THE INCARNATION, PART 3
By
Dr. Stephen Jones: Aug 14, 2019
Blog
Post Date: 8-18-2019
If
one accepts that Jesus Christ was incarnated, one must then deal with the basic
question of pre-existence. Incarnation, after all, presumes pre-existence;
otherwise it is not incarnation at all. Incarnation means that Christ did not
originate in the womb of Mary but in an earlier time—or, in the case of a
Trinitarian, Christ had no origination point at all. Either way, we must treat
the subject of the Son of God’s pre-existence, and also ask if the sons of God
pre-existed.
For
our purposes, we will define incarnation as a transfer of identity or person-hood
from heaven to earth. Incarnation, then, means that one’s birth is only a new landscape
or environment in which the person finds himself/herself. Pre-existence, then,
is when a person existed in heaven or in a spiritual dimension prior to his
natural birth in a fleshly body on earth.
The
Jews and Greeks held significantly different concepts of pre-existence. The
Greeks believed that we all pre-existed as conscious persons. However, the Jews
believed that we pre-existed only in the mind of God, defining it in terms of
predestination and foreknowledge.
Trinitarian
and Subordinationist Viewpoints
The
question of pre-existence, of course, took center stage in the fourth century
disputes between the Trinitarians (“God the Son”) and the Subordinationists
(Unbegotten Father, Begotten Son later). The Trinitarians said that Jesus
Christ pre-existed in heaven as the second member of the Godhead and was later
incarnated in Mary. The Trinitarian view of His pre-existence was similar to
the Greek understanding.
Holding
the Jewish view were those subordinationists who believed that Christ did not
exist until He was conceived in Mary. Yet there were other subordinationists
who believed that Christ was the first One created at the beginning of time.
These affirmed the pre-existence of Christ’s Personhood in the Greek sense.
The
View of Mainstream Judaism
Talmudic
Judaism’s position is quite clearly defined in Pesikta Rabbati 152b,
“[F]rom the beginning of the creation of the world
the King Messiah was born, for he came up in the thought of God before the
world was created.”
It
was understood that from the dawn of creation the Messiah was predestined to
come into existence at a later time in history. In other words, the birth of
the Messiah was a certainty in the mind of God, and nothing would be able to
stop it.
Mainstream
Judaism did not teach that anyone, including the Messiah, pre-existed as a
person in the spiritual realm prior to being born on earth. Yet they used
terminology which, to one of another religious culture, might suggest actual
pre-existence. That is the danger of words whose definitions differ from one
religious culture to another. The essential difference between Greek and Jewish
pre-existence is the Greeks saw actual persons pre-existing, whereas the Jews
saw the Messiah as a divinely-imagined person predestined to be born at some
point in time.
Both
of the above views seem to have merit in different ways, but both also need
some modification to conform to New Testament revelation.
Jesus’
Dispute with the Jews
One
of the main themes of the Gospel of John is how the Jews misunderstood Jesus’
teachings.
For
the moment, insofar as incarnation and pre-existence is concerned, the most
relevant question for us to consider is how Jesus understood His own claims to
having “come down from heaven” (John 6:38), how He was “sent into
the world” (John 3:17), and how He existed “before
Abraham (John 8:58). Did the Jews disagree what
Jesus was actually saying, or did they misunderstand Him?
Jesus
said in John 6:48-51 that He was the true
bread that came down out of heaven as manna in the wilderness. It was bad
enough that He claimed to have come down from heaven, as this implied that He
existed in the time of Moses. But even more disturbing was that He told them
that they had to eat His flesh and drink His blood in order to have life at
all! The general populace reacted negatively in John 6:52, and He also heard grumbling
from His own disciples (John 6:61).
In
such cases where the Jews disagreed with Jesus, it is clear to us (as believers
in Jesus) that the Jewish view was not the same as Jesus’ view—which (by
personal definition) is the Hebrew view of Scripture. From our point of view,
Jesus held the Hebrew view, because He had the proper understanding of the law
and the prophets.
What
is Existence?
As
we have shown, the Jewish view denied that anything (other than God Himself)
existed prior to its appearance on earth as a part of the created order. The
question is this: Does something or someone exist before it appears in
physical form on earth? What exactly qualifies someone to the privilege of existing?
Is it a physical body, or is it something else?
We
know that spirits exist, so (in my view) physical bodies do not determine
existence. Likewise, God is spirit (John 4:24), and we are not atheists
who deny His existence. So the real underlying question is whether or not man
or Christ could have existed in spirit form prior to conception in his/her
mother.
Paul
affirmed the doctrines of foreknowledge and predestination many times,
including Romans 8:29, 30, where we
read,
29 For whom He foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the
image of His Son, that He might be the first-born among many brethren; 30
and whom He predestined, these He also called; and whom He called, these He
also justified; and whom He justified, these He also glorified.
Foreknowledge
and predestination are not the same, even though they are related. The moment
God predestined something, He then foreknew (knew ahead of the event) that it
would manifest in the earth in the way that He had predestined it. Men only
object to predestination because they prefer to maintain control of their own
destiny through “free will.” But one cannot believe in free will and
predestination at the same time, because they are opposites. There is no free
will; there is only authority that God has given. Free will is a belief that
man is in control and therefore determines his own destiny; authority is constrained
and limited by a higher will.
The
Father of Spirits
At
any rate, if a physical body is not the determining factor of existence, the
question is whether we (and Christ) existed in spirit form prior to our
appearance on earth. We are told in Hebrews 12:9,
9 Furthermore, we had earthly fathers to discipline us, and we respected
them; shall we not much rather be subject to the Father of spirits, and
live?
This
unusual title for God is interesting, because it compares earthly fathers to
our heavenly Father. Was this verse referring to God only as the father of
angels and/or evil spirits? Certainly, we are included in this verse, since we
are to be subject to this “Father of spirits.” In fact, we are subject to Him
because we believe in the Fifth Commandment, “Honor your father and your
mother” (Deuteronomy 5:16). A father has the
right to discipline and correct his children, and God is our ultimate Father,
who has caused us to exist.
If
we are “subject to the Father of spirits,” then this implies that we are
all spirits. Not only do we each have a spirit within us, but each of us is (or
was at one time) a spirit. More than that, God is the Father of spirits. He has
begotten spirits. In fact, John 1:3 says,
3 All things came into being by [dia, “through”] Him, and apart from Him
nothing came into being that has come into being.
It
can be properly stated, I believe, that all things were created by Him,
but not all things were begotten by Him. His role as Creator applies to
creation as a whole, but fatherhood implies a special act that brings forth
sons. Since He is “the Father of spirits,” then it is plain that He has
begotten spirits. Furthermore, spirits is plural, so it cannot be
limited to Jesus Christ.
The
question is WHEN did He beget spirits? When did He beget the spirit of Christ?
When did He beget your spirit, or my spirit? Was it when we were conceived by
our earthly fathers, who brought forth mortal souls in the image of the
first Adam? Is it not rather when God Himself begot us as spirits?
The
Only-Begotten Son
Scripture
says that Jesus is the “only-begotten son” (John 3:16). Yet John 1:12 says
that we have been given the right to become the children of God. Further, when
the only-begotten Son finished His work, He brought “many sons to glory”
(Hebrews 2:10). How can there be an
“only-begotten Son” and yet have “many sons”?
The
Greek term monogenes, “only-begotten,” must be defined through Hebrew
lens, rather than Greek lens. Abraham had begotten Ishmael 14 years before
Isaac, which, by the modern way of thinking, Abraham had two sons. Yet God
later told Abraham in Genesis 22:2 to “take now your son,
your only son [yachiyd], whom you love, Isaac, and go to
the land of Moriah.”
The
term yachiyd means “that which is dear, that which cannot be replaced.”
The root word is yachad, “united, joined together.” The KJV translates
it as “darling” in Psalm 22:20 and 35:17. It refers
to a son who is the designated heir of the father’s estate, the birthright
holder.
The
point is that neither yachiyd nor monogenes imply that a father
has only one son. It was the designated son, the one called to inherit the
birthright. The other sons could share in that birthright but only if they were
united with the monogenes. If they rejected him or separated themselves
from him, they lost the privilege of being co-heirs with their elder brother.
Did
the Father of spirits beget spirits (as His children) at the beginning of
creation? If so, was Christ the first-born among them, as some
subordinationists claim, or was He co-eternal with the Father, as the
Trinitarians claim?
In
Jewish terms, how did the predestination of sons actually work out in practice?
Did God use His imagination to image spiritual sons who would later be
born physically on earth? If so, did they exist? Is it possible for God to
imagine anything without it coming immediately into existence? Does God define
existence using criteria that men do not use?
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