Yes, John in John chapter 1 and John 17:5
the beginning. Jhn_1:2; Jhn_1:15, *Jhn_8:58; *Jhn_17:5, *Gen_1:1, Psa_90:2, *Pro_8:22-31, *Isa_9:6; Isa_43:13, +*Mic_5:2, Act_11:15 g. Eph_3:9, Php_4:15 g. *Col_1:17; *Col_1:18, 2Th_2:13, Heb_1:10; Heb_7:3; **Heb_13:8, 1Jn_1:1, Rev_1:2; Rev_1:4; *Rev_1:8; Rev_1:11; Rev_1:17; *Rev_3:14; Rev_21:6; *Rev_22:12; *Rev_22:13.
was the Word. Note.—No title could be conceived more clearly expressive not only of the pre-existence of Christ, but of his essential Divinity as co-eternal with God than this—The Word, ο λογος;—for as the word of a person co-exists with himself, and is that in which the mind or thought of man is embodied, in order to be declared or made known, and by which the spirit in man is revealed, so did Christ in his eternal and pre-existent nature as "The Word" co-exist with God, who in him also is embodied for manifestation, declared and revealed, as below, Jhn_1:18—’the same, the self, the same very self as thought, or any act of the mind.’
Moreover that "The Word" or "Logos" denotes a person, and not merely an attribute—as Wisdom or Reason—is evident from this passage, as well as all the places where mentioned in the references here given. For evidence that by "The Voice" or "Word of Jehovah," the Jews at and before the coming of Christ had been accustomed to designate the Messiah, see Townsend’s Dissertation on the Logos, N.T. Chronology, pp. 7 and seq. (William De Burgh, New Marginal Readings and References to the Gospels, p. 222). FS101, +Deu_32:42, Jhn_1:14, Isa_49:1-2, Heb_4:12-13; Heb_6:1, 1Pe_1:25, 1Jn_1:1-2; 1Jn_5:7, *Rev_19:13.
and. FS148, +Gen_8:22.
with God. Jhn_1:2; Jhn_1:18, Jhn_3:12; Jhn_14:10; Jhn_16:28; *Jhn_17:5, *Pro_8:22-31, *Zec_13:7, Col_2:2, 1Jn_1:2.
and the Word. FS101, +Deu_32:42, By Hyperbaton, the subject, "the Word," being defined by the article which is prefixed to it, can be placed at the end of two of the clauses, and in each case we are to put the stress on "the Word." FS77, +Exo_3:19, Bengel notes that "when the predicate precedes the subject, there is an epitasis (an emphatic enlargement of the subject)" as also in Jhn_4:24 (New Testament Word Studies, vol. 1, p. 543).
*Jhn_10:30-33; +**Jhn_20:28, +*Psa_45:6, +*Isa_7:14; +*Isa_9:6; Isa_40:9-11, Mat_1:23, *Rom_9:5, **Php_2:6 note. *1Ti_3:16, **Tit_2:13, *Heb_1:8-13, **2Pe_1:1 g. 1Jn_5:7; 1Jn_5:20.
was God. Not "a god," for the lack of the Greek article here does not make "God" indefinite, but determines which term ("Word" or "God") is to be the subject of the linking verb "was." Greek word order is somewhat more flexible than English, for in English statement sentences the predicate nominative always follows the linking verb. But the literal order of the Greek words here is "and God was the Word" (kai theos ēn o logos), the subject "Word" follows the verb, and the predicate nominative "God" precedes the verb, the reverse of English word order.
Since this clause uses a linking verb, both the subject and the predicate nominative are in the nominative case, so case endings do not serve to identify the subject in this construction; rather, the article "the" points out the subject of the clause. Greek uses the article "the" to accomplish what English does by word order. Thus, if John had placed the article "the" before "God," the meaning would be "God was the Word;" if he had placed the article "the" before both "Word" and "God," the meaning would be convertible or reversible: it would mean equally "God was the Word," and "The Word was God," but this John did not do.
By placing the article "the" before "Word," "Word" must be the subject of the linking verb "was," and the statement can only be rendered "the Word was God." Just as mistaken is the rendering "the Word was divine," for "God," lacking the article, is not thereby an adjective, or rendered qualitative when it precedes a linking verb followed by a noun which does have the article.
See the note on Mat_27:54 for scholarly documentation and an explanation of this construction known technically as the "anarthrous noun."
Translators and translations which choose to render this phrase
"a god" or "divine," are motivated by
theological, not grammatical, considerations.
The phrase "a god" is particularly objectionable, because it makes Christ a lesser "god," which is polytheism, and contrary to the express declaration of Scripture elsewhere (Deu_32:39).
For clearly if Christ is "a god," then he must be either a "true god" or a "false god." If "true," we assert polytheism; if "false," he is unworthy of our credence. John’s high view of Christ expressed throughout his Gospel, climaxing in the testimony of Thomas, who addressed Christ as "my Lord and my God," is asserted from this opening statement, "the Word was God." There is no legitimate basis for understanding his declaration in any lesser sense than affirming the full deity of our Savior. **Jhn_5:18; +*Jhn_8:35; +*Jhn_8:58; +*Jhn_8:59; +*Jhn_10:30; +*Jhn_10:33; +*%+Jhn_10:34; Jhn_14:7; +**Jhn_20:28, +*Deu_32:39, +*Job_19:26, Isa_7:14; Isa_9:6; *Isa_43:10; **Isa_44:6, **Jer_23:5; **Jer_23:6, +*Mic_5:2, %Act_12:22; **Act_20:28, Rom_9:5, %*2Co_4:4, Eph_5:5 g. **Php_2:6 note. 2Th_1:12 g. 1Ti_3:16, **Tit_2:13 g. +*Heb_1:8, **2Pe_1:1 g. Rev_21:7.
Some extra verses brother and pray you are well and healthy.
J.