father sent — requiring us to...
