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Why is the cleansing of the temple in the Gospel of John (John 2) described at the beginning rather than at the end?

Why is the cleansing of the temple in the Gospel of John (John 2) described at the beginning rather than at the end?

Church 1 min read updated 10 May 2026

A reader moving from the Synoptic Gospels to the Gospel of John notices a striking contrast: the cleansing of the temple in Matthew and Mark is at the end of the ministry, while in John it is at the beginning. What is this—a chronological error or theological artistry?

Two possible explanations

Option 1: Two different incidents. Jesus cleansed the temple twice—at the beginning and at the end of His ministry. This is entirely realistic: the corruption of the merchants in the court quickly returned, and Jesus ministered through several Passovers.

Option 2: John’s theological arrangement. John is known for selecting material and arranging it in a way that reflects a theological purpose rather than a strictly chronological one. Placing the cleansing at the beginning emphasizes: from the very beginning Jesus comes as Judge and Restorer of Worship.

What the text shows

“Zeal for Your house will consume Me.” John 2:17

The disciples remembered Psalm 69:9. Jesus did not come with soft compromise, but with zeal for what the place of worship should be. Regardless of the chronology, the theological meaning is the same: money and trade have no place where a person meets with God.

Practical meaning

  • “Contradictions” between the Gospels are often different theological emphases, not errors.
  • Divine inspiration does not mean one chronological order—it means reliability and spiritual truthfulness.
  • A message for us: is there anything in the “house of our heart” that Christ would want to cleanse?

Jesus overturning the tables of the money changers does not contradict Jesus embracing children. It is the same Christ, in whom the fire of holiness and the warmth of love are united.

The mission of the Seventh-day Adventist Church is to convey the message of God's great love for every person, leading them to accept Jesus as their personal Savior, which in turn motivates every believer to make changes in their own lives and serve God and their neighbors.

Southern Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church

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