From Focus on the Kingdom
Was Jesus “A Mere Man”?
by F. Paul Haney
The following article we hope will be of special interest to
any of our readers who have exited the Worldwide Church of God founded by
Herbert Armstrong. It was the belief of that denomination that God is a family
of two members. It was customary to hear Herbert Armstrong speak and write of
“two Gods in the God family.” Our understanding now is that such language
betrays an unveiled polytheism and paganism. God is One Person in the Bible and
that One Person is the Father of Jesus Christ, His Son. We say with Paul “there
is one God, the Father” (I Cor. 8:4-6), and with Jesus that the Father is “the
only One who is truly God” (John 17:3). Jesus is the Lord Messiah (Luke 2:11),
the Man Messiah Jesus (I Tim. 2:5) and certainly never in Scripture the One
God.
The curious notion that Jesus was “a second God in the God
Family” persists among some, even after they leave their former association.
Our experience over the past 45 years suggests that many who think they have
become “ex’s” are more attached to the apron strings of former mentors than
they suspect. (This is true also of those who are attached to the idea that
water baptism has no meaning for Christians now — a particularly striking
example of a view held against almost everyone for 2000 years. This is not a
complex question. Jesus was baptized. The Apostles baptized in water also
throughout the Book of Acts. Jesus commanded baptism in water as the outward
seal and sign of repentance. He commanded it until the end of the age — which
has not yet occurred. Since we all believe in obeying the Lord Jesus (John
3:36), it follows that we will all desire to enter his church on his terms, one
of which is baptism in water upon intelligent reception of the Gospel (see Acts
8:12, etc.).
We much appreciate Paul Haney’s excellent plea for the
abandonment of the notion that God consists of two members of a Divine Family.
We believe that this view promotes in fact the God of the philosophers (whose
influence was massive immediately after Bible times), and not the God of Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob and of Jesus.
Paul Haney wrote in The Journal (edited by Dixon
Cartwright): Let me respond to Jeff Maehr’s letter in the June 30, 2002 issue
of The Journal (“How can God die?”). In that letter Jeff produces the weak, yet
recurrent “mere man” argument to “prove” that God did die — but somehow without
really dying! Although the “mere man” pitch involves a rather obvious logical
fallacy, probably most multi-god “Binitarian” believers do not realize it. Such
a lame argument has really so little biblical justification that we may wonder
why it is not immediately rejected.
To make matters worse, this proposal seems to have taken on
legs and a life of its own. The argument as usually presented and framed is no
more than a superficial straw man. It was apparently created long ago by PR
debaters wanting to knock it down and grab a cheap victory while confusing
people with fancy footwork. I reject the “mere man” argument as without merit
in any sense. Jesus was no “mere” man. He was (and is) unique. Jesus is Lord,
but Jesus was not (and is not) God or Yahweh.
Usually, the “mere man” argument goes like this: “A mere man
cannot be a sacrifice for all men; only the life of God could atone for all of
mankind’s sins.” This claim, however, is no more than human theory imposed on
the Bible. A modicum of biblical research exposes the disputer’s error for what
it is. Those who resort to this particular “straw man” fallacy sidestep the
main issue of who deems any sacrifice sufficient to cover sins. It is God, not
we, who decides what constitutes a sufficient sacrifice for the sins of
mankind.
In an attempt arbitrarily to limit the terms of the debate,
some proponents of the “Jesus is God/Man” theory insist that either Jesus was
God or he was a “mere” man. There is no middle ground with them. But I reject
the limiting proposal they establish and reject the term “mere” as not being
applicable to Jesus or the debate. Facts: Jesus was a man, but he was no “mere”
man. He is matchless. Jesus was (and is) the only begotten Son of God. His
father was Yahweh. His mother was Mary. Jesus was miraculously conceived and
begotten (i.e. by the Father, Matt. 1:20) without sin. He had a human lineage
through Mary and was thus also the Son of David and thus the Messiah. Jesus, as
the sinless Son of God, also the Son of Man, is worthy of our respect and
worship as the Son of God. He is divine only in the sense that he is the
exalted, uniquely begotten Son of God, and he sits at the right hand of the
Father in heaven. He is to be praised for what he is, not for what people think
or imagine he was. We must avoid at all costs constructing a Jesus of our own
persuasions and church traditions, uncritically examined.
In addition, it must be admitted by thinking believers that
Yahweh God, the Creator, the Father, can accept whatever sacrifice He deems
sufficient to cover any number of sins for mankind, even for every person that
has ever lived, or ever will live. God will have mercy and compassion by
whatever means He wills, and we have nothing to say about it. God (not man)
decided that certain animals would be acceptable as sin offerings for the whole
land and nation of Israel, during the period of the Law. “And the priests
killed them; and they presented their blood on the altar as a sin offering to
make an atonement for all Israel, for the king commanded that the burnt
offering and the sin offering be made for all Israel” (2 Chron. 29:24; cf. Lev.
4:20-21; 5:11-13). Although animals have lesser value than humans, God deemed
their spilled blood adequate to cover all the sins for all the people at that
time. As a result, the “mere man” argument fails miserably. Who are we to argue
with God and exalt our speculations above His revelation about His dealings
with us?
This “mere man” objection never quite seems to go anywhere,
or go away in spite of its obvious weaknesses. Yahweh God has all power, and
with God, all things are possible. It should be clear that God deemed
sufficient the yearly blood sacrifices of lambs, bulls, and goats for the sins
of an entire nation of people. God also deemed sufficient the sacrifice of the
Passover lamb. This in itself causes the collapse of the “mere man” argument.
Nor does it require much research to discover that the man
Jesus (Rom. 5:15) was one of, and the last in, a long line of blood sacrifices
(Rom. 6:10; Heb. 10:10, 12, 14). This is hardly rocket science! The huge
difference between bloody animal sacrifices and Jesus was that God authorized
Jesus to be the final and sufficient blood sacrifice for all atonement from
that point forward. By contrast, animal sacrifices were temporary and had to be
repeated every year (Heb. 10:3). The key phrase here is “God deemed or
authorized.” The point is that neither the blood of animals nor the blood of
Christ in itself, by itself, took away sins. Only the acceptance by God of His
chosen sacrifice removes sins. Had God not accepted animal sacrifices, they
would have been worthless and a waste of time. Had the Father not accepted
Jesus as the final sacrifice, his sacrifice would have been valueless also
(Isa. 53:10; Matt. 3:17; Col. 1:19-23). Believers have redemption (forgiveness)
“through” the blood of Jesus, not “by” the blood in itself (Eph. 1:7; Col.
1:14). The sinless human “lamb” of God’s choosing is fully adequate for this
purpose.
According to polytheistic Binitarian doctrine, it was not
God that died on the cross, anyway. They say Jesus was not God then, but was
“fully” man, Thus it follows that the man Jesus who died on the cross was not
God after all! By their own testimony, God did not die for the sins of all
mankind as they insist He must.
The brand of Binitarianism supported by many WCOG’s is the
view of a relatively small group of people who contend that God is one, God is
two, God is a family, God is a kingdom, and God is or will be millions and
billions of God-beings. It is an unsound and bizarre doctrine. It is not
biblical. In my opinion, it is irrational, self-contradictory, and evasive.
To illustrate our point consider the following dialogue between
myself and Steven Collins from the Seattle conference as reported in The
Journal of May 31, 2002, page 31, entitled, “Can God die?” (I added the
explanatory bracketed parts.)
Paul Haney asked Mr. Collins about the concept of the loss
of “divine life.” “Was Christ God at the time that he died on the cross?” Mr.
Haney asked. “It is said he tasted death,” began Mr. Collins. “But do you
believe he was divine God at the time he died?” Mr. Haney said his point was
that one of the attributes of God, Yahweh, elohim, is His “infinitude,” that He
has the attribute of infinity. “He does not die. I think the Bible is clear
that God does not die. Yet you have God dying on the cross.” “I have the human
being Jesus Christ, into whom the divinity emptied Himself, dying,” replied Mr.
Collins. “If God was in His glorified state, He couldn’t die.”
“But,” said Mr. Haney, “if Jesus was God preexistent, then
this pre-Jesus God did, in fact, die, before He became Jesus in the womb.”
“Your point is?” asked Mr. Collins. “The attribute of infinitude,” said Mr.
Haney, “cannot be hung up like an old coat on a rack. The Bible tells us there
is no end, no beginning, for all time [for God] and that’s the way that God
was, or is. But here you have Christ dying twice. He died. And [the pre-Jesus]
God died essentially because you said that there was one God left [in heaven].
One of [those] two Gods died, lost His life, because [you say] He did not exist
[on earth or in heaven] as a God, and [you say] He became Jesus the man. Jesus
the man died the second death. Then he became infinite again. This does not
compute.”
“It does to me,” said Mr. Collins. “I don’t see the problem.
Remember, Christ said in his prayer, Restore the glory which I had with you.”
Mr. Haney: “You say glory, but you interpret that to say eternal life.” [Jesus
in fact did not say “restore, give back the glory, but give the glory. He was
asking for the glory stored up with God from the beginning and promised for the
Messiah — ed.]
Notice in the above dialogue Mr. Collins states, “If God was
in His glorified state, He couldn’t die.” But Mr. Collins is trapped. He
believes that the pre-Jesus God, a glorified eternal God-being, ceased being
God and became a man. If a human stops functioning as a human, we call it
death. If an eternal God stops functioning as an eternal God, the God dies,
ceases to be, and goes out of existence. And this shows that Collins’ God is
not, nor was He, “eternal” at all. Since Christ was not God, but a pre-Jesus
God did exist, and that pre-Jesus God was not in heaven or on earth while Jesus
the man walked around, it is inescapable: the pre-Jesus Binitarian God must
have gone out of existence! He died!
One of the definitive attributes or qualities of an eternal
God is that He has “infinity,” or the attribute of immortal life with no
beginning or end (not finite). Apparently Mr. Collins agrees with this because
he said himself that God cannot die. Yet, Steven Collins’ pre-Jesus glorified
God had an end at the very same time he said that God cannot have an end.
Mr. Collins believes Jesus was totally a human being and
that he died on the cross and that he was not then God. “I have the human being
Jesus Christ…dying,” replied Mr. Steven Collins at the One God Conference in
Seattle. This sounds a whole lot like Binitarians have a “mere” man dying on
the cross; most certainly according to this testimony it was not God but a man
dying that day.
So, according to this Binitarian testimony, God did not die
on the cross. And consequently, according to the theory, God did not die for
our sins! Collins further asserts that there were two Gods in heaven in the
beginning. Apparently one of those Gods died, vanished, while the other
remained alive, at home alone.
Collins: “A Binitarian realizes that God must be two rather
than one because one of the two must remain alive to be able to resurrect the
other one,” (The Journal, June 30, “One Resurrects the Other,” p. 33).
Here Collins admits that one of the two Gods did in fact
die; if one God remained alive, it is self-evident that the other one died. And
he further implies that the God being resurrected was Jesus who had just died
on the cross, who earlier, Collins said, was only a man, not God. While Collins
admits that God cannot die, he virtually testifies to us that one of the Gods
died. So, if I have this straight, Collins has Jesus the man dying on the
cross, Jesus the God dying or vanishing prior to something entering Mary’s
womb, after which it became a single cell without arms, legs or a brain, being
born as Jesus the man, finally becoming Jesus the God once more.
So, which is it? Was a “divine God-life” given for all
mankind or not? Binitarians will insist, “Yes!” but then hasten to add that the
one who died and who was sacrificed for all mankind was not God, but fully a
man. Such are the extreme complications which arise once the simple truth that
God is one Person, the Father of the Lord Jesus, is abandoned. End of article.
________________________________________________
Trinitarian doctrine is in the same dilemma. I propose the following to trinitarian advocates:
Trinitarian belief says that Jesus was 100% man as well as
100% God and we know that God alone is immortal, which means God can never die.
Trinitarians agree with this. They will also say that GOD is the ONLY Savior
because "no man" can save us from our sins, and therefore Jesus is
God. However, Jesus died on the cross - so they will say it was the "man
part" that died, not God himself.
Can Trinitarians answer the following? Since you say
"no man" can save us from our sins, then how can Jesus be your savior
when you say it was only the "man part" that died" and not God?
Remember? ONLY GOD can be our savior and save us from our sins, not "a
man." This still leaves God having to die. When will this happen since
only God can be your savior and not a man?
This is very thought provoking.
ReplyDeleteGod bless and shalom.
Jamie RA Gerrard.