1-10a Some Wrested Scriptures: Introduction
I cannot help but comment upon the intellectual desperation of
Trinitarianism. Time and again when I ask for evidence that "Jesus
is God", I'm told things like "Well, in the Bible He's
called 'the Son of God', 'the Lord', the 'Son of man'- so, of course
He's God! The Bible says so!". My dear mother used to call
me obtuse, and maybe it's just so, that I really am. But I'm afraid
I can't see why ever those titles of Jesus can make Him "God".
There's no lack of thorough academic study been made of all those
titles. The evidence is conclusive that they were used before
the time of the New Testament and applied to men (1). Indeed
the adjective theios meant little more than 'inspired'
in the first century. And further, all these terms were used by
the Jews at the time of Jesus- who were fierce monotheists, unwilling
to countenance the idea of there being any other being apart from
Yahweh who could be 'God' in the trinitarian sense. And so it would
seem that in the minds of many Christians, the Trinity is an assumption
rather than a reasoned understanding and belief. The presence of
unexamined assumptions in our lives and hearts, as well as in societies,
ought to be a red flag. Why, in this age of apparently fearless
examination, eager toppling of paradigms, deconstruction of just
about everything, rigorous research, trashing of tradition, brutal
testing of assumptions... does the Trinity idea remain an unexamined
assumption? Perhaps it's because it demands so much to believe in
the Biblical account of a truly human Jesus. Admittedly there is
a difficulty for any Bible reader in integrating the Bible passages
which speak of the 'God' side of God's Son, His Divine titles etc.,
and those passages which speak of His humanity. The discussion of
misunderstood Bible verses which now follows is an attempt to achieve
just that integration, a key which as it were turns every lock presented
to us by the references. But the effort required in interpretation
is, it seems to me, designed by God, whose word it is which we are
discussing. The intention is to make us think about Jesus, struggle
with the issue of His identity and nature, in order that we should
understand Him better, and thereby love and serve Him the more intently.
Perhaps that is why so little is recorded of Jesus- all the speeches
and actions of Jesus found in the Gospels would've occupied only
three weeks or so of real time. The rest of His life, words and
actions we are left to imagine, given what we do know of Him. He
wants us to reflect, as He did the disciples, "Whom do you
think I am?" (Mk. 8:29). Perhaps that is why at least in Mark's
Gospel there is the theme of Jesus not wanting men to be told in
point blank terms that He was Messiah, and the very few direct statements
about Himself- e.g. He never actually says He had a virgin birth,
nor does He explain that He was born in Bethlehem as required by
Micah 5:2. He left people assuming He was born in Nazareth (Jn.
7:42). In fact it could be that without this struggle for understanding
going on within the heart of each of us, there is no other way for
us to come to real relationship with Jesus. Without that effort
to understand we'd be left with a fictional Jesus, a 'Jesus' we
inherited from men, from churches, from theologians, from our own
unexamined assumptions... and not the real Christ.
Notes
(1) See W. Bousset, Kyrios Christos (Nashville: Abingdon,
1970); Oscar Cullmann, The Christology Of The New Testament
(London: S.C.M., 1971); H. Todt, The Son Of Man (London:
S.C.M., 1965) and many others.
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