JESUS AND HIS FATHER, PART 2
By
Dr. Stephen Jones: Aug 20, 2019
Blog
Post Date: 8-27-2019
The
law of imputation, which Paul uses in Romans 4 in regard to calling us
righteous in a pre-existent way, is best summed up in Romans 4:17. The NASB reads, “God… calls into
being that which does not exist.” The KJV reads, “God… calleth those
things which be not as though they were.”
Perhaps
The Emphatic Diaglott says it best: “God… calls things not in being, as
though existing.”
Paul’s
application of this law of imputation has to do with our righteousness, which
we do not presently have in this body, and yet by law God considers it to be in
existence already. The law is an expression of God’s character, and since God
has the power and right to do anything consistent with His nature, He has the
right to say things exist even though they are not yet manifested in the earth.
In
fact, it cannot be that it does NOT exist, once He calls it into existence. The
universe must obey His commands, for He is God. We have difficulty conceiving
of such power, for it is beyond our experience and transcends our earthly
nature. Yet the key is to understand that things exist in spirit form before
they manifest in the earth.
Not
only people but all historical events first exist (or “occur”) in the heavens
before they occur on the earth. Predestination is rooted in the law of
imputation. We ourselves pray and conduct spiritual warfare according to the
same law, for it is only when conditions are changed in the second heavens that
those changes are reflected afterward here on the earth.
And
so, in the laws of spiritual warfare that are found in Deuteronomy 20, the
priests’ duty was to inform the army that God was with them and that they had
already been given the victory (Deuteronomy 20:4). The responsibility of the
priests was to “perform the service” (Numbers 4:23) at the tabernacle. The Hebrew
literally reads, “to war the warfare.” In other words, they were to win
the spiritual battles in the heavens before the troops on earth engaged in
warfare.
In
the big picture, the Kingdom of God as a whole pre-existed in heaven as decreed
by God Himself, and we have been given the authority to bear witness to His
will and bring heaven to earth. Of course, none of our own prayers or faith
would be effective if it were not for the breakthrough that Jesus made at the
cross and in His resurrection and ascension to the throne. His work laid the
foundations for our success. Our faith is subordinate to His faith. If He had
been unable to complete His work, we ourselves would have no assurance of completing
our own callings.
The Law of Double Witness
As
I said earlier, every law is an expression of some aspect of the nature of God
and is therefore a universal law. Every law has jurisdiction and power wherever
God may be found. Moses was the first (in Scripture) to tell us that heaven and
earth were two witnesses (Deuteronomy 4:26; 30:19). The first witness calls things into
existence; the second establishes it in the earth.
The
entire purpose of God in Genesis 1:1 is rooted in
this law of the double witness. Earth was created to bear witness to all that
is in heaven. The first witness is God Himself, who has called all things into
existence by His own word (logos), but nothing was seen on earth until the
second witness spoke what He heard His Father say.
Hence,
the “one God and Father of all who is over all and through all and in all”
(Ephesians 4:6) remained true to Himself by
bringing forth “the Image of the invisible God, the Firstborn of all
creation” (Colossians 1:13). His
purpose was to be the Creator’s double witness that would “establish” all
things, speaking only what He heard His Father say, and doing only what He saw
His Father do.
So Hebrews 1:5, 6 says,
5 For to which of the angels did He ever say, “Thou art My Son, today I
have begotten Thee”? And again, “I will be a Father to Him, and He shall be a
Son to Me”? 6 And when He again brings the First-born into the
world, He says, “And let all the angels of God worship Him.”
The
angels were not begotten, nor are they called “sons.” The angels were to
worship the First-born Son as God, for Hebrews 1:8, 9 continues, saying,
8 But of the Son He says, “Thy throne, O God, is forever and
ever, and the righteous scepter is the scepter of His kingdom. 9
Thou hast loved righteousness and hated lawlessness; therefore God, Thy God,
hath anointed Thee with the oil of gladness above Thy companions.”
The
throne of the Son, then, and His scepter is above the angels, called “Thy
companions.” Speaking of the Son Himself, we read, “God, Thy God, hath
anointed Thee with the oil of gladness.” Here again, the Son Himself has a
God who has the power to anoint Him, that is, to make Him the Messiah, the
Christ, the Anointed One.
At
the same time, Christ is called “God” in verse 8. Hence, it is proper to refer
to Christ as “God,” though He is also recognized as having His Father-God above
Him. To claim that Christ is “coeternal” and “coequal” with the Father is not a
proper way of knowing Him. Hence, Jesus Himself spoke of His Father as being “the
one and only God” (John 5:44) and in spite of
His own highly exalted position, He said “the Father is greater than
I” (John 14:28).
The Amen of God
In Revelation 3:14 Jesus gave a message to the
church of Laodicea, saying,
14 And to the angel of the church in Laodicea write: “The Amen, the
faithful and true Witness, the Beginning of the creation of God, says this.”
Christ
is the “Amen,” because He bore witness to His Father’s words and will at the
time of creation. He was a “faithful” witness, because He fully believed what
the Father said. He was a “true” witness, because He was an eyewitness and an
earwitness to all that His Father was saying and doing. He was not simply repeating
what others had heard or seen, nor was it just His opinion. He was a
fully-qualified witness, called and anointed for that very purpose.
Hence,
when the Father spoke “Light!” the Son said Amen, or “let it be so.” Genesis 1:3 records it as “Let there be light.”
We are not told specifically whose logos was being spoken here, but the
implication is that the Son was speaking in order to “establish” light by His
double witness. At each stage of creation, the Son spoke what He heard His
Father say.
So
Paul says in 1 Corinthians 8:6,
6 yet for us there is but one God, the Father, from [eis] whom
are all things, and we exist for Him; and one Lord, Jesus Christ, by [dia,
“through”] whom are all things, and we exist through Him.
All
things come FROM the Father but they come THROUGH Jesus Christ. The subtle
distinction in the wording shows that both Father and Son were involved in the
creation. The Father created, but they were manifested through the witness of
the Son by the law of the double witness. This is again declared in John 1:3,
3 All things came into being by [dia, “through”] Him, and apart
from Him nothing came into being that has come into being.
Scripture
is careful to distinguish between the One who Created and the One through
whom all things came into being. All things came “from” the Creator in that
they were created from God’s own substance—God particles—but it required a
second witness by the First-born of creation to bring it into being. Hence, all
things came into being through Christ—that is, through the witness of
the Amen.
Jesus
was a witness in the beginning, when the Father created all things. He
therefore pre-existed His birth in Bethlehem and was a necessary component and
participant in creation. The importance of this principle is seen in the fact
that because of sin, there is also a new heaven and a new earth that is
presently being created. It is a second creation, as it were, and once again,
it is being created by God by means of the law of the double witness.
This
time, however, Christ is not the lone Witness, as it was in the first creation.
Christ now has a body who are also called as witnesses. The Head has done His
part at the cross, and since that time He has been calling and training a body
to be an Amen people like Himself. These are the ones who, like their Head,
speak what they hear their Father say and do what they see their Father do.
They know His will and agree with it.
In
other words, they have learned to pray. Most of their prayer time is spent in
listening and discerning, for they are intent on knowing the will of their
Father so that they may bear witness to His will. They are not interested in
telling God what to do or in advising God so that He knows how best to recreate
heaven and earth. It is always “not my will but Thine be done.” Such are
the Amen people, who are privileged to participate in this recreation and
restoration of all things.
Relationship without
Usurpation
Though
Christ has been highly exalted, He never usurped the position of His Father but
does all things for His glory. In the end, He will present the restored
creation to the Father and take a subordinate throne, so that “God may be
all in all” (1 Corinthians 15:28).
The
same relationship is seen between Christ and His body. Christ is our Head, even
as the Head of Christ is the Father-God (1 Corinthians 11:3). Even as He does not consider
Himself to be equal with His Head, neither do we consider ourselves to be equal
with Christ. After all, that is the essential meaning of the Head-body
relationship.
In Philippians 2:1-11 Paul discusses the mind of
Christ insofar as it relates to His position of authority in relation to God
and man. In Philippians 2:4-6 we read,
4 do not merely look out for your own personal interests, but also for
the interests of others. 5 Have this attitude in yourselves which
was also in Christ Jesus, 6 who, although He existed in the form [morphe,
“shape, appearance”] of God, did not regard equality with God a thing to be
grasped…
In
other words, we are to put on the unselfish mind of Christ, looking out for the
interests of others, rather than our own interests. Christ Himself is set forth
as our Example in this, for He was interested in glorifying His Father, rather
than doing His own will.
Verse
6 says that “He existed in the form of God.” The Greek word morphe
is translated “form” here in the NASB. It comes from the root word meros,
which means “a part, portion, one of the constituent parts of a whole.” So
Gesenius’ Lexicon tells us that morphe means shape or form “through the
idea of adjustment of parts.”
In
other words, Christ was in the morphe of God, which is another way of
saying that He was in the image of God. In that sense, He was a part or portion
of God, but not the whole. Never did He attempt to grasp (or claim) equality
with God, Paul says, even though the later church councils made that claim for
Him. Philippians 2:7, 8 continues,
7 but emptied Himself, taking the form of a bond-servant, and being made
in the likeness of men. 8 And being found in appearance as a man, He
humbled Himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a
cross.
In
that Christ “emptied Himself,” it shows that He had something to leave behind.
He left behind an exalted position and became a bond-servant. He left behind
His position as God (second to His Father) and was “made in the likeness of
men.” From a position of immortal Life, He became “obedient to the point
of death.” Being willing to take all the sin of the world and its suffering
upon Himself, He set forth the example of not looking out for His own personal
interests “but also for the interests of others.”
For
this reason, having proven Himself to be the absolute Image of the God of Love
and for being the perfect Amen of God, He showed by actual example that He was
worthy to be given a name which above every name and that every knee should bow
to Him and every tongue confess (“profess”) that He is Lord to the glory of God
the Father (Philippians 2:9-11).
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