Who is Jesus? What is his relationship to God? These questions aren’t simply debates that divide one Christian from another. They’re part of what defines a Christian. Because if salvation is found only in Jesus, then whether or not we’re believing in the right Jesus is no mere doctrinal discussion. Nevertheless, before examining what Jesus said about himself, or what his apostles said about him in the New Testament, it’s important to understand the context into which Jesus was born.
The cultural, religious context into which Jesus came was
absolute monotheism. That is, there is only one God in the entire universe. This
doesn’t simply mean the Jews worshiped only one God (allowing that there might
be another one somewhere). It also means their Scriptures (the Christian OT)
insist that no other God exists. God’s name is YHWH (in English traditionally
rendered as “the LORD” or “Jehovah”). There was no time when God wasn’t. Any
“gods” that came into being aren’t gods in the sense that Jehovah is God. He is
the only one in his category in the entire universe.
Jesus referred to the only God as “my Father” and to himself
as “the Son of God.” The monotheistic Jews understood this to be a claim of
equality with God. But did they understand Jesus or did they simply accuse him
of saying something he didn’t intend? For that matter, do biblical Christians
understand what Jesus and the Bible claim for him or do they simply hold to a
tradition handed down to them? For approximately 18 months I wrestled with a
similar question: Do the many passages in the Scriptures used to prove Jesus’
deity really teach that?
Convinced from childhood of the reliability of the Bible,
and thus a monotheist, I also believed what I’d been taught about Jesus’ full
deity. But, for a time, when I looked at specific Bible passages used to
establish his deity, I wondered whether I really understood them or whether
they meant something else. The same excruciating doubt kept arising with every
proof text I looked at. At the same time, I (rightly) reasoned, if faith in
Christ is the only way to eternal safety, it’s essential to know in whom I’m
believing. Had I believed in the biblical Jesus?
The danger of proof-texting is that we pull verses out of
their context to prove what we want to believe or what others tell us is true.
Any text—isolated from the logical flow of thought, separated from God’s big
story, removed from the rest of what God has revealed in his Word, or contorted
against the way language naturally works—can mean anything we make it mean. The
answer is to read the whole Bible (not simply isolated verses), to allow whole
sections to flow where they will, and to do so with humility and submission to
God.
By God’s grace, I concluded that the monotheistic Jews were
right: Jesus was indeed claiming equality with God. The New Testament calls
Jesus God, identifies Jesus as YHWH (Jehovah), shows Jesus accepting worship
and taking the divine prerogative of forgiving sins, and gives him the name
Jesus—“Jehovah saves”—because he, Jesus, saves. The Scripture doesn’t let us
conclude that the Father and the Son are the same person; it’s not that the one
God sometimes shows up as the Father and other times as the Son. Nor can we say
that there are multiple Gods or even that the Son merely represents his Father.
Rather, the Son, a person separate from the Father, is at the same time equal
and coeternal with him. Honoring Jesus begins with honoring God as the only
God, eternal, all-knowing, able to do everything he wants to do, and the
Creator of everything else that exists. Honoring Jesus means recognizing him to
be of full and equal deity with his Father and fleeing to him for forgiveness
of sin and eternal rest. There are proof texts to support these affirmations,
but it’s better to read the book as a book.
My pastor shared this message last Sunday concerning the nature of Jesus. Please consider listening!
https://www.mountcalvarybaptist.org/pages/sermons/detail/sermon/8413
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