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Jesus as the Son of God
Jesus
as the
Son of God
by
Luther Engelbrecht
Ernest Hahn
Introduction
Muslims believe that God is one, that there are no gods except
the God. They may contend that even though Christians claim to
be monotheists, they actually believe in more than one God.
Since Christians believe that Jesus is the Son of God, they
therefore err like other people of ancient or modern times who
have believed in a plurality of gods or the sons and daughters
of God.
So often Muslim-Christian religious discussion breaks on the
topic of Jesus' Sonship. The Christian affirms that Jesus is the
Son of God; the Muslim denies that Jesus is the Son of God. Both
simply agree to disagree, each convinced that he is right and
the other is wrong, as they go their separate ways.
But is there another alternative? In suggesting that there is,
the following questions are proposed: Has the Christian truly
understood what Jesus' Sonship means to the Muslim and why the
Muslim rejects it? Has the Muslim truly understood what Jesus
Sonship means to the Christian and why the Christian affirms it?
On this topic, which for centuries has been notorious for
generating more heat than light, could both agree to explain
their relative positions more fully and to listen to one another
more intently and courteously?
The intention of this essay is to help both Muslims and
Christians to penetrate a little deeper into the Biblical
concept of Jesus as the Son of God and the significance of this
idea for Christians. At the same time, it is hoped that this
essay, as it unfolds, demonstrates at least some sensitivity
towards a truly Muslim position on this vital topic. Where it
needs correction or amplification, gladly let Muslim friends
provide it.
Biblical Meaning of "Son"
To understand the Biblical meaning of Jesus as "the Son of God",
first we must examine the Biblical use of the word "son". In the
Bible, "son" is a term expressing an intimate relationship with
someone or something; basically, it indicates origin, but it is
also used to express close association or identification with
persons or things. Even when indicating origin, this term does
not limit oneself to one's father and mother. One may be called
the "son" of the following: his father and mother, his family,
his tribe, his people, his place of birth (city or country),
and the time or circumstance of his birth. The if "father-son"
terminology is also used in connection with kings and their
vassals or subjects, masters and servants, teachers and
disciples, and almost any situation in which someone is
subordinate to or dependent on someone else. The basic
requirement of the "son" is to honour and obey his "father",
but he should also love him and emulate him.
The term "son" is used in many other ways in the Bible, some
of which are connected with origin but others of which mainly
express some sort of association with or resemblance to persons
or things. A large, somehow homogeneous group may be called
"sons" (occupational and ethnic groups especially). Sometimes
characteristics or qualities themselves are personified and
regarded as having "sons" - those who possess that same
characteristic or quality. Still also other uses of the term
"son" in the Bible reflect the versatile and imaginative use
of this term especially in the Hebrew language.
A complete list of the various uses of the term "son" in the Bible
would be too long for this essay. A few of its more idiomatic uses
are listed below, with their literal meanings and the translations
of the Holy Bible, New International Version (or The New English
Bible or Holy Bible, Revised Standard Version).
Old Testament
Reference: Expression (as literally in the original text)
-- Meaning (as found in the translation)
Genesis 5:32: "son of five hundred years"
-- "five hundred years old"
Genesis 15:3: "a son of my house"
-- "a servant in my household"
Deuteronomy 25:2: "a son of stripes"
-- "deserves to be beaten"
Judges 19:22: "sons of Belial"
-- "wicked men"
I Samuel 20:31: "a son of death"
-- "he must die"
I Kings 20:35: "sons of the prophets"
-- "a company of prophets" (NEB)
II Kings 14:14: "sons of pledging"
-- "hostages"
Job 41:28: "son of a bow"
-- "arrow" (NEB)
Isaiah 60: 10: "sons of a foreign land"
-- "foreigners"
Lamentations 3:13: "sons of a quiver"
-- "arrows from his quivers"
Joel 3:6: "sons of the Grecians"
-- "the Greeks"
Zechariah 4:14: "sons of oil"
-- "anointed"
New Testament
Matthew 9:15: "sons of the bridegroom"
-- "the guests of the bridegroom"
Matthew 12:27: "your sons"
-- "your people"
Luke 10:6: "a son of peace"
-- "a man of peace"
Luke 16:8: "the sons of this age"
-- "the people of this world";
"the sons of lights"
-- "the people of the light"
John 17:12: "the son of destruction"
-- "the one doomed to destruction"
Acts 13:26: "sons of the family of Abraham"
-- "you who come of the stock of Abraham" (NEB)
Galatians 3:7: "those who believe are children of Abraham"
Ephesians 2:2: "the sons of disobedience"
-- "those who are disobedient"
The above are only a few of the many uses of the term "son(s)"
in the Holy Bible. The most common uses, which are usually
translated literally, have been omitted. However, one such group
might be illustrated here: personal, yet non-physical,
Father-son" relationships:
Father Son(s)
I Samuel 3:6 Eli Samuel
I Samuel 24:16 Saul David
I Samuel 25:8 Nabal David
Proverbs 1:8, etc. Solomon the reader
II Kings 2: 12 Elijah Elisha
II Kings 8:9 Elisha King Ben-Hadad
II Kings 5:13 Naaman his servants
Judges 18:19 the priest the people
Genesis 4:20f. first musician all musicians, etc
Matthew 9:2 Jesus the paralytic
I Timothy 1:2, etc. Paul Timothy
Titus 1:4 Paul Titus
Philemon 10 Paul Philemon
I Peter 5: 13 Peter Mark
Other languages also use the term "son" in a variety of ways.
Thus, in the Arabic language of the Qur'an "son" need not mean
only a direct male issue or descendant. A familiar example is
ibnu's sabil ("son of the road"), which means "a
traveller". Another example with which many are familiar is "the
son of Satan" a vivid descriptive for any mischief-maker (cf.
also Acts 13:10). Obviously Satan does not have a wife in order
to have a son! The name implies that the mischief maker is like
Satan, an embodiment of Satan, a "Satan with us". Worthy of
remembrance is also the Arabic term ummu'l kitab (literally
"the mother of the book") the heavenly Scripture from which all
Scripture with us on earth is derived, as if each Scripture were
her child.
In the light of the above, let us turn to well known verses of
the Qur'an: "He is Allah, the One.... He begetteth not nor was
begotten...." (Pickthall, The Meaning of the Glorious Koran,
surah 112:1-4). This surah clearly states that God has no son
and that no son can be God. Why? "How can He have a child, when
there is for Him no consort?..." (surah 6:102). As these and
other verses suggest, even to imagine that God would have a wife
and sexual intercourse with her would be absolute folly. But do
these Quranic verses actually address the Biblical meaning of
Jesus' Sonship? Does the Bible affirm that God has a wife and
through procreation a son, whose name is Jesus? Our response to
these questions will become more intelligible after we consider
in greater depth the Biblical meaning of "son of God".
Biblical Meaning of "Son of God"
The term "son of God" too is used in a variety of ways in the
Holy Bible. As creator, God is the "Father" of Adam and of all
mankind (Luke 3:38; Isaiah 64:8; Malachi 2:10; etc.). However, a
more specific "Father-son" relationship is achieved by the
gracious choice of the Father and the faithful obedience and
service of the son, not by creation and certainly not by
procreation. In this sense, the following are some of those
referred to as "son(s) of God" in the Bible:
1. The people chosen by God (Exodus 4:22f.; Jeremiah 31:9,20;
Hosea 11:1; Romans 8:14; II Corinthians 6:18; Galatians 3:26;
Hebrews 2:10; Revelation 21:7)
2. Heavenly beings (Job 1:6)
3. Kings and rulers (II Samuel 7:14; Psalm 2:7; 82:6; 89:26f.)
4. Pious, godly individuals (Matthew 5:9; Luke 6:35)
If the meaning of the term "Son of God" in the case of Jesus
would be limited to the same significance that it has in these
cases above, even the Muslims might agree with its use. In fact,
some Sufis speak of God as "Father" and humanity as "God's
children". Other Muslims, of course, might question this
terminology, preferring the use of "servant" instead of "son".
Still, the fact remains that God being Father and humanity being
His children, apart from any sexual connotation, is an idea
compatible with the thinking of some Muslims.
To equate the Sonship of Jesus with the sonship of the above
mentioned beings, however, would be denying the plain truth of
the Holy Bible and the very essence of the Christian faith.
Jesus is more than one of God's chosen people, more than one of
His heavenly messengers, more than one who rules on God's behalf
on earth, more than one who pleases God, although He is all of
those also.
Jesus as the Unique Son of God
What, then, is the evidence for this tremendous claim? Is it
because Jesus, though a man born of a woman, was yet born of a
virgin? Some Christians, it is true, might conclude that because
Jesus was born of the virgin Mary, therefore He is the Son of
God. Likewise, some Muslims, while denying that Jesus is the Son
of God, might consider the virgin birth of Jesus to be the basis
for Christian belief that Jesus is the Son of God. Biblically
speaking, however, Jesus' Sonship does not rest upon His being
born of the virgin Mary. On the contrary, as we shall later see
more clearly, His virgin birth rests upon His Sonship. Before
Mary ever was, the Son of God is. Jesus does not become the Son
of God, but the Son of God becomes Jesus. Thus Jesus, as the
Son, speaks to the Father about "the glory I had with You before
the world began" (John 17:5; cf. Colossians 1:13-20), long
before Mary ever was. This eternal Son of God entered into the
limitations of time and space by the power of God working
through the virgin Mary and was born as a man, called Jesus, in
Bethlehem some nineteen centuries ago.
Similarly, Jesus is not the Son of God because of His mighty
works and wonderful words. On the contrary, He does His mighty
works and speaks His wonderful words because He is the Son of
God.
True, both the manner of Jesus' birth and the nature of His
works lend evidence for His Sonship. But neither, alone or
together, provides the origin or basis for His Sonship. The
distinction is important.
Indeed, His works witness to His Sonship. A "son" must be
obedient to his "father", doing his will and works, being like
him (cf. John 8:37-47). Jesus Himself pointed to His works as
evidence of the fact that He is the Son of God: "If I am not
acting as my Father would, do not believe me. But if I am,
accept the evidence of my deeds, even if you do not believe me,
so that you may recognise and know that the Father is in me, and
I in the Father" (John 10:37f.). Jesus did the works of God, His
Father, acting as God would.
In addition to the evidence of His works, Jesus had other proof
that He is the Son of God. At important times in His life, He
was called the Son of God by the Father Himself and by others:
1. The Annunciation: The angel Gabriel told the virgin Mary that
her son would be called "the Son of God". (Luke 1:32,35)
2. The Baptism: God's voice from heaven proclaimed: This is my
Son, whom I love." (Matthew 3:17, etc.)
3. The Transfiguration: God's voice once again proclaimed: "This
is my Son, whom I love. Listen to Him." (Mark 9:7, etc.)
4. The Crucifixion: The Roman centurion and his men confessed at
the time of Jesus' crucifixion: "Surely he was the Son of
God!" (Matthew 27:54)
5. The Resurrection: St. Paul writes that Jesus' resurrection
from the dead declared Him to be "the Son of God". (Romans 1 :4)
Others in addition to God Himself, His angel, and the Roman
soldier proclaimed that Jesus is the Son of God. Madmen and even
unclean spirits confessed to Jesus: "You are the Son of God."
(Mark 3:11; cf. 5:7; Matthew 8:29; Luke 4:41; 8:28) . Jesus'
disciples also confessed that He is "the Christ (Messiah), the
Son of the living God" (Matthew 16:16; cf. 14:33). Jesus, as a
true Son, preferred to give glory to His Father, but He too
would not deny His Sonship (Matthew 26:63f.; Mark 14:62; John
10:36). Of interest in the first two of these passages (and
others) is the close association between the terms "Messiah" and
"Son of God".
It is also interesting to note how closely Jesus' Sonship is
associated with His suffering (Romans 5:10; 8:32; Galatians
2:20; Hebrews 5:8; 6:6) . When Jesus was famished after a long
fast, the tempter said to Him: "If you are the Son of God, tell
these stones to become bread" (Matthew 4:3, etc.). When Jesus
was in agony on the cross, the passersby mocked Him and said:
"Come down from the cross, if you are the Son of God!"
(Matthew 27:40). These speakers forgot that Jesus is the Son of
God. God, who seeks and serves and even suffers to save
those whom He loves, the people of the world. He is not the son
of some earthly king, who must show his might and save his pride
by appearing to be victorious in the eyes of the world,
according to the world's standards. It was just because He is
the Son of the God of love that He would not use His
power for selfish purposes but perfectly fulfilled the will of
His Father, who chose to reveal Himself and His love to all men
through His suffering Servant/Son.
Even a casual reading of the verses cited above would show that
the use of the term "Son of God" with reference to Jesus is
different in both quality and extent from the other uses
mentioned previously. Others were graciously chosen by God as
His adopted sons; the Son is in the Father eternally. Others
obeyed the Father, though imperfectly; Jesus the Son obeyed Him
perfectly, without sin (Hebrews 4:15) . Sons should be like
their father, but only Jesus was perfect like Him in His
goodness, giving Himself completely for Him and His people. The
Father has entrusted all judgement to the Son alone, "that all
may honour the Son just as they honour the Father" (John 5:22,23).
Only the Son gives life as the Father gives life (John 5:21).
For was the Father has life in Himself, so He has granted the
Son to have life in Himself" (John 5:26). The Son is obedient
to the Father, with the will of the Father becoming concretized
in the way of the Son; but the Father also listens and gives
heed to the Son (John 11:41-44). Thus there is a sharing of
power, authority, knowledge, glory, and kingship which indicates
a relationship of equality and mutuality between the Two who are
One. About what people, what angel, what king, what pious man
could it be said: "In these last days God has spoken to us by
the Son whom He has appointed heir of all things, and through
whom He made the universe. The Son is the radiance of God's glory
and the exact representation of His being, sustaining all things
by His powerful word"? (Hebrews 1:2f.)
Many of the uses of the term "son" in the Holy Bible and in
various languages can give clues to the significance of the term
"Son of God" with reference to Jesus, but in the end its use,
directly applied to Jesus, remains as unique as the relationship
it expresses is unique. Jesus said: "I and the Father are one."
(John 10:30)
Explaining the Meaning of Jesus as Son of God
How then, can Muslims (and Christians?) be helped to understand
Jesus and the true significance of His name "Son of God"?
In the first place, it is significant that the Holy Injil does
not portray Jesus indiscriminately proclaiming that He is the
Son of God - and, for that matter, that He is the Messiah
(Christ). Nor need we, especially when we know the term to be
offensive to those with whom we converse. When we use it, we
should explain it.
The Jews, in fact, were familiar with the title "Son of God", as
they were familiar with the title "Messiah". There is evidence,
though outside of the Bible, that they spoke about the Torah as
the "daughter of God", meaning "the revelation of God", without
sacrificing their monotheistic convictions. They did, however,
object when Jesus called Himself "the Messiah" and "the Son of
God", considering His confession of Himself to be blasphemy and
worthy of crucifixion (John 5:18; cf. 10:33). It, therefore, is
hardly surprising that Jesus Himself used this term discreetly.
Secondly, it should be made clear that Jesus was a man, a
servant and a prophet, just as Muslims have always insisted and
just as the Holy Injil claims the Son of God to have become.
When the disciples of Jesus first met Jesus, they understood Him
to be a man. How could they have understood otherwise? They had
heard how Satan tempted Him. They saw Him hungry and weary. They
knew Him in need of companionship and prayer. They saw Him weep.
They heard Him in prayer and saw Him in action surrendering His
will to the Father's will, claiming the Father's will to be His
bread. His words: "The Father is greater than I" were
intelligible to them. How else should they have understood? Or
we, had we been with Him on earth?
Only after the disciples' association with Jesus had deepened,
after they heard His words and witnessed His deeds, did they and
others begin to wonder and ask questions about Him: "Who is this
man?" "From where does He come?" They saw Him feed the
multitudes, heal the sick, control nature, raise the dead. They
heard Him forgive sins, they heard Him speak in an extraordinary
manner about His purpose in coming, about His relation with the
Temple, the Law and the prophets, about the love of God and His
personal relationship with God. Even then, there were those who
misinterpreted Him and His works, willfully or otherwise.
The disciples' understanding of both Jesus and His ministry was
a gradual and at times a painful process. What He required of
them to understand Him was not simply keen intellect but firm
trust in God and obedience to His will, readiness for
self-examination, repentance, and a change of mind and heart in
the light of God's holiness and His holy Law, an openness to
receive what He said about Himself, what He had done, what He
was about to do, and the purpose of it all. True, Peter
confessed Jesus to be the Messiah and Son of God, but
immediately proceeded to contradict Jesus by denying that Jesus
must suffer and die (Matthew 16:21,22), as if he had sharper
insight into the will and ways of God than Jesus (John 12:1-7)!
Women seemed to understand better (Mark 14:1-9). In brief, to
understand Jesus is not simply to verbally confess Him, to
admire and to applaud Him; it is to follow and obey Him.
In fact, the Holy Injil clearly and consistently indicates that
Jesus' disciples did not fathom the deeper significance of His
Sonship or His ministry until He had risen from the dead! Then
their change in mind and heart was dramatic. Does this offer the
Christian a clue for his witness? While to legislate techniques
for presenting Jesus to the Muslim or anyone may be dubious, is
there here a ' procedural pattern on which Christians might
meditate, even imitate?
Thirdly, it is often necessary to explain what the term "Son of
God" in reference to Jesus does not mean. As already
noted above, nowhere does the Holy Injil suggest that God takes
Mary as a wife, that He procreates, and that Jesus therefore is
the Son of God by virtue of His birth to Mary. God is no male
deity! The Injil, like the Qur'an, speaks of Jesus as the son of
the virgin Mary. In Arabic Jesus is called
ibnu'llah not waladu'llah. Nor does the Injil
sacrifice the fundamental Biblical affirmation that God is one.
Nor does it suggest that somehow for Christians Jesus, as the
Son of God, is another god associated with God, or that somehow
Jesus, as the Son of God, is the second or third of three gods,
or that somehow Jesus is elevated from His original position of
man and servant to the status of the Son of God and then made to
supplant the true God. In no way does the Holy Injil's
affirmation of Jesus' Sonship transform Biblical monotheism into
a subtle form of polytheism. God is one! And Jesus, the Son of
God, confirms that God is one! Only after Muslims and
Christians have established this common ground, can they proceed
to discussion about who the one God is, what He does for
mankind, what He expects from mankind, and how God is one while
Jesus is the Son of God.
Fourthly, Christian belief in Jesus as the Son of God simply
echoes the constant, insistent and consistent affirmation
throughout the Injil that He is the Son of God. Contrary to what
some Muslims suggest, normally with no evidence, Christians,
including St. Saul, did not invent this title. For Christians to
deny the Sonship of Jesus would mean that they should expunge
all references in the Holy Injil to this title. If Christians
were to do this, then they would be truly guilty of corrupting
their Scriptures, just as many Muslims (but not the
Qur'an) have felt Christians to have done. The Qur'an tells
Christians that they are to judge according to the Injil (surah
5:46,47). It contains no reference to a corrupted or abrogated
Injil.
Fifthly, and closely related to the previous points, Christians
should encourage Muslims to read the Holy Injil with an open
mind and heart and to compare both the Quranic and Biblical
portrayals of Jesus' Sonship. Even if the Muslim rejects the
Biblical portrayal of Jesus' Sonship after having seriously
studied it, he should at least have understood the meaning of
Jesus' Sonship as the Bible portrays it. Would the Muslim, after
understanding the Biblical meaning of Jesus' Sonship, then
entertain the possibility that the Quranic and Biblical
portrayals of Jesus as the Son of God differ from each other,
that the Qur'an rejects a concept of Jesus' Sonship which the
Bible never affirms and could never affirm because it is really
alien to the Biblical concept? Yet the Bible affirms Jesus to be
the Son of God - in the Biblical sense of this term!
A frame of reference more congenial to the Islamic portrayal of
Jesus may further help Muslims in understanding Jesus as the Son
of God. Among the many names used of Jesus in the Qur'an, three
especially can help elucidate the Christian understanding of His
Sonship:
1. 'Abdu'llah -- "Servant of God" (surah 19:30)
2. Rasulu'llah -- "Apostle (messenger) of God" (surah 4:157)
3. Kalimatu'llah --"word of God" (surah 4:171)
1. The prime duty of a son is to honour and obey his father, to
serve him freely and fully. The ideas of being a servant and a
son are very closely related in the Holy Bible. The Christian
Church has always regarded the great Servant Songs in the book
of the prophet Isaiah as referring to Jesus the Messiah (Isaiah
42:1-4; 52:13-53:12, etc.). This Servant is called "my chosen
One" by God. "The Spirit of the Sovereign Lord" is upon Him
(Isaiah 61:1). He heals the sick and helps the oppressed. He
even suffers and bears the guilt of others and is vindicated by
God. The early Christians used the same word found in the
Servant Songs and referred to Jesus as God's "holy Servant"
(Acts 4:27,30). This Son indeed served the Father, not out of
compulsion but because of His unity with the Father and out of
love. Which servant serves better than a son? In Jesus, the son
and servant are fused!
2. An apostle or messenger is "one sent" by God to proclaim His
message. Jesus also is called an "apostle" in the Holy Injil
(Hebrews 3:1). In the Gospel account according to John, the Son
is very often spoken of as "the sent One", and the two terms are
almost synonymous. The other Gospel accounts use this
terminology also, and the terms "Father" and "the sending One"
are virtually synonymous too (Matthew 10:40; Mark 9:37: Luke
9:48). There have been many apostles who were sent by God. But
the Apostle/Son was not only sent by God; He was also sent from
God. He came forth from above, from God Himself (John
8:23,42) and so He is called "Immanu-el", "God with us".
(Matthew 1:23)
Jesus' parable of the absent landlord is very instructive in the
whole matter of His Sonship. The landlord's servants were unable
to collect the rent for the vineyard he had planted and fully
equipped and then let out to tenants. Finally, the landlord
decided to send his son as his personal representative. The
tenants killed him, thinking that thereby they had achieved
victory and could take possession of the estate for themselves,
but in the end they lost everything. (Matthew 21:33-43, etc.)
Plainly enough, the landlord and the son of the landlord in this
parable represent the Father and the Son respectively. Whatever
else the parable teaches, it clearly distinguishes between "the
sent ones" and "the sent One," the prophets and the Son, and the
ultimate destiny of "the sent One." Indeed, this parable is
strange and unusual! Yet it is no stranger or more unusual than
the Person and event to which the parable points.
Thus, it is clear for what purpose the Son has been sent by and
from the Father: to reveal Him, to carry out His plan of
salvation for mankind, to serve as His "personal"
representative, and to expend Himself in the process (John
3:16f.; Romans 8:3,29; Galatians 4:4-7). In carrying out God's
saving will, the unique Son was to acquire many "brothers", who,
by following Him, also became God's "sons" by His gracious
adoption. Those who follow the obedient Servant/Son sent from
the Father are also God's obedient servants/sons, true "muslims"
(as the followers of Jesus are called in the Qur'an - surah
3:52; 5:111). Son/Servant/sent One/Saviour: all these are
closely connected in the Holy Bible.
3. For Muslims, as for Christians, the Word of God is eternal,
even as God is eternal. It is through His Word that God acts,
creating and sustaining the universe and revealing His will. If
one should refer to the Word of God among Muslims, they would
naturally think of the Qur'an. However, many of them know that
Jesus also is called "the word (Word?) of God" in the Qur'an.
Even though they regard Jesus as only a prophet, could not their
idea about His being "the word of God" be filled with the
Biblical significance of the same expression? Some will say,
"No!" Others have found this a very useful means for explaining
Jesus' relationship with the Father, including the concept of
Sonship. As He is God's eternal Word, so He is God's eternal Son
(John 1:14) . It may also help remove the deep-rooted
misunderstandings about this relationship, leading Muslims to
understand that Christians believe in only one God, that they do
not set up the Son as another God, nor do they displace God by
the Son, nor do they make a man into God.
Even among people we depend much on one's word to know what a
person wants and does, and what he is like. Through his word a
man makes himself known, bringing out what is within him. We
trust Abdullah because we trust Abdullah's word. We trust
Abdullah's word because we trust Abdullah. We distinguish
between Abdullah and his word and we equate Abdullah and his
word. Both are true.
In a much different, higher and glorious way, the Word which
proceeds from God gives expression to God's will and to His
acts, and also reveals what He is like in a comprehensible way.
Thus the Holy Injil says:
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and
the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God; all things
were made through him, and without him was not anything made
that was made. In him was life, and the life was the light of
men .... And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, full
of grace and truth; we have beheld his glory, glory as of the
only Son from the Father.... No one has ever seen God; the
only Son, who is in the bosom[1] of the Father, he has made
him known."[2] (RSV, John 1:1-4,14,18)
"This is my Son, whom I love. Listen to him" (Mark 9:7)
"... in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son."
(Hebrews 1:2)
[1.] i.e., so intimately is He related to the Father. Should one
recall that both the Qur'an and the Bible speak of "the hand
of God", "the face of God", etc.?
[2.] "He has made Him known": literally, from the original Greek
language of the Holy Injil, "He has exegised (interpreted,
explained) Him". It is as if God had revealed His concealed
heart through His enfleshed Word.
If a Muslim can accept that the Word of God, which is eternal as
God Himself is eternal, can enter into the limitations of time
and space and become available in book form, could he not also
comprehend that this same Word might be made manifest as a human
being? If on earth the uncreated Word of God in its created form
of a book can be described as both uncreated and created, then
cannot the uncreated Word of God in its created form of a human
being be described as both uncreated and created, if the one God
should so will it? That God has so willed is the testimony of
the Holy Injil: God's eternal self-expression, His Word, His
Son, has entered human form as Jesus the Messiah.
Jesus as the Son of God: God's Self-Revelation on Earth
We all know that God is the creator of all creation. We know
that he continually points mankind to manifold signs in creation
and in history which, in turn, point mankind beyond these signs
to God Most High Himself as mankind's creator and judge. We know
that periodically He has intervened in creation's history
through prophets and apostles and the Scriptures. He has
mediated through them, whereby He has offered mankind a pattern
for life. Probably we all also agree that he bears witness to
Himself through human conscience. In all these ways God reveals
to us something about Himself so that we can know something
about Him. But does He reveal Himself? Can we know Him?
The response to these crucial questions is found in the
astounding claims of Jesus:
"All things have been committed to me by my Father. 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." (Matthew 11 :27)
"Don't you know me, Philip, even after I have been among you
such a long time? Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father.
How can you say, 'Show us the Father'? Don't you believe that
I am in the Father, and that the Father is in me?" (John
14:9,10)
Angels, persons and things can reveal to us something about God.
But God alone can reveal God! It takes God to reveal Himself to
mankind . It takes God to reveal Himself to mankind under
created circumstances congenial to human understanding. What
better way for the eternal revealer to be revealed to mankind on
earth than by clothing His self-expression in human flesh!
In Jesus, His eternal Son, the revealer becomes also the
revealed for us. This is why the Holy Bible speaks of Jesus as
God manifested in the flesh. In turn, the revealed Son becomes
the revealer of the Father among mankind. "Trust in God; trust
also in me," says Jesus (John 14:1). In inviting His hearers to
trust Him, Jesus is not subtly deflecting trust away from God;
rather He is simply affirming that God, forever Most High, is
revealing Himself through Jesus by His presence in Jesus.
God, the revealer and the revealed. We would agree that God
creates the world, appoints prophets, sends Scriptures and
provides laws for human guidance. But can He Himself enter His
own creation to be with us? Would this not be unworthy of Him?
Would He not demean Himself thereby? Would not His entry into
the world conflict with His sovereignty, cloud the brightness of
His glory, and make Him less than greater?
God indeed is greater. To Him alone belong the kingdom, the
power, and the glory. He alone is sovereign. But, we may ask,
what is the nature of God's sovereignty? And how does God
Himself manifest the nature of His sovereignty so that humanity
too can begin to understand the nature of His sovereignty?
Stated otherwise, are we to understand God's sovereignty simply
as the sovereignty of any earthly potentate magnified to its
ultimate degree? Does God Himself manifest His sovereignty over
His creation by remaining aloof from it? Does He safeguard His
sovereignty by insulating Himself in celestial serenity, far
removed from the suffering and sin of this dying world? Or is it
possible that our understanding of God's sovereignty conflicts
with His own understanding of His sovereignty; that His thoughts
are not our thoughts and our ways are not His ways, even as God
has declared through His prophet Isaiah (Isaiah 55:8)? Is it
possible that God not only answers but even anticipates the
yearning of this prophet: "Oh, that You would rend the heavens
and come down...!"? (Isaiah 64:1)
According to the Bible, God is love. In Biblical perspective, by
entering into this world, God does not demean Himself; rather He
exalts Himself. By His visitation on earth, He does not cloud
His glory; rather, He magnifies it among mankind. By His
presence among us, He does not become the lesser; rather, He
becomes the greater for our greater praise. By being not only
above us but with us in Jesus Immanuel, He not only acts in
conformity with Himself; even more, He is being Himself and He
is being what He will be.
Finally, let us briefly summarize the Biblical meaning of Jesus
as the Son of God, bearing in mind that 1. "the Lord our God,
the Lord is one" (Deuteronomy 6:4) and 2. the Holy Injil itself
must be read to grasp the fuller meaning of Jesus' Sonship
through His servanthood:
1. The unique Son of God is of the Father eternally;
by Him God created and sustains the universe.
As God's self-expression He is truly God.
2. Because God loved us, the unique Son of God entered time
and space, was born of the Virgin Mary and was called Jesus
the Messiah. As God's self-expression on earth in the form of
man He is also truly human.
3. The Son shares the attributes of the Father; He is like Him
in powerful works and loving self-giving.
4. The Son has been sent by/from the Father as His representative
to carry out His work of revelation and salvation.
5. The Son is the Father's personal message, God expressing
Himself and His love in a way that can be seen and heard and
comprehended by humanity.
6. The Son serves the Father perfectly; the Father is also
responsive to the will of the Son.
7. The Father and the Son are One in a unique relationship of
complete mutuality between Master and Servant, sending One and sent
One, revealed One and revealing One.
8. Those who believe in the unique Servant/Son sent by God, God's
personal Good News" ("Evangel" or "Injil"), and who follow
Him, can become His "brothers and "sisters"; they can become
adopted, obedient children of God.
Praise and glory and wisdom and thanks
and honour and power and strength
be to our God forever and ever.
Amen!
(Revelation 7:12)
Books by Ernest Hahn
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