THE CHURCH COUNCILS, PART 2
By
Dr. Stephen Jones: Aug 31, 2019
Blog Post Date: 9-29-2019
As
I see it, the church debate regarding Christ’s deity and humanity failed to
focus on the real underlying issue. Their arguments did not start with an
understanding of Paul’s Hebrew view of spirit, soul, and body but upon the
Greek philosophical distinction between spirit and matter. For this reason, the
Greek Christian philosophers compared and distinguished Christ’s spiritual
nature with His physical humanity.
Paul,
on the other hand, compared Adam with Christ, saying 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. 46 However, the spiritual
is not first, but the natural [psuchikos, “soulish”]; then the
spiritual. 47 The first man is from the earth, earthy; the second
man is from heaven.
If
the church had understood the apostle Paul, they would have built their
arguments upon his foundation and the tripartite nature of man in general. Adam
was “a living soul” and “earthy.” The name Adam literally means
“earthy,” for he was named after the earth or ground (adamah). By
contrast, the last Adam, Christ, was “spiritual” and “is from heaven.”
The
Nicean Creed did set forth that Christ was “begotten, not made,” which reflects
this basic understanding of the difference between the two Adams. They
understood that Adam was “made,” and that Christ was “begotten.” So far, so
good. But when they began to slice Him into two separate beings, Jesus being
His humanity, and Christ being His divinity, they immediately began to veer
down a Greek philosophical path of dualism and Docetism.
How Many Natures Did Jesus
Have?
Jesus
Christ is a single Person having spirit, soul, and body—as we all have in
common. The primary difference between Him and us is that we were born Adamic,
that is, soulish, whereas Christ is spiritual. What does this mean in practical
terms? Primarily, it means that in our fleshly identity, we inherited souls in
the image of the first Adam, souls that are mortal and corruptible. Christ,
however, was begotten by the Spirit, so He was never soulish by nature.
Christ
certainly had a soul, but His conscious identity came through His spirit, not
His soul.
The
same can be said of all who have been begotten by the Spirit and who have
transferred their identity from the old man (fleshly soul) to the new man
(spirit). Jesus never had to transfer His identity from one entity to another,
but all of us must do so, because we were not virgin born.
The
key is to be begotten, not made. Our Adamic flesh man was “made,” whereas our
new man was “begotten.” As long as we live in human flesh, there are two
Persons coexisting in one body. Paul tells us that we ought to be led and
instructed by the spiritual man, so that we do not follow the dictates of the
old soulish man.
Though
we tend to shift our conscious identity back and forth between these two
entities, we are really just one person at a time. Legally speaking, we are who
we claim to be in the divine court. Having changed our identity, we are no
longer the person that our parents brought forth. But being spiritual does not
mean we have ceased to have a soul. It is rather that the soul is in submission
to the spirit. The soul is subordinate; the spirit is dominant; but each of us
is one person.
Hence,
it cannot properly be said that when we were begotten by the Spirit, we began
to have two natures (spiritual and material) at the same time. We are one or
the other, even though both are present. Likewise, Jesus Christ from birth was
one Person who had one nature. It was spiritual from the start, even though
that nature had been begotten in a material body. When we were begotten from
above and became new creatures in Christ, we became like Him.
The Main Issue
Therefore,
the argument about the dual nature of Christ, along with the dispute over his
deity or humanity, misses the point. Those who make Christ “human” miss the
point because they emphasize His physicality without seeing that He was
disconnected from Adam. Those who argued for Christ’s deity, downplaying His
humanity, split His Person-hood into two separate entities, thus straying from
the truth that He was spirit, soul, and body like all of us.
In
other words, their dispute was over the issue of human vs. deity and physical
vs. spiritual, when they should have been discussing Adam vs. Christ
and soulish vs. spiritual.
It
all started with His virgin birth, for this alone separated Him from Adam,
insofar as His nature is concerned. While it is true that His mother was
Adamic, the penalty for Adam’s sin has always been passed down through the seed
of the male, not through the female. Hence, Paul says in 1 Corinthians 15:22,
“as in Adam all die,” even though Eve sinned first.
Two Main Laws of Sonship
By
failing to comprehend the real issue, the early church lost the understanding
of sonship. They continued to use terminology of sonship, but they did not know
the laws on which it was based. Sonship is based primarily on two laws: (1) “after
its kind” in Genesis 1:21, which means that fathers
beget children in their likeness; and (2) the law of authority, based on the
Fifth Commandment, “Honor your father and your mother” in Deuteronomy 5:16,
which establishes the subordination of a son to his father.
Hence,
when Jesus claimed to be the Son of God and, conversely, claimed that God was
His Father, He was placing Himself in subjection to His Father in accordance
with the law. Likewise, He was also in the image and likeness of His Father,
because the spiritual seed that had begotten Him in the Virgin Mary guaranteed
that He was a perfect fractal of His heavenly Father.
We
too are (or are destined to be) fractals of our heavenly Father, for “when
He appears, we shall be like Him” (1 John 3:2). Therefore, John says, we
are not to practice lawlessness (1 John 3:4), as if we were still in
the image of Adam. True sons of God are those who think like their heavenly
Father, agree with His plan insofar as they are able to comprehend it, and do
only what their heavenly Father does. In this way, we both praise and honor our
Father. We honor our mother by acknowledging the New Covenant, living by faith
in the promises of God.
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