THE VIRGIN BIRTH, PART 3
By
Dr. Stephen Jones: Aug 07, 2019
Blog
Post Date: 8-9-2019
The
first century church was established by Jesus and the original apostles. When
they passed from the scene, a second generation of leaders arose whose
worldview was Hebrew.
I
say Hebrew, rather than Jewish, in order to distinguish between
Christ’s understanding of the law from the traditions of men in popular
Judaism. The traditions of men were the understanding of the rabbis, much of
which synchronized with Christ’s own teaching, but in some key areas also
differed with Him.
So
I use the term Hebrew view to describe one’s view of the law and
prophets that aligns with Jesus’ own view. I normally use the term Jewish
to describe a popular view in Judaism that contradicts Jesus’ teaching. That
is, of course, an inadequate definition for general use, because much in
Judaism itself was also Hebrew, even by my own definitions. Much of rabbinic
teaching was genuine truth. Nonetheless, I would be reluctant to put Jesus into
the camp of Judaism, if for no other reason, Judaism rejected Jesus as the
Messiah. By demanding His crucifixion and by persecuting His followers
thereafter, they specifically distinguished themselves from the new way that
later came to be known as Christianity.
It
is clear from history that the religious leaders of Judaism violently opposed
the Christians, and if it had not been for Roman intervention in those early
days, the Christians might have been but a small footnote in Jewish history.
Not only the book of Acts but their own writings reflect this hostility. The
plain fact is that the violent conflict between Jews and Christians started
with Jewish persecution—not the other way around. If Judaism had been
open-minded enough to embrace alternative views, the church might have remained
a sect of Judaism, and the conflict may have been limited to doctrinal
disputes.
In
later years, after the church was given power and influence in the government
of Rome, Christians often took vengeance on Jews in characteristically
unchristian ways that Jesus never condoned. The abused son became the abuser,
as so often happens, perpetuating the problem instead of making the world a
better place.
Unfortunately,
the Holy Spirit’s power and demonstration largely died out by the second
century, leaving the majority of Christians in a state of carnality.
Christianity became a religion rather than a way of life. Christian teaching
shifted its focus from identifying with the “new man” to improving or reforming
the “old man,” hoping that the flesh would qualify to receive the inheritance
of sons. Such is the character and goal of religion.
The Greek Worldview
Even
as Judaism was based on law as the standard of perfection, Greek culture was
obsessed with the root idea of “the perfect man” through its own philosophies.
Classical Greek art and beautiful sculpture set forth their ideal body forms.
Philosophies sought wisdom to perfect their spiritual souls, as they called
them, so that they might attain their place among the fixed stars.
These
ideas were rooted in the culture itself, and their Hellenism even affected
Judaism itself, particularly the Sadducees. Greek wisdom originated in the
souls of men, which they mistakenly believed to be spiritual. Hebrew wisdom
originated with God via Moses (Deuteronomy 4:6), but few had the capacity to
receive it with spiritual eyes and ears, so it was interpreted by the carnal,
soulish mind of rabbis, who, though often brilliant and educated, fell short of
the divine truth.
Neither
group appears to have had a firm grasp of the difference between soul and
spirit. Certainly, no Old Testament book presented a clear teaching on the
subject. The Apostle Paul presented an alternative to both Jewish and Greek
teaching by telling us that true wisdom came from “the spirit of the man”
within (1 Corinthians 2:11). One’s spirit, enlightened by
the Holy Spirit that indwells our temple, has begotten a new man through whom
true revelation of the wisdom of God is imparted and passed on, to some degree,
to the willing soul.
The Church’s Adoption of the
Greek Worldview
Because
the Church was persecuted in Judea and Jerusalem, the apostles and many other
believers fled to other parts of the empire. The Greeks soon made up the
majority of the Church. Without adequate teaching, it did not take long for
them to overwhelm Paul’s tripartite view of man’s nature as well as his
contrast between the old man and the new man. Though Paul laid down all the
foundations of the truth of Sonship, this truth was one of the first to be lost
in the torrent of Greek thought patterns.
In
the second and third centuries, it was common for Church leaders to evangelize
the Greeks by adapting Christianity to Greek culture and its philosophers. To
be sure, they presented Jesus and the apostles as superior to the philosophers,
but nonetheless, they emphasized their similarities rather than their
differences. Some of this was positive, of course, for we can always learn from
others, regardless of their viewpoints. But the downside was that they soon
interpreted Paul through Greek lenses, which hid some key elements of Pauline
teaching.
It
has only been in recent decades that theologians have begun to explore the
Hebrew roots of the Church, perhaps coinciding with the modern Zionist movement
which drew attention to this problem. Unfortunately, much of the shift has been
toward Jewish roots rather than toward Hebrew roots, since many have not
recognized the difference. Hence, the alternative to the Hellenism has often
been a form of Christian Judaism. Many churches have thus reverted, not only to
a study of the divine law but to Old Covenant applications of the law.
When
combined with the Dispensationalist view of prophecy, which, in its classic
form, presents the future Kingdom in Old Covenant terms. This reversion to
Judaism (with Jesus added to it as an appendage) has again raised the problem
of Judaization that Paul strenuously opposed. Such churches have not fully
appreciated the third alternative given in Paul’s writings. The result is that
while they may have been dehellenized, they have become Judaized. They have yet
to discover the real distinction between soul and spirit, old and new man, and
the basis of Sonship.
On
September 12, 2006 Pope Benedict XVI gave a speech to the University of
Regensburg in Germany, where he had previously served as a professor of
theology. He bemoaned the “dehellenization” of Christianity and praised pagan
Greek philosophers, even so far as equating the ideas of Socrates to God’s
revelation to Moses at the burning bush. He said, in part,
“Biblical faith, in the Hellenistic period,
encountered the best of Greek thought at a deep level, resulting in a mutual
enrichment. The encounter between the Biblical message and Greek thought did
not happen by chance.”
(Faith, Reason, and the University, Memories and
Reflections, quoted in The God of Jesus, by Kegan A. Chandler, pp.
269, 270)
In
this, he openly admits that the Greek philosophers played an important role in
developing Church theology. This would not have been a problem if the church
leaders had had a firm grasp of Pauline theology. But because they did not
understand Paul, they allowed the pagan Greek philosophers to define Paul’s
terms. They should have understood that Paul was using Greek terms to express
Hebrew equivalents that had been set forth in the Septuagint Greek translation
of the Old Testament.
Religious Creeds vs.
Spiritual Revelation
In
the expulsion of the church from Judea into a Greek arena, much was lost in
translation. At the forefront was the loss of some core Christian concepts such
as how to become a son of God. This problem, in turn, led to a wider problem in
their attempt to understand the nature of THE Son of God, Jesus Christ. From
the fourth century onward, the church struggled to understand and to express
how Jesus was both Son of God and Son of man. Frankly, they never could resolve
this, although their creeds were enforced by the power of the state and
dissenters were threatened with excommunication, death, and even torture.
But
truth that needs such enforcement is hardly self-evident or even understandable
to the average person. When the precise wording of creeds became unintelligible
to the masses—and even to the bishops and scholars themselves—the people were
told to accept the creeds by faith and not to use reason. Hence, Christianity
soon became a mystery religion, having secrets that only the religious
superiors could hope to know. But controversies still remained among the church
leaders even unto this day.
Perhaps
if they had understood Paul’s dissertation in the second chapter of First
Corinthians about the source of true wisdom, they would have elevated men who
were spiritually minded rather than soulish men who were merely religious. Their
actions speak for themselves. Historians of all denominations have looked back
on those tumultuous times with horror, as ambitious bishops, motivated by their
jealousy to maintain power, perpetrated unspeakable atrocities upon their
opponents. Men were killed for failing to confess the precise wording of creeds
that were determined by majority vote, even when majority votes were obtained
by threats or bribery.
Paul
defines carnality and spiritual immaturity in 1 Corinthians 3:1-3,
1 And I, brethren, could not speak to you as to spiritual men, but as to
men of flesh, as to babes in Christ. 2 I gave you milk to drink, not
solid food; for you were not yet able to receive it. Indeed, even now you are
not yet able, 3 for you are still fleshly. For since there is
jealousy and strife among you, are you not fleshly, and are you not walking
like mere men?
Are
we, then, to accept such creeds from these church councils as if “God moves in
mysterious ways,” using carnal men, by virtue of their religious title, to
reveal divine truth? Personally, I believe it is better to believe God than
religious men. I am hopeful that at the second coming of Christ, we will have a
new beginning. In fact, I believe that the church creeds will be swept away,
and real truth will remain standing.
For
that to happen, we need someone of sufficient stature to establish truth, to
make it understandable, and to make the Unknown God knowable again. Such truth
will be proven by its peaceable fruit of righteousness. Moses had problems in
his day, but for the most part he had sufficient stature to command the respect
of the Israelites—even when they rebelled against him. Jesus Christ, too, had
problems in His day, but most Christians give Him honor (or at least lip
service), even if they rebel against His teaching.
We
need another appearance of Christ to settle matters of truth and to bring the
Kingdom to a new level in the age to come. For my part, I will be asking Him
for a full dissertation on the path to Sonship, so that all will know how to
become a son of God.
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