The Trinity & Diety Of Christ
Notes
Transcript
tHE
trinity
and dEity
of
cHrist
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Crossroads Full Gospel
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CONTENTS
THE TRINITY & DEITY OF CHRIST.....................................1
THE TRINITY......................................................................1
THE HOLY ONE..................................................................4
THE DIMENSIONAL FACTOR..........................................7
THE PRE-EXISTENT CHRIST.........................................15
tHE trinity & dEity of cHrist
THE TRINITY
The term “Trinity” is generally acknowledged to have first been
used by the church father Tertullian (A.D.145-220), and is derived
from the Latin “trinitas.” It is a term that denotes “the specifically
Christian doctrine that God is a unity of three persons: Father, Son
and Holy Spirit. The word itself does not occur in the Bible.” 1
There is one true triune God, as we have learned, eternally coexistent in three persons Who constitute the Holy Trinity: God the
Father, God the Word and God the Holy Spirit. These three dwell
together in perfect unity forming one heavenly government called
God, and each of the three Divine persons we recognize to be God.
“All three Persons of the Godhead are Divine and can be spoken of
individually as “God” and collectively as “one God in the sense of
unity.” 2
We can confirm the existence of the Trinity from scripture:
1. JOHN 20:17 . . . (Jesus said), “ ‘I am returning to
My Father and your Father, to My God and your God
(God the Father).’ ”
This confirms that the Father is God - God the Father.
2. JOHN 1:1 In the beginning was the Word, and the
Word was with God, and the Word was God (God the
Word).
JOHN 1:14 And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt
among us, (and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the
only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.
These verses confirm that the Word is God - God the Word,
and that He took on flesh and became all man while still being all
God.
1
3. ACTS 5:3 But Peter said, “Ananias, why has Satan
filled your heart to lie to the Holy Spirit . . .
ACTS 5:4 . . . Why have you conceived this thing in
your heart? You have not lied unto men but unto God
(God the Holy Spirit).”
This confirms that the Holy Spirit is God - God the Holy
Spirit. There are also many other scriptures which confirm the truth
of the Trinity, the triune government of God.
“. . .All three Persons of the Godhead are
Divine and can be spoken of individually
as “God” and collectively as “one God in
the sense of unity. . .”
Thus there are three distinct persons in the Godhead, yet these
three persons still form one God of unity:
1 JOHN 5:7 For there are three that bear record in
heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Spirit: and
these three are one.
MARK 12:29 And Jesus answered him, “The first of all
the commandments is, ‘Hear, O Israel; The Lord our
God is one Lord:’ ” (Deuteronomy 6:4)
GENESIS 1:26 And God said, “Let Us make man in
Our image, after Our likeness (the creation of man was
preceded by a Divine consultation; as well, the pronouns
“Us” and “Our” proclaim the consultation held by the
Three Persons of the Divine Trinity, Who were One in the
creative work; “image” and “likeness” enable us to have
fellowship with God; however, it does not mean we are
gods, or can become gods; “in Our Image after Our
Likeness” actually refers to true Righteousness and
Holiness [Ephesians 4:24]) (E.S.B.): and let them have
dominion over the fish of the sea . . . . ”
2
The triune government of God has always been: one in unity,
one in desire and one in purpose. Each Divine being in the Trinity is
a distinct personality but is identified with the others through the one
Divine Nature. These three persons are equally Divine, uncreated
and uncaused, eternal and omnipotent, omnipresent and omniscient.
The New Testament teaching of Jesus revealed Yahweh, the
Creator - God of the Jews, as Father.
“While the existence of one God as a Trinity of Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit involves concepts beyond our understanding, what is
most important is that in the coming of the Son, we have a stunning
revelation of the fact that God is the Father. This could come only
through Jesus. As Christ said, “No one knows the Son except the
Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and those to
whom the Son chooses to reveal Him” (Mat.11:27; Lk.10:21-22;
Jn.14:1-13). In presenting Himself as Son, Jesus presented an
aspect of God completely unknown before the Incarnation. He spoke
of God as His Father - the One they claimed as their God - saying to
the Jewish leaders, “Though you do not know Him, I know Him”
(Jn.8:54--55).
Only in Jesus do we learn that God is Father. Only in seeking
God as Father do we begin to realize the intimacy of the relationship
that can exist between the Believer and the Lord.” 3
(underlines added)
Israel had known God by many different names but as Father,
only in the sense of Creator (Deuteronomy 32:6). His relationship
with them was corporate rather than individual (S.B.C. John, pg.16).
When Jesus spoke of God as Father, He aroused tremendous hostility
in the religious leaders of the day. The awesome God Yahweh was a
distant God whose name was too holy to be spoken, let alone
identified in the intimate way Jesus did.
The revelation of God as triune came very clearly and
specifically in the New Testament.
“With the Revelation of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Trinity comes
much more into view. . . . The teaching of Jesus is Trinitarian
throughout. He spoke of the Father Who sent Him, of Himself as the
One Who reveals the Father, and the Spirit as the One by Whom He
and the Father work. In fact, the interrelations between Father, Son,
3
and Spirit are emphasized throughout (Jn.14:7, 9-10). He declared
with emphasis: “I will pray the Father and He will give you another
Counselor (Advocate), to be with you forever, even the Spirit of
Truth” (Jn.14:16-26). There is thus a distinction made between the
Persons of the Godhead, and also an identity. The Father Who is
God sent the Son, and the Son Who is God sent the Spirit, Who is
Himself God.
“. . .The teaching of Jesus is Trinitarian
throughout. He spoke of the Father Who
sent Him, of Himself as the One Who
reveals the Father, and the Spirit as the
One by Whom He and the Father
work. . .”
In the Commission given by Christ before His Ascension,
instructing His Disciples to go into the whole world with His
Message, He made specific reference to Baptism as “in the Name of
the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” It is significant
that the Name is One, but within the bounds of the One Name there
are three distinct Persons. In fact, the Trinity as triunity could not be
more clearly expressed (Mat.28:19).
Early Christians knew themselves to be reconciled to God the
Father, and that the reconciliation was secured for them by the
atoning Work of the Son, and that it was mediated to them as an
experience by the Holy Spirit. Thus, the Trinity was to them a fact
before it became a Doctrine.” 4
(underlines added)
THE HOLY ONE
God the Word took on flesh through the virgin birth and
became a human being called Jesus. He was called the Son of God
and the Son of Man, being truly identified with both God and man.
He became, without ceasing to be God (God the Word), a perfect
sinless man. He stripped Himself of the right to use His Godly power
while on earth, including the knowledge He possessed as God the
4
Word, and forsook His heavenly rights as God. Therefore during
Jesus’ earthly ministry, God’s miraculous power was released by the
faith that Jesus obtained as a man.
Jesus possessed the Divine Nature which empowered Him to
walk in fellowship with the Father all the days of His earthly life.
Indeed He said to His disciple Phillip, “He who has seen Me has
seen the Father” (John 14:9), His sacrificial love showing forth the
Father’s nature and character.
“. . .God the Word took on flesh through
the virgin birth and became a human
being called Jesus. He was called the Son
of God and the Son of Man, being truly
identified with both God and man. . .”
After Jesus died on the cross, scripture tells us that the place to
which He descended was Hades - a place of departed spirits of the
dead. But Psalm 16:10 and Acts 2:31 reveal that Jesus’ soul was not
left in hell (Hades), and neither did His physical body experience
corruption.
PSALM 16:10 For You (God) will not leave My (Jesus’)
soul in hell (Sheol); neither will You (God) suffer Your
Holy One (Jesus) to see corruption (decay of His
physical body).
ACTS 2:31 He (the psalmist) seeing this before spoke of
the resurrection of Christ, that His soul (spirit and soul)
was not left in hell (Hades), neither did His flesh see
corruption.
The prophetic words of Psalm 16:10 were fulfilled when God
raised Jesus from the dead.
ACTS 2:32 This Jesus has God raised up (speaks of a
physical resurrection), whereof we all are witnesses (of
the fact).
5
MATTHEW 12:40 For as Jonah was three days and
three nights in the whale’s belly; so shall the Son of
Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the
earth.
The exact location in “the heart of the earth” is not revealed by
scripture. Some Christians cannot and do not believe that Jesus went
to the lower parts of Hades. They believe that after physical death
Jesus did descend into Hades, but only Upper Hades (known as
Paradise) not the burning side of hell.
Many Christians, however, believe that, after Jesus died on the
cross, He descended for three days and nights into Lower Hades, also
called Lower Sheol. As stated, the exact location in the heart of the
earth is not given. If Jesus did go into Lower Sheol, the forces of
darkness could not have touched or harmed Him in any way because
He was perfect and sinless. Jesus may have descended into a waiting
place in the heart of the earth attached to Hades but devoid of flames.
“. . .After Jesus died on the cross,
scripture tells us that the place to which
He descended was Hades - a place of
departed spirits of the dead. . .”
Whatever view is adopted, we should all remember that this
doctrine is essentially a peripheral one if we adhere to the
foundational truths of the Cross (the Atonement), and we should
therefore not allow it to become divisive - to cause us to be separated
from our brothers and sisters in Christ who hold different views.
What we should agree on is that Jesus was sinless before the Cross,
on the Cross and after the Cross, and that He was never tainted by sin
in any way. We should also agree that what He did at Calvary paid
the price to set us free. For this reason we can say it is through the
“finished work of the Cross” that our redemption was won.
6
THE DIMENSIONAL FACTOR
Background Reading: John 1:1-18
The dictionary meaning of incarnation is “the embodiment of
Deity in a human form.” This union of the Divine Identity and the
human identity was found in Emmanuel, meaning “God with us”:
MATTHEW 1:23 Behold, a virgin shall be with child,
and shall bring forth a son, and they shall call His
name Emmanuel, which being interpreted is, “God with
us.” (Isaiah 7:14.)
Being Deity and humanity united, Jesus could assume the
obligations of human treason, satisfy the claims of justice, and
thereby bridge the chasm between God and man.
Now the Divine identity of Jesus was God the Word and the
human identity of God the Word was Jesus.
The way to explain this seemingly inexplicable enigma is to say
that Jesus the man was living in one dimension and God the Word
was living in another dimension, yet within the same being.
“. . .Being Deity and humanity united,
Jesus could assume the obligations of
human treason, satisfy the claims of
justice, and thereby bridge the
chasm between God and man. . .”
There are actually three planes or dimensions of existence
pertaining to life.
The first plane is the God-dimension of existence which only
God inhabits.
The second is the spiritual plane of existence in which all spirit
beings, both good and evil, live.
The third is the physical plane of existence in which all physical
life dwells. This includes the physical body of man.
Therefore Emmanuel existed with a twin identity, in three
dimensions or planes of existence, as one Being. So Emmanuel lived
7
in three dimensions, as both Jesus the man, a perfect man, and God
the Word, the second member of the Trinity. And within the Goddimension, He therefore did not cease to exercise the functions
which belonged to Himself as God the Word.
Note: The God-dimension is not heaven! The God-dimension is
a personal plane of existence from which all life has come, and on
which all life relies (Hebrews 1:2-3). From this plane of existence,
the Light of God is released into the second and third planes of
existence. These two are totally reliant on the first. All things exist
because of the creative force that exists in the first plane - that being
God. He is that eternal and everlasting force. What was originally
created by Him in perfection, however, has been corrupted by the sin
of others. Also note that man on earth lives within both the spiritual
and physical planes or dimensions, for he is both spiritual - an eternal
being - and physical flesh.
Only the Trinity - God the Father, God the Word and God the
Holy Spirit - inhabit the first plane or dimension. These three
Beings, Who constitute the holy heavenly Government called God,
are omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent, uncreated and
uncaused. They had no beginning and will have no end, being selfsufficient and in need of nothing. This is in direct contrast to those
who dwell on the other two planes or dimensions of existence. These
require help from God in order to exist. Almighty God Who lives on
the God-plane of existence chose from the beginning of time to
create the other two planes, so ultimately all life is dependent upon
its Creator, God, for its very existence.
“. . .Therefore Emmanuel existed with a
twin identity, in three dimensions or
planes of existence, as one Being - as
both Jesus the man, a perfect man, and
God the Word, the second member of the
Trinity. . .”
8
Concerning Jesus, His Deity did not add to His humanity,
and His humanity did not detract from His Deity.
COLOSSIANS 2:9 For in Him dwells all the fullness of
the Godhead bodily.
JOHN 8:58 Jesus said unto them, “Verily, verily, I say
unto you, Before Abraham was (brought into existence) I
Am (eternally existent).”
He was one Being with two identities, living within the three
dimensions of existence, all God and all man, Emmanuel, God with
us. It is important to note, however, that the two identities of Jesus,
the Divine Identity and the human identity, never merged, even
though they remained connected.
Although He never ceased to be God, Jesus never functioned as
God in His earthly life and ministry. Rather He functioned as a
perfect man, filled with the Holy Spirit and empowered by Him to do
the Father’s will as He activated His faith.
ACTS 10:38 How God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with
the Holy Spirit and with power: Who went about doing
good, and healing all who were oppressed of the devil;
for God was with Him.
Jesus, functioning in His human nature and thinking with His
human mind, could not call upon His Divine power or
foreknowledge to assist Him in His earthly walk and ministry. This
was why He needed the presence and the Anointing of the Holy
Spirit to do that which He (in His human identity) was unable to do.
So by the Spirit’s power, Jesus healed the sick, raised the dead, cast
out demons, prophesied, taught and endured temptation. He needed
to depend completely on the Holy Spirit, as man does, while He
walked the earth - for it is not man who does these works, but rather
the power of the Spirit working through man! This despite His own
conscious awareness that He was indeed God (John 8:58). If Jesus
had been functioning with the full power of the Divine Nature here
on earth, there would have been no need for God to anoint and
empower Him with the Holy Spirit (for God the Word is already
omnipotent - having all power)!
9
Furthermore, as we see in the Word, Jesus was tempted during
His earthly walk:
HEBREWS 4:15 For we have not an High Priest which
cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities;
but was in all points tempted like as we are (to leave the
prescribed will of God), yet without sin.
MATTHEW 4:1 Then was Jesus led up of the Spirit into
the wilderness to be tempted of the devil.
If Jesus was tempted, it means that it was possible for Him to
sin, for the Bible writers could not have used the word “tempted”
unless this possibility was real, (e.g. Hebrews 4:15, Matthew 4:1). If
Jesus had been operating in His identity as God the Word, it would
not have been possible for Him to sin, for God cannot sin (and
therefore cannot be tempted)!
“. . .Jesus, functioning in His human
nature and thinking with His human
mind, could not call upon His Divine
power or foreknowledge to assist Him in
His earthly walk and ministry. . .”
So within the Divine Identity of Emmanuel, there is no
possibility of sin at all, not in any way or to any degree. This is
because if God were to sin, He would be contradicting His very own
word, i.e. saying one thing and doing another, which of course is
impossible for God (James 1:17; Romans 3:4; John 17:17).
NUMBERS 23:19 God is not a man, that He should lie;
neither the son of man, that He should repent: has He
said, and shall He not do it? or has He spoken, and
shall He not make it good?
However within Christ’s human identity, as with Adam and
Eve before the Fall, there existed the potential to sin, i.e. to disobey
10
God. As we have said, Christ possessed this human nature and
therefore the potential to sin - to give over to His own human desires.
Otherwise the temptations would not have been genuine. As has
already been stated, we see His struggle with His own human desire
which departed from the will of the Father prior to the crucifixion
(Matthew 26:39). Yet He dealt with this divergence in a different way
to Adam! Christ went to the Cross with a human nature. To do so,
He had to submit completely to the will of the Father. And unlike
Adam, He passed the test, that of total obedience, regardless of the
cost to self. Whereas Adam chose to self-rule, Jesus chose the Holy
Spirit ruled life (as we Christians should also do [Romans 12:1-2]).
However, let us be clear - Jesus’ character determined His
choices, not His human desires. His character caused Him to desire
that which was above His human desire. Therefore His ultimate
desire was a holy desire, not a carnal one based on human emotions
or logic. His desire was never self-serving, only God serving. We,
after the Cross, in the power of the Spirit, are to govern our lives by
this holy desire that we are now partakers of through the grace of the
Divine Nature.
As we have said, the two identities of Emmanuel, the human
identity and the Divine Identity, never merged. Otherwise the testing
He went through would have been a farce. He would also not have
needed the Anointing of the Holy Spirit in order to do the will of the
Father and operate in the miraculous (Isaiah 61:1-3, Luke 4:18-19).
Jesus, though God the Word, functioned as a perfect man during His
life and ministry, and identified with man in this regard, being
wholly dependent upon the Holy Spirit. His dependence on the Holy
Spirit was to be the same as Adam’s, no more and no less. He, like
Adam, had to partake of the Divine Nature, even though as God the
Word He actually owned it.
He did not assume the rights and privileges that were His as
an owner of the Divine Nature. Rather He was fully dependent on
the Holy Spirit and partook of the energies and graces of the Divine
Nature in order to walk in righteousness. This He did to an extent
that no other man had ever done. As Jesus the Man, He remained at
all times fully God and fully man. He remained omnipresent,
omnipotent and omniscient as God, but not as man. As a man Jesus
was tested, and as a man, conducted His ministry within the
11
limitations of His human identity. The dimensional factor helps us
understand how all this was possible.
“. . .The two identities of Emmanuel, the
human identity and the Divine Identity,
never merged. . .”
Only God has the Divine Nature in its fullness for He owns it,
the Divine Nature being part of Who He is. Adam, through Divine
connection, was originally able to partake of the Divine Nature
which energized his human nature. This gave him the desire and
empowerment to live a Godly life and to serve God. When Adam
sinned against God, he and his descendants lost their right to partake
of the energies and graces of the Divine Nature. However this right
is now restored to those who are “in Christ”:
2 PETER 1:4 Whereby are given unto us exceeding
great and Precious Promises (pertains to the Word of
God, which alone holds the answer to every life
problem): that by these (Promises) you might be
partakers of the Divine Nature (the Divine Nature
implanted in the inner being of the believing sinner
becomes the source of our new life and actions; it comes
to everyone at the moment of being “Born-Again”),
having escaped the corruption that is in the world
through lust. (This presents the Salvation experience of
the sinner, and the Sanctification experience of the Saint.)
(E.S.B.)
The energies and graces of the Divine Nature are given to
empower us to undertake and complete all that God has given us to
do. Indeed as we yield to the Spirit of Grace, the Divine Nature
supplies us with the passion and power we need to do God’s will.
We do not own it, God does. But by His grace He causes a Divine
connection to take place so that His Divine Nature is imparted to us
at regeneration. (Note: This is a positional blessing. The Divine
Nature is really expressed in our lives as we yield to the Holy Spirit
and partake of its energies and graces.)
12
Note: As human beings we are provided with access to the
Divine Nature of God to the extent that we are not owners but rather
partakers of it for the purpose of living an abundant life (through
obeying God / doing God’s will). The higher purpose involved here
was and is to have a total reliance on the Holy Spirit and the power
He brings to us to walk in righteousness. Then man walks in His
potential and God gains the glory which is rightfully His. This
reliance and relationship of dependence and love will continue for all
eternity.
As God the Word, Emmanuel owned the Divine Nature, which
made Him God. But as Jesus the man with a human nature,
Emmanuel, like Adam, was connected to the Divine Nature to
partake of it, so as to have the desire and power to do God’s will.
This was even though “in Him (Christ) dwells all the fullness of the
Godhead bodily” (Colossians 2:9). This made Him completely
reliant on the Holy Spirit during His earthly walk. Christ forsook the
privilege of the graces of His very Divine Nature so as to become the
second Adam. As the second Adam, He relied on the Holy Spirit to
energize His human nature with the grace of the Divine Nature. This
was a work of the Holy Spirit through relationship with Jesus the
man. The grace of the Divine Nature flowed freely through Jesus the
man to order the thinking of his mind and heart.
“. . .Man, whether Adam before the Fall
or Jesus, needs the graces of the Divine
Nature in order to be energized to live
according to God’s holy
standard and will. . .”
Therefore Emmanuel’s human identity consists of Jesus
having a human nature and being a partaker of the Divine Nature.
Emmanuel’s Divine Identity consists of God the Word as owner of
the Divine Nature. The difference is that God (including God the
Word) needs no other than Himself, and man, whether Adam before
the Fall or Jesus, needs the graces of the Divine Nature in order to be
energized to live according to God’s holy standard and will. This is
how God created man to live (Acts 17:28) - so that man, being reliant
13
on God and so a partaker of His graces, would not fall but reach the
potential he was created to reach, day by day.
Let us then read the following article in this light, differentiating
between the two identities of Emmanuel. Professor Renald E.
Showers wrote of the union of the human and Divine Natures in
Jesus Christ in this article entitled “The Hypostatic Union Of Jesus
Christ.” The word “hypostatic” refers to the real essence of the
person or thing, therefore, as applied here, the real essence of the
incarnate Christ within this union of man and God. A portion of this
article is quoted as follows:
“The Relationship of Christ’s Two Natures in the Hypostatic Union
First, the two natures are united without loss of separate identity.
Christ’s human nature always remains human, and His divine nature
always remains divine. There is no mixture of the attributes of one
nature with those of the other. A mixture would cause the human
nature to cease being a human nature, the divine nature to cease
being a divine nature, and Christ to cease being fully God and fully
Man. A mixture would change the real essence of the incarnated
Christ.
Second, the two natures are united without either losing any of
its attributes. When Christ became incarnated, His divine nature did
not lose any of its attributes, and He did not take to Himself just a
partial human nature. His divine nature remained a complete divine
nature, and He took to Himself a complete human nature. Thus, He
is fully God and fully Man. If either nature were minus any of its
attributes, Christ’s essence would be different than it is.
“. . .Although Christ has two complete
natures, He remains one person. He is
not two persons. The attributes of both
natures belong to His person. . .”
Third, although Christ has two complete natures, He remains
one person. He is not two persons. The attributes of both natures
belong to His person. While on earth, Christ performed some
14
functions in the realm of His humanity (He walked from place to
place, John 4:3–6) and other functions in the realm of His deity (He
held the whole universe together, Colossians 1:17), but in both
instances one person was acting. Thus, at the same time this one
person could be physically tired and omnipotent, growing in wisdom
and omniscient, finite and infinite, limited to one location and
omnipresent.” 5
(underlines added)
THE PRE-EXISTENT CHRIST
The Father has decreed that His Divine Light should come
through Christ to the believing sinner to remove all spiritual darkness
from his spirit. In this, eternal life comes not as a result of some
spiritual energy or dynamic, but through the Person of the Lord Jesus
Christ. Thus eternal life only comes to us through the Divine
relationship between the Believer and his Lord. When a sinner opens
up to the influential graces of God by the ministry of the Holy Spirit,
a conviction of sin and the revelation of Jesus as Saviour will cause
the repentant to be wed to Christ, the Light of the world. He was
given by God for us and to us so that whosoever would believe on
Him and commit their life to Him, not just for now but for eternity,
should not remain in spiritual death. Rather they should gain
spiritual life by entering into relationship with our Heavenly Father
through His Son by the power of the Holy Spirit. In other words, as
the scriptures tell us, in the beginning Christ created all things and
now revives that which was once dead to God through His great
Atonement at Calvary.
“. . .In the beginning Christ created all
things and now revives that which was
once dead to God through His great
Atonement at Calvary. . .”
In His Incarnation, Jesus Christ was one person with two
natures, Divine and human. His Deity did not make Him more than
a man, and His humanity did not make Him less than absolute Deity.
15
From eternity past, Christ was in God the Word, and as God the
Word is eternal, then so is Christ (Colossians 1:15-17). Indeed,
scripture tells us, as Jesus stated, that He had always existed:
JOHN 8:58 Jesus said unto them, “Verily, verily, I say
unto you, Before Abraham was, I am” (in essence He
said, “Before Abraham was brought into being, I was
eternally existent”; He also said, “Abraham was,” “I
am”). (E.S.B.)
PHILIPPIANS 2:7 But made Himself of no reputation
(instead of asserting His Rights to the expression of the
Essence of Deity; our Lord waived His Rights to that
expression), and took upon Him the form of a servant (a
bondslave), and was made in the likeness of men
(presents the Lord entering into a new state of Being
when He became Man; but Him becoming Man did not
exclude His Position of Deity; while in becoming Man,
He laid aside the “expression” of Deity, He never lost
“possession” of Deity): (E.S.B.)
As we can see, Jesus the man, even though He was at the same
time God and so called Emmanuel, set aside the expression of His
Deity. Therefore Emmanuel did not empty Himself of His Deity,
rather only the outward expression of His Deity (His Glory), while
becoming a servant and being made “in the likeness of men.” As a
servant for mankind, He entered into a new state of being. This new
identity, however, did not exclude His possession of Deity.
Some wrongly believe that God the Word exchanged His Divine
mode of existence for His human mode of existence. This is not
correct, for even though He stepped out of eternity to enter the
physical earthly realm, He remained omnipresent as God the Word in
the plane of existence in which only God dwells. This is very
difficult for the human mind to comprehend. Christ, Who had
always existed but never expressed Himself in human form, stepped
out of eternity, changing not Himself but the expression of Himself.
16
“. . .This is very difficult for the human
mind to comprehend. Christ, Who had
always existed but never expressed
Himself in human form, stepped out of
eternity, changing not Himself but the
expression of Himself. . .”
Christ was and is in God the Word as one person. Therefore as
God the Word, the second member of the Trinity, created all that is,
Christ also did and so “all things” were “created by Him.”
COLOSSIANS 1:16 For by Him (Christ [Colossians
1:13-15]) were all things created, that are in heaven,
and that are in earth, visible and invisible (seen and not
seen), whether they be thrones, or dominions, or
principalities, or powers (refers to the organization of
both holy and fallen angels, the latter serving and being
created for God before they fell): all things were created
by Him, and for Him
“Creation is “for Christ” in the sense that He is the end for
which all things exist, the goal toward Whom all things were
intended to move. They are meant “to serve His Will, to contribute
to His Glory . . their whole being willingly or unwillingly, moves . .
‘to Him’; whether, as His blissful servants, they shall be as it were
His Throne; or as His stricken enemies, ‘His footstool.’ ” 6
“ALL CREATION BY HIM
The phrase, “For by Him were all things created,” presents the
justification of the title given Christ in the preceding phrase, “the
firstborn of every creature (Colossians 1:15).” “All things” are
absolute and comprehensive, and will admit of no exception. In
other words, He created all things.
“By Him” is not instrumental (He merely did this) but locative
(puts the fact of creation in Him with reference to its sphere and
center). In others words, all Creation is within the sphere of His
personality, in Him resides the Creative will and the Creative energy,
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and in that sphere the creative act takes place. It does not deny the
instrumentality, meaning that He carried it out, but claims, as well,
that He was not merely the instrument that did these things, but that
the origination of the creation rests “in Him.” Thus, creation is
dependent on Him.
“All things” speaks of a definite historical event, which means
that the creation took place at some point in time in eternity past.” 7
(scriptural reference added)
“The context makes it clear that this title is not given to Him as
though He Himself were the first of all created beings; it is
emphasized immediately that, far from being part of creation, He is
the One by whom the whole creation came into being” 8
“Pre-Existence
Pre-existence and eternality are not necessarily the same. This is
evident because a human being can exist before a certain event, but
that does not mean he is eternal by nature. Thus, when reference is
made to the pre-existence of Christ, the emphasis is not necessarily
upon His eternality. Instead, it is upon the fact that He existed before
His incarnation in human flesh. He existed before He was born of
the virgin Mary.” 9
(underlines added)
“. . .From eternity past, Christ was in
God the Word, and as God the Word is
eternal, then so is Christ. . .”
Where did Christ come from? He was not created but always
was, for before Abraham was, He existed (John 8:58). At the
Incarnation He stepped out of eternity and into time and space for us,
yet as God the Word He remained in eternity. Christ came from
heaven to earth to stand in our place as a sinless offering. He came
into the world as One who had lived elsewhere before His coming.
Again our Saviour drew aside the veil of eternity and stepped into
time and space.
“Christ’s existence did not begin when He was conceived in
Mary’s womb and born into the world several months later. As an
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eternal divine being, He had always existed without beginning and
end throughout eternity past and Old Testament history. When, at a
specific point in time, He was incarnated in human flesh, He added a
complete human nature to His pre-existent, eternal, divine nature.
The Word, who existed with God the Father before the beginning of
creation, became flesh and dwelt among people on the earth for
more than thirty years (John 1:1–3, 14).” 10
“. . .When, at a specific point in time, He
was incarnated in human flesh, He
added a complete human nature to His
pre-existent, eternal, divine nature. . .”
Christ is eternal. He was present at creation and throughout all
history. But there came a time when His eternal Presence would be
“made flesh.”
GALATIANS 4:4 But when the fulness of the time was
come, God sent forth His Son, made of a woman, made
under the Law
“His Higher Nature.
That He was of higher than earthly origin and nature, He
repeatedly asserts. “Ye are from beneath,” he says to the Jews (John
8:23), “I am from above: ye are of this world; I am not of this
world” (compare John 17:16). Therefore, He taught that He, the Son
of Man, had “descended out of heaven” (John 3:13), where was His
true abode. (Note: He was eternally Christ but He was not eternally
the Son of Man. He became the Son of Man when He took on flesh,
i.e. the Incarnation of Deity.) This carried with it, of course, an
assertion of pre-existence; and this pre-existence is explicitly
affirmed: “What then,” He asks, “if ye should behold the Son of man
ascending where he was before?” (John 6:62). It is not merely preexistence, however, but eternal pre-existence which He claims for
Himself: “And now, Father,” He prays (John 17:5), “glorify thou me
with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the
world was” (compare John 17:24); and again, in the most
impressive language possible, He declares (John 8:58 the King
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James Version): “Verily, verily, I say unto you, Before Abraham was,
I am,” where He claims for Himself the timeless present of eternity
as His mode of existence. In the former of these two last cited
passages, the character of His pre-existent life is intimated; in it He
shared the Father’s glory from all eternity (“before the world was”);
He stood by the Father’s side as a companion in His glory. He came
forth, when He descended to earth, therefore, not from heaven only,
but from the very side of God (John 8:42; 17:8). Even this, however,
does not express the whole truth; He came forth not only from the
Father’s side where He had shared in the Father’s glory; He came
forth out of the Father’s very being - “I came out from the Father,
and am come into the world” (John 16:28; compare 8:42). “The
connection described is inherent and essential, and not that of
presence or external fellowship” (Westcott). This prepares us for the
great assertion: “I and the Father are one” (John 10:30), from
which it is a mere corollary that “He that hath seen me hath seen the
Father” (John 14:9; compare 8:19; 12:45).” 11
(bracketed note added)
JOHN 17:5 And now, O Father, Glorify Thou Me with
Thine Own Self (proclaims that all True Glory exists
only in God; when Christ as God became Man, He
divested Himself of that Glory) with the Glory which I
had with You before the world was (a request that He
would be glorified as Man with the Glory which is
Eternally His as God; this prayer was answered at the
Resurrection, when He came forth with a Glorified Body).
(E.S.B.)
JOHN 17:24 Father, I will that they also, whom You
have given Me, be with Me where I am (one with the
Father); that they may behold My Glory, which You
have given Me (pertains to the exaltation that He will
receive at His Resurrection, which was only hours away):
for You Loved Me before the foundation of the world
(Jesus proclaims His pre-existence with the Father and,
therefore, His Deity). (E.S.B.)
“It is important to note that, when Christ became incarnated in
human flesh, He took on Himself humanity, not deity (John 1:14;
20
Hebrews 2:14–17). In light of this truth and the significance of the
designations “the Son of man” and “the Son of God,” we must
conclude that He became the Son of man, not the Son of God, when
He became incarnated.” 12
(underlines added)
“. . .He was eternally Christ but He was
not eternally the Son of Man. He
became the Son of Man when He took on
flesh, i.e. the Incarnation of Deity. . .”
From the moment of conception, Christ took on a human body.
He had a human mind, will and emotions, all that pertains to being
human, while at the same time remaining unchanged in His Divine
Nature. He became what He was not - human - while remaining what
He was - the eternal, almighty, all-knowing Word of God. We can
never speak of Jesus without at the same time speaking of the Eternal
Word and Son of God. Jesus is the Eternal Word and Son of the
Father. JESUS IS GOD. And on that our salvation depends.
If Jesus was a man, somehow just united or connected as Christ
to the Word of God, then we cannot be saved. Unless Jesus is the
Word of God made flesh, then He can do nothing for us. He would
be nothing more than another prophet, as the Muslims teach.
Eternity as it relates to God is not so much immeasurable time as
the mode of being, the mode of existence of the unchanging and
eternal Creator Who is nevertheless revealing Himself as time
proceeds. Thus eternity can be viewed as the form of eternal
existence of our God.
Man was created to be reliant on God, and so able to be a
partaker of His graces. By this means, and this means only, he would
not fail to reach the potential he was created to reach, day by day
(Proverb 3:5-6). However as we know, man did fail to rely on God
and trusted in himself, placing his choice above God’s rule or
direction. It is the same today. Every time man relies on anything or
anyone, including himself, for direction or insight in what to do
concerning the important things in life, he fails, and falls into sin.
21
This not only darkens man’s mind, but gives hell a little mortgage on
his mind as well. Consequently the debt with its compound interest
begins to accrue, crippling the one who has allowed hell’s currency
of darkness to invade their mind and life.
“. . .From the moment of conception,
Christ took on a human body. He had a
human mind, will and emotions, all that
pertains to being human, while at the
same time remaining unchanged
in His Divine Nature. . .”
In order to become the second Adam, Christ forsook the
privilege of the power of His own Divine Nature. He then needed, as
a man, to rely on the Holy Spirit to energize His human nature with
the grace of the Divine Nature - and this He did. This was a work of
the Holy Spirit, functioning through an intimate relationship in
which Christ as a man submitted to the Father’s will in all things. In
Christ, God’s Divine Nature was expressed. The Cross proved how
great and loving this Nature could be. In Christ, because of His
sinlessness and reverent submission, the grace of the Divine Nature
flowed freely so as to order His thinking in His mind and heart. The
Divine Nature, of which Christ was a partaker, also energized His
human nature so as to produce in Him the faith needed to do the
Father’s will. The graces and energies of the Divine Nature became
available to Him through the presence of the Holy Spirit. Jesus
worked in, flowed in, and reacted in the power of this very Divine
Nature as He submitted to the Father and was led by the Spirit in all
He did. In this He showed to us how the first Adam was meant to
live and reach his potential.
As we have stated, for the purpose of becoming a man, the
second Adam, so He could stand in our place as our Kinsman
Redeemer at Calvary, Christ had to forsake His heavenly rights as the
Word of God. This included the expression of His glory and power.
“He was both hidden and manifested - hidden as to His Glory,
manifested as to His Person.” (S.B.C. John, Vol.10, pg.229). Indeed
22
God the Word existed on a plane of existence that only God lives in,
and in this plane His glory and power was full and absolute. But as
Jesus Christ He existed on a plane of existence common to man,
without the expression of the glory and power that, as God the Word,
He possessed. Therefore, for the purpose of sacrifice, He denied
Himself the full expression of His glory and power.
Concerning the first Adam, what gave life to the earthly being
who was created in the image of God? It was the spirit which God
gave to that body of flesh and blood. God gave to the body of Adam
a spirit so that he could become a living soul. But God did not have
to give a spirit to the physical body of Jesus because Emmanuel
already had a life force. He was a Divine Spirit called the Word of
God. He was one Divine Spirit Being with two identities.
Christ pre-existed before His earthly, physical manifestation
because God the Word is one Divine Spirit with two identities that
have eternally existed. The expression of His second identity was
manifest in human form to this world in the babe and then the man
called Jesus Christ.
After the Incarnation, within one Divine Spirit Being are now
contained two souls, in other words two identities - a Divine identity
with a Divine soul, and a human identity with a human soul. Yes one
Being, but two identities. Christ’s eternal expression was in God the
Word and God the Word’s eternal expression was in Christ. In one
dimension, one plane of existence, as Jesus the man (Christ), He laid
aside His expression of Deity without losing His possession of Deity.
In another dimension, another plane of existence, God the Word
remained God the Word.
God the Word could never become diminished. Therefore when
Christ was manifested in the flesh He became more - He was not
only God but became Saviour.
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“. . .After the Incarnation, within one
Divine Spirit Being are now contained
two souls, in other words two identities a Divine identity with a Divine soul, and
a human identity with a human soul. . .”
Christ eternally existed, but His human identity was not
manifest until the Incarnation. He always was, but did not need to
express Himself in this way until the appointed time - to show His
love for His creation and thus to become the Saviour for mankind.
Thus when the scriptures speak of an unchanging God, they describe
the character and nature of God, rather than the expression of Who
He is.
MALACHI 3:6 For I am the Lord, I change not . . .
HEBREWS 13:8 Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and
to day, and for ever.
May you have the victory in Christ. Amen!
For further information or teaching material to help you grow in
the Christian faith, please visit:
CROSSROADS INTERNATIONAL
FULL GOSPEL MINISTRIES
crossroadsministries.org.au
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NOTES
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NOTES
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1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Harper’s Bible Dictionary
S.B.C. I John, Vol.23, pg.169.
S.B.C. John, Vol.10, pg.18.
S.B.C. Genesis, pg.2.
Israel My Glory, Vol.56, No.2.
S.B.C. Colossians, pg. 100.
S.B.C. Colossians, pg. 101.
The New International Commentary on the New
Testament, Commentary on the Epistle to the Colossians,
p. 194.
Israel My Glory: Vol.55, Issue 4.
Israel My Glory: Vol.55 Issue 4.
Dr. James Orr, The International Standard Bible
Encyclopedia.
Israel My Glory: Vol. 59, Issue 1.