Ecclesiasticus 4:28

"Fight to the death for truth, and the Lord God will war on your side."

Ora pro nobis,

Most Blessed Virgin Mary, St. Francis de Sales, St. Thomas Aquinas, and St. Dominic. Amen.

Friday, April 23, 2010

I was on the Radio!

Hello all,

I just wanted to mention that my pastor, Fr. Bill Trusz, has a regular Wednesday radio show on the Italian Catholic station Radio Teopoli, AM 530, out of Toronto. Fr. Bill, of course, broadcasts in English, so I didn't have to learn Italian to be a guest.

Anyway, if there are any listeners to that program who have come to the blog because of my visit to the program, I bid you a hearty welcome, and hope you enjoy the site!

For those of you who missed the program, you can download the mp3 here.

Take a listen; offer feedback! I'd love to hear from you!

God bless
Gregory

(Category: Miscellaneous--Fun Stuff.)

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

On the Holy Trinity

The Doctrine of the Triune Nature of God is the most fundamental tenet of Christianity--and it is also the most misunderstood of all Christian doctrines--both by Christians and non-Christians alike.

Almost every heresy in the Early Church revolved around some aspect of the Trinity, and most, if not all, of the cults and religions that are based on Christianity are a repackaging of one of those ancient heresies.

Recently, I was presented with a series of arguments against the doctrine of the Trinity. In this article, I will present first the anti-Trinity argument in its entirety, with my comments, and then I will offer my rebuttal.

However, before I begin, I think it wise to define just what we are talking about: namely, God; specifically, God as Trinity. What, then, do we mean by the term "God"? Obviously, since this is a Catholic Apologetics blog, we should understand by "God" the historical Christian understanding of God. As such, I tend to incline toward St. Anselm's given definition of "God is that which nothing greater can be conceived" (Proslogion ch. 2).

This definition essentially covers the general attributes normally associated with God that Christians refer to and see described in the Bible, such as omnipotence, omniscience, omnipresence, love, goodness, etc. This definition will also be important for the later development of my argument for the Trinity, so keep it in mind.

As to the latter, the doctrine of the Trinity is somewhat more complex to define. Essentially, the Church teaches that the One God subsists in three co-eternal Persons within the One Being. That is, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are all the One God, but the Father is not the Son, nor the Son the Father, and neither is the Holy Spirit the Father nor the Son--yet all are the One God. On the other hand, the three Persons are not parts of God or facets of God. The Son, in other words, is not a particular manifestation or mode of God, nor is He simply one third of God.

Obviously, mathematically, there is no easy solution. However, while the Trinity is a mystery which we can never fully comprehend, logic and revelation show its truth and the necessity of its belief, as I hope to demonstrate below.

The following is the argument against the Trinity, with my reply after each point:

There is only one God, the Lord of the worlds. Some people believe in two gods. Some believe in an entity divided by three, each sharing the responsibility of managing the worlds. Some feel that there are many gods, each responsible for some aspects of life.

From the outset, the main error committed by the author of these arguments is to make the Trinity out to be more than One God. Since Christians believe that the Three Persons of the Trinity are all the One God together, many of the arguments presented simply do not apply in arguing against the Christian conception of God. Christians neither believe in two (or more) gods, nor in "an entity divided by three," nor obviously in the latter polytheistic view mentioned. Nevertheless, I shall now address all eight given arguments, and conclude with a presentation of what Christianity does teach.

The fact is, there is One God, the Creator, and everything else other than Him, is the creation--created by Him--, and thus, cannot be God. Logic necessitates it, and here are just a few logical arguments:

This is what we believe, certainly--as far as it goes.

1) Hypothetically, if we assume that there are two gods, which is of course impossible, then both must be equally capable of doing everything at will. If one wants to move something and the other god doesn’t, then either:

a. Both of their wills will be executed, which is impossible, as two opposite things cannot happen at the same exact second, which leads to the conclusion that both are incapable, and therefore cannot be gods.

b. None of their wills are executed, therefore, they cannot be gods, since a god cannot be incapacitated, because incapacitation is imperfection, and imperfection cannot be attributed to God.

c. One of them will have his way, which means, he is capable and the other is not, hence, the other is not God.


This is exactly the case for God, assuming our given definition is correct: That God is that which nothing greater can be conceived. For I can conceive of a God who is perfect--and so, God, if He exists, must be perfect (in fact, even more perfect than my conception of Him).

2) If we assume--contrary to the truth--that there are two gods, then they both must be equal in the attribute of existence, yet they must be distinguished from each other. Otherwise what is the logic behind two? And in fact it is impossible to be different, since God is attributed with the perfect attributes, and is clear of all and any imperfection. That would necessitate one of them having more perfect attributes than the other, which would make the latter lesser, hence, he cannot be God. Or that one would simply have more attributes that are not attributes of perfection. But God is attributed only with the attributes of perfection; therefore the second is not God.

Again, the logical contradiction of two ultimate perfections which are yet distinct argues in favour for One God. St. Thomas Aquinas makes this same point in his Summa Theologica (Part 1, Question 11, Article 3):

God comprehends in Himself the whole perfection of being. If then many gods existed, they would necessarily differ from each other. Something therefore would belong to one which did not belong to another. And if this were a privation, one of them would not be absolutely perfect; but if a perfection, one of them would be without it. So it is impossible for many gods to exist. Hence also the ancient philosophers, constrained as it were by truth, when they asserted an infinite principle, asserted likewise that there was only one such principle.
3) If we assume-–contrary to the truth--that there are two gods, then either one of them is enough to manage the worlds or one is not enough. If one of them is enough, then the second god is not needed, and nothing is in need of him, and it would be nonsense to have him to start with. If one cannot manage the worlds without the other, then they both are needy, and dependent, and incapacitated on their own, hence, both cannot be gods, as God is not in need of anything, and everything is in need for Him.

Obviously, again, a God who is independent is better than a God who is dependent--and a God who is necessary better than a God who is unnecessary. Thus, according to St. Anselm's definition, this argument is again quite valid.

4) If we assume-–contrary to the truth--that there are two gods, then one of them should be able to hide some of his actions from the other, or he is incapacitated of that. If he can hide things from the other, then that makes the other ignorant and unknowledgeable, which means the other is not God. And if he can’t hide any action from the other one, then he is incapacitated and not able to do all he wills, and not omnipotent.

I must confess that while I see the logic of the argument, it fails to strike me as a very strong one. I suppose it works better cumulatively. I fail to see why a God greater than that which can be conceived would need to hide His actions from another god (should one exist). However, that is neither here nor there.

5) If we assume-–contrary to the truth--that there are two equally omnipotent gods, then the summation of both of their powers must be more than each power alone. Hence, the summation is more perfect that what each god has, which means that their power was not perfect and sublime, meaning they cannot be god.

This is an interesting concept. However, I'm not a capable enough mathematician to know whether two infinities is actually greater than one infinity. If it is, then this argument succeeds. If not, then not. Perhaps any theoretical mathematicians could help us out on this point?

6) Partnership and association is a sign of imperfection and need. The king who does not have any associates or partners other than himself is much more perfect than the one who does. God is attributed with the attributes of perfection, but having a partner or an associate implies imperfection, which means that such a partnership is impossible.

This one, I have to take issue with. There is nothing implying need for someone to voluntarily partner with another. Consider the investor who helps an up-and-coming businessman start a new venture. The investor does not need the businessman in order to be wealthy--he already is. It is rather a sign of his great wealth that he can freely invest in the business venture, with all its risks and uncertainties.

For God to freely partner with another--for the purposes of my beliefs--with me, say, or with you--in order to achieve His will on earth, is not to say that He couldn't have achieved His will without me, or you, but rather, out of His abundant perfection and love, He has chosen to use me or you in the achievement of His will. Despite the risk to the achievement of His will that our involvement poses to Him, His omnipotence is demonstrated by the fact that His will is achieved despite our limitations. Or, as St. Paul put it, "My grace is sufficient for you; for My power is made perfect in weakness" (2 Corinthians 12:9).

As such, the above argument fails utterly insofar as it is formulated in this way.

7) God is attributed with the attributes of perfection. Sharing such attributes or even some of them with any other entity, revokes the uniqueness, superiority and perfection of God. The Creator’s attributes are unique to Him, nothing else has any of them.

Again, I deny that this argument has any merit. The author here seems to think that an omnipotent God could lose something of His omnipotence by sharing it. I can conceive of a God who could share His power with another (for example, Moses, or St. Peter) without losing that power Himself. Again, we enter into the abstract concept of infinity. This is much the same as the above argument, for God bestowing a portion of His perfection on His creation does not diminish His perfection, but rather represents it in the other--which is not perfect in and of itself, but only by participation in the perfection of God. In the author's hurry to vindicate and vouchsafe the utter uniqueness of God's perfection, he has unfortunately overstated his case without fully examining the logical consequences of his statement.

8) If we assume--contrary to the truth--that there are two gods, then can one of them buy the other one out, and remain the only power? If he can, then the second god is weak, and not needed, meaning he is not god. If he can’t then he is incapacitated, and god cannot be incapacitated.

This, I must confess, does not make much sense to me. The ground of two gods with contradictory wills both being exercised has been covered already. I am not sure what this argument adds except the seemingly absurd concept of fiscal relations between the two deities supposed.

From all the above and many more logical arguments we can conclude that there is only One God, the Creator.

As I said, I wholeheartedly agree with the conclusion: that there is only One God, the Creator. However, God's Oneness does very little to tell us anything about that One God other than that He is one, and that He is perfect. So let us explore the concept of the One Perfect God, using St. Anselm's definition as a guide or mental exercise, and see if logically we cannot come to any further conclusions about this One Perfect Creator.

First, if God is greater than that which can be conceived, we start with some questions about what such a God is like. If we borrow (to save time) from the list of attributes typically associated with God, we can ask questions like, Is God Good, or Evil? I can conceive of a good God, which is greater than an evil God. God then, must be good. Certain things logically flow from that: Namely, Love is Good, and hatred evil. If God is good, then He must be loving.

Here we come to a quandary, though. For Love, by definition, needs a lover, and one to be loved. But God is One. How do we understand "One"? Solitariness? If God is solitary, He cannot love, for there is no one to love. But I can conceive of a good and loving God. Moreover, I can conceive of a God who is not solitary--that is, He is not lonely and deprived of someone to love.

We have a couple options, then. Either the Solitary God created the world and people in order to fulfil His need to love, or He did not become loving until He created the world. Or, He was not solitary in His Oneness.

Let us examine these options:
First, if God created the world because He needed someone to love, then His love is dependent upon another. That makes God needy. Need means God is imperfect, which cannot be. Thus, God could not have created the world out of some sort of need.

Moreover, what happens if God creates the world, and us, out of a need to love us and to be loved by us? What happens when we reject that love? What does omnipotent God do when we reject His love? This answer, I believe, is played out in those strictly monotheistic religions who are so zealous for God's worship that they either claim that God is vengeful and angry with us; or who themselves take up God's anger and act violently toward the infidel. It is the logical conclusion of a lonely God being spurned by His creation. If God has need, and that need is not met, beware the consequence! But God has no need.

Option 2, is that God created the world, and then became loving. But this implies a change in God, from not being loving to being loving. But perfection can have no change, for a change is either an increase in perfection, or a decrease in perfection. Thus, God did not become loving, but always was loving, since a loving God is greater than an unloving God.

Option 3, God is One, but not Solitary. That is, while there is One Divine Being, that Being is, within Himself, a social entity. This is what the Church identifies as the Trinity (why Three and not Two, or more than Three, will be established in a minute). The One Being of God subsists within Himself in different Persons, who share in the One Substance of God (and since there cannot be another God, having God's substance means you are God). These Persons within God each share in God's Attributes equally, and are thus neither less nor more than each other. They are undivided, and so the One God; but unconfused in that unity, and so distinct. Since distinct, they are able to relate to each other--in a relationship of Love. Hence, God is loving, from all eternity, without change, without need, without compulsion, without imperfection.

Why then did God create us? Not from need, but out of the overflow of His infinite love and generosity. He desired others to share in the joy of His infinite love, not for His own sake, but for theirs. So He made man, and made him free to love. But it does not hurt God when we reject Him. We do not fail to gratify His need. So He continues to love us and strive to call us back to Him (in ways that will not violate our free will, and thus, our ability to love). Rather than striking us dead when we rejected Him, He came Himself, to call us back to Him. He Himself paid our debt of sin, and He Himself gives us to share in His divine life of grace. The consequences and punishments incurred by our rejection are not because we have injured God and so He retaliates. Rather, they are the only other possibility of existence without God. Hell, then, is not the capricious torture of an angry and insulted God, but simply the state of existence resulting from being granted our own free wish to be without Him. This is a fundamental difference between Christianity and other monotheistic views of God.

Whence the three Persons, no more, no less? At this point, simple logic cannot help us, but we must rely on God's own self-revelation.

The Scriptures teach us that "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God...The Word became flesh and dwelt among us..." (John 1:1, 14).

What do we see? That the Word (Jesus Christ) who "became flesh" (that is, was incarnated--who was born as a man), was "with God" in the beginning--that is, from all eternity, Jesus, the Son of God, existed with God. And yet the next line tells us that the Word wasn't simply there with God as a separate being, but that the Word was God. So we see this Word as being the same substance as God, and thus God Himself (as we mentioned above) and yet somehow distinct from "God". How are we to reconcile this? Only in the doctrine of the Trinity--that God, who is One, nevertheless subsists in different Persons, co-equal, co-eternal.

The Word, the Logos (in Greek), is the Wisdom of God--His utter and complete self-expression. In the Word of God (by which I am not referring to the Bible, but to the "Word" of John's Gospel), God communicates Himself in such an efficacious and infinite self-description, that it itself is completely what God is. That is, God, from all eternity, reveals Himself through the Word--a never-ending, eternal communication from before time, resulting in the Word which is so infinitely perfect an expression of God that it is God, not separate from God or different from God, except that one is the "speaker" and the other is the "spoken", or, in more familiar parlance, one is Father, and the other is Son. The Father eternally generates the Son, and the Son is eternally begotten of the Father--not as a separate Being, nor as something created by God, but begotten by God. Just as a man begets a son who is not a dog nor a statue, but another human (of the same kind) as the father who begot him, so the Son of God is of the same kind as the Father who begot Him--yet since two Gods is a contradiction, the two persons of Father and Son are still the One God together.

Moreover, since the Father begets the Son from all eternity, there was never a moment when the Father existed without the Son. Thus, there was never an addition to God, nor a change in God, from not-Father to Father; from sonless to having a Son. The Son existed with the Father from all eternity, together as the One God.

This Father and Son loved each other with the infinite Love that is God's essential nature. Thus the love of God did not come into existence at a later point and so change God; neither did the loving God ever need anyone to love and to love Him. The Father and the Son were content and joyous in their mutual Love--and that Love was so perfect, so eternal an expression of God, that it itself was God, for God is Love. And this Love is what we call the Holy Spirit--who Himself is the Third Person in the Trinity, the expression or the manifestation of the eternal Love of God the Father for God the Son, and God the Son for God the Father, and of each for the Holy Spirit, and of the Holy Spirit for them--for all eternity, without beginning and without end.

Hence, we come to the Three Persons of the Trinity, each distinct from the other, yet each the One God together; co-equal, co-eternal, sharing in the life of each other and the One Substance of the God Who Is.

There are no more Persons than this, for if there were, there would be no necessary distinction between them and the Three Persons. For we have the Begetter, the Begotten, and the Procession of their Love. If another is begotten, in what primary way does He differ from His Divine Brother? He becomes arbitrary and unreal. If there are, on the other hand, two begetters, then we have the consequence of Two Deities, which is absurd.

Moreover, The Son, who became Man, revealed to us no more than the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and we depend on His revelation of God.

(Category: Theology Proper: The Holy Trinity.)

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Notes on a Scandal

Because I want Barque of Peter to be not so much a "blog" as an apologetics resource, I don't tend to comment on "current events", but stick to universal, timeless, theological articles.

However, I cannot simply say nothing about the current spate of media reporting on the Clerical Sex Abuse Scandal in the Catholic Church. As such, while I'm not going to devote an entire article in this location, I am going to link to the article that I wrote at my other blog, Doubting Thomist.

Notes on a Scandal (The title of this post links to that article, as well.)

Please read it, and consider the facts and the reality of the present situation, and keep our Holy Father, the whole Church, and especially our priests in your prayers. Most importantly, pray for the victims, that they may receive healing and peace.

(Category: The Church: A Light to the World.
Category: Catholic Distinctives: Sacraments--Holy Orders.)

Monday, April 05, 2010

Curious about Kyrios

In the beginning was the Word:
the Word was with God
and the Word was God.
He was with God in the beginning.
Through Him all things came into being,
not one thing came into being except through Him...
The Word became flesh,
He lived among us,
and we saw His glory,
the glory that He has from the Father as the only Son of the Father,
full of grace and truth (John 1:1-3,14).
In Him, in bodily form, lives divinity in all Its fullness (Colossians 2:9).(1)
The Lordship of Jesus
Christianity is a faith based on a person: Jesus Christ. Two thousand years ago, He lived, taught, and went about doing good. He died on a cross to save humankind from their sin and to provide reconciliation to God. This same Jesus rose again from the dead, and ascended to heaven, where He is the mediator between God and man. This we believe.

Jesus Christ, through His death and resurrection, provided salvation to those who accept the free gift His grace. All people can have this relationship with God. The Apostle Paul wrote, "If you declare with your mouth that Jesus is Lord, and if you believe with your heart that God raised Him from the dead, then you will be saved" (Romans 10:9). What does this mean, this oath of confession? What does it mean to declare that Jesus is Lord? It is one thing to idly say "Jesus is Lord," or even "Jesus is my Lord," without knowing what it is to be Lord. What does an oath avail if the taker has no knowledge of the meaning of the oath?

Truly, Jesus is Lord, and this paper will examine what that means. It surely is necessary to know the meaning if one is to truly confess it, for if one confesses "Jesus is Lord", and believes God raised Him from the dead, the Scriptures say that one is saved. But if the person who confesses that Jesus is Lord, but at the same time confesses the opposite, even unknowingly from not having a proper understanding of what Lord means, is that one truly saved? For how can one confess what he denies, and still confess it unto salvation? Thus it is of chief importance that all have a proper understanding of who Jesus Christ is, and why He is to be called Lord.

The Meaning of "Lord": Kyrios
The word "Lord" then is one of special significance. In the Greek, it is Kyrios, and means "the owner, master, controller, one in authority."(2) Denotatively, Lord refers to anyone having authority, from a King or master to a teacher. Kyrios correlates to the English term, "sir". Thus, denotatively, confessing Jesus as Kyrios is nothing more than to call Him a teacher. In fact, many do nothing more than this, saying Jesus was just a great moral teacher. Calling Jesus Kyrios in this sense promises to follow His teachings. This perhaps seems a promising method of gaining salvation, to follow the teachings of the one who purchased our salvation. However, this idea quickly evaporates into legalism and Semi-Pelagianism. But as St. Paul says, "it is by grace that you have been saved, through faith...not by anything that you have done, so that nobody can claim the credit" (Ephesians 2:8,9). It is not that there are no works involved in our salvation, for, St. Paul continues, "We are God's work of art, created in Christ Jesus for the good works which God has already designated to make up our way of life" (v.10). Our works are energised by God's grace, and so are efficacious. But this efficacy is not possible if by "Lord" we mean simply a good teacher. Thus understanding "Lord" in a purely denotative fashion leaves one's redemption incomplete.

However, any student of language knows that words have two types of meaning. Since the basic denotative meaning has fallen short of providing salvation, because it comes down to works, let us look at the connotative meaning of the word Kyrios, and thereby know what the early Christians meant by confessing Christ as Lord.

Lord as Title of Divinity
While to the people of that day, "Lord" meant all of the above things, it had come to refer to the gods that were worshipped as well as to the Emperor, and in fact calling the Emperor "Lord" and offering sacrifices to him was a religious test of loyalty to the Emperor Cult. Leon Morris writes, "This term could be no more than a polite form of address, like our 'sir'. But it could also be used of the deity one worships."(4) He also says that calling Jesus Lord "points to the deity of Christ."(5) On a similar note, Jennings Reid writes, "When the Hebrew Scriptures were translated into Greek, resulting in the Septuagint, when the translators came upon the word Yahweh, they translated it Kurios. Thus, in the Septuagint, which was widely used by Jews of the dispersion, the most frequently used name for God was Kurios, or Lord...Certainly it was a most noteworthy development that the early Christians felt that Jesus had so revealed God, had so been God's instrument of redemption for them, and was so one in nature with God that they deemed it fitting to appropriate this supreme title for Him."(5)

Thus one can see that the title of Kyrios was perceived by those to whom St. Paul wrote to be a title of deity. Jesus called Himself Lord (Mark 12:34-37; Luke 6:5, 46). St. Hilary of Poitiers has this to say about the passage in Mark: "He is not unmindful of the Law by any means, nor is He ignorant of the fact that we must not acknowledge another God, but, without doing any violence to the faith of the Law, He gives us to understand that He is the Lord who has come into being by the mystery of the natural birth from the womb of the incorporeal God, since the one from the one through the nature of the one would possess that nature in Himself which belongs to the Lord."(6) Since Christianity is monotheistic, Jesus Christ, if He is at all divine, must then be the One God who created all things. Thus we are left with a paradox and a mystery: How can the all-powerful God be at the same time flesh, a man; yes, and even to have died? Yet orthodox Christianity confesses Him so.

The Mystery of the Trinity
How can the man Jesus Christ be at the same time the God of the universe? Truly one does not know. The Christian can only confess that He is, and understand the rest by faith. Yet some do not like that which is unexplainable, and thus they outright deny the truth of the mystery, or re-interpret or misinterpret the evidence in order to explain it away. St. Augustine begins his Trinity by addressing just such persons: "The reader of this treatise should know beforehand that our pen is on the watch for the sophistries of those who consider it beneath their dignity to begin with faith, and who thus are led into error by their immature and perverted love of reason."(7) Merely because the human intellect cannot grasp all the intricacies of something does not make the truth of that thing void. But let us examine the Scriptures on the subject, that perhaps the Holy Spirit will break open the box of our narrow theology in order that we might believe what we do not understand, and perhaps by believing, begin to understand, however faintly, the great mystery which is central to Christianity.

The first chapter of John's Gospel very distinctly states that Jesus is God. Verse 1 says, "In the beginning was the Word: the Word was with God and the Word was God." The opening of the Gospel introduces us to the Word, and says two very important things: that It is distinct from God and that It is the same as God. In the second verse, the Evangelist shows us that the Word of God is also a person: "He was with God in the beginning." Thus there was a person, both distinct from God and yet God, present at Creation. St. John goes on to reveal that this Word is not a created thing, either, but was actually the instrument of creation: "Through Him all things came into being" (v.3). Thus clearly St. John states about the Word that He is a person who is co-eternal with God.

Truly John's idea is nothing new, for Genesis chapter 1 also shows God as not solitary before Creation. At each step of Creation, God spoke commanding creation to come into existence. What was God commanding, though, if there was nothing? The Scripture clearly indicates that God's word brought them into being (Genesis 1:3, 6-7, 9, etc.). The Scriptures are in unity on this idea, as St. Hilary comments, "If you will dare to claim that the Son is not referred to when it is stated: 'And God made it,' what will be you attitude to where it is said: 'All things were made through Him,' and to those words: 'And our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom are all things,' and that statement: 'He spoke and they were made'?"(8)

But so that there could be no ambiguity in the Genesis account, God saw fit to have Moses record this: "God said, 'Let Us make man in Our own image, in the likeness of Ourselves'" (Gen 1:26). St. Hilary again has this to say: "By declaring: 'Let Us make mankind in Our image and likeness,' He does away with any idea of isolation, since He reveals this mutual participation. But He Himself who is alone cannot have any kind of companionship for Himself. Again, the words, 'Let Us make' are not compatible with the loneliness of a solitary, nor does anyone address another as 'our' who is a stranger to himself."(9) Hilary goes on to point out that the One to whom God speaks, while showing that God does not live by Himself, is also shown to be not different from God, but as possessing the same nature, "because He says 'Our image' and not 'Our images'."(10)

Thus Scripture reveals that there was another of the same substance eternally present at Creation. In John's Gospel, he is very clear to point out who he means when he writes of the Word. Verse 14 of chapter one says, "The Word became flesh, He lived among us." And so John introduces Jesus Christ, the subject of his Gospel, who is the Word made flesh. As such John chapter one paves the way for Trinitarian doctrine, clearly stating that Jesus is the Second Person of the Trinity.

Scriptural Support
Scripture teaches that Jesus was pre-existent before He was made flesh, that He existed since before the world began. Even before Jesus was born of the Blessed Virgin Mary, He was. He states unequivocally "Before Abraham ever was, I AM" (John 8:58). Several Old Testament prophecies of the Messiah allude to His divinity. Isaiah's Servant Song of chapter 53 begins, "And who has seen in it a revelation of Yahweh's arm?" While the terminology that calls Christ the "arm of the LORD" is clearly a metaphor, still it indicates that Jesus is of the same substance as the Father.

Still more clear a reference to the Messiah's Godhead is in Psalm 110:1: "Yahweh [the LORD] declared to my Lord, 'Take your seat at my right hand, till I have made your enemies your footstool.'" In the Gospels, Jesus Himself picks up this passage in order to make a claim that He is God. In Mark 12:28-37, Jesus addresses the issue of His divinity from the Psalm 110 passage. A Scribe had asked Jesus what the greatest commandment was, to which Jesus replied, "This is the first: 'Listen, Israel, the Lord our God is the one, only Lord, and you must love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind and with all your strength.' This is the first commandment. The second is this: 'You must love your neighbour as yourself.' There is no commandment greater than these" (vv. 29-31). The Scribe who questioned Him agreed wholeheartedly, stating even that these commandments are greater than all of the burnt offerings and sacrifices. Verse 34 says, "Jesus, seeing how wisely he had spoken, said, 'You are not far from the kingdom of God.' And after that no one dared to question Him any more." It is out of this dialogue that Jesus quotes from Psalm 110:1, by asking how the scribes can say that the Christ is the Son of David. He makes His point from the psalm by saying in verse 37, "David himself calls Him Lord; In what way then can He be his Son?"

The Scribe knew the basic message of the Gospel when he said that loving God and others was greater than burnt offerings and sacrifices. Jesus promised the kingdom of God to such people as helped the downtrodden and clothed the poor. Yet, St. Hilary sees one thing in Jesus' reply to the Scribe, that he is not far from the Kingdom of God. He writes, "What is the meaning of so gracious a reply that this Scribe was not yet in the kingdom of God but is not far from the kingdom of God, if to believe in the one God and to love Him with your whole soul...and also to love your neighbour as yourself is the faith that makes us ready for the kingdom of Heaven? But, while the Lord praises the Scribe...He does not confer upon him the possession of the blessed hope itself."(11) The Scribe's faith was true, and it was almost enough. By quoting and teaching from Psalm 110:1, Jesus told the Scribe what he still lacked. St. Hilary writes this: "The Scribe, therefore, is not far from the kingdom of God when he acknowledges the one God who is to be loved above all things. But he is warned by his own confession why he does not know the mystery of the Law and does not realise that Christ the Lord, the Son of God by nature of the birth, is to be acknowledged in the faith of the one Lord."(12)

Now this, "by nature of the birth", does not refer to the birth from the Blessed Virgin. Rather, it refers to the Eternal Generation of the Son from the Father. The heretics, who deny the deity of the Son, call the Son "created", because He is a Son, and therefore must have been begotten. However, the heretics claim that to be begotten means that there was a time before the begetting. If this is the case, then the Son is not from eternity, but is a creature, a demi-god at best. But this blasphemous view stems from several incorrect ideas, and leads to several incorrect conclusions. Of these, two shall be examined.

Illogical Conclusions
First, if Christ has not always been the Son, then the Father has not always been the Father, for a father is not a father without a child. If then the Father has not always been the Father, then He is not unchanging, for there was a time when He became the Father. St. Athanasius illustrated the change in God necessary if the Son is not eternal by saying that if the Son did not exist with the Father from all eternity, then once God was without His Wisdom and Glory, that once the Father had no Word or Reason. He writes, "Is it not then irreligious to say, 'Once the Son was not'? For it is all one with saying, 'Once the fountain was dry, destitute of life and wisdom'. But it would then cease to be a fountain; for what begetteth not from itself is not a fountain."(13) St. Hilary states, "Where there is always a Father, so, too, there is always a Son...If it is always proper for the Father to always be the Father, it must always be proper for the Son to be always the Son."(14)

Similarly, "God is love" (1 John 4:16). But love requires someone to love. If before creation God was alone in eternity, He would have no one to love, and thus could not Himself be love. Thus we must conclude that if God truly is unchanging, as St. James tells us (James 1:17), then the Son is eternal, just as the Father is eternal. God the Father loves God the Son, and as such, the Trinity is Itself a social relation.

The second heretical notion and ultimate conclusion is this, that if Jesus Christ is not eternal, He must be a creature, and thus part of all of creation. The complication lies here, in Romans 8:19-22, which says, "For the whole creation is waiting with eagerness for the children of God to be revealed. It was not for its own purposes that creation had frustration imposed on it, but for the purposes of Him who imposed it--with the intention that the whole creation itself might be freed from its slavery to corruption and brought into the same glorious freedom as the children of God. We are well aware that the whole creation, until this time, has been groaning in labour pains." As to this passage, Hilary writes:
Hence, if Christ is a creature, He must remain in uncertainty during the long period of hopeful expectation, and His long expectation rather than ours is waiting, and while He is waiting He must be subject to vanity, and He is not subject freely who is subject through necessity. But, since He is not subject of His own free will, He must also be a slave, but, since He is a slave, He must also be exposed to the corruption of nature. The Apostle Paul writes that all these things are proper to a creature, and when He has been freed from them through the long expectation He will be resplendent in human glory. Oh what a ridiculous and blasphemous description of God, to expose Him to these insults by falsely accusing Him of being a creature, so that He hopes, serves, is subject to necessity and corruption, and is to be delivered into our state and not His own, since we are advancing toward something by means of His gifts!(15)
How can the Christ who has come to redeem humanity and restore creation be of necessity bound to the slavery of creation? He thus would have no means of redeeming humanity, for He Himself would first require freedom from creation's curse. Thus Christ Jesus must truly be something other than a creature. He must be God.

Eternal Generation
How can the Son be as eternal as the Father? If the Father is Unbegotten with eternity, and the Son is begotten of the Father, does that not mean that the Son by necessity came afterward? By no means! "Afterward" has no meaning in eternity. The birth of the only-begotten God from the Unbegotten God is eternal. John Deschner writes, "Christ is divine by virtue of an eternal generation of the Father, through which the Son has absolute, independent life in Himself. He is the Word, the eternal Wisdom, whom the Father begot or spoke from eternity...The eternal generation is...important for Christ's pre-eminence as the source of man's salvation (Col 1:8). It distinguishes Him categorically from all creatures, including angels, and underlines the absolute sense in which Christ is called 'God' (John 1:1)."(16) St. Hilary speaks on this mystery also, saying, "Everything that always is is eternal, but everything that is eternal is not also unborn. What is born from the eternal possesses the attribute that what has been born is eternal but what is unborn is unborn with eternity."(17) Therefore, Christ is God of God, Spirit from Spirit, Light from Light, the only-begotten offspring of the Unbegotten God. He is the second person of the Trinity, which is "the incorporeal and immutable unity...a nature consubstantial and co-eternal with Itself."(18)

God-Made-Man
All this is not to say that Jesus Christ was not also a man. He was the Word made flesh. The eternal Son of God took on a human nature, and was born as a man, to die for humanity and thus purchase redemption. Jesus, then, was fully God and fully man, coexistent in one person. The divine nature did not override the human nature, as though God merely put on human flesh like a disguise, for to believe that is a heresy equally as wrong as to believe that the eternal Son of God is only a creature. Jesus was both God and man, and thus St. Paul writes, "Who, being in the form of God, did not count equality with God something to be grasped. But He emptied Himself, taking the form of a slave, becoming as human beings are; and being in every way like a human being, He was humbler yet, even to accepting death, death on a cross. And for this God raised Him high, and gave Him the name which is above all other names" (Philippians 2:6-9). Jesus didn't consider equality with God something He needed to reach for or cling to, because it was who He was. Thus He was able to let it go, to humble Himself, and take on the form of a slave. As God, He is equal to God, but He emptied Himself, and thus, as man, as a slave, is less than God in habit. But as St. Augustine writes, "The divinity was not changed into the creature so that it ceased to be the divinity, nor the creature into the divinity so that it ceased to be a creature."(19) Jesus Christ became real flesh, but because He was also Divine, He was not given humanity's fallen nature. He took on the form of a slave, but did not become a slave. Thus He was able to live a perfect life, and His sacrifice could cover the sins of all people. Jennings Reid writes, "In Jesus we have an exact representation and manifestation of the invisible God. Our thoughts travel naturally back to the Genesis creation story where it is said that God created man in His own image. That image became marred by sin. Through all the centuries since, the image of God has been marred in man. But...in Christ, the image of God was exhibited as a perfect likeness. The image, lost in Adam, was restored in Christ."(20) Thus Christ was both God and man during His incarnation.

Necessity for Salvation
Both natures in Christ are essential for His mediatorial work. If Christ were not man, He would not be humanity's high priest, making intercession on our behalf before God. He can identify with people because He gave Himself up to be tempted in all respects as we are, but without sin. Thus He knows what people go through, and is able to empathise with them in their need.

Conversely, if Christ were not God, if He were only human, His death on the cross would have been for nothing, for if human sacrifice was all that was required to pay for humanity's sins, then the pagans would have had no need of salvation, for they practiced human sacrifice since bygone times. Also, if it was human sacrifice that was needed, then God would be unjust in expressly forbidding that which would have given humanity salvation. For God hates human sacrifice. If Jesus were just a man, He would be a man just like all others. His life and death would not have meant anything. If Jesus were just a man, He could not have risen from the dead, for, as John Wesley maintains, "Christ's power to lay down His life and take it up again was originally His: He did not receive it as a part of His mediatorial commission."(21) Therefore, if Jesus were just a man, there could be no salvation.

Conclusion: Mystery and Truth
Let Him be praised! For He is not just a man, but the most high God! He is the sacrifice for our sins, the Lamb who was slain. His resurrection shows that He is the Son of God, and proves that He is Messiah! It is because of the mystery of Christ that we can be saved! Yes, it is a mystery. No one can fully comprehend all that Jesus' divinity and manhood is. That is not to say that it is untrue, however. Jennings says, "After many treatises on the subject, the mystery of the incarnation remains a mystery. This is one reason that it remains central to the Christian religion. True religion will always involve mystery. Faith in God does not mean that we have found all of the answers, nor does Christian assurance mean that we have theology tied up in a neat package. There will always be a place for mystery in religion, 'for now we see in a mirror dimly'."(22)

"If you declare with your mouth that Jesus is Lord, and if you believe with your heart that God raised Him from the dead, then you will be saved." Truly, the confession of faith in Romans 10:9 is what matters for salvation. It is the free gift of God, that we must accept by faith. But beyond saying the words and living them out, one must truly know what they mean. Paul writes, "Nobody is able to say, 'Jesus is Lord' except in the Holy Spirit" (1 Corinthians 12:3). Jesus said that the Holy Spirit will "lead you to the complete truth" (John 16:13). Let His guiding bear witness to you that what is written here is truth. Amen.
________________
1 All Scripture quotations are taken from The New Jerusalem Bible. (New York: Doubleday, 1999).
2 Definition comes from Hayford, Jack W., Ed. The Spirit-Filled Life Bible - NKJV. (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publisher, 1991).
3 Morris, Leon. The Epistle to the Romans. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998), p. 47.
4 Ibid., p. 385.
5 Reid, Jennings B. Jesus: God's Emptiness, God's Fullness - A Christology of St. Paul. (New York: Paulist Press, 1990), pp. 65, 66.
6 St. Hilary of Poitiers. The Trinity. (Washington DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 1968), p. 347.
7 St. Augustine. The Trinity. (Washington DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 1988), p. 3.
8 St. Hilary, p. 106.
9 Ibid., p. 107.
10 Ibid., p. 108.
11 Ibid., pp. 345, 346.
12 Ibid., p. 347.
13 Athanasius. Orations against the Arians. I, vi.19. as quoted in Schaff, Philip, ed., Athanasius: Selected Works and Letters. (New York: Christian Literature Publishing Co., 1892), p. 317.
14 St. Hilary, p. 516.
15 Ibid., p. 504.
16 Deschner, John. Wesley's Christology: An Interpretation. (Grand Rapids: Francis Asbury Press, 1985), 16.
17 St. Hilary, p. 515.
18 St. Augustine, p. 21.
19 Ibid., p. 20.
20 Reid, Jennings B., p. 34.
21 Deschner, John, p. 153.
22 Reid, Jennings B., p. 75.

(Category: Theology Proper: God the Son--Jesus Christ.
Category: Christology.)

Sorry...

For the utter lack in posting recently. Life, as usual, has been busy. I just got a laptop (as an early birthday present), so now that I can take the computer with me, I should have a greater opportunity to blog. We'll see how that goes.

I'm changing the commenting system to Moderated Comments. I don't intend to stifle genuine commenters by this means--I still most wholeheartedly want you to comment!

However, I've been getting a lot of spam on here. I put the word recognition program into effect to deal with it, but one particular source seems to be an actual person--and this actual person seems to be intent with advertising pornography.

Well, not on my blog! So, please, pornography spammer, take your smut elsewhere.

In the meantime, comments will be moderated by me before they go up.

Anyway, while I work on a new post, I thought I'd toss up an old paper, slightly adapted, from my Bible College days. I was amazed recently to find so many Christians confused about the identity and divinity of Jesus Christ. So my next post will be a paper I wrote that explains that Jesus Christ is both God and Man.

God bless
Gregory