THE VIRGIN BIRTH, PART 2
By
Dr. Stephen Jones: Aug 06, 2019
Blog
Post Date: 8-7-2019
The
virgin birth of Jesus is the central feature that defined his nature and
character. It is also the fundamental pattern for the manner in which we ourselves
may become sons of God. If the fourth-century church had understood the true
implications of the virgin birth and the idea of Sonship, they might have
avoided much turmoil and over-exuberant enforcement of the creeds formulated by
the church councils.
But
in order to trace the problem back to its roots, we must begin with the Book of
Beginnings.
The Genesis Record
Genesis 1:27 tells us that God created man, male
and female. This record is in the first of eleven family histories that Moses
compiled, making up the book of Genesis. The first tablet is an overall account
of creation, focusing upon the order of events within seven “days.”
Each
tablet or manuscript is entitled, “This is the generations of….” (KJV).
Up to the time of Abraham, tablets normally had their titles at the end, but in
the time of Abraham, titles began to be written at the start of the tablet.
Hence, the title identifying the first creation tablet is given not in Genesis 1:1 but at the end in Genesis 2:4 (NASB),
4 This is the account of the heavens and the earth when they were created,
in the day that the Lord God made earth and heaven.
Genesis 2:7 is part of the second tablet giving a
more detailed account of the creation of man. It shows how Adam was first created
and how Eve was taken out of Adam (Genesis 2:21). It includes the marriage principle
of unity in Genesis 2:24, along with the account of the
original sin and its penalty. It concludes with the account of Cain, Abel, and
Seth. The title of tablet 2 is found in Genesis 5:1,
1 This is the book of the generations of Adam.
We
then begin the third tablet, or “book,” in Moses’ compilation, giving us the
family records of Shem, Ham, and Japheth, as we read at the end in Genesis 10:1).
The First and Last Adam
The
Apostle Paul compares Adam to Christ, telling us in 1 Corinthians 15:45-47,
45 So also it is written, “The first man, Adam, became a living soul.”
The last Adam became a life-giving spirit… 47 The first man is from
the earth, earthy; the second man is from heaven.
Paul
explains further in Romans 5 that the sin of Adam was overcome by the
righteousness of Christ. Adam’s sin brought death into the world, which was
then passed down to his descendants through his mortal and corruptible seed,
making all of us mortal as well. Peter affirms this as well when speaking of a
second begetting of seed which imparts immortality and incorruption (1 Peter 1:23, 24 25). Here the NASB mistranslates gennao as
"born" rather than as "begotten."
The
first Adam was said to be created; the last Adam was begotten by the Holy
Spirit in what we know as the virgin birth. Hence, there is an inherent
difference between the two Adams insofar as their origins are concerned. This
means also that we who were born of earthly parents in a “natural” manner are
tied to Adam’s creation. Paul refers to this “self” (NASB) as the “old man”
(KJV). It is our earthly identity, or, more specifically, our soulish identity,
because Adam was made “a living soul.”
The
idea of Sonship is the revelation of a second begetting patterned after
Christ’s own virgin birth. We are begotten by incorruptible and immortal seed,
which is the living word that “abides forever” (1 Peter 1:25). The quality of this seed is what
imparts immortality and incorruption. It begets “Christ in you the hope of
glory” (Colossians 1:27), and that holy seed, because of
its Holy Spirit origin, is incapable of sin. So First John 3:9, properly translated, reads,
9 No one who is begotten of God practices sin, because His seed abides
in him; and he cannot sin, because he is begotten of God.
Those
ignorant of the Sonship idea misapply this verse, thinking that a true believer
is suddenly made perfect when he makes his confession of faith. Such a view
makes no distinction between the “old man” that was begotten by corruptible
seed from Adam and the “new man” that was begotten by incorruptible seed from
the Last Adam.
Soul
and Spirit
One
of the biggest hindrances to the truth of Sonship is not distinguishing between
the soul and the spirit. Paul says in 1 Thessalonians 5:23,
23 Now may the God of peace Himself sanctify you entirely; and may your
spirit and soul and body be preserved complete, without blame at the coming
of our Lord Jesus Christ.
We
are a tripartite being, and the word of God is a sharp sword that divides and
distinguishes between soul and spirit (Hebrews 4:12). Paul differed from the widespread
Greek view that saw man as a duality of body and spiritual soul. The Greeks did
not distinguish between the soul and spirit, and so they believed the soul was
heavenly and divine. The Bible, however, says that the soul is from the earthly
man (1 Corinthians 15:45, 47, 48).
Paul
contrasts the soulish “man” from the spiritual “man” in the latter part of 1
Corinthians 3, where the word psuchikos, “soulish” (from psuche,
“soul”) is often translated “natural.” Paul was not speaking of a worldly
individual in contrast to a righteous man. He was speaking of the old man and
the new man within each of us—two identities, each having a different father.
By
the second century, when the church lost its Hebrew worldview through a massive
Greek influx of new Greek converts, the majority of Christians appeared to be
more influenced by Plato than by Paul. Paul’s views on the sovereignty of God
were replaced by the Greek view of free will. The tripartite view of man was
replaced by the dualistic view. The law as an expression of the nature of God
was replaced by the Greek philosophical idea of good. Sin as an offence
was replaced by a new definition of sin as ignorance, moving the
solution out of the court room into a classroom.
One
of the most basic shifts was to forsake the Hebrew worldview that a good God
created matter and to adopt the Greek view that matter was inherently evil and
created by the demiurge, an evil god (or “devil”). The Greek view that spirit
is good and matter is evil caused them to believe that the goal of history was
not to marry heaven and earth but to divorce them. Thus, all things could never
be put under the feet of Christ, for matter was inherently incorrigible and
could only be separated from God forever.
Greek
dualism, then, despised the body and interpreted Paul’s statements about “the
body of this death” (Romans 7:24) in ways that
Paul never contemplated. Whereas Paul was teaching us the difference between
the old soulish man and the new spiritual man, each begotten by a different
father, the Greek mind interpreted this in terms of good spirit and evil body.
This, in turn, caused many to reject the bodily resurrection of the dead and to
reinterpret resurrection in more mystical terms that did not allow any return
to a physical body.
For
our present purpose, the Greek idea of a good spiritual soul in contrast to an
evil material body undermined any serious understanding of Sonship. Their Greek
assumption then prevented them from understanding the nature of Christ Himself,
and the church found itself arguing about Christ’s human and divine natures
through Greek lenses. Disputes broke out, each side calling their opponents
heretics, when in fact, neither side had a clear grasp of the biblical truth
about Sonship.
Paul’s
View
Paul
makes it clear that when Adam sinned, he became mortal and that his mortality was
passed down to his descendants through his seed. So Romans 5:12 says, “just as through one man sin
entered into the world, and death through [Adam’s] sin, and so death
spread to all men, on which [eph ho] all sin.” Hence, all who
have been begotten by mortal seed have themselves inherited mortality, the
original disease that has resulted in corruption and sin. Our mortality makes
our flesh weak and thereby causes us to sin.
In
other words, we do not have a sinful nature as such; we have a mortal
nature that sins.
Jesus’
virgin birth bypassed this problem. Not being begotten by corruptible seed from
Adam, Jesus’ soul was sinless. The fact that His mother was of Adamic seed (and
mortal) did not change this, because mortality is passed down through the seed
of man, not through a woman. Being begotten by incorruptible seed, Jesus
qualified as the spotless Lamb that was the Supreme Sacrifice for the sin of
the world. If He had been begotten by Joseph or any other man, He would have
been disqualified.
Mary’s
role was to unite heaven and earth in marriage, at least in seed form, and when
Jesus earthly ministry was complete, He received authority over heaven and
earth (Matthew 28:18).
This
pattern was thus laid down for all of the sons of God who would come afterward.
All of us, whether male or female, play the role of Mary, for when the Holy
Spirit overshadows us, we too are begotten with holy seed through our ears in
hearing the word of truth. The Holy Spirit begets a “new creature” (2 Corinthians 5:17), which Paul also calls the
“new man” (Ephesians 4:24 KJV) or “new self” (Ephesians 4:24 NASB).
The
new man is begotten in our spirit, while the old man remains the conscious
identity (mind) of the soul. Each has a will of its own. The main difference
between us and Jesus is that Jesus’ soul was not begotten by Adamic seed,
whereas our souls are Adamic. Our similarity is seen in our spiritual man,
which, like Christ, is begotten in our virgin spirit and is perfect,
incorruptible, and immortal.
Having
two “men” within us, one soulish and one spiritual, we are then admonished to
change our identity from the old man to the new. This involves a change of
identity that is established in the divine court, much like a man may go to an
earthly judge to change his name. It is a matter of law, because from that
point on, the law, the court, and the Judge Himself officially recognize you as
a different person.
The
life of a son of God, then, is not about trying to cleanse the old man from sin
or to perfect the old man. It is not about seeking to make the old man
immortal, as if somehow one can overrule the sentence of God upon Adam. No, the
old man has already been condemned to death. The path to immortality is not
about granting favor to the old man of flesh. That old man must be crucified,
not saved (Romans 6:6), for he received the death penalty
from the beginning. Hence, being a son of God is about transferring our
identity to a new man who is immortal and incorruptible inherently by virtue of
the sanctity of the seed that has begotten that new man.
Paul
says that we have been set free from the dictates of Sin commanding us to
violate the law of God (Romans 8:2). Even though we
still experience inner conflict between the two “men” residing in the same
body, we are called to serve God and obey His law (Romans 7:25). We are to stop thinking that we are
still subservient to the old slave master. We are no longer in agreement with
him. We now “joyfully concur with the law of God in the inner man” (Romans 7:22).
Our
new creation man is inherently in agreement with his heavenly Father, even as
Jesus was always in agreement with His Father. Like Father, like son. Jesus’
soul was in agreement with His Father from the beginning, of course, whereas
our soul was not virgin-born and so it remains in conflict and disagreement
with the law of God. Nonetheless, we are admonished to change our conscious
identity from the old man to the new and then live our lives in agreement with
the will of our heavenly Father in accordance with His laws.
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