The Incarnation
Now we reach the question,
'Is Jesus Christ God incarnate? Is he God made man?'
The Jews were familiar with
the idea, from their Scriptures, that the power of God could inspire a man to
speak and act for God. The record of the Old Testament prophets was all about
that. Jesus himself was described as a prophet (Mark 6: 15, Luke 7: 16, Luke 24: 19)
in exactly the sense that someone like Amos, Elijah or Jeremiah had been. But
what we are now asking is whether in Jesus something absolutely unique
happened, much more than the description of 'prophet' could explain. Was the
self-revelation of God in Jesus?
In Colossians I: 15, 19-20, Paul
affirms this. He says: 'Christ is the visible likeness of the invisible God. He
is the first-born Son, superior to all created things.... For it was by God's
decision that the Son has in himself the full nature of God. Through the Son,
then, God decided to bring the whole universe back to himself. God made peace
through his Son's death on the cross and so brought back to himself all things,
both on earth and in heaven.'
When a prophet spoke or
acted for God, God used the human character of that prophet as a channel
through which to communicate aspect of his own character to his people. For
example, Hosea's loving and forgiving character was used by God to teach Israel
something about his own love and willingness to forgive his people if they would
turn back to him. A great insight of the Old Testament is that no human being
can fully understand or define God and this is one of the reasons why the Old
Testament absolutely rejects any attempt to make an image to represent God. The
name of God revealed to Moses was 'I AM'. Through the experiences of their
history and through the teachings of the prophets, aspects of God's character
had been revealed to the people Israel, but no prophet could claim to have been
given a full self-revelation by God of his character.
It is the Christian belief
that the full self-revelation of God, to the limit that human understanding can
comprehend, is given in Jesus Christ. It was many years after New Testament
times that the great Councils of" the Church agreed on the very carefully
worded Creeds, express this belief, but even when we have memorized, say, the
Nicene Creed and thought very carefully about what it means, we are still faced
with a great mystery. And how else could it be if we accept that God has come
right into the human situation? We may speak of the divine nature and the human
nature of Jesus Christ. In his divine nature Jesus Christ is the perfect
expression of his Father's being. In his human nature, God's love for mankind
is made visible. 'To have seen me is to have seen the Father' (John 14:0).
Jesus is the perfect human expression of what God is like.
It is not irreverent to ask
what the Incarnation means for us today because many people have no
understanding of what it means. It means that God knows our human situation
from the inside; there is no part of human life and experience which is outside
the knowledge and concern of God. This teaches us that God is not only the
great Creator, the transcendent and mighty Sustainer of the universe, but that
he has infinite, loving concern for every human being. In the teaching of Jesus
we read this: 'Not one sparrow is forgotten by God. Even the hairs of your head
have all been counted. So do not be afraid; you are worth much more than many
sparrows!' (Luke
12:6-7).
Nearly all religions have
taught about a Supreme Being or a Creator God, but it is possible to believe
this without seeing any significance in this belief for individual human lives.
It is possible to think of a remote, unconcerned Supreme Being who leaves the
human race to its own fate. The character of God as revealed to us in the Bible
is the opposite of this idea. God is so concerned about human beings and their
lives that, in the Person of the Son, he entered into human life and
experience, to transform it. This is the meaning of the Incarnation. In the
life of Jesus Christ we see the defeat of the fearful powers of evil, sin and
death which every human being has to face. The New Testament teaches that these
powers can be broken in every individual human life by the greater power of
God's love revealed in Jesus Christ. What Paul discovered is as true for us
today as it was for him nearly two thousand years ago. A new relationship with
God is possible for each person so that we become the 'sons' and 'daughters' of
God. Our human life has a new meaning as we discover the meaning of eternal
life.