Sin And Nature

According to traditional Augustinian theology the entire creation is under a curse as a consequence of Adam’s (original) sin. (1* See e.g. Stott, pp.41,121,153,231; Wright, pp.198,395, etc.) As the work of the perfect God the assumption is that it was initially created not simply ‘good’ but perfect along with Adam and Eve who from the start were holy, righteous, immortal and incorruptible. If this is so, various questions immediately arise. For example, how can that which is perfect become subject to sin and lose its perfection? If it can, then the implication is that the God who is perfect can also lose his perfection. Maybe he like the devil will fall like lightning from heaven Luke 10:18)! If this is the case, what guarantee have we that he will maintain his promises to us? The anchor of our souls is clearly less reliable than we thought (Heb. 6:13-20). Fortunately, we are in a position to dismiss the initial premise that a perfect God is obliged to produce perfect artifacts. The author of Hebrews recognizes this when he says that the builder of the house has more honour than the house itself (3:3).

Creation Imperfect

On reflection, we realize that throughout Scripture all created things are regarded depreciatively in comparison with their Creator (Ps. 90:2; 102:25-27; Isa. 45:11f.; 51:6,8; 54:10; Heb. 1:10-12; 1 John 2:17, etc.). They are but shadows of the real (cf. Heb. 8:1-7). What is ‘created by hand’ (cheiropoietos) is not to be compared with what is ‘not created by hand’ (acheiropoietos, Heb. 1:10-12; 9:11,24, etc.). While the creation may have a certain glory of its own (Ps. 19; Rom. 1:20), it pales when compared with its Author just as the old covenant pales in comparison with the new (2 Cor. 3). (2* See my Covenant Continuity and Discontinuity.) In fact creation merely testifies to God’s power and divine nature and is certainly not divine in itself as the heathen world frequently believed. Thus it is not at all surprising that God’s chosen people were forbidden to worship creation in any form (Ex. 20:3f.; Dt. 4:15-19).

Man’s Imperfection

Man himself as created is clearly intrinsically imperfect, that is, immature and incomplete and needs to be perfected (Phil. 3:12-14; Heb. 6:1, etc.). His imperfection is natural and has nothing to do with sin. He does not and cannot become sinful until he breaks the law. As flesh he is mere dust, clay, grass like the rest of the animal creation (Ps. 103:14, etc.).

What this suggests is that nature as such is inherently defective and needs to be upheld by the sovereign providence of God on the one hand and the delegated dominion of man created in the divine image on the other. Apart from man’s habitation and cultivation the creation like the temple at a later date (Mt. 23:38) is a desolate wilderness (Isa. 6:11).

Assertions like this are supported by other biblical evidence. For instance, quite apart from sin, creation has by nature a beginning and an end (Gen. 1:1). It is initially uncovenanted, visible and impermanent (2 Cor. 4:18; 1 John 2:17). It is also imperfect (Gen. 1), corruptible (Heb. 1:10-12; Rom. 8:18-25), shakable (Heb. 12:27) and destined for ultimate destruction (Zeph. 1:18; Mt. 24:35; 2 Pet. 3:7,10-12).

Adam and Noah

The initial lack of a guarantee for creation is made evident by the contrast between the mere commandment given to Adam and the covenant made with Noah. But even the latter was to operate only while the earth remained (Gen. 8:22). In other words, the flood which threatened total destruction makes it plain that an uncovenanted creation had no guarantee of permanence. It was only when God made a covenant with Noah that the latter in contrast with Adam (cf. Gen. 1:26-28) could undertake to exercise dominion with hope of success (cf. Jer. 31: 35-37; 33:19-26). Even then, it was for a limited time only (Gen. 8:22). And even Jesus who overcame the world (John 16:33) could not reverse its inherent corruption and inevitable end which were clearly ordained by God (Mt. 24:35; Rom. 8:18-25; Heb. 1:10-12, etc.). Even he had to escape from it by keeping the law which promised life and being crowned with glory and honour (Heb. 2:9, cf. Rom. 2:7,10; 1 Pet. 1:7). Just as the law of Moses which relates primarily to the flesh is obsolescent by nature (2 Cor. 3; Heb. 8:13), so is creation and the flesh which emanates from it (Mt. 5:18, cf. Heb. 7:18f.). And since the law is incapable of perfecting anything (Heb. 7:19), escape or transformation is intrinsically necessary. This is the invisible hope referred to by both the author of Hebrews (7:19, cf. 11:35) and by Paul (Rom. 8:20, 24f., cf. Heb. 10:20; 1 Pet. 1:3)

Two Factors

There are then two factors involved so far as man is concerned: he must exercise dominion (Gen. 1:26-28; Ps. 8) if he is to gain glory, honour and praise (Rom. 2:7,10), and he must keep the law if he is to gain the life God promised to (naturally) mortal man from the beginning (Gen. 2:17, cf. Rom. 7:10). (3* In other words, man must attain to incorruption and immortality and thus take on the generic image of God, cf. 1 Cor. 15:53; 2 Tim. 1:10. See further my Death and Corruption.) Thus sin and nature frequently appear together and though intimately related they must both be overcome. A clear illustration of the distinction between sin based on law and corruption or decay by nature appears in Luke 13:1-5. Though they seem to operate separately, nonetheless they achieve the same result which is death. While Luke 13:4, which deals with natural corruption, can be linked with 12:33 (cf. Mt. 6:19f.), Luke 13:1-3 corresponds with passages in Luke 21:5-36 where various events occur by necessity, that is, as part of the divine intention. Obviously, if creation is naturally corruptible or subject to corruption (cf. Rom. 8:18-25), it will show increasing signs of its corruptibility as it ages in more frequent earthquakes, celestial portents, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions, and so forth. Alongside them, however, as in Luke 13:1-5, there is plenty of evidence of sin in wars, insurrections and international hostilities (Luke 21:9f.). The sack of Jerusalem is a type of the end and hardly surprisingly the two appear interwoven in Scripture (Luke 21:20-26). These events both natural and sinful will be capped off by the second coming of Christ (Luke 21:27f.).

Paul

No one reading carefully about Paul’s missionary journeys can fail to note that he constantly has to cope with both sin and nature. We see this in Acts 27 where nature perhaps predominates in contrast with Jonah where sin and nature are arguably treated more even-handedly. In 2 Corinthians 6 (cf. 4:8-12 where Paul refers to his naturally ‘mortal flesh’), however, sin and nature are more obviously interspersed. On the one hand the apostle has to cope by great endurance with afflictions, hardships, calamities, labours, sleepless nights and hunger, on the other hand he has to submit to beatings, imprisonments and riots and the like. Again, in chapter 11:23-28 we read of labours, shipwreck, being adrift at sea, danger from rivers and the wilderness, toil and hardship, sleepless nights, hunger, thirst, cold and exposure on the one hand and of imprisonments, beatings, lashes, stonings, hostility from both Jews and Gentiles in the city, and so forth. In chapter 12 Paul talks of his mysterious thorn in the flesh from which God did not see fit to relieve him and in verse 10 the mixture of sufferings stemming from both sin and nature.

Jesus

The fact that Jesus as incarnate was both mortal (like all flesh he was naturally subject to death, Heb. 5:7, and so died) and corruptible (he got older) should surely teach us something about creation. (4* See further my Death and Corruption, Romans 8:18-25.) If he was subject to nature even apart from sin (as Adam had originally been before he sinned), he had to overcome both nature and sin. And, despite all his trials and temptations (Mt. 4:1-11; Luke 22:28; Heb. 4:15, etc.), praise God he did precisely that (2 Tim. 1:10). He kept the law which graciously promised life and defeated sin in the flesh (Rom. 8:3). He thus freely, that is, by the grace of God tasted death for everyone (Heb. 2:9). But his death and subsequent resurrection were only part of the story. As the author of Hebrews indicates, he was crowned with glory and honor (Heb. 2:9). This can only mean that since he did not see corruption in the grave, he rose still corruptible. But in accordance with the promise of God, having finished his work and thereby gained honour and praise, he was transformed at his ascension. (5* In other words, Jesus’ resurrection, which relates to sin and death on our behalf, and ascension, which relates to the decay ordained by God in hope, Rom. 8:20, are separate events and must not be merged as many writers merge them today. See more below and my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities, Did Jesus Rise Physically From The Grave?.)

Creation Defective

This points again to the fact that nature or creation as such is defective in comparison with divine perfection (cf. the earthy and the spiritual bodies in 1 Cor. 15:46-49). It is therefore of prime importance for us to recognize, as noted above, that death is often the result of nature, not sin. For example, animals which do not know the law cannot sin but they all nonetheless die in conformity with the law of creation. Sinless embryos (cf. Job 3:16; Eccl. 6:3) and babies (cf. Dt. 1:39) sometimes die. Ignorance in children guarantees that they cannot keep the law by which to sin or to exercise faith. Like Adam and Eve at creation, as born of woman, they are uncovenanted and undeveloped and so, if they die, they do so in innocence (cf. Dt. 1:39, etc.). They will not come into judgement since they can neither believe nor sin (Rom. 2:1-16).

Unregenerate Man

In 1 Corinthians 2:14f., Paul clearly distinguishes between the natural (generate) and the regenerate man apart from sin. So he is fully aware of the natural ignorance that characterizes all of us in our infancy and minority. To stress this alternatively, sin is not the only problem. Even Jesus spent thirty of his years on earth as a once-born ‘natural’ man, a true son of Adam (Luke 3:38), and only after keeping the law that promised life to his Father’s satisfaction was he born from above at his baptism. He thus became the first and only man in the entire history of the race to receive the Spirit and gain life by obeying the law (cf. Lev. 18:5). Prior to his time all had failed (1 K. 8:46; Pss. 130:3; 143:2; Rom. 3:9-20, etc.). Only when the time had fully come did God send forth his Son and put him in a position to redeem all the rest who were still under the law (Gal. 4:4f.). This had been his intention from the start (Rom. 3:20; 11:32; Gal. 3:22). He had planned from before the foundation of the world that before him no flesh should boast. But the point to note is that man by nature even apart from sin can neither see nor enter the kingdom of heaven. His regeneration is a ‘natural’ necessity (John 3:1-8).

The Body

However, if man’s rebirth is spiritual, what about his body? A spiritual birth does not provide for a resurrection from the dead. And since flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, transformation also becomes a ‘natural’ necessity quite apart from sin (1 Cor. 15:53). Even Jesus had to undergo it as he ascended into heaven (cf. John 20:17; Phil. 3:21).

The Importance of Sin

Sin derives its importance from the fact that it prevents the necessary rebirth and transformation from occurring. The original promise of life and glory that God made to Adam in his natural mortality and corruptibility was conditional on his keeping the commandment. If the commandment was not kept and life not gained, then death as wages (Rom. 6:23) and corruption (decay) inevitably followed. Thus since all, like Adam, sinned, all died (Rom. 3:23; 5:12). Only Jesus despite being tried to the utmost overcame sin (1 Pet. 2:22) in the flesh (Rom. 8:3). Only he as a true man to whom the original promise made to Adam applied (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5) was able to serve as Saviour (cf. Heb. 2). After all, the OT had made it crystal clear that only God could save (Isa. 45:22-25) and that before him no flesh would boast (Isa. 42:8; 48:11, cf. Rom. 3:20; 1 Cor. 1:29; Eph. 2:9). But since Jesus though flesh was also God, he triumphed. Gloria Soli Deo.

Conclusion

By blindly following the sin-obsessed Augustine, traditional theology has confused and merged sin with nature not least by embracing the idea that we are born sinful. As hinted above, the same is true when the resurrection of Jesus from the grave is regarded as transformation resulting in the virtual obliteration of ascension which implies escape from nature in Jesus’ case, not sin. (6* This comment doubtless requires explication. Writers like Stott, ch. 4, and Harris, pp.103,139ff.,413f., who virtually reduces the ascension to drama, p.423, merge Jesus’ resurrection with his transformation and fail to recognize that while Jesus’ transformation was a divine necessity reversing his incarnation, cf. John 3:13; 6:62; 13:3; 17:5, his resurrection which followed his death was not intrinsic to his life at all. As one who had kept the law and gained life, he did not have to die, but he freely and vicariously did so. By contrast his transformation after, John 20:17, but definitely not at his resurrection, cf. Luke 24:39, was, as already implied, inherently necessary, Gk dei, 1 Cor. 15:53. See my John Stott on the Putative Resurrection Transformation of Jesus.) This can only be described as a gargantuan gaffe which has largely hidden the truth of the gospel for so long. From an Englishman’s point of view, the harsh reality is that the British quaternion of Murray, Lloyd-Jones, Packer and Stott, despite much good work, have helped to embed us in a theological quagmire from which it is more than high time for us in these tumultuous days (2012) to be rescued. Since we are all like the rest of the animal creation part of and hence captive to nature, nonetheless as those who are also created in the image of God we find ourselves presented with the opportunity of escaping its bondage by keeping the law (Rom. 8:18-25, cf. Heb. 1:10-12; 8:13; Gal. 6:8) and of gaining glory by exercising our delegated dominion (Gen. 1:26-28; Ps. 8:5, cf. Rom. 2:7,10; Heb. 2:9; 1 Pet. 1:7). But since on account of our susceptibility to sin we find this impossible, the only means of salvation open to us is faith in Christ (John 3:16; 14:6; Acts 4:12, etc.). He alone triumphed over both nature and sin, over the world, the flesh and the devil (John 16:33; 1 John 2:14-17, cf. 2 Tim. 1:10).

Additional Note

The church’s traditional confusion of sin with nature appears in the widespread idea that at his resurrection Jesus was transformed despite the fact that he was visible, audible and tangible (cf. 1 John 1:1f.) and that as a result we shall inherit a body like his as seen by the disciples. (At this point it is important to notice the difference between what they saw and what Paul saw on his way to Damascus.) Some even believe (contrary to the explicit teaching of Paul that flesh and blood cannot by nature inherit the kingdom of God) that Jesus went physically to heaven and that he will return as flesh to reign for a thousand years in the millennium. The truth is that just as Jesus himself taught that spiritual regeneration was by divine design necessary for all (including himself on the assumption that he was a man), so Paul taught that corporeal transformation was equally so. (See further my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities.)

The difference between flesh and spirit are noted both by Jesus (John 3:6) and by Paul (1 Cor. 15:48). Both imply the need for change.

Again, on reflection, it becomes quite apparent that the Augustinian worldview which involves original perfection confuses the beginning with the end. The natural development or evolution so evident in human life taught by Irenaeus was to all intents and purposes obliterated by Augustine.

It is high time we recognized that perfection, that is, maturation or the completion of the divinely intended goal, is part of the essence of the biblical worldview. Even Jesus had to be perfected, that is, become the full-grown man (Eph. 4:13) as the letter to the Hebrews in particular makes clear.

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References

John Stott, The Contemporary Christian, Leicester, 1992.

M.Harris, From Grave to Glory, Grand Rapids, 1990.

Christopher J.H.Wright, The Mission of God, Nottingham, 2006.

Salvation

During the course of my Christian pilgrimage I must have read thousands of times that we are, or need to be saved, from sin. This is the heart of the Augustinian worldview in which sin is basic. The received idea is that originally God, being God, created the world not merely good, that is, serving a purpose (Gen. 1; Ps. 119:91; Prov. 16:4; Eccl. 3:11), but perfect along with Adam and Eve the first humans who were deemed to be immortal, righteous, holy and good. Tragically, however, despite their perfection, our first parents succumbed to the temptations of the flesh, the world and the devil and ‘fell’. In so doing they brought a curse not only on themselves but on the whole creation they were intended to rule. And this is the situation that we have inherited today. We as the posterity of Adam and Eve are by nature born sinners who inhabit a cursed or fallen creation. Bluntly expressed, all our problems stem from sin and it is from sin that we must be saved. When this occurs, paradise will be regained and creation restored.

But is this a true depiction of what the Bible teaches? I think not.

Divine Perfection

In the Bible the only perfect being is God himself. He alone is immortal and incorruptible (1 Tim. 1:17; 6:16), holy, righteous and eternal. In plain words, he is “complete, lacking in nothing” (James 1:4, cf. Ps. 50:12-15). The mere fact that he created the temporal universe which has both a beginning and an end brings into question its original perfection. The apostle Paul tells us that all that is visible (Rom. 1:20) is also temporary (2 Cor. 4:18, cf. Heb. 1:10-12; 12:27). From this we are compelled to conclude that the physical creation far from being perfect was simply ‘good’, a useful tool designed by the Creator to serve a purpose (Ps. 119:91; Prov. 16:4; Eccl. 3:11) which, once achieved, would be dispensed with (Heb. 12:27; 2 Pet. 3:7,10-12). If this is so, the Augustinian idea that after sin has been taken care of creation will be redeemed and restored is false, for nature itself as ‘hand-made’ constitutes a problem. We are thus forced to conclude that the creation/fall/restoration schema widely accepted today (Jan. 2012) is a figment of the Augustinian imagination.

If this is so, what then is salvation in the Bible all about?

Creator and Creature

First, we must take seriously the view that the Creator God himself is uniquely eternal, immortal and incorruptible. As has already been affirmed, he alone is perfect and complete. According to the Bible, in his love he freely chose to create man spiritually in his image but physically from the earth with the intention of bringing him to eventual perfection as his child (Mt. 5:48; 19:21; Phil. 3:12-14, etc.). (1* We may well wonder why God chose to love us, cf. Dt. 7:8; Ps. 8:4. Love is free but it also involves the glory he gains in our redemption and adoption.) As created from the earth man is dust (cf. Ps. 103:14). He thus stands in patent contrast with his self-existent Maker as being naturally both mortal and corruptible, that is, subject to both death and decay. So if man is ever to attain to the perfection of his Creator (Mt. 5:48), he must somehow ascend from ground to glory (cf. Eph. 4:9f.), from dust to destiny, from Eden to eternity.

Man’s Vocation

According to the book of Genesis, God challenges mortal man (Adam) to avoid the death to which, contrary to the traditional view, he is naturally subject. It is of vital importance to recognize this, for if death is the last enemy of mortal man (1 Cor. 15:26), it is also the first (Gen. 2:17). So, if death is to be avoided, eternal life or immortality is a paramount necessity implied in the commandment (cf. Rom. 7:10) God made to Adam (Gen. 2:17) who alone among all the animals was made in the image of God. Only he in the course of his development from total animal/infant ignorance (Dt. 1:39, etc.) could attain to knowledge and understanding (Gen. 2:17; 3:5,22). But knowledge (commandment/law) on its own was not enough: all it did was provide the test (cf. Ex. 15:25; 20:20; Dt. 8:2,16, etc.) on the basis of which there came either blessing or curse (cf. Dt. 11:26-28, etc.). To gain life man had to fulfil its initial condition which was to keep the commandment (Gen. 2:17). Then, after the development of the race (and the individual) in both extent and maturity, the precondition of life (cf. Dt. 30:1-6; Jer. 31:33; 32:39f.) became obedience to the law (of Moses) in its entirety (Lev. 18:5; Dt. 30:15-20; Ezek. 20:11,13,21, etc.).

Sin

However, the OT itself makes it plain that there was a massive problem inherent in the condition: man who derived from the earth was afflicted by fleshly weakness (Ps. 78:39; 103:14; Rom. 7:14) and, deceived by the devil, he lacked the ability to meet this condition (Ps. 130:3; 143:2, etc.). The obedience which was the prerequisite of righteousness (Rom. 5:21) needed to please God (cf. Mt. 3:17) was in its turn the condition of regeneration (Lev. 18:5; Rom. 10:5), and it proved universally elusive. As the Psalmist (14:1-3) and the apostle (Rom. 3:10) maintained, none was righteous not even one. From Egyptian bondage to the Promised Land (Num. 14:19; 1 Sam. 8:8), from youth to maturity (Gen. 8:21; Jer. 3:25), from Adam (Gen. 3:22-24) to Moses (Rom. 5:14) and from Moses to Jesus (1 K. 8:46-53), all to the very last one broke the law with the result that all forfeited the promise of life. All without exception became prey to sin, earned its wages and died in conformity with the rest of the temporal creation (1 K. 8:46; Eccl. 7:20; Rom. 5:12, cf. 3:23).

Children

Babies, however, like Adam and Eve before them, at the start of their lives do not know the commandment (law) and so are incapable of breaking it (cf. Rom. 3:19; 7:1,7). While the sinful parents of the exodus all sinned and died in the wilderness, their little ones survived because they were innocent (Dt. 1:39) and under the leadership of Joshua entered the Promised Land (Num. 14:3,26-36). This shows beyond reasonable doubt that the received dogma of original sin, which is in any case rejected by the Jews and even the Orthodox, is false. Sin, which may be defined as transgression (James 2:11, cf. 1 John 3:4), does not exist apart from the commandment. The apostle Paul states explicitly that where there is no law there is no sin (Rom. 4:15; 7:8f.).

Jesus

It is into the sink of the universal sinfulness of rational men and women that eventually the promised Messiah came. His purpose was not to play the role of a military leader capable of defeating Israel’s enemies, especially the Romans, but to deal with sin (Mt. 1:21). To do this he had to live as a man among men, uniquely keep the law to perfection (Lev. 18:5; Mt. 5:48), please his heavenly Father (Mt. 3:17) and permanently receive the Holy Spirit (John 1:32; 6:27). In other words, he had of necessity (Gk dei, John 3:7) like all those who were flesh (born of woman), to be born again from above (John 3:3,5,6). In his case, this occurred at his baptism when his Father acknowledged and confirmed him as his Son who had successfully kept the law. He had come into the world not to offer sacrifices as in the OT but where all others had failed to do God’s will in the flesh (Heb. 10:5-9, cf. Rom. 8:3). And that is precisely what he did and was consequently rewarded by the permanent gift of the Spirit (John 1:32; 6:27) at his baptism (Mt. 3:13-17). He had uniquely met the precondition of life (Lev. 18:5).

Christian Believers

But Jesus did not undergo incarnation (become flesh) simply to prove his personal prowess. As the author of Hebrews goes on to point out in 10:10, we as his fellow human beings who believe in him have been sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all. In chapter 2 our author had painted the picture in greater detail. There he told his readers that the Saviour was crowned with glory after suffering on behalf of his people (2:9). He goes on to say that it was fitting that God in bringing many sons to glory should have made the founder of their salvation perfect through suffering. Together they were all brothers (Heb. 2:11-13, cf. John 17:2) and hence heirs of a common glory provided they suffered with him (Rom. 8:17).

Jesus Both Saviour and Saved

The author of Hebrews makes another point that needs to be highlighted since we so easily fail to recognize it. Behind the work of Jesus, the man of flesh and blood, is the eternal living God. Though Jesus was himself the Word of God, yet when he became flesh he was necessarily weak and dependent (2 Cor. 13:4, cf. Rom. 8:3). As a true man and our model or paradigm, he needed the full support of his heavenly Father like the rest of us (John 5:19,30; 6:38). Indeed, our author goes further and suggests that even Jesus needed salvation if not from any sins he might have committed (cf. 1 Pet. 2:22). He says that in the days of his flesh he offered up prayers and supplications to him who was able to save him from committing sin (cf. Heb. 2:17a; 4:15) and its consequence death (Heb. 5:7). He thus learned obedience through what he suffered and became the source of eternal salvation to all who obey him being designated by God a high priest after the order of Melchisedek (Heb. 5:8f.). We need to note too that apart from John 2:19 and 10:17f. Jesus’ resurrection from the grave is always attributed to God and regarded as a demonstration of his power (e.g. Eph. 1:19-22). Truly no flesh will boast before God (1 Cor. 1:29) who is not indebted to anyone or anything (Rom. 11:35). He will not give his glory to another (Isa. 42:8; 48:11). If we read that before Jesus every knee will bow (Phil. 2:10f.), we need to recognize that in so doing it is to the glory of God (2:11, cf. Isa. 45:23; Rom. 14:10-12).

Salvation from the Flesh

Jesus plainly teaches that all who are flesh, that is, born according to nature and regardless of sin need to be born again (cf. John 3:6). Why? Because we belong by nature to this transient world and have to endure the test to qualify for the next (Ex. 20:20; Dt. 8:2,16, cf. 1 Cor. 9:24-27; 2 Tim. 4:7, etc.). We must prove ourselves pure in heart and spirit to be accepted by a holy God. Those with defiled consciences cannot stand before God (Heb. 9:9,13f.;10:1-4). When Jesus died, he committed his sinless spirit to his Father (Luke 23:46) leaving his body in the grave. In other words, while his flesh and blood could not enter heaven, his spirit could. It broke through the curtain that had been rent in two (Heb. 6:19f.; 10:19f.). Of course, his spirit returned to his uncorrupted body and he was able to resume his earthly life. However, his work was to all intents and purposes finished (John 17:4; 19:30) but having in his retirement (!) given his disciples their final instructions, he then at his ascension took his seat at his Father’s side in his heavenly kingdom not merely spiritually qualified and perfected but corporeally changed. His bodily transformation crowned his earthly work (cf. 1 Pet. 1:4; 5:4,10).

Transformation

What did this change involve? Taking his flesh to heaven? Not at all. As Paul says, flesh and blood cannot by nature inherit the kingdom of God (1 Cor. 15:50). Just as his natural spirit had had to be reborn from above, so now his body had to be transformed. (2* See my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities.) An eternal spirit could not possibly be permanently housed in a temporal body of flesh (cf. 2 Cor. 5:1), in what was effectively a temporary tent (John 1:14; 2 Pet. 1:13). Was this on account of sin as has been traditionally taught? By no means. After all, God had given him his body of flesh when he was ‘born of woman’ (Gal. 4:4, cf. Heb. 10:5), but this was the product of a futile creation. Now, because he was naturally subject to age (Luke 3:23; John 8:57) and hence decay (2 Cor. 4:16; Heb. 8:13), his fleshly nature had to be changed (cf. Heb. 1:10-12). So he had to be given a body of glory to fit him for heaven (Phil. 3:21, cf. Rom. 8:30) and reception of the eternal blessings of David (Acts 13:34), and this occurred at the end of his life at his ascension from the earth. Escape at last!

Salvation from the Physical Creation

It is common nowadays in the 21st century under traditional Augustinian influence to assume that since creation ‘fell’ when Adam ‘fell’ that creation will be restored and redeemed once sin, and therefore death, has been eradicated. (3* The deeply dubious idea that Jesus was changed at his resurrection while still in the flesh is used to support this. See my Did Jesus Rise Physically From The Grave?, John Stott on the Putative Resurrection Transformation of Jesus, etc.) But is this a viable proposition? I suggest not. As we saw above, the truth is that material creation was never perfect: it was only ‘good’ (Gen. 1) or fit to serve a temporal purpose. It was made ‘by hand’ (cheiropoietos, Isa. 45:11f.), an OT designation indicating its pejorative nature in contrast with heaven which was ‘not made by hand’ (acheiropoietos, cf. Heb. 9:11,24). (4* See my Manufactured Or Not So.) And since we as flesh stem from the earth and are consequently dust (Ps. 103:14; 1 Cor. 15:46-49, etc.), both our flesh and the material earth/creation itself must of necessity be changed or rather replaced by divine design. Sin does not come into the picture. This is surely what Paul teaches in Romans 8:18-25 and the author of Hebrews in 1:10-12. Like the flesh which in contrast with God himself is mortal and corruptible, the physical creation in general was likewise subjected to futility and destruction from the start. Why? Because God had something better in mind for those who were to be his adopted children. Paul calls this an invisible, and therefore a permanent (2 Cor. 4:18), hope (Rom. 8:24f.). Clearly he means heaven itself, the Father’s house to which Jesus returned and for which Paul himself strove with might and main to attain (Phil. 3:14). At the end of his life he was convinced that he would reach his goal (2 Tim. 4:18) and gain his crown of righteousness (4:8) just as Jesus himself had been crowned with glory (Heb. 2:9). He was not alone, for Peter entertained the same idea. He also had a living hope and believed in an inheritance that was imperishable, undefiled and unfading (1 Pet. 1:3f.). What is more he too thought in terms of a crown of glory awaiting him (1 Pet. 5:4). James likewise thought similarly: he hoped to receive his crown of life too (James 1:12). This was doubtless the eternal life that God had promised from the start (1 John 2:25, cf. Rev. 2:7). And John entertained the same hope (Rev. 2:10).

The Restoration and Redemption of the Physical Creation

To hope for the restoration and redemption of the physical creation as many seem to do nowadays in the 21st century is therefore completely contrary to the mission of God (pace C.Wright, N.T.Wright, p.179, Surprised By Hope) which is to bring down the curtain on the earthly life of this evil age (Gal. 1:4) of affliction, trial and tribulation (2 Cor. 4:17) once its purpose has been achieved (Heb. 12:27; 2 Pet. 3:7,10-12; Rev. 21:1-5). To restore creation is reminiscent of the Israelites returning to Egypt or Christians yearning to return to Judaism, reverting from the new covenant to the old or from Judaism to paganism. Once we are launched on the pilgrimage of life there is no fetching back the Age of Gold, returning to the Garden of Eden (Gen. 3:22-24), to paradise, to the womb (John 3:4), to Egypt, to Judaism (Heb. 3,4), or to the world (2 Pet. 2:20-22, cf. 2 Tim. 4:10; James 4:4; 1 John 2:15-17). The entire book of Hebrews is a warning against this. (5* See my No Going Back. As Dt. 17:16; 28:68; Hosea 8:13b; 9:3; 11:5 indicate, going back involves pain and punishment.)

Glory

Rather we are to follow in the steps of Jesus our paradigmatic pioneer who went from ground to glory without deviating except to die freely on our behalf. (6* See my The Journey of Jesus.) Just as he led the way (John 14:6) to glory (Heb. 2:10; 12:1f.), so we follow his lead (John 17:24). “And those whom he predestined he also called, and those whom he called he also justified and those whom he justified he also glorified” (Rom. 8:30 ESV). Where he is we shall be too (John 12:26); where he goes we shall go too (Rev. 14:4), and so we shall be forever with the Lord (1 Thes. 4:17, cf. John 12:26; 14:3). This is salvation indeed. Glory to God alone.

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References

C.J.H.Wright, The Mission of God, Leicester, 1996.

N.T.Wright, Surprised By Hope, London, 2007.

The Challenge of Jesus, Downers Grove, 1999.

 

 

 

 

 

Profiling Modern Pharisaism

Some months ago the minister of our church began his sermon with the following comment: “The Pharisees were the evangelicals of the New Testament”. If this is true, it ought to strike fear into the hearts of all who call themselves evangelicals. For it was the so-called evangelicals that Jesus criticized more scathingly than any other group (see e.g. Mt. 23).

Most of us associate the Pharisees of the NT with hypocrisy, with “putting on a mask” or pretending to be what they were not (Mt. 23:27f.). So the question immediately prompts itself: Am I (or are you) as a professing evangelical guilty of pretending to be what I am not? Generally speaking, I personally would not readily associate myself, or the evangelicals I have known, with play acting and dissembling. They have not appeared to be like the Pharisees Jesus criticized for insincerely putting on a show (Mt. 6:16; 23:5) or for a meticulous adherence to legalistic formality (Luke 18:12). But is there more to the issue than first meets the eye?

Evangelicalism

I have always associated the word evangelical with the evangel, the gospel as portrayed in the NT. Evangelicals profess to regard Scripture, or the apostolic foundation of the gospel (Eph. 2:20), as their final authority and court of appeal in matters of doctrine. They are, in other words committed to the Bible as the word of God. But are they as good as their profession? After all, the Pharisees of the NT saw themselves as children of Abraham (cf. John 8:33) and true disciples of Moses (John 9:28), yet Jesus nonetheless subjected them to blistering criticism. In Mark 7:6f., it is noticeable that Jesus locates their hypocrisy in their nullifying the word of God by their tradition. Considering the wildly different doctrines presently propounded by modern evangelicals, the suggestion is that many are, first, simply failing to understand the Bible. Since we are all be guilty of that from time to time, we need to be always ready to take another look and if necessary to revise our opinions. After all, Jesus warned us about getting things wrong and of the need to avoid acting as if we had one eye when in fact we have two (cf. Mt. 18:9). But, second, it would seem that many are in fact sidestepping Scripture and appealing to other authorities. Perhaps we are failing as our predecessors in the NT did. Anyhow, the issue is worth subjecting to further examination.

The Pharisees were of course but one group among the Jews at the time of Christ. On occasion, Jesus even supported their stance on matters of crucial importance to the gospel. For example, he took their part, as Paul did later (Acts 23:6-9) against the Sadducees with regard to the resurrection (Mt. 22:23-32). The latter he accuses of ignorance and failure to appreciate the power of God rather than deliberate distortion of the Scriptures.

Orthodoxy

One of the disturbing features of the modern scene is the tendency of some to equate their denomination or sect with Christianity. Here in Australia, at least on TV, Roman Catholicism is regularly equated with the Christian faith. Then again many evangelicals refer to their stance as “Biblical and Reformed”, thereby adding to Scripture. When we consider that the Reformation occurred nearly 500 years ago, are those who embrace Reformed theology saying that despite believing that doctrine should always be subject to reform (semper reformanda) no further progress in understanding the faith has been made? As long ago as 1609, John Robinson, pastor to the Pilgrim Fathers, while acknowledging the greatness of Luther and Calvin was convinced that God had more light to break forth from his word. Yet even post-2000 some evangelicals give the impression that their traditional creed is fixed and unalterable (semper eadem), and to be classified as unorthodox is equivalent to denying Scripture. I suggest, however, that the boot may be on the other foot and that the source of so much doctrinal error in evangelicalism is a refusal on the part of the so-called orthodox to re-examine Scripture.

The Need for Conversion

When writing to the Galatians Paul left his readers in no doubt that to teach what he called a “different gospel” (1:6, ESV) led to distortion, and, even if this so-called gospel appeared to emanate from an angel from heaven, it should be rejected on pain of being cursed. In general, in my experience most evangelicals cling to the doctrine of justification by faith which was Paul’s main consideration especially in Galatians. But the apostle implies that other doctrines are also of basic importance, and, if they are misunderstood, disregarded or distorted, they can, when taken to their logical conclusion, undermine the faith. On the assumption that the Christian faith constitutes a complete worldview, a comprehensive, connected whole, any perversion of its parts threatens not only its unity but also its intelligibility. This comment requires expansion with reference to infant baptism, for example.

Infant Baptism and Its Theological Support

While infant “baptism” appears to jeopardize justification by faith, there is good evidence available to suggest that this can be overcome to some degree. Even some Catholics have acknowledged the need for conversion at a later stage in the lives of the “baptized”. And most Anglicans lay a good deal of emphasis on confirmation, even if it is not a biblical doctrine. (I deny that it corresponds with circumcision and bar mitzvah.)

However, if this paedobaptist tradition is supported, for example, by a false covenant theology, not to mention original sin or an equation of baptism with circumcision, the issue becomes much more serious. For our entire worldview is greatly affected by it. As it happens, even baptists are tarred with the same (Augustinian) brush as their counterparts in non-baptist churches. And this clearly accounts for much of the doctrinal mayhem confronting us today.

Original Sin

Then, let us take a quick look at that time-honoured dogma of original sin. First, it needs to be recognized that the Jews and the Orthodox have never embraced it. Second, it has been virtually set in cement in the West by Augustine. He did not read Greek, and where the latter has “because all sinned” in Romans 5:12, he read “in whom all sinned” (Latin ‘in quo’). In other words, he believed that we all sinned “in Adam” and were therefore born sinful. (The only text I can discover in the Bible that might possibly support this idea is Psalm 51:5. But since it runs counter to more explicit teaching and the general belief of the Jews, we must assume that David, under the stress of his sin with Bathsheba resorted to hyperbole. (Compare e.g. Ps. 58:3, cf. Isa. 8:4; Job 31:18.) Augustine went on to distinguish between Jesus and the rest of Adam’s descendants by arguing that since the former was born of a virgin without “carnal concupiscence”, he was therefore innocent. This contrasts with the author of Hebrews who tells us that the only way in which Jesus differed from the rest of us as a human being was that he did not personally sin (Heb. 2:17f.; 4:15). The implication of this is that we, like Adam and Eve who until they broke the commandment knew neither good nor evil, are all, like Jesus himself (cf. Isa. 7:15f.), born innocent (Dt. 1:39, cf. Num. 14:3,39-33, etc.), or as Paul says “alive” (Rom. 7:9). It is only with the advent of law that the trouble starts (cf. Rom. 4:15; 1 Cor. 15:56, etc.). As ordinary men and women of dust we prove incapable of keeping it (1 K. 8:46, etc., as God, who planned to justify us by faith in Christ, always intended), while the man of heaven proved that he could (John 8:46; Rom. 8:3; 1 Pet. 2:22, etc.).

Covenant Theology

In light of this it should come as no great surprise that when the Reformers, or rather their successors, came to develop a covenant theology, they posited a covenant with Adam regarded as the head and representative of all his posterity. So they taught that when he sinned all sinned ‘in him’ (cf. Bengel’s comment: omnes peccarunt, Adamo peccante). But not only is this not taught in Scripture, it is actually contrary to its basic teaching. For Moses (Ex. 32:33), Jeremiah (31:29f.) and Ezekiel (18), for example, insist that sin cannot be transferred. Moses went so far as to lay it down as an axiom that the child could not be punished for the sin of the parent (Dt. 24:16, etc.). Yet even today writers tell us that we sinned in Adam (see, e.g. Horton, pp.88f., Collins, p.277, etc.), and adhere to the notion of the imputation of Adam’s sin. The latter is based on a glaring fallacy implicitly contradicted by Paul himself. For if the wages of sin is death and all died (Rom. 5:12), they must have earned their wages. Imputation is ruled out of court for the simple reason that it excludes wages (Rom. 4:1-8).

Natural Corruption

If infants, who do not know the law, die, since imputation is out of the reckoning, there is obviously another explanation for their death! This brings up another subject. According to the Bible the corruption of the material creation is natural. God made it that way (Ps. 102:25-27; 103:14-18, etc.) No wonder God has established his throne in the heavens (Ps. 8:1; 113:4, etc.), and not on the impermanent earth (Ps. 103:19) which is his footstool (Isa. 66:1). That explains the plan of salvation. To gain eternal life (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5, etc.) mortal man must escape from the natural corruption to which even the incarnate Jesus himself was subject (John 8:57) by keeping the commandments. He can’t. But Jesus could and did. He thus began his exodus (Luke 9:31), died for others, took back his life (John 10:17f.) since death had no claim on him, (Acts 2:24) and made his escape (Lu. 9:51; Rev. 12:5) by returning to the glory of his eternity (John 17:5, cf. Eph. 1:20f.).

Since infants who know neither good nor evil never receive the commandments in any form, they cannot be either righteous (Dt. 6:25; 1 John 3:7) or sinful (Rom. 4:15; 7:1-13, cf. 6:16). Furthermore, since they are not covenant children like Noah, they sometimes succumb naturally like all flesh (Gen. 6:17; Ps. 49:12,20), that is, apart from moral considerations, to the corruption of the material world of which they are a part.

The upshot of all this is that the so-called Christian, but what is in reality the Augustinian, worldview propounded by many is deeply flawed. The idea that God created a perfect world to be ruled over by the perfect human beings Adam and Eve is traditional twaddle. Our first parents were not by nature holy and righteous, least of all perfect, and the creation they were called on to rule was manifestly imperfect or defective in some sense (cf. Rom. 8:18-25; Heb. 1:10-12, etc.). If Adam and Eve were perfect, their fall into sin and the ruin of the creation over which they were intended to exercise dominion is a complete mystery. It is not only contrary to the clear teaching of Scripture but also absurd. From Genesis 1:1 to Revelation 22 the picture is different. The temporal creation and the eternal Creator are differentiated throughout the Bible. The one is on no account to be worshipped, the other is (Rom. 1:23,25)!

What has this to do with Pharisaism? A whole lot! It proves that if we adopt at some point an erroneous but traditional interpretation of the Scripture we claim as our authority, we are inevitably jeopardizing the faith we claim to uphold. It may be true that God can overcome error and use people who genuinely misunderstand. Calvinists argue that God did this in the case of the Wesleys who were Arminian. Genuine misunderstanding, or the doctrinal immaturity that has always characterized the church to some degree, is one thing but persistence in clinging to dogma that is shown to be false is another. To claim as Christian what is manifestly unchristian (cf. Isa. 5:20) is a serious matter and may lay us open to the charge of the Pharisaism that Jesus so heavily criticized.

Over thirty years ago I myself wrote a book indicating that there was something seriously amiss with traditional Reformed theology. My principal criticism was leveled at received covenant theology. Of course, I could have been wrong and perhaps still am. But I continue to await the refutation of my own thesis on the one hand and to see the justification of traditional views on the other. All too often assumption masquerades as proof. Let me illustrate what I mean.

“Cheating”

Some twenty or more years ago I read Murray’s “The Imputation of Adam’s Sin”. When I had finished it, I wrote somewhere that he had “cheated”. My complaint was that at the end of the first section of his book his argument had fallen short of the proof that the doctrine required. (This is scarcely surprising since, as I have noted above, it is incapable of proof. Paul’s own teaching in Romans shows that it is built on a blatant error.) In the second section, however, he simply assumed what needed to be proved.

More recently Collins has presented us with his “Genesis 1-4” which in some respects has much to commend it. However, my complaint is again that he has “cheated”. He promises proof of a creation covenant. Despite many hints, inferences and assumptions, this proof never materializes. Again this is hardly surprising since Scripture not only fails to refer to such a covenant but also in the nature of the case it cannot do so. The material creation, as the flood which threatened it implied, lacks both covenant and guarantee. It is, as Genesis 1:1 asserts, temporal and not eternal. Its ultimate destiny, like that of the body of flesh which derives from it (2 Cor. 5:1) is oblivion. Thus the contrast between the Creator and the created is maintained throughout the Bible (Isa. 51:6, etc.). Jesus himself says: “Heaven and earth will pass away but the word of God will abide forever” (Mt. 24:35). Once the material creation has served its purpose of nurturing the children of God (Mt. 24:8; Rom. 8:18-25), it will be dispensed with, not least by Jesus himself when he returns in the glory of God as a consuming fire (2 Thes. 1:7; Luke 17:29f.; Mt. 22:7; Heb. 12:29; 2 Pet. 3:7,10-12; Rev. 20:11; 21:1-4). In other words, the message of the Bible is loud and clear: there is no ultimate future for either the flesh or this world in general. The present age must give way to the age to come (1 Cor. 7:31; 1 John 2:15-17, etc.).

Personal Pharisaism

So, I am compelled to ask whether I personally am a Pharisee? Am I seeking to make tradition and confessionalism my final arbiter and so rendering the word of God ineffective? Over the years I have not only changed churches (though not always as a result of conviction) but also changed my opinion. As one who embraces the notion of constant reformation (semper reformanda) and of maturing in the faith (cf. Phil. 3:12-16), I trust that I shall continue to do so. If the perfection or glory of God is my aim in Christ, I can do nothing less.

But if this is so, I must ask whether you, the reader, are a Pharisee? Lacking the insight and the perfection of Jesus I cannot answer that question for you. If the cap fits wear it! If it does, then add your name to those who seek for a new reformation. On the other hand, it is vital for all of us as individuals to change our views only as prompted by conviction and insight. If these are missing, it is far better to remain with time-honoured tradition. At least it has the backing of some of the great names of the church whom God blessed in their time, and these are not to be lightly tossed aside. Clearly we should all make haste slowly. But in these days when we are being challenged both within and without the church, make haste we must. For only the truth will make us free (John 8:31f.).

The Question of Truth

This brings up another point. If the truth is something that the world has suppressed (Rom. 1:18) and failed to attain to (1 Cor. 1:21), then it is vitally necessary for the church which is meant to be the pillar and bulwark of the truth to propagate it (1 Tim. 3:15). The failure of the Jews to do this resulted in judgement, first, in the Babylonian exile, then in the punishment and dispersion of the Jews by the Romans. If God has vented his wrath on his own in times past, he may well do the same again in our time. This time the Assyrian may not be the rod of his anger (Isa. 10:5) but the Muslim in general may be. The Pharisaical refusal of those who claim to acknowledge the Bible as the word of God to abide by its teaching threatens the veracity of Christian witness.

Worldview

A false worldview has other implications which cannot be dealt with here. I therefore allude to just one. It is vital for Christians in these days of potential suicide bombers to emphasise the natural impermanence and corruption of the temporal creation (Ps. 102:25-27; Isa. 40:6-8; 51:6; Mt. 24:35; Rom. 8:18-25, etc.). Apart from other considerations, this can only mean that those who blow themselves up lose their corruptible flesh permanently (Gen. 3:19, cf. Rom. 8:13; Gal. 6:8). Their hope of lapsing into the embrace of buxom beauties in the world to come is forever forlorn. In heaven, as Jesus clearly taught in accordance with the Bible in general, there is no marriage for the simple reason that we shall be the children of God who is spirit (1 Pet. 4:6) and hence like the angels (Luke 20:34-36, cf. 1 Cor. 15:50).

Conclusions

The Augustinian worldview with its stress on the original perfection of creation, original holiness and righteousness (*1), original sin, “Fall”, universal curse and the eventual redemption of the material creation is not only lamentably unbiblical, it is ludicrous, and it is high time it was abandoned. Failure to jettison it can only lead evangelicalism at best to marginalisation, at worst to total rejection (Mt. 23:38). And then there is the possibility of the judgement of God in more tangible form. We have been warned.

*1 A more blatant case of putting the cart before the horse would be difficult to find. Even Jesus had to begin his pilgrimage in innocence (cf. Isa. 7:15f.), achieve righteousness by keeping the law and then to fulfil all righteousness (Mt. 3:13-17) in his bid to attain to the perfection of God (Mt. 5:48; Heb. 1:3f.; Rev. 3:21, etc.).

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References

C.J.Collins, Genesis 1-4, Phillipsburg, 2006.

M.Horton, God of Promise, Grand Rapids, 2006.

The Exaltation Of Jesus

In my essay Still Docetic I have argued that at his incarnation the Word of God was made man (John 1:14) as the son of Adam (Luke 3:38), as the seed of Abraham and David (Mt. 1:1; Rom. 1:3) and born of woman (Gal. 4:4, cf. Heb. 10:5; Jer, 1:5). Though obviously still God in person, he laid aside his divine nature and took on human nature. On the face of it, without going further, both John in John 1:1-18 and Paul in Philippians 2:5-11 seem to teach this. However, history, as evinced not least in the Chalcedonian Creed, subverts this contention by positing two natures in one person (the hypostatic union). In other words, it is held that it was impossible for God the Word to divest himself of his divine nature in order to become man. This is apparently is a patent denial of what the Bible teaches and leads inevitably to what is known as docetism, that is, that Jesus appeared to be a man but was not really so. The idea that one human person can possess at one and the same time the nature of both God and man and still be a man, a true human being of the sort portrayed in Scripture, is logically impossible (cf. 1 Cor. 15:46 where Paul teaches that we are first flesh and then spirit finally transformed or ‘deified’ as in 15:50-53). Little wonder therefore that theologians like Berkhof (p.321), Berkouwer (p.285, etc.) and Milne (p.46) maintain that the two-nature doctrine is an inexplicable, incomprehensible or ineffable mystery. In fact it is contrary to reason and if allowed, it undermines all confidence we might otherwise have in the extensive use of logic throughout the Bible. Jesus’ controversies with the Pharisees (1* See espec. Stott on Jesus the Controversialist.) and Paul’s contentions regarding the resurrection in 1 Corinthians 15 especially involve logical reasoning, and it must be upheld on pain of death.

Hebrews

Apart from John and Paul, the author of Hebrews especially presents us with the a genuinely human Jesus who for a little while as God incarnate was made lower than the angels but then, having successfully finished his work, was crowned with honour and glory in accordance with the promise made to the first Adam (Heb. 2:7-9, cf. 1:3f.). In other words, he conquered as man (cf. Rom. 8:3) in a world where all other men failed, and it was for this reason that he had to die on their behalf. According to our author, unless he had become like his fellow human beings in every respect as a son of Adam (Luke 3:38), he could not have served as their representative and substitute (Heb. 2:17). Now, if the pre-existent Word had retained his divine nature, he could hardly be said to have been a true representative of man, a son of Adam (Luke 3:38) and one whom Paul regards as the second Adam. We are faced with two inseparable and apparently contradictory points: first, the OT tells us that salvation must be achieved by man (Adam) on condition of keeping the law (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5) and, second, that God alone saves (e.g. Isa. 43:11; 45:20-25). In light of the failure of Adam and all his descendants (1 K.8:46, etc.), it was therefore necessary that God the Word became man as a true son of Adam (Luke 3:38), kept the law, gained eternal life and ascended to heaven, perfected as man in the image of God (2 Cor. 4:4; Col. 1:15; Heb. 1:3). This is precisely how the clearly human Jesus is presented in Hebrews. Having become like his fellows in every respect apart from sin (2:14,17; 4:15, etc.), at his exaltation he achieves not the divine nature which on Chalcedonian principles he already had and had never lost but the exact image of God as man (Heb. 1:3, cf. Col. 1:15-20; 2:9).

In sum, though eternally God in person and the human Son of God born of woman (Gal. 4:4), as man he fulfils the charge originally given to Adam as man made in the image of God and is perfected in the likeness of God. In other words he established the pattern of human salvation or pilgrimage from earth to heaven (John 3:13; 13:3; 16:28) in accordance with the plan of God. He was thus not merely representative man like Adam whose conduct all his descendants imitated (Rom. 3:23; 5:12, pace Augustine.) (2* On imitation, see my Imitation.), but, since he died on their behalf, he is the covenant representative and substitute of all who put their trust in him. As such he is their elder brother (Heb. 2:10-13), man the mediator between God and man (1 Tim. 2:5).

In dealing with Jesus’ exaltation, it is vital to see that his genuine humanity is paramount. If he had retained his divine nature, first he could not have been genuinely the human son of God like Adam (cf. Luke 3:38);  second, he could not for a little while have been made lower than the angels (Heb. 2:7,9); third, he could not have kept the law as man; fourth, he could not have represented his fellows as a true brother; and; fifth he could not have been exalted as man to sit at God’s right hand as the perfected image of God (cf. Heb. 1:3; Col. 1:15). He would simply have confirmed his nature as God, but this is surely not what Scripture teaches.

Throughout the NT we are taught that it is Jesus the man, the genuine Son of God born of woman when the time has fully come, who is finally exalted as Lord (Acts 2:33-36; 1 Cor. 8:6; 12:3). As the second Adam he did what the first Adam (and all his descendants Jesus apart) failed to do, that is, achieve victory as man in the flesh (Rom. 8:3; Heb. 2:14). In fact, to argue that throughout his earthly sojourn he retained his divine nature is to undermine his exaltation as man altogether and to make nonsense of it. The NT makes it abundantly clear that Jesus, the man, was the Son of God by a woman. Just as Adam had been created literally in the earth, Jesus was created in his mother’s womb (Heb. 10:5, cf. Jer. 1:5). Since his mother was herself dust, that is, flesh as deriving from Adam (Ps. 78:39; 103:14, cf. Gen. 3:19f.; 1 Cor. 15:47-49), so Jesus followed the same path as his father Adam (Luke 3:38) had but in his case, since he kept the commandment or law, to perfection. Indeed, he could not have become the second Adam apart from this.

The Second Adam

It may be asked at this point who the second Adam really was? Surely the answer must be that he was as Paul says the man from heaven. How could he be that since the very name ‘Adam’ establishes man’s connection with the earth? (See e.g. NBD, p.13, col.2.) The answer must lie in the fact that as man, the son of Adam (Luke 3:38), he uniquely kept the law in the flesh (Rom. 8:3) and was born from above in accordance with the promise originally made to the first Adam. It is thus as the second Adam that he became the firstborn representative of the new human creation (Col. 1:15, cf. 2 Cor. 5:17).

Is all this borne out by the rest of the NT? The answer must be in the affirmative. First, it is the man who was born to a woman who is recognized as God’s unique Son in the birth narratives (Matthew and Luke). Next, he is the one who pleased his Father by keeping the law thereby qualifying to be his regenerate Son (given eternal life) at his baptism (Mt. 3:13-17; John 1:32, etc.), then at his transfiguration and again at his resurrection (Acts 13:33) and finally at his ascension (Rom. 1:4). Some may argue that the latter reference relates to the resurrection from the grave but this is to miss or ignore the fact that the resurrection is often viewed comprehensively in the NT. Sometimes it is shorthand for the whole process of exaltation and clearly includes not merely his resurrection from the dead as such but also his ascension, transformation, exaltation and heavenly session. It is doubtless used in this way by Paul in Romans 1:4 where Jesus is seen not in the weakness of his flesh (2 Cor. 13:4, cf. Mt. 26:41) but ‘in power’ as Lord. (3* Mt. 28:18 is surely proleptic like John 20:22, cf. 7:39; Acts 2:33, etc.)

Again study of such references as Luke 24:26, Acts 2:33; 5:31; Romans 8:17, Ephesians 1:20; 4:10, 1 Timothy 3:16, Hebrews 1:3, cf. 2:9, 10:12 and 12:2 all point to the same conclusion.

Eternal Sonship

Of course, church tradition would have us believe that Jesus was God’s eternal Son signifying his Sonship as the pre-existent Word. There is no evident support for this view in the Bible as even its advocates concede. (4* See e.g. Giles, p.66,88.) The idea of the eternal generation of the Son stems in part from the belief that God cannot change his nature for which again there is no evident Scriptural support. Rather it seems to be an inference from the Greek philosophical view of God which regarded God as utterly transcendent, immutable and impassible, but it flies in the face of the clear teaching of the Bible, especially John 1 and Philippians 2 and is implied in 1 John 1:1-3 (cf. John 20:27-29). In other words, what John 1:1-18 and Philippians 2:5-11 teach is implicitly denied, and as a consequence we inevitably have the docetic Jesus who has plagued the church for centuries. Instead of accepting that God became man, we are urged to believe that his eternal, implicitly subordinate, Son became man. If this is the case the cutting edge of the humiliation of God is inevitably blunted (Phil. 2:7f.). On the other hand, if it was God the eternal Word who truly became man, then his exaltation makes sense. It is difficult indeed to understand how one who retained his divine nature could be either humbled or exalted. As Creator, he was Lord of heaven and earth by nature (Col.1:16).

This is of basic importance. Jesus had to be a true man to serve as man’s representative and mediator (1 Tim. 2:5). If he had preserved his divine nature he would not, could not possibly be a genuine man, the elder brother of his fellows. He could not have been a true trail blazer and pioneer (Heb. 12:2) but an alien. His salvation would have been an act of power like that portrayed in Islam but apart from righteousness and holiness (cf. Isa. 45:21,24).

Let us thank God that he sent Jesus his incarnate Son Jesus to serve as our elder brother and author of our salvation. It is he who now sits at his Father’s side as the Lamb, the Lord of glory, on the throne of the universe interceding for his blood-bought people. While he may now be subordinate (1 Cor. 15:24-28) as Joseph was to Pharaoh (Gen. 41:40,43; 44:18, etc.), it is for our sake (cf.. Gen. 45:5,7; 50:20). What humility! What love!

Gloria Soli Deo.

_______________________________________________

References

L.Berkhof, Systematic Theology, London, 1959.

G.C.Berkouwer, The Person of Christ, Grand Rapids, 1954.

K.Giles, The Eternal Generation of the Son, Downers Grove, 2012.

B.Milne, Know the Truth, 3rd ed. Nottingham, 2009.

John R.W.Stott, Jesus the Controversialist, Leicester, 1970.

 

The Ecclesiastical Christ

My extensive reading and writing over a number of years have led me to believe that the traditional Jesus of the churches is docetic. This observation is occasionally made by others usually with regard to a particular doctrine, though I am unaware of anyone who has tried to demonstrate the issue in any detail. I believe, however, that the evidence for it is substantial.

Having recently (2013) written an essay entitled Still Docetic in reaction to a book by Professor Bruce Ware entitled The Man Christ Jesus (2013), I remain convinced that the problem is much more deeply rooted than most are aware. In the present essay I attempt to show even if somewhat superficially just how the traditional image of Christ is portrayed in the churches and in the text books.

Original Sin

First, it is often pointed out with reference to Hebrews 2:17 that Jesus was like his brothers in every respect apart from sin. The point being made is that he was a genuine human being. On the face of it this settles the issue: the only difference between Jesus and all his fellow human beings is that he did not sin. This would appear to be supported by such texts as Hebrews 4:15 (cf. 2:14,18) and 1 Peter 2:22. In contrast with Adam and the rest of us, we can say that Jesus was the obedient Son of God. He kept the law to perfection: the rest of us do not.

There is a problem, however. Historically, under the influence of Augustine of Hippo in particular, the church has strongly stressed the ‘Fall’ from original perfection, righteousness and holiness into sin, and this is said to have affected the whole of humanity along with creation in general. All the descendants of Adam are deemed to be sinful even from conception. (1* Cf. Ps. 51:5. This verse is not only frequently mistranslated assuming what needs to be proved, but almost universally misinterpreted by evangelical Christians. The Jews, followed by the Orthodox, have never drawn “Christian” conclusions from it, and with good reason. See further my various articles on original sin.) They are one and all the victims of original sin, sinful by nature and born under a curse. Given this assumption, Jesus too as the Son of Adam (Luke 3:38) through Mary his mother who rejoiced in God her Saviour (Luke 1:47) must have been born sinful. But this is emphatically denied by most Christians, and the Bible itself makes the position clear as we have already seen. However, on the assumption that original sin is true, a Jesus who was sinless at birth and different from all his fellows was clearly not human, and the conclusion we must draw from this is that he was docetic, definitely not like the rest of us. His exception by birth nature inevitably involves his exclusion: as an exception he was excluded from the human race, not genuinely part of it.

The question that confronts us now is: How do we overcome this problem? Tradition tells us that the first Adam was sinless as created and that Jesus replaces him. This, however, ignores the indisputable fact that Jesus had forebears including Adam himself (Luke 3:38) as Matthew 1:1-6, to go no further, indicates. God could not possibly begin again like a potter. To begin again with Jesus he would have to obliterate a substantial portion of previous history as Moses was fully aware (cf. Ex. 32:11-14; Num. 14:13-19). (See note 2 below.) Clearly the answer lies in the fact that the dogma of original sin is contrary to sound doctrine. It simply cannot be true, and the idea that the sin of Adam is either transmitted (Catholics) or imputed (Protestants) is foreign to the Bible. Apostolic teaching informs us that where there is no law there is no sin, that sin involves breaking the law and that moral attributes are not transferable except by faith. As Ezekiel 18 and Jeremiah 31:29f., for example, clearly indicate, they have to be acquired. We become murderers by murdering, adulterers by committing adultery, the slaves of sin by sinning (John 8:34), and so forth. (2* The much-touted idea that we sin because we are sinners by birth nature is clearly false. If we are born sinful in contrast with Adam, then God has made us such and we are blameless. The very idea is blasphemous. It makes God the author of sin. In any case, throughout the Bible God opposes the imputation of sin to those who do not sin, cf. Ex. 23:7; 1 K. 21; Prov. 17:15, etc.) On the one hand we are deemed righteous by keeping the law; on the other hand we are deemed unrighteous by not keeping it. But babies which do not know the law can neither keep it nor disobey it and are consequently innocent like Adam before he sinned by breaking the commandment when it eventually registered on his mind (Dt. 1:39; Isa. 7:15f., etc.). In Romans 7:9f. Paul clearly indicates that he recapitulated Adam and Eve’s experience. He was, he claims, once ‘alive’ but when the commandment came and he broke it, though it promised (eternal) life, he earned the wages of death (Rom. 6:23). And so with all of us apart from Jesus (Rom. 3:23; 5:12).

But, it will be said that Jesus was made sin (2 Cor. 5:21). He was indeed but only by faith. Just as we are justified (deemed righteous) by faith, so he who did not personally sin and earn its wages was accounted sinful by faith. (3* On this, see my An Exact Parallel?) He bore our sins on the tree voluntarily and vicariously. Why? Because in no other way could he save his fellows who all actually and willfully sinned and were doomed to die (Rom. 3:23; 5:12, etc.).

So, I conclude that the ecclesiastical Christ who was not born sinful as the rest of us are said to be is docetic. The only way to overcome the problem that this constitutes is to abandon the dogma of original sin. (4* See further my various articles on original sin including those on imputation) It is not and indeed cannot be true. The creeds, church tradition (apart from the Orthodox) and false exegesis, especially of Romans 5:12-21, have led us astray. A simple syllogism clarifies the situation:

  • First premise: According to the churches all human beings are born sinful.
  • Second premise: Jesus was not born sinful.
  • Therefore Jesus was not a human being.

On the assumption of original sin, I conclude that the ecclesiastical Jesus was docetic, not what he appeared to be.

The New Birth (Regeneration)

Closely associated with the dogma of original sin is the doctrine of regeneration. Perhaps the best known chapter in the Bible is John 3, yet I would argue it is among the worst understood. In verses 1-8 Jesus makes it clear beyond reasonable dispute that the new birth is not an imperative like repentance (Mark 1:15) but a natural necessity (Gk. dei) for all who are flesh. Since his incarnation made him flesh, by inexorable logic we must conclude that Jesus too had to be born again. As Wheeler Robinson once wrote: “… if regeneration be entrance into conscious sonship to God, we must regard regeneration as the normal and ‘natural’ completion of what was begun in the first birth” (p.327). (5* Jesus’ sonship requires brief explication. First, he was the Son of God like Adam by natural (physical) birth, Luke 3:38, cf. Mt. 2:15. Second, as the first and only human being ever to keep the law, in accordance with Leviticus 18:5, cf. Gen. 2:17, etc., and having thereby pleased his Father, he was confirmed as his Son by baptism of the Spirit (= was born again), Mt. 3:13-17. Third, he was further acknowledged as God’s Son at his transfiguration when God bore testimony to him, Mt. 17:1-8; 2 Pet. 1:17, then, fourth, at his resurrection, Acts 13:33. Finally, he was appointed or declared to be the Son of God in power at his ascension transformation, Acts 13:34; Rom. 1:4. Though the latter verse refers to his resurrection, it clearly involves the entire process of resurrection including his exaltation and heavenly session.)

So far as Jesus is concerned this conclusion is to my knowledge universally denied in the church. Why? The answer lies in the fact that quite unwarrantably the sin-obsessed Augustine of Hippo, who did so much to fashion church tradition, claimed that the new birth provided the cure for original sin, and since Jesus was not its victim, he did not need to be born again. As a consequence of this, anyone brave or rash enough to suggest that Jesus needed to be born again is immediately but quite wrongly accused of charging Jesus with sin! Yet if Jesus himself was truly flesh (note v.3) the ‘obvious’ truth is that he was born again at his baptism. It was he who in contrast with all his sinful forebears (1 K. 8:46; Eccl. 7:20, etc.) who brought life to light (2 Tim. 1:10).

As we have seen above, however, original sin is alien to the Bible. In fact, all human beings recapitulate the experience of their forebears of whom Adam and Eve were the first. In other words, we all begin at the beginning and mutatis mutandis recapitulate the history of the race. (Only the other day I heard on TV that this is one of the findings of modern geneticists!) Just as Adam lacking all knowledge of the law (commandment) was created knowing neither good nor evil, so are all his descendants (Dt. 1:39; Isa. 7:15f.). Genesis 5:1-3 says nothing about sin and the notion that we are all created in the moral image of Adam (not to mention that of God) after he had sinned is simply false (cf. e.g. Ezek. 18, etc.). The fact is that original sin is a mythical not a real problem, a veritable mare’s nest which has led to all sorts of unnecessary and erroneous speculation about the Virgin Birth. In reality, Jesus did not avoid original sin by being born of a virgin – a solution which when subjected to critical analysis proves both false and inadequate. As the Son of God he simply did not sin and thereby proved his divine pedigree. He was, in common parlance, a chip off the old block, a true Son of his Father. If he had sinned, he would have proved an impostor.

Having said this, however, we must hastily add that as the Son of Mary he was made in Adam’s fleshly image (Luke 3:38) and as such he needed to be born again as a natural necessity. As a true human being he was in contrast with his Father both mortal and corruptible (Rom. 1:23; 1 Tim. 1:17; 6:16, etc.). He had a natural or created spirit (cf. Num. 16:22; Zech. 12:1, etc.), but to enter the kingdom of heaven he had to have an eternal one of which God was the Father (John 1:12f.; Heb. 12:9). How, it may well be asked, did he acquire this? The answer is that he did it by keeping the law that all the rest of us failed to do. At the beginning, Adam was promised eternal life if he kept the commandment (Gen. 2:17). He failed. By contrast Jesus kept that commandment, indeed the entire law of Moses, and so inherited life in accordance with the promise (cf. Lev. 18:5). Prior to him no one, on account of sin (1 K. 8:46; Eccl. 7:20, etc.), was born again, and throughout the OT regeneration remained a promise which was never fulfilled (Dt. 29:4; 30:6; Jer. 31:33; Ezek. 11:19f.). Jesus as the second Adam was the first to be born from above as his baptism makes plain. He was the leader of the band, of the new or regenerate humanity (cf. Rom. 8:29; Col. 1:15, etc.). Only he was in a position to establish the new covenant by his death. Had he not been born again, he would have remained forever under the law and under a permanent obligation to keep it. In this situation he would have been incapable of doing good works as opposed to works of obligation (Eph. 2:10; Acts 10:38), least of all of atoning for the sins of his fellows. As the author of Hebrews says, the law could not perfect anything (Heb. 7:18f.).

I conclude then that a Jesus who on his own testimony regarding the flesh (John 3:1-8) was not born again was not truly human. Though he apparently failed to appreciate the logic of his assertion, Louis Berkhof was dead right when he wrote regarding the new birth in John 3:3, cf. vv.5-7: “This statement of the Saviour is absolute and leaves no room for exceptions” (p.472). The Bible implies, even if it does not explicitly state, that Jesus was born again; but the churches traditionally deny it. The plain truth is that a once-born Jesus is not and cannot be our elder brother (Heb. 2:11-13) and trail-blazer into heaven (Heb. 6:19f.; 9:24; 10:19f.; 12:2, etc.). On this assumption, he is, like Adam, dead, permanently so as we shall see below, and we are still in our sins.

Jesus’ Fleshly Corruption and Transformation

Traditionally, following Augustine, the churches attribute both moral and physical corruption to sin. (6* Older writers like Ottley apparently attribute Jesus’ fleshly corruption to sin. He writes: “Christ is ‘flesh’, is ‘man’, morally such as he originally was, but physically such as sin has left him, i.e. subject to creaturely weakness, pain, temptation, and death, but sinless”, p.100, cf. pp.105,115.) But is this what the Bible teaches? Emphatically not. First, we must acknowledge the fact that Adam was created from the physically visible, temporary, provisional and hence corruptible earth (cf. 2 Cor. 4:18; Heb. 1:10-12, etc.). This being the case he himself in contrast with his Maker was naturally mortal and corruptible. As we saw above, as such he was promised (eternal) life on condition that he kept the commandment. He did not, and so he died being paid the wages of sin. And the rest of us, Jesus apart, followed suit (Rom. 3:23; 5:12, etc.).

However, what would have happened to Adam if had not sinned? Jesus, the second Adam provides us with the answer. First, as we have seen, he did not sin, pleased his Father and so was born again (= gained eternal life). But this was a spiritual rebirth not a physical one as Nicodemus seemed to think. Second, this prompts questions regarding our physical flesh. Some even in the twenty-first century apparently believe that it can be transformed despite the fact that Paul dogmatically denies that flesh and blood and all that is perishable by nature can inherit the kingdom of God. They base their argument on the putative transformation resurrection of Jesus from the grave. This is clearly false. If Jesus was transformed at that point, his perishable flesh would have been imperishable and this contradicts Paul’s plain assertion in 1 Corinthians 15:50b. (7* On this, see, for example, my John Stott on the Putative Resurrection Transformation of Jesus, When Was Jesus Transformed?, etc.)

The truth is that the flesh, like the earth from which it is taken, is perishable or corruptible by nature (creation) as the entire animal creation implies. If it had a beginning, it will also have an end. Thus it is that according to Paul transformation is a natural necessity intended, in fact ordained by God and integral to his plan of salvation (Gk. dei, 1 Cor. 15:53, cf. John 3:7). So Jesus who was flesh and in contrast with his Father grew older (Luke 2:42; 3:23; John 8:57, cf. Mt. 5:36; Heb. 1:11f.) had consequently to be changed even though he was not a sinner. And this change according to Paul must have taken place at his ascension. Indeed, just as he was the first to be born again, so he was the first to be corporeally changed (cf. 2 Tim. 1:10). (8* Superficially considered, Enoch and Elijah in the OT seem to be exceptions. It is important to realize however, that nothing is said of their receiving a body of glory like that of Jesus, Phil. 3:21. As Hebrews 11:39f. indicate, their perfection both spiritual and corporeal still awaits them.)

All this brings under suspicion the still widespread Augustinian idea that creation was originally perfect but was cursed when Adam “fell” and lost his putative original righteousness and immortality. If the sinless Jesus was corruptible and subject to aging, then the corruptibility of creation must be natural, nothing whatsoever to do with sin. It is vital to note that Paul claims that even though Jesus was truly flesh and hence subject to death and corruption, having abolished death he brought to light both life and incorruption (Gk.) (2 Tim. 1:10. In other words, Jesus uniquely met the conditions of life and incorruption.) While the ecclesiastical Jesus has been regarded as God, he has failed to be truly appreciated as man who by nature needed to be born again and transformed. (9* See my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities, Death and Corruption.) Whereas with the old or unregenerate man the natural precedes the spiritual, with the new or regenerate man the spiritual precedes the supernatural or incorruptible (1 Cor. 15:46-49). If Jesus had not been born again and changed, as naturally corruptible flesh he would eventually have died or disappeared (cf. Heb. 8:13).

A story from classical mythology illustrates the point I am making:

The goddess Aurora fell in love with the beautiful Tithon and carried him away. He requested immortality and that was granted him. Unfortunately he forgot to ask for incorruption with the result that he gradually grew old, decrepit and began to fade (cf. 1 Pet. 1:3f.). So, since he could not die, he requested to be removed from the world. The goddess then turned him into a cicada or grasshopper.

The difference between this and the teaching of the Bible ought to be plain to all. As man, then, though Jesus never earned the wages of death, he was inevitably growing old (Luke 2:42; 3:23; John 8:57, cf. Mt. 5:36). But as the regenerate Son of God who had kept the law, the condition of eternal life, he was transformed as a natural necessity (1 Cor. 15:53) at his ascension to inherit the holy and sure (eternal) blessings of David (Acts 13:34). Thus he received the powers delegated to him by his Father as the Lamb who sits at the right hand of God (Mt. 11:27; 28:18; Rom. 1:4; Rev. 5).

The Exaltation

Traditional ecclesiastical theology contends in accordance with the Chalcedonian Creed that at his incarnation the Word never gave up his divine nature. Despite the explicit biblical assertions that nothing is impossible with God (Luke 1:37, etc.) and that the eternal Word who was God became flesh (John 1:14) and emptied himself (Phil. 2:7), the reason given for this is that it was impossible. This idea doubtless stems from Greek philosophy (which thought of God as an immutably transcendent and impassible monad) and can only mean that he never truly became man. Bluntly, Chalcedon is a denial of the incarnation, for no one person can at one and the same time have two natures. (10* Just how a body of flesh could contain the divine nature even in the womb, cf. the theotokos or mother of God idea, is not merely incomprehensible but plainly impossible. If God’s incommunicable attributes by definition are not granted to men in general, how could they be to Jesus who was one with his fellows, Heb. 2:10-13, etc.? Col. 1:19 and 2:9 describe the situation in heaven and refer to Christ’s transformed body of glory. Compare John 17:5,24; Phil. 3:21. Note also that when Jesus returns he will do so in his own and in the glory of God, Mt. 16:27, etc.) However, Jesus himself while strongly stressing the fact that it is the humble who will be exalted (Mt. 23:11f., etc.) even goes so far as to describe himself as gentle and lowly in heart (Mt. 11:29). The evidence of his life and death supports this to the hilt. He who was originally exalted in his divine nature freely humbled himself and became man (cf. 2 Cor. 8:9). Even in that condition he humbled himself still further and so was finally exalted in his humanity (Phil. 2:5-11). His life reflects both correspondence and violent contrast with the characters alluded to in Ezekiel 28-32 (cf. Luke 1:52).

Lower Than the Angels

But this matter can be taken even further. For example, it is said that Jesus was made for a little while lower than the angels (Heb. 2:7,9). If he retained his divine nature as their Creator he was always and forever superior to the angels and not for a little while lower. And it follows from this that since he never underwent true humiliation, he was never exalted. But Scripture insists that he was both humbled and exalted. In other words, while the Bible clearly teaches that he became man and as such was humbled (e.g. Phil. 2:7), it also teaches that in that condition he was further humbled and on that account was exalted as Lord (Phil. 2:9-11, cf. Acts 2:33,36). Thus it was as man that he was crowned with glory and honour (Heb. 2:9; Rev. 5:12f., cf. Rom. 2:7,10; 1 Pet. 1:7) and as the firstborn received the worship of the angels (Heb. 1:6). In this way he regained as man the glory that he had had as the eternal Word who was with God and was God (John 17:5).

So while the eternal Word retained his identity and remained God in person (2 Cor. 5:19-21), he nonetheless changed his nature by divesting himself of his divine non-communicable attributes. For example, in the days of his flesh (Heb. 5:7), he clearly lacked divine omnipotence, omnipresence, omniscience, incorruptibility, immortality and eternity. As a true human being he was wholly dependent on his heavenly Father apart from whom he could do nothing (John 5:19, cf. 15:5). (11* On this see e.g. Berkouwer, pp.185ff.) To become man he could do no less. This would appear to be the point Paul is making in Philippians 2:5-11 (cf. 1 John 1:1-3).

The Glory of Jesus

This raises yet another point for in John 17:24 it is implied that Jesus’ glory, which he prays his people will see, will be evident only in heaven (cf. Rev. 5; 22:4). This deals the death blow to those who claim that he was transformed and glorified at his resurrection from the grave when he was physically visible and hence still impermanent by nature (cf. 2 Cor. 4:18). Indeed, after his resurrection Jesus goes out of his way to stress his fleshly nature (Luke 24:39; John 20:28f.; Acts 10:41) and that he had not yet ascended (and by implication been transformed, John 20:17). Truly, as Paul indicates, he could not in this state inherit the kingdom of God (1 Cor. 15:50).

The Inheritance

If the eternal Word had retained his divine nature during his incarnation, it is difficult to see, first, that he was truly man, and second, that as such how he could receive his inheritance, the sure or eternal blessings of David (Acts 13:34, cf. Rom. 1:3f.). In any case, if he was still God both in person and in nature, he did not require an inheritance. As the eternal Word equal with God he was already the owner of everything (Ps. 24; John 1:11, compare Gal. 4:1). But Paul tells us that as the Son of God he was the heir and we ordinary human beings are joint-heirs with him (Rom. 8:17, cf. Mark 12:7; Luke 22:25-30). It is as perfected man, the first-born of all creation (Col.1:15), the Lamb of God who sits at God’s right hand (Rev. 5:13) that Jesus inherits everything and becomes Lord of all. He was the antitype of Joseph who became lord of all Egypt with the exception of Pharaoh himself (Gen. 45:10,26).

Delegated Powers

If it is hard to appreciate Jesus as the heir assuming he had retained his divine nature during his sojourn on earth, it is also hard to understand why so much is made of his delegated powers. As the eternal Word he was God and as such he exercised divine sovereignty (see John 1:1-4; Col. 1:16; Heb. 1). As man, however, he is clearly subordinate and his purpose is to do the will of his Father in heaven (John 4:34; 8:29; 17:4, etc.) and not to please himself (Rom. 15:3). It is clearly as man then that he is said to be Lord and to exercise the powers normally attributed to God (cf. Mt. 11:27; John 5:26, etc.). As the one who had been baptized by the Spirit and acknowledged and confirmed as the Son of God not simply ontologically but functionally, he was in a position to receive and exercise the power to forgive sin, to be worshipped, to perform miracles (signs in John), to serve as judge (John 5:22) and to distribute the (gifts of) the Spirit. These things were granted to him by his Father but were wholly unnecessary, even superfluous, if he had retained his divine nature and not become incarnate. If the latter were the case, he would have acted on his own account (cf. Jud. 6:31, 1 K. 18:21,24-26) even if in inter-Trinitarian agreement. It is surely as man, the Lamb in fact in the book of Revelation, that he is seen to take his seat at God’s right hand (Rev. 3:21, cf. Rom. 1:4)

Eternal Son

It is widely held in the churches that Jesus was the eternal Son of God, that is, that he was God’s Son even in his pre-existence before his incarnation. If this is true, then he was never truly (equal with) God (John 1:1; Phil. 2:6) but inherently, that is, in essence a subordinate being. Apart from the fact that this derogates from his humiliation so powerfully stressed in the NT, there are all sorts of problems attaching to this view which need more space to develop than I have here. (See at greater length, however, my essay Still Docetic, referred to above.) Suffice it to say, it is not taught in the Bible as even some of its advocates concede. It would appear to be a false inference drawn from what is called the projectionist language both the Bible writers and we ourselves all use from time to time. Scripture tells us plainly that prior to his birth of Mary Jesus was the eternal Word, equal with God, indeed God. The doctrine of the Trinity itself is at issue here.

Son of Man

Jesus’ usual self-designation was that of the Son of Man. His meaning has been much disputed and cannot be reasonably dealt with here. On the assumption that the title derives from Daniel 7:13f., rather than, say, from Ezekiel, references such as Matthew 24:30 and 26:64 make admirable sense. Jesus the man is to return transformed, we are told, in his own and in his Father’s glory (Mt. 16:27; Luke 9:26). Jesus the man is not merely King of the Jews (Mt. 27:37, etc.) but the King of kings and Lord of lords (Rev. 17:14; 19:16).

The Glorification of Man

The glorification of man in general is surely dependent on his union with and the glorification of Jesus as man. It could occur in no other way. If the eternal Word had remained God in nature as well as in person (John 1:1-3, cf. 1 John 1:1-3), it is more than a little difficult to see how man could be glorified as man and gain access to the presence of God (cf. Eph. 2:18; Rev. 3:21). Jesus who as man was our mediator (1 Tim. 2:5) was also our pioneer as the author of Hebrews is at pains to stress (2:10; 5:9; 6:19f.; 10:19f.; 12:2). He was made for a little while lower than the angels to win salvation and glory as man. And it is as man that we shall see his glory in accordance with his promise (John 17:24, cf. 14:9; 20:28f.). To suggest that he did not divest himself (Phil. 2:7, ekenosen) of his divine nature in order to become man makes the idea of his humiliation followed by his development or perfection through incarnation, regeneration and exaltation a charade. How different is the picture painted by John (3:13; 6:62; 16:28, etc.)!

High Priest

The letter to the Hebrews in particular (though note John 17) depicts Jesus as our heavenly high priest (8:1-7). Since priests are representative men (like the Levites) who mediate and intercede on behalf of other men before God (Heb. 5:1f.), as God become man Jesus is the perfect mediator (1 Tim. 2:5) and high priest after the order of Melchizedek who ever lives to intercede for his people (Rom. 8:34; Heb. 7:15f.). Having equipped himself to perform these vital roles through incarnation (Heb. 2:14), personal experience (Heb. 2:17f.) and exaltation, we cannot but rejoice. He meets our need ideally. (How different he is from Allah who apparently acts by mere power!)

Miracles

It can be argued that no one who performed the kind of miracles that Jesus performed could be performed by anyone who lacked the nature of God (though note John 3:2; 9:16,33). But this fails to reckon with the fact that others, like Elijah who James reminds us had a nature like ours (5:17), even in the OT performed miracles. And just as they attributed their miracles to the power of God at work through them, so does Jesus (e.g. John 5:17,19,20,20, etc.). If Jesus was truly God’s Son then, as his Father, God would testify to (see e.g. Mt. 17:1-8, cf. 1 Pet.1:17) and honour him (John 12:28, etc.) and even raise him from the dead. This is the picture presented in the NT. Jesus as man is God in person but as a human being while lacking the nature of God he is nonetheless empowered by him (cf. John 5:17). In heaven at his Father’s right hand he exercises all the prerogatives of deity (Mt. 28:18). The unity between God and man (John 10:30; 17:22, cf. 1:14; Rev. 3:21) culminates or attains its apogee at this point.

Permanent Subordination

Nothing is more clear than the teaching that in eternity Jesus was the eternal Word, equal with God (John 1:1; Phil. 2:6), but who became man (John 1:14) in the fullness of time (Gal. 4:4). The churches, however, ruled apparently, as was mentioned above, by a Greek philosophical principle emphasizing the immutable transcendence of God deny that he changed his nature. If this is the case, how is it that he who was originally equal with God and according to Paul ‘emptied’ himself (Phil. 2:7) is presented to us as permanently subordinate to God even in heaven (1 Cor. 15:24-28). The answer must lie in the fact that in his love and humility he freely became one of us and in so doing humbled himself to death on the cross to save us (Phil. 2:8; Heb. 2:9). In this way he revealed and manifested the loving character of our God in the most radical way possible. No wonder the Roman soldier at the foot of the cross said of Jesus that he was the Son of God and that Doubting Thomas after subjecting him to meticulous physical examination acknowledged him as God (John 20:28, cf. 14:9; 1 John 1:1-3). To say this, however, forces us to infer that if Jesus could be called God while still in the flesh, he was so in person but manifestly not in nature.

The Trinity

One of the more obvious differences between the OT and the NT is the doctrine of the Trinity. It is only in the NT that Jesus, himself the Son of God born of Mary, teaches his disciples to call God Father. The Trinity is a NT revelation only made possible by the incarnation. This necessitated a change in relationship whereby God became Father and the Word became Son. This reaches the heart of the love and humility which radiates from new covenant doctrine.

Who Is Jesus?

So, then, who is Jesus? My brief answer to this question is that he is the eternal Word made man, approved by God (Mt. 3:17; 17:5; Acts 2:22, cf. 10:38) and perfected in the image of God (2 Cor. 4:4; Col. 1:15; Heb. 1:3, cf. Mt. 5:48). It is he before whom every knee will bow and every tongue confess that he is Lord to the glory of the Father. It is he who sits at God’s right hand, and it is to his image that we as his fellow (adopted) sons (Heb. 2:10-13) and co-heirs (Rom. 8:17) will be conformed (Rom. 8:29; 2 Cor. 3:18) and glorified (Rom. 8:30; Phil. 3:21; Rev. 3:21).

Conclusion

Without going further, I conclude then that the Chalcedonian or ecclesiastical Jesus of the churches is sadly distorted. Traditional Christology is in effect a denial of the incarnation. As the eternal Word Christ remains for ever God in person and can do no other. As such, however, in his humiliation freely undertaken in demonstration of the love of God (cf. Fee, p.384), he was made man the mediator between God and man (1 Tim. 2:5). Having in love and humility changed his nature to become the Son of God at his incarnation (John 1:14; Gal. 4:4; Phil. 2:6f.), he remains for ever man even after his ascension transformation and exaltation to the right hand of his Father. And though all things are slowly but surely being subjected to him (cf. Phil. 2:9-11; Heb. 2:5-10), he himself will be finally subjected to him who put all things in subjection under him so that God may ultimately be all in all (1 Cor. 15:27f.).

If God really is the Creator, the author of all life (Acts 17:25; 1 Tim. 6:13) and universal redeemer (1 John 2:2), nothing less can be expected (cf. Neh. 9:6; Acts 17:24-28; Phil. 2:9-11; Rev. 4 & 5; 22:1-5, etc.).

Soli Deo Gloria

Note 1

It is strange that evangelicals seem to be more concerned with the deity than the humanity of Jesus (see, for example, God Became Man, A.M.Stibbs, The Truth of God Incarnate, ed. Michael Green.) Apparently, this was not so in the early church when his deity was more readily accepted. It was doubtless for this reason that John, like Paul (Phil. 2:5-8; 1 Tim. 2:5), so strongly stresses the Word’s coming in the flesh and reprobates those who deny it (John 1:1-18; 1 John 1:1-3; 4:2; 2 John 7). Of course, the very idea that God could become flesh (human) was as intolerable to the Jews in apostolic times as it is to both Jews and Muslims today (2013). But that is surely what the New Testament teaches (cf. John 17:3).

Note 2

If we assume the eternal generation of the Son, it is difficult to see how Jesus could become man at all since as such he was changeless. On the other hand, the assumption that he became the Son of God at his incarnation permanently undermines the idea of original and hence birth sin. Why? Because if Jesus had sinful ancestors through his mother (cf. Rom. 1:3; Mt. 1:1-6, etc.), he must have inherited their sin or he was not human. To overcome this problem he would have had to make a new beginning but to do so would mean the destruction of God’s earlier plan of salvation as Moses recognized in Exodus 32:11-14 and Numbers 14:11-19. Of course, since we have incontrovertible evidence that he was born sinless, we are forced to conclude that original sin as propounded by Augustine is false. This is further proved by references such as Deuteronomy 1:39, 1 Kings 3:7,9, Isaiah 7:15f. and Hebrews 5:13f. Furthermore, if Israelite babies were born sinners, on what basis were they differentiated from their fathers? In contrast with them who died in the wilderness, how did they come to enter and inherit the Promised Land (Num. 14:31; Dt. 1:39)? The plain fact is that like Adam, Eve and Paul (Rom. 7:9f., cf. 9:11), babies are born innocent because they do not know the law and so cannot break it (Rom. 4:15, etc.). In truth, we all begin at the beginning and each individual to the extent that he/she gains maturity recapitulates the history of the race as the father of theology, Irenaeus, taught (cf. Heb. 2). Jesus not only recapped to perfection first Adamic history, but as the second Adam he inaugurated and ‘precapitulated’ regenerate or kingdom life, died for his sinful fellows (cf. 1 John 2:2), and blazed a trail for all who follow him into heaven itself (Heb. 2:10; 5:9; 6:19f.; 10:19f.; 12:2, cf. Rom. 8:30; 1 Cor. 15:50-55).

_______________________________________________

References

L.Berkhof, Systematic Theology, London, 1959.

G.C.Berkouwer, The Person of Christ, Grand Rapids, 1954.

Gordon D.Fee, Pauline Christology, Peabody, 2007.

Michael Green, ed., The Truth of God Incarnate, London, 1977.

R.L.Ottley, The Doctrine of the Incarnation, London, 4th ed. Rev. 1908.

A.M.Stibbs, God Became Man, London, 1957.

B.Ware, The Man Christ Jesus, Wheaton, 2013.

H.Wheeler Robinson, The Christian Doctrine of Man, Edinburgh, 1911.

 

 

 

Still Docetic

Over many years of studying theology I have read occasionally that the church still suffers from placing undue emphasis on the deity of Christ to the diminution of his humanity. The point is usually made without specific comment apart from the fact that a proper appreciation of the humanity of Jesus was one of the few benefits accorded to us by liberals. It has, however, always seemed obvious to me that anyone who believes in original sin, for example, is docetic in his or her thinking. For, unless one takes the clearly false Roman Catholic view regarding the Virgin Birth, how could Jesus have been born sinless if all his fellows, not to mention his ancestors (cf. Mt. 1:1-6), were born sinful? Only highly questionable exegesis could warrant an appeal to Hebrews 2:17 and 4:15 at this point since like 1 Peter 2:22 they surely point to actual sin as does Romans 5:12. The truth is that if Jesus, though a son of Adam (Luke 3:38) was an exception to the normal rule, then his humanity is immediately called into question and he is automatically separated and excluded from the rest of humanity. The solution to this conundrum is of course to reject the dogma of original sin which the Bible does not and indeed cannot teach without contradicting itself. (1* On this see my various articles on original sin and imputation. If we assume original sin, we can illustrate its effect by means of a syllogism: Major premise: All humans are sinners by birth and not simply by deed as Scripture teaches (John 8:34; Rom. 5:12; Eph. 2:1-3). Minor premise: Jesus was not a sinner by birth. Conclusion: Therefore Jesus was not human.) Once we have rejected original sin, we can safely regard Jesus as a true human being born of woman without knowledge of (the) law (cf. Rom. 4:15) and hence of good and evil (Isa. 7:15f., cf. Rom. 7:9f.), like all the rest of the descendants of Adam (Dt. 1:39; Isa. 7:14-16).

Docetism

Docetism, however, is the idea rife in the early church and still alive in Islam in 2013 (see e.g. Green, pp.113f.,146) that Jesus only seemed to be a man. What is more, it continues to make itself evident even among modern (2013) evangelicals who traditionally lay strong emphasis on Jesus as God, so much so in fact that Professor Bruce Ware has written a book, The Man Christ Jesus (2013) in what I believe proves in the event to be a notable but nonetheless forlorn attempt to undermine it. In one of the comments in the blurb promoting this book Todd Miles claims that the church is functionally docetic and that the divine Christ only seemed to be human. He goes on to assert that Ware skillfully and passionately explains that the gospel and its implications depend on the full deity and humanity of Jesus Christ. They do indeed, but after reading the book I was left with the feeling that Ware for all his good intentions has failed to fully extricate himself from the traditional trap. For one thing he still believes in original sin (e.g. pp.98,122f.). But more significantly and relevantly his understanding of the full deity and the full humanity of Christ as expounded by Paul in Philippians 2 is in my view less than satisfactory.

Philippians 2:5-11.

It is worth commenting that not merely books but perhaps even libraries seem to have been written on this passage. And the reason is not far to seek. Some 50 years ago I remember reading D.M.Baillie’s God Was In Christ. In this seminal book Baillie was at pains to deny that when Christ became man he underwent kenosis or self-emptying as he, Baillie, understood it. In doing so, he asked what he seemed to think was an unanswerable question: What would have happened to the world if the second person of the Trinity who played a role in its creation (John 1:3) and by whom it was sustained (Col. 1:16, cf. 1 Cor. 8:6; Heb.1:3) had laid aside his divine nature in order to become man? (This question was apparently posed earlier by Archbishop Temple.) It was precisely this question that a Jehovah’s Witness who recently visited me asked, again as if it was unanswerable. Yet, even at that time of my relative ignorance I sensed that the answer to the problem lay in the doctrine of the Trinity, for a strict monotheism or monad seems to exclude the very possibility of God becoming man. (See further below.) The evident dependence of Jesus on his Father so strongly stressed in the NT is excluded by a purely monotheistic God who must forever retain his nature as God (cf. Rev. 4:9-11) as a matter of inherent necessity and thereby preclude the very possibility of an incarnation unless, as Arius followed by the JWs maintained, Jesus was a creature and therefore intrinsically subordinate.

The Two Natures

It is here that we touch the heart of the issue of docetism in evangelicalism and in the churches in general, for it seems to be accepted as a self-evident and hence a non-negotiable truth that in order to maintain his identity as God Jesus also had to retain his divine nature. And this is one of Ware’s primary contentions and presuppositions. In view of this I would argue that he does not merely set off on the wrong foot, he actually shoots himself in the foot thereby disabling and rendering himself completely incapable of eradicating docetism from the church. Despite what is taught in time-honoured creeds, the notion that Christ retained his divine nature when he became human is highly vulnerable, and Ware is honest and perceptive enough to acknowledge this. On page 23 he avers that the idea of one person, Jesus, having two full and integral natures, one uncreated and the other created is beyond our understanding and a mystery. On the face of it, it would appear to be not merely incomprehensible but logically impossible. (2* From the perspective of history Ware appears to have rejected common-sense monophysitism and opted for grandiloquent but intrinsically nonsensical Chalcedonian Dyophysitism. Chalcedon is and always has been a threat to both the incarnation and to the Trinity. In comment on John 1:14, p.102, Morris takes as strong an anti-docetic stance as anyone could reasonably wish for, but in comment on John 1:18, p.114, he clearly thinks in terms of two natures, for he asserts that when the Word became flesh his cosmic activities did not remain in abeyance until his life on earth had ended. If this is so, then the Word did not become flesh after all! No wonder he, like Ware, refers to mysteries that man cannot plumb. By asserting that the incarnation meant adding something as opposed to subtracting as in the Athanasian Creed something which kenosis implies, he has opened up the way to the docetism he has already in principle rejected.) But it also prompts a blunt question: If Jesus retained his divine nature, why didn’t he rely entirely on himself (cf. Jud. 6:31), regard his Father as redundant and his help as unnecessary in a manner somewhat reminiscent of Absalom in his relations with his father David. In the words of Dale Davis, there is something jarring about the supposition of omnipotence receiving help (p.143). Is it not rather cynically asserted from time to time that God helps those who help themselves? In fact, however, Jesus epitomizes the man who in his fleshly weakness (2 Cor. 13:4, cf. Mt. 26:41) relies totally on his heavenly Father as all human beings should and in the end must. In light of this we need to be very sure of what Paul in Philippians 2 and John in John 1 are actually saying.

Philippians 2

First, I would argue that traditional exegesis of Philippians 2 is flawed. Adopting a more general synthetic approach and trying to read this passage skating over some of its manifest exegetical difficulties dealt with in detail by the commentators like O’Brien, Martin and Fee leads me to the conclusion that what Paul is intimating in plain words is that Christ as the Word (John 1:1), who as the one who was equal with God and had the nature of God in eternity, humbly and freely set it aside in order to experience in person the life (nature) of a man (cf. 1 John 1:1). Bluntly, he did what Bruce (p.46), like Fee (p.211 n.81) and O’Brien (p.218), emphatically denies, that is, exchange his divine nature for human nature or flesh (cf. Heb. 2:7,9; 5:7) just as he exchanged his righteousness for sin in 2 Corinthians 5:21, his life for ours in Matthew 20:28 and 1 Timothy 2:6 and his riches for poverty in 2 Corinthians 8:9. Of course, Bruce in traditional fashion attempts to justify his negation by quoting J.B.Lightfoot’s rendering of ‘emptied himself’ as “ ‘… he divested himself’ not of His divine nature, for this is impossible, but ‘of the glories, the prerogatives of Deity’.” (3* It is interesting to note, however, that Bruce has no problem with interchange when he comments on 1 Thessalonians 5:10 and alludes quite happily to Irenaeus’ famous dictum to the effect that Christ became what we are so that we might become what he is, pp.113f. We do well at this point to note the change in nature implied by 2 Peter 1:4, not to mention 1 Peter 1:3f., 4:6, etc. And note espec. Paul in 1 Cor. 15:46-49. See also my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities, etc., and the apposite comments and references of Richardson, p.242.)

At this point I ask a simple question: On whose authority and on what grounds do we accept the notion that it was impossible for Christ to divest himself not of his deity, his identity and divine character but of his divine nature? (4* In all probability the ultimate culprit is the immutable monotheism of Greek philosophy which maintained that there is and can be only one divine existence. According to Reichenbach the Platonists deprived God of all emotion because a perfect God has to be unchanging. He adds, surely correctly, that a ‘de-anthropomorphized’ God is totally transcendent to the affairs in which he has a part, p.199. Writing in the 1920s on the Anglican Articles, Griffith Thomas, in effect denying kenosis, says it was impossible for Christ to achieve manhood by renouncing his deity and that he did not, because He could not, surrender his essential form of being (morphe), p.44. Again he talks of “an unthinkable metamorphosis of God into a man”, p.45. By contrast Fee commenting on Philippians 2:7, while rightly emphasizing pre-existence, reduces kenosis to a “metaphor, pure and simple”. This smacks of evasion rather than interpretation, p.210, for even metaphors have meaning. It is difficult to escape the suspicion that Fee who is a superlative commentator is also governed at this point by tradition and an erroneous philosophical principle rather than by the biblical text. Bray denies both a change in nature and in person, p.243. See also Berkouwer, esp. p.199.) As intimated above, however, change would seem to be an unavoidable requirement of the very possibility of an incarnation. So it is worth asking what the divine nature consists of if not of the glories and prerogatives of God including his immortality (1 Tim. 6:16), incorruptibility (1 Tim. 1:17), omnipresence, omnipotence and omniscience. (5* See further my Creation Corruptible By Nature.) According to Paul, this divine nature stands in significant contrast with human nature (Rom. 1:23 Gk, cf. Ps. 106:20). But Lightfoot seems to be trying to have his cake and eat it. His highly questionable assumption seems to be that if the second person of the Trinity emptied himself of, or laid aside his divine nature, he ceased to be God in person. Here, it seems to me, we reach the nub of the issue, for exchange seems to be demanded by the very idea of incarnation. Without it there can be none, for while three persons can share one nature (consubstantiality) as in the (immanent) Trinity, it is impossible for a single individual person to have more than one nature at one and the same time and remain either divine or human, the one or the other. Apart from anything else such a one is a hybrid or a freak or a third alternative. (6* It is ironic that those who assume that kenoticism is an impossibility seek to substitute it with and counter it by means of another indisputable impossibility, that is, a Christ with two natures. This is quite simply to jump out of the pan into the fire. Furthermore, many rob the second person of the Trinity of his equality with God by attributing eternal Sonship to him, but more on this below.) To put the issue somewhat differently, if Christ retained his divine nature at his incarnation, his humanity would at best be but a shadow, a reflection, an extension, an appendage or a supplement of his divine nature and not a true incarnation. In other words he would be docetic. He did not really become man and traditional theology is reduced to a charade. If it is now urged that Scripture makes it clear beyond dispute that Jesus had both a divine and a human nature I would agree, but not simultaneously only consecutively.

A Simple Illustration

If a wicked witch were to turn me into a dog or, as the children’s fable has it, into a frog, I would inevitably have all the physical attributes of a dog: four legs, large ears, a hairy coat, a long or at least a waggable tail, a wet nose and heightened physical sense perceptions that are part and parcel of the nature of a dog. In other words, I would inevitably lose my human nature involving not so much my “flesh and blood” (Heb. 2:14, cf. Ware, p.119) but my upright stance, two arms, a smooth skin and all the physical attributes making it possible for me to speak. I would inevitably change my present physiological condition in fact. In plain words, I could not possibly retain my normal human nature and become a dog at one and the same time. (7* By the same token man and dog cannot interbreed! If it were possible, such offspring would be third alternatives or tertium quids like a minotaur or centaur, neither the one nor the other but hybrid freaks or dogmen. Equally by the same token, Jesus could not have two natures at one and the same time or he would be a godman or a theanthrop, neither God nor man. In other words, it is not only logic but nature itself that teaches us the impossibility of such a duality turning monad.)

The Illustration Flawed

Of course, my illustration is flawed because whereas it is possible to accept that the second person of the Trinity could become a man who is potentially made in the image of God, it is impossible for me as a person to become a dog. Why? For the simple reason that whereas I am made in the image of God, a dog is not. If I became a dog my personality would be obliterated. I as a person would cease to exist. However, when Nebuchadnezzar in Daniel 4 temporarily lost the image of God and to all intents and purposes became a mere (human) animal, he did not lose his human nature as flesh and blood. What he did lose according to the text was his reason which rendered him temporarily a non-person incapable of ruling or ‘inheriting’ his own kingdom (Dan. 4:34,36), let alone the kingdom of God (1 Cor. 15:50). To all intents and purposes he ceased to be a man or a person. So with Jesus. Somewhat like Nebuchadnezzar he laid aside his glory then regained it (John 17:5,24). He became a human animal or baby, but like all human babies in contrast with mere animals he had the potential to be perfected and ultimately to gain the complete image and likeness of God (cf. Rom. 8:29; Col. 1:15; Heb. 1:3). (8* This stress on the indispensability of the image of God relative to the incarnation has another important corollary: it indicates that the foundation of the incarnation was laid at the beginning, at the creation of man, specifically in Genesis 1:26-28. Truly is the Bible all of a piece; truly is it the inspired word of God.)

In light of this illustration it is difficult indeed to hold dogmatically to the view that the second person of the Trinity who was spirit (cf. John 4:22) could not divest himself of his divine attributes and become a man, especially since man is created in the image and likeness of God. This view is supported by the teaching of John’s gospel in particular where it is insisted in unmistakable terms that Christ descended and became a man (cf. John 1:9f.,14) precisely in order to ascend as a man (John 3:13; 6:38-40,62) with his transformed fellows in train (Heb. 2:10, cf. 5:9). Indeed, John 17:5 and 24 are especially apposite at this point since they portray Jesus himself praying, first, that he as a man having lost the majesty and splendour of the glory that he once enjoyed during his divine pre-existence might regain it, and, second, that his people should see that glory which in his days on earth they could not possibly see since he had laid it aside in order to become incarnate, man in the flesh, or, to put it more appositely, because he had changed his nature. Denial of this constitutes foundational heresy as John intimates (1 John 4:1-3; 2 John 7).

Geisler and the Resurrection

In further support of my contention that Paul’s ‘emptied himself’ (or stress on what is known as kenoticism) should be given its full significance, I would draw the reader’s attention to the bodily transformation that Paul says in 1 Corinthians 15:50-53 must (Gk dei) as a matter of natural or rather divine necessity occur for entry into heaven and the presence of God. (9* Cf. the new birth referred to by Jesus in John 3:7 on which see my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities). Some years ago while trying to assess the relative merits and validity of the views of Murray Harris and Norman Geisler on the question of the resurrection, I noted that the latter, in contrast with other commentators took the view that when Paul says in 1 Corinthians 15:50 that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, he had in mind only corruptible flesh. (10* The problem here is that all flesh is by nature corruptible. Compare e.g. Fee, p.798, who says that the synonymous parallelism of 1 Cor. 15:50 indicates that the present physical body cannot inherit the heavenly existence of vv. 47-49. Again, in comment on Romans 7:18, Dunn, p.391, says that sarx (flesh) in contrast with soma (body) is tied to this age and must perish before redemption can be complete.) His argument was apparently that flesh and blood are essential to the nature of man and to be bereft of them means that man is no longer man even in heaven! His exact words were that “Paul is speaking not of flesh as such but of corruptible flesh. For he adds, ‘nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable’ (1 Cor. 15:50 NIV, emphasis mine). Paul is not affirming that the resurrection body will not have flesh, but that it will not have perishable flesh” (p.122). This I would (and did) argue is an impossible position to take, for since the creation from which flesh derives is by nature (that is, not on account of sin) perishable (Gen. 1:1; 8:22; Ps. 102:25-27; Heb. 1:11, etc.), it follows remorselessly that all flesh (dust, clay, grass) as such is also perishable (Isa. 40:6-8; 2 Cor. 4:7; James 1:10f.; 1 Pet. 1:23-25). It was never intended to last forever. This is why sinless animals, which do not know the law cannot break it (Rom. 4:15) and thereby earn its wages (Rom. 6:23), nonetheless die (i.e. apart from sin) and undergo corruption (decay). (11* On this see further my Death and Corruption, Geisler on the Redemption of Creation, etc. It might usefully be added at this point that Geisler seems to understand better than most the correspondence between the flesh and the creation. With a true philosopher’s logic he recognizes that if the creation is redeemed, so is the flesh which emanates from it, and vice versa (pp.32f.). In contrast and with similar logic, I adamantly deny both in my Romans 8:18-25, Creation Corruptible By Nature, etc.)

The Change in Nature

So what is the point I am making? It is that just as a change in nature is a ‘natural’, that is, a divine necessity for man to inherit the kingdom of God (1 Cor. 15:50-53, cf. 2 Pet. 1:4), so a change in nature was necessary for Christ the Word to become man in the first place, and again when he as man returned to heaven to regain his former glory (John 17:5,24; Phil. 3:21). This is what would appear to be involved in the heavenly assumption of mankind and was part and parcel of the plan of salvation from before the foundation of the earth. Apart from transformation, the change from flesh to spirit which involves the acquisition of the generic as well as the moral nature of God, salvation is impossible (cf. John 3:6). (We need to remember here, of course, that righteousness is the only gateway to eternal life, Lev. 18:5.) While we live on earth, God’s footstool, our flesh and indeed creation in general serve as an impenetrable barrier or veil between us and God and his throne. After all, even Isaiah in the OT recognized that God was a consuming fire with whom flesh could not possibly dwell (Isa. 33:14-17, cf. James 5:3, and note also 1 Tim. 6:16 and Paul’s blindness on his conversion). It is only through the mortal flesh of Jesus that that barrier or curtain can be penetrated to allow for man’s transformation and inheritance of the kingdom of God (cf. Heb. 6:19f.; 10:19f.).

The Heart of the Issue

Just as we are divested of our flesh in order to receive God’s generic nature as the children of God (1 Cor. 15:50-53; 1 Pet. 1:3f.; 4:6; 2 Pet. 1:3f.; 1 John 3:1-3), so the Word had to divest himself of his divine nature in order to take on human nature. God really did become man and if he didn’t, Christ was docetic, not what he seemed to be. In the event his change in nature highlights the amazing love of God (John 3:16) and the awe-inspiring humility freely accepted in order to save us and bring us to glory. Surely this is what Paul is teaching in Philippians 2, John in 1:1-18 (cf. 1 John 4:2; 2 John 7) and the author of Hebrews in chapter 2, and we dismiss it at our peril.

Anthropological/Cosmological Dualism

What traditional views fail to take account of is the fact that man is an anthropological dualism, both flesh and spirit (cf. Isa. 31:3; John 3:6, etc.) who corresponds with cosmological dualism (earth and heaven) and is hence an exception in the animal world. As flesh he is tied intrinsically and indissolubly to the earth and the animal world in general and as such he is naturally subject to both corruption and combustion, burial and cremation, dust and ashes (Heb. 12:27; James 5:3; 2 Pet. 3:7,10-12, etc.). As the potential image and likeness of God (cf. 2 Cor. 3:18), however, he is linked with the eternal or heavenly world, for God has put eternity into his heart (Eccl. 3:11) and made eternity his goal (John 3:16, etc.). If he could take his flesh to heaven, then all the animals could presumably be accorded the same privilege. In fact, however, it is only man who on his divine side can be transformed, glorified and enter the presence of God minus his flesh which is temporary and corruptible by nature since it derives from the transient material creation (Gen. 2:7, cf. Heb. 2:7,9; 5:7). And in case the reader has any doubts, let me roundly assert that even Jesus could not enter his Father’s presence in the flesh, that is, as aging dust (clay, grass, cf. John 3:7; 1 Cor. 15:53), pace Geisler. Even he as flesh was corruptible, growing old (Luke 3:23; John 8:57) and was necessarily susceptible by nature, that is, by divine decree, to the transformation Paul clearly regards as indispensable. And it is Jesus precisely who, having differentiated between flesh and spirit (John 3:6), brought to light both life (cf. John 6:63) and incorruption (Gk 2 Tim. 1:10). (12* This, of course, raises the question of when Jesus himself underwent transformation. While I assert unequivocally that he did so at his ascension, cf. 1 Cor. 15:50-53, many in the course of church history have held the view that he was transformed or glorified at his resurrection from the grave. I maintain that this is impossible since both Peter, Acts 2:31, and Paul, Acts 13:34-37, emphasize the fact that he did not experience corruption in the grave in which case he must have remained the same flesh as was crucified. Alternatively expressed, what was sown was raised and his post-crucifixion body was numerically the same as his pre-resurrection body. It is at this point if not at others that I side strongly with Geisler against Harris. See my When Was Jesus Transformed?, Did Jesus Rise Physically From The Grave?, John Stott on the Putative Resurrection Transformation of Jesus)

In his aforementioned book Ware stoutly maintains and repeatedly asserts that Jesus was fully God and fully man, and depending what he means by this, I would agree. But where I would certainly disagree is that he had two natures simultaneously as opposed to successively. The former view is impossible, for it would logically require Christ to be two persons, not one. At this point it is worth recalling the illustration I used above regarding my becoming a dog. If I became a dog, I would not, could not retain my human nature. So it follows remorselessly by parity of reasoning that when Jesus, the second person of the Trinity, became man, he could not retain his divine nature. Despite this, however, as man born in the image of God like Adam before him (cf. Gen. 5:1-3; Luke 3:38), he did not for a moment lose his identity as that person. This the Scriptures are at pains to indicate (e.g. Heb. 10:5-10). But again I stress that if he did not change his nature, he did not become human at all! In other words, the retention of his divine nature inexorably implies denial of the incarnation and points unerringly to docetism.

The Incarnation and the Trinity

As I indicated above, those who are tied to tradition and confined by creed argue that when he became man Christ retained not merely his identity as the second person of the Trinity but his divine nature as well. In the words of Chalcedon his two natures were united “unconfusedly, unchangeably, indivisibly and inseparably”. They are therefore apparently convinced of two things: first, that Christ without his nature as God is no longer God (cf. Geisler and his insistence that man without flesh and blood is no longer man), and, secondly, that creation would collapse if he divested himself of that nature.

It is here, however, that Scripture intrudes its demurral. Apart from insisting that nothing is impossible with God (Luke 1:37), there is not the slightest suggestion that Jesus ever lost his personal identity. He was always fully God in person if not in nature. This is surely implied in both his humiliation and his glorification. When he entered the world (kosmos) he was made lower than the angels; when he re-entered the world (oikoumene or heaven) as the first-born crowned with glory and honour (Heb. 2:9) all God’s angels worshipped him (Heb. 1:6). This view of the matter is essential to the gospel. His virginal conception and birth underwrote the fact that he was truly God’s human Son or God incarnate (cf. Adam, Luke 3:38). And like all good fathers his Father took care of him, treated him like a son, not an illegitimate bastard, and even disciplined (tested) him appropriately (cf. Heb. 5:7; 12:7f.). (13* Compare us believers who are (spiritually) born of God, John 1:13, and have his seed in us, 1 Pet. 1:23; 1 John 3:9, and are not abandoned as orphans, John 14:18. We do not, however, fully become the children of God until we receive his generic nature when our fleshly bodies finally succumb to corruption and we are given spiritual bodies at our resurrection transformation.) Furthermore, as a son, the only Son, on the level of his incarnation, that is his flesh, Jesus was as subject to salvation as the rest of us (cf. Heb. 5:7) since there was no good in his flesh even apart from sin (John 6:63; Rom. 7:18; 1 Cor. 1:29 Gk). Autosoterism or self-salvation was as alien to Jesus the man as it is to us. (14* At this point the reader needs to appreciate the fact that I deny that sin is the only obstacle or barrier to salvation. As I argue in my Not Only But Also we need to be rescued from the world and the flesh by nature as God intimated when he promised naturally mortal and corruptible Adam eternal life noticeably before he sinned on condition of the perfect obedience which he could not provide, Gen. 2:17, cf. Lev. 18:5. We need to be born again and transformed by nature apart from sin, but sin is what prevents this from taking place.) Well does Ware stress that Jesus felt deeply his need of divine assistance and what must be provided to him by another (p.61). So, with the superficial exception of John 10:17f., the NT writers make it crystal clear that he was totally dependent on his heavenly Father. And like the rest of us believers of whom he was the pioneer, he was kept by the power of God through unwavering faith (1 Pet. 1:5) and whole-hearted commitment (John 4:34; 5:30; 6:38; 8:29, etc.). In other words, as God in person he kept the commandments to perfection in the flesh (Rom. 8:3; Heb. 2:14). (15* It must never be forgotten that Jesus uniquely kept the law, the condition of eternal life, Lev. 18:5, and so brought in life, 2 Tim. 1:10. His manifest dependence on his Father is a subject in itself and one which I cannot reasonably explore at this juncture. It must be stressed, however, that if he retained his nature as God, his dependence on his Father would be superfluous, totally unnecessary (cf. Jud. 6:31). Again, the idea that he simply kept it in abeyance brings its own problems, not least docetism.)

Continued Divine Activity

It should be noted that it is Jesus himself who while still in the flesh insists that his Father is always at work in a way that he himself as a dependent man on earth cannot be (John 5:17). The sovereign God who created and continues to sustain the world now sustains him in the flesh which is an integral part of the world. He thus ensures that he (Jesus) fulfils the purpose for which he came, for God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself (2 Cor. 5:19). It is on this account that Paul is adamant that Jesus’ humiliation and subsequent exaltation are to the glory of God the Father (Phil. 2:11). All this underlines the basic, non-negotiable truth of the Trinity. While my JW visitors denied both the incarnation and the Trinity, I argued strongly for both since it is impossible to have the one without the other.

The Trinity Again

This leads directly to my next point. Since all three persons of the immanent Trinity are equally God, are of the same substance (consubstantial) and so share the same essence and nature, it follows that each person of the Godhead can perform the function of the others. This has been the longstanding conviction of the church based on Scripture in times past. Thus in a chapter on the Trinity Knox rightly avers that the close unity of Trinitarian relationship is expressed in the theological dictum that all God’s works in the world are not divided (p.54). And a little later he adds significantly that the works (and words) of God in the world may be ascribed to any of the persons of the Trinity. Alan Richardson, who was professor of theology at Nottingham when I was there, arguably makes the situation clearer when he explains that in every activity of each of the three ‘persons’ it is always the one-and-the-same God who acts (16* Latin: Opera Trinitatis ad extra sunt indivisa, p.123. See also J.I.Packer in God the Holy Trinity, ed. George, p.102.) Now if this language of appropriation, or mutuality of powers, is true, concern about providence and the sustaining of creation during the incarnation is unwarranted, even misplaced and implicitly a denial of the Trinity. As we have already seen, while he was here on earth temporarily in the flesh (Heb. 2:7,9; 5:7) Jesus himself said explicitly that God was still at work and by implication not least in himself (John 5:17, cf. 10:37; 14:10, etc.), a fact that even Nicodemus recognized (John 3:2).

A Retrojection

While there may be difficulties, not least exegetical ones, with the suggestions I have put forward, it is arguable, especially in view of John 1:1-4, that the apparent references to Jesus as the Son before his incarnation are but retrojections of his earthly sonship. After all, I remember my mother saying in my youth such things as “When I was expecting Ken …”. The truth is that during her pregnancy she didn’t even know that I was a boy. I became ‘Ken’ later after birth and before that only in retrospect. Wayne Grudem in his commentary on 1 Peter 4:6 (p.159) even more appositely refers to the birth of Queen Elizabeth in 1926 and points out that at that stage she was not a queen, and, as history makes plain, not even likely to be so. But whereas she who, relatively speaking, was a nobody became a somebody, Jesus was a somebody who became a nobody (‘of no reputation’ according to the KJV, compare also Hos. 1:9f.). With these examples in mind, I suggest that awareness of the danger of thinking anachronistically when dealing with Christological problems may enable us to question more boldly what is known as the eternal generation of the Son or Jesus’ eternal Sonship.

Eternal Generation

So Ware’s book raises another point which relates directly to the incarnation and the issue of docetism. He refers frequently to Christ as the eternal Son of God. In a note in his opening chapter (p.15) he distinguishes three distinct but related senses in which the word ‘Son’ is used, the first being eternal Son. (17* Lane, who seems to have reservations, is putting it mildly when he says that there is a certain degree of unresolved tension in the author of Hebrews’ designation of Jesus as Son since the title can be applied to the pre-existent Son, to the incarnate Son where its use may be proleptic, and to the exalted Son, pp.25f., cf. pp.cxxxix,12,118,121.) In support of this he alludes to John 3:16f., Galatians 4:4, Hebrews 1:1f. and 1 John 4:9f.

It so happens that shortly before I read his book I had read part of Kevin Giles’ on The Eternal Generation of the Son. I found it impressive but a good deal less than convincing. It seemed to me to betray a number of serious weaknesses, one in particular as we shall see.

Problems

First, the expression ‘eternal generation’ is enigmatic at best and almost certainly not understood by most who encounter it especially as they recite the Nicene Creed. Second, it seems to be a contradiction in terms, a veritable oxymoron. Third, Giles virtually admits his failure to find explicit biblical evidence supporting his case (e.g. pp.66,88) and relies heavily on the great theologians of the past, creedal tradition and convoluted theological reasoning. Fourth, it is difficult to see why if Jesus was the eternal Son of God he needed to keep the law as a man in order to meet the condition of regeneration and eternal life (Mt. 3:13-17). (18* Of course, his regeneration is strongly denied in the Augustinian tradition which links it with sin and thereby emphasizes its inherent docetism. The truth is that regeneration relates primarily to nature not to sin as John 3:3-8 plainly indicate to the unprejudiced eye. See further my Was Jesus Born Again?) How could he as the eternal Son grow older, die, be raised, ascend and be transformed thereby inheriting a new nature. How could God give up his own Son to death if he was still his eternal co-equal Son (Rom. 8:32)? Would this not be deicide, even suicide? Indeed, this ought to remind us that if the Son retained his nature as God who is a consuming fire during his incarnation, he would have been self-consumed (cf. Isa. 33:14; James 5:3. The story in Daniel 3 hardly constitutes a denial of this. After all, Jesus miraculously walked on water contrary to the laws of nature.) Again, the idea that Jesus as the eternal Son of God retained his divine nature as the incarnate Son of God and presumably watched himself, that is, his alter ego (!), his human nature, die on the cross is quite beyond my understanding. (If Jesus was not two persons as the two-nature theory implies, he was not two sons either.) Such ‘schizophrenia’ is, I suggest, totally alien to Scripture and indeed reality. Fifth, how could we be regarded as Jesus’ brothers all having one origin and all sharing a common sanctification (Heb. 2:10-13)? If we are Jesus’ human brothers we have a common Father. In the OT God was not known as Father (though note Ex. 4:22; Hos. 11:1) except in prophecies such as Psalm 2:7f. (cf. Acts 13:33; Heb. 1:5; 5:5f.). Jesus’ birth of a virgin signifies his change of nature (cf. O’Brien, p.224 n.119). Mary was not the mother of God (theotokos) but of a fleshly human son (cf. Gal. 4:4) who was hence our brother. In other words, Christ could not at once be the eternal pre-incarnate Son of God and our elder brother. Rather, it was the incarnate Christ who became our brother, the antitype of Adam. Sixth, the impression is constantly given in the NT that Jesus first became a son at his birth (Luke 1:32) or creation in the womb of Mary (Heb. 10:5) and his sonship was progressively acknowledged and confirmed as he matured (=was perfected, cf. 2 Cor. 3:18) as a true human being at his baptism (Mt. 3:17), his transfiguration (Mt. 17:5) his resurrection (13:33) and finally his ascension (Rom. 1:4; Heb. 1:6). The pleasure of his Father at his righteous and holy conduct (Mt. 3:17; 17:5) so manifestly missing with regard to the rest of us implies his genuine humanity. Well does Paul say that he (God) condemned sin in the flesh of his Son (Rom. 8:3). It was on account of his sinlessness in the flesh that Jesus, the Son of David, was raised to power (Rom. 1:3f.) (19* I take the reference to Jesus’ resurrection here comprehensively, i.e. meaning resurrection, ascension, exaltation and session. This would seem to be confirmed by verse 5.) It is as man, and obviously not as the eternal Son of God, that he is said to have become superior to angels (1 Pet. 3:22, cf. Eph. 1:20-23) both in essence and in name (Heb. 1:4), and it is as man that he became the mediator (1 Tim. 2:5), the plenipotentiary of God (Mt. 28:18) and a life-giving spirit (1 Cor. 15:45, cf. John 5:26). Seventh, according to John it was the eternal Word, and implicitly not the eternal Son, who became flesh (John 1:14) though Ware like so many others equates the two. It was as (human) son (cf. Gal. 4:1f.) that Jesus was appointed to be a prophet (greater than Moses), priest, and heir (king) by means of an oath and no mere promise (cf. Heb. 1:2-5; 5:5; 7:1-28). This is part of the essence of the argument of the author of Hebrews who regularly and surely significantly refers to ‘Jesus’ throughout his letter and majors on Jesus’ humanity (cf. Heb. 2:17, and 2:14 which corresponds with Romans 8:3). In light of this Jesus can be regarded as eternal Son at best only retrospectively. However, serious difficulties arise from regarding Jesus as the eternal Son without implying his eternal subordination and thereby denying his equality. Again, in eternity he did not have a mother! But even more to the point according to the author of Hebrews he did not have a father either (7:3)! Furthermore, the bracketing of Psalm 1:8 and 2 Samuel 7:14 together in Hebrews 1:5 points away from the eternal Son idea which is as foreign to Scripture as it is to experience. Indeed, it is fair to say that the ultimate reference of 2 Samuel 7:14 to Jesus, the Son of Mary, is difficult to miss. It is he who will be God’s firstborn, the highest of the kings of the earth (Heb. 1:6, cf. Col. 1:15) and the one who inherits the name of Lord (Heb. 1:4, cf. Rom. 1:4). This suggests that the entire notion of the eternal generation of the Son is an ecclesiastical concoction based on misunderstanding, not least the assumption that God cannot change his nature. On the other hand we can accept without qualm Hughes’ implication in comment on Hebrews 1:2 that the eternal Word who had brought the world into being became the Word incarnate (p.36). And this is doubtless what Paul meant when he said that God sent his born-of-a-woman Son (cf. Rom. 1:3) in the fullness of time, not eternity (Gal. 4:4f., cf. John 1:1-4; 3:16f.; 1 John 4:9f., cf. Rom. 8:3). (20* Lane’s claim that the order of (eternal) Son, creation and inheritance is logical is disputable, p.12. It would seem that the ‘transcendent dignity’ which he attributes to the Son is post- not pre-incarnate throughout Hebrews 1. Mention of his original role (note the ‘also’) as creator reads like an explanatory comment or reminder of his real identity as the second person of the Trinity, cf. John 1:10.) Eighth, it is Jesus the incarnate son who is the heir (Mark 12:7, cf. Gal. 4:1-7). But in eternity both Paul and John insist that as co-Creator he as the Word was equal with God and the owner of all (John 1:11; Col. 1:16, etc.). But it is only as the incarnate Son of his Father that he is both priest and heir. In any case, how could he be heir to everything he already owned (cf. Ps. 50:10ff.; Heb. 1:10-12)? Furthermore, it is surely in light of his human sonship that the devil tempted him and offered him what was not his to give, that is, all the kingdoms of the world and their glory (Mt. 4:8f., cf. Mt. 5:5). The fact is that Jesus as the incarnate Son was along with us the heir of his Father (cf. Rom. 8:17). In eternity, however, his so-called Father was not his Father but God equal with the eternal Word as both Paul and John assert. The truth is that this Word voluntarily, lovingly and humbly became a son, the Son, at his incarnation in order to redeem his brothers under the law (Gal. 4:4f., cf. Heb. 9:15b). Ninth, if Lane’s claim that Jesus’ sonship is correlated with his priesthood by the author of Hebrews is correct (p.cxl), since the latter was not eternal (cf. Ps. 110:4), then neither was the former. But to say this is immediately to bring into question the notions of eternal Father and Son yet again. How could they be such before the foundation of the world? How could God the Trinity be both consubstantial Father and Son at one and the same time? Such designations make sense only if they apply after the incarnation. Prior to that time they are prophetic promises. At this point it becomes clear that we are back with anachronistic thinking, projectionism and the tendency of our forefathers to treat the Bible as a flat uniformity devoid of historical and doctrinal development. Their misunderstanding is patent.

Tenth, Giles as an Anglican relies more heavily than I care to do on traditional creeds, confessions and the great theologians of the past. While not denying the greatness of the latter, I jib at investing them with the semblance of infallibility, and hence regard them as vulnerable, subject to criticism, correction and upgrading in the light of my understanding of Scripture. Having said that, while I would not quarrel with Giles’ claim regarding the anti-subordinationist intentions of Athanasius et al., I would certainly quarrel with the language they used which almost inevitably leads to misunderstanding even among the most able theologians as the evidence Giles himself produces indicates. The problem is that to our ears they say one thing and mean another and the very notion of the eternal generation of the Son as opposed to the Word is, apart from being a contradiction in terms, inherently docetic. Like Ware whom he criticizes on other grounds (pp.33f.,229f.) he is implicitly docetic if not intentionally subordinationist in his thinking and at the end of the day, Giles is a prime example of the pot calling the kettle black. The sooner the idea of the eternal generation of the Son is dropped the better or docetism will continue to dominate the church.

The problem arises from the fact that Giles relies heavily on Athanasius whom he greatly admires. On page 73 (cf. p.116, etc.) after quoting him he comments that Athanasius saw with great clarity that if the Son is not eternal then God is a God who changes. Precisely! Giles like Lightfoot, Bruce and the rest simply cannot accept the great exchange of Philippians 2. He clearly regards it as impossible and hence, logically, he denies the incarnation (cf. 1 John 4:1-3; 2 John 7). As for Athanasius, he apparently held a static or non-dynamic view of an immutable God. By contrast, I argue that the Trinity retained its identity but changed its nature. John’s prologue which most would claim is modeled on Genesis 1 makes it clear that the creator God of the OT became Father and the Word became incarnate Son. The plain truth is that the Son as Son was not eternal and not equal and not independent but very definitely subordinate. It is only as the Word that he was eternal. And he remained the Word of God in person even when he changed his nature! Despite all his protestations, Giles himself falls prey to what he condemns in others, that is, the interpretation of the immanent Trinity in terms of the economic Trinity. Without any biblical support, he applies the term ‘Son’ to the immanent Trinity and fails to note that John in his prologue studiously avoids this. Put otherwise, his projectionist use of the word Son inevitably means he is docetic if not intentionally subordinationist in his thinking since the eternal Son by definition is unchangeable and therefore cannot be incarnate and mortal. To argue then that the language that is traditionally used is analogical not univocal (see e.g. p.260) is beside the point. The damage has been done.

So when Ware regards Christ as the eternal Son, that is, as the Son of God eternally generated prior to the incarnation, on the basis of questionable exegesis of texts like Romans 1:3f., 8:3 and Galatians 4:4, I must protest. (21* As already implied I argue that Jesus as a man was a son by ‘natural’ even if by virgin birth and, since he uniquely kept the law, cf. Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5, etc., by spiritual rebirth. John 3:3-7 applies to all believers including Jesus if he was truly human just as certainly as Paul says transformation does in 1 Cor. 15:53. Berkhof, p.472, rightly maintained that John 3:3 does not allow for exceptions, but he somehow failed to recognize that if Jesus was truly human even he could not be an exception either, since exception implies exclusion. Denial of this again raises the issue of docetism which pervades traditional theology. See once more my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities, Death and Corruption.) Does this not mean that he was eternally subordinate? Indeed, Richardson’s comment (p.123) is a propos at this point. He writes: “The very word ‘Son’ implies derivation, subordination and dependence”. If so, then the second person of the Trinity, the very Word of God (John 1:1-4), is not as equal as Paul avers (Phil. 2:6), and Richardson’s further comment that the word ‘Son’ “asserts identity of substance and therefore co-equal divinity” is quite gratuitous. (22* Compare Hughes, who, claiming the support of Athanasius and Cullman, says that the title “Son” implies the consubstantiality of Christ with the Father, p.40. Perhaps it does but it certainly does not imply equality as Galatians 4:1-7, for example, intimates. It is an extremely dubious thesis if it means that Jesus as the original Word was simultaneously the Son.) Not only is it open to question but it is also a patent non sequitur. If Jesus was the eternal Son, he could arguably be compared with Absalom waiting in the wings ever ready to seize his Father’s throne. But this is the exact opposite of Paul’s assertion that Christ Jesus as the Word did not regard his equality with God as something to be clung to. Like King Edward VIII, Jesus abdicated his throne, if only temporarily (Heb. 2:7,9), not for love of a woman but for the sake of mankind in general. (23* Of course, it may be said that the Jews were incensed when Jesus referred to himself as Son because that made him equal with God in John 5:18, 19:7. But this involves a question of status rather than ontology. Whatever ‘equal with God’ meant, for them it was blasphemy.)

Humiliation

If the designation ‘eternal Son’ implies subordination (as Ware among others apparently thinks), it must inevitably detract from the humiliation that the incarnation involved. In other words, it leads to the inference that the incarnation of the subordinate Son is one thing and that God became man is another. At its worst it implies that a strict and severe Father ordered his son to do his dirty work! Yet, on my thesis even Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice his son, Isaac, does not compare with the sacrifice God made. For if the Word was equal with, even was God and was of one substance with God, his sacrifice was infinitely greater. God himself was in Christ his incarnate Son reconciling the world to himself. If this is so, Ware’s laudable emphasis on the eternal Son’s humiliation falls short of the reality. My contention is that the humiliation was so radical that it involved a freely undertaken change in the divine nature, pace Athanasius, undertaken to accommodate man. Indeed, it was so great that Jesus was not ashamed to call us his brothers (Heb. 2:11, cf. 2:17; Phil. 2:7b). In his book, God’s Greater Glory, Ware impressively highlights the unconditional character of God’s love (see e.g. p.56) and Fee, who majors on the character of God, observes in comment on Philippians 2:7 that God is self-giving for the sake of others (p.211). How true. Yet, he also says that the one who was himself God and never during the whole process stopped being God did not exchange one form of existence for another (n.81). But surely this is precisely what Paul is asserting, and it is at this point that we touch the heart of the divine humiliation. If we deny it, we diminish that humiliation and are back with docetism. The change in nature is as absolutely indispensable to incarnation and humiliation as it is to regeneration, transformation and ultimate glorification. Truly did Jesus, who as God the Word was rich, become poor for our sakes, 2 Cor. 8:9, and just as truly do we by a change in nature become the children of God (1 John 3:1-3, cf. John 3:1-8; 1 Cor. 15:50-53). Of course, it may be said that this change brought about a kind of separation or distancing within the Trinity which a change in nature would seem necessarily to imply. After all, man is distant from God by nature. He begins by being far off, is made near and is eventually given access to the very presence of God (Eph. 2:17-21, cf. Dan. 7:13f.). Thus the development or perfection of Jesus was fundamental to his life in the flesh and paved the way for his God-ordained transformation. The question is: Is this still further supported by Scripture? It is important to try and find out.

The Covenant of Redemption

However, before we leave the subject of the eternal Sonship and by implication the eternal generation of the Son which I claim implicitly belittles both the love and humiliation of God in Christ, it is important to draw attention to what I regard as a much more congenial idea, that of the covenant (or counsel or council) of redemption which is characteristic of Reformed orthodoxy as ‘the eternal prototype of the historical covenant of grace’ (Berkhof, p.270). Correctly understood and this is important, it surely eliminates the idea of Christ as the eternal Son and presents him as the eternal Word of God, a co-equal member of the Trinity, playing his proper and fundamental role in the formation of the covenant or pactum salutis (John 1:1-4, 14; 6:37-51;14:15-17,26; 15:26; 16:12-15). In other words, the plan of salvation formed before the foundation of the world (Eph. 1:4; 2 Tim. 1:9; Tit. 1:2) involved an eternal pact within the Godhead between the three persons who were the same in essence, power and glory as God, Word and Spirit. Though they were implied as early as Genesis 1:26, only at the incarnation, at the beginning of the Christian dispensation, did they become Father, Son and Holy Spirit in a change of nature, relationship and function. As Berkhof says (p.266), it is only in the economy of redemption that there is an apparent division of labour by which the Father is the originator, the Son the executor and the Holy Spirit the applier.

Permanent Humanity

It is often said that Jesus remains eternally incarnate in heaven (24* See, for example, Bruce, Hebrews, p.98, Grudem, Systematic Theology, p.859, cf. p.835; Packer, Christianity Today, March 2004). In light of 1 Corinthians 15:50 to go no further this cannot be literally true. A change in nature, a transformation, necessarily intervened (1 Cor. 15:53). What is true is that Jesus is forever human. But while he is no longer (temporary, corruptible, combustible) flesh, pace Geisler, (cf. Heb. 2:7,9; 5:7; 1 Cor. 15:50-53), he clearly does not divest himself of the humanity or the image of God in which he is perfected (Heb. 1:3; 2:10; 5:9; 7:28). The question then arises: Does he regain the divine nature as opposed to the glory that he laid aside at his incarnation (cf. John 3:13; 17:5,24)? What seems to be the case is that like all human beings who enter the presence of God, while he receives by necessity the generic nature of God (John 3:6; 2 Pet. 1:4; 1 Pet. 4:6), he cannot so long as he remains man become God as such in a Nirvana-like absorption. For a start he has a body (Phil. 3:21) and God has not, but it is in the embodied Jesus that we see God (Col. 2:9, etc., cf. John 14:9; 20:28).

Since we ourselves as the sons (children) of God become God-like, even gods according to Jesus in John 10:34, we nonetheless retain our individuality and separate identity with spiritual as opposed to dusty bodies (1 Cor. 15:46-49; 2 Cor. 5:1; Phil. 3:21). Next, it is as man perfected (Heb. 7:26,28) that Jesus takes his place at the right hand of God (1 Pet. 3:22, etc.) and it is there that we ourselves as his fellow conquerors and children of God join him (Rev. 3:21), but neither he nor we literally become God (in nature). Then we need to realize that in the book of Revelation we read not simply of God on his throne but of God and the Lamb who in chapters 4 and 5 are equally but individually glorified (cf. 5:13; 14:4; 15:3; 21:22; 22:1,3). Though they are always one in spirit or character (cf. John 10:30), they always remain as distinguishable as they were in the immanent Trinity. This is made manifest in Hebrews, especially 12:22-24 where the living God is differentiated from Jesus the mediator (cf. John 17:1-3). (25* Note how Jesus sits at the right hand of God in Heb. 1:3,13; 8:1; 10:12f.; 12:2, cf. 4:14;7:26.) Furthermore, it is the still-God-in-person Jesus who has the generic nature of God as man and who is man the mediator between God and man (1 Tim. 2:5, cf. John 1:51). In Jesus the perfection of man in the image of God attains its apogee (cf. Rom. 8:29). The union between man and God is here as close as it can get (John 1:18). In the words of Morris it stresses that “Christ is in the closest possible relation to the Father” (p.112). But it comes short of identification. The distinction is not obliterated, not intended to be and indeed cannot be if the gospel is true.

Is Jesus God?

So if I am asked if Jesus the man is God, I immediately respond in the affirmative (John 1:18; 20:28; Rom. 9:5; Tit. 2:13, etc.). Yes, Jesus remains eternally, essentially and ontologically God in person but not consubstantially so as in his pre-existence as the Word. He does not recover the divine nature (the Trinitarian consubstantiality) of which he divested himself when he became man for the simple reason that in the saving plan of God he remains forever man and as such the King of kings. To recontextualize the language of Athanasius as quoted by Giles (p.117), “The Father is ever the Father and never could become Son, so the Son is ever Son and never could become Father”. Rather as Paul intimates in Colossians 1:15 he is not God per se but the image of God and the firstborn of all creation (cf. Heb. 1:3). (26* Again I would point out that for two natures there must be two persons. And Jesus is one, Eph. 4:5f. Having changed his nature at his incarnation, he is now the perfected image of God by exaltation, function, power and heavenly session, cf. Rom. 1:3f. Alternatively expressed, he is man perfected in the image and likeness of God, Rom. 8:29; Heb. 1:3. If this is the case, we might well ask how if he had retained his divine nature he could he become the image of God, 2 Cor. 4:4; Col. 1:15; Heb. 1:3. In the event, when we see him, we see God the Father whose express image he is, John 14:9; Rom. 8:29; Heb. 1:3; Rev. 22:4.)

Man’s Permanent Subordination

Again, it is imperative for us to be aware that Paul in 1 Corinthians 15:24-28 presents the perfected man Jesus to us, not in his so-called equality as the eternal Son but as God’s exact image as man seated at his right hand (Eph. 1:20-23; Heb. 1:3, etc.). It is the all-conquering Jesus (Rom. 8:31-39; Rev. 5:5) who delivers the kingdom to God the Father. In other words, even though Jesus is at once the Son of man and the Son of God in his humanity not his divinity (cf. John 1:1-4; Phil. 2:6), he is by nature subordinate. God as God remains forever and ever (Rev. 4:9-11), but the same is now said of the Lamb (Rev. 5:13, cf. John 3:16; Dan. 7:13f.). Truly in Christ are God and man united in an eternal relationship, and now with all relationships restored (Acts 3:21; Col 1:20) God is all in all (1 Cor. 15:28). Well does Jesus urge those who believe in God to believe in him (John 14:1f.). Just as it was with Joseph (cf. Esther 3:1f.), a type of Christ if ever there was one, who ruled over all Egypt with the exception of Pharaoh himself, so it is with Jesus, the Man, who sits forever at God’s right hand (Gen. 41:40-44; Ps. 110:1; Eph. 1:20-23; Heb. 1:3,13; 1 Pet. 3:22, etc.). Such is the wonder of the gospel testifying to the love the Father has given us that we should be called the children of God and fellow heirs with Christ (1 John 3:1; Rom. 8:17).

Additional Note

If we as children or sons of God are not (equal with) God, neither is Jesus as the Son of God, pace Athanasius et al. Of course it may be replied that Jesus was the unique Son of God, but then it may be countered that the NT teaches that we are brothers and Jesus is our elder brother (Rom. 8:29; Heb. 2:10-13). The fact is that we are now by nature what Jesus is (cf. Irenaeus and interchange) and we shall be with him forever (John 12:26; 1 Thes. 4:17) and in the same Father’s house (John 14:2-3) with a body like his (Phil. 3:21). We share together the generic nature of God our Father as his children (cf. 1 Pet. 4:6) just as all the children of Adam, including Jesus, shared his generic nature without actually being Adam (Gen. 5:1-3; Luke 3:38; 1 Cor. 15:46-49; Heb. 2:14,17; 5:7, pace those who believe in the imputation of Adam’s sin or Platonic realism). Otherwise expressed, we are together ‘deified’ (cf. 2 Pet. 1:4) in the sense that we are transformed (1 Cor. 15:50-53). Jesus differs from us only in that he forever remains God in person and has pre-eminence. (When the author of Hebrews says that he remains the same yesterday, today and forever, 13:14, he is obviously referring to his personal deity and character. If he were referring to his nature, he would be denying his incarnation and the very fact that he is truly human even in heaven. In view of Hebrews 2 this is the very last thing he is saying.) It is at this point that God and man are indissolubly united in ‘marriage’ (cf. 2 Cor. 11:2; Eph. 5:32). And it is for this reason that our salvation is eternally unshakable (Rom. 8:31-39). It can never be undone. That is why divorce except on grounds of adultery, which at this point is not on the horizon, is taboo.

Summary of Basic Contentions

1. Whereas it is possible for three persons to share one nature as in the Trinity and for many persons to share the one (human) nature of Adam (Gen. 5:1-3), it is impossible for one person to have two natures at one and the same time. Only he who was God the Creator was ever in a position to become man (creature) and elevate his fellow human beings (creatures) to heaven and the divine presence. Christ could not at one and the same time be God and his eternal Son eternally generated (cf. Gal. 4:1-7). The eternal generation of the Son as opposed to the Word involves a profound misunderstanding. Jesus became (was made and was not begotten as) a Son and God a Father at the incarnation, not before. In other words, the Trinity as God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit is a NT revelation. Though purposed before the ages began (2 Tim. 1:9), it was realized when the time had fully come (Gal. 4:4) and was integral to the plan of salvation.

2. Jesus was the incarnate Son of God uniquely (monogenes) born of a virgin (Mt. 1:18-25; Luke 2:1-20; Gal. 4:4; Rom. 1:3f.). Denial of this constitutes radical heresy (1 John 4:1-3; 2 John 7).

3. The incarnation necessarily involved a change in nature (John 1:14; Phil. 2:6-8), so when God became man, he thereby humbled himself (cf. Heb. 2:7,9; 5:7). While remaining forever God in person, the Word ceased to be God in nature when he took on human nature. Just as we who are flesh are divested of our flesh in order to receive God’s generic nature as his children (1 Cor. 15:50-53), so Jesus divested himself of his divine nature in order to become flesh, the son of Mary.

4. Jesus the incarnate Son of God became a servant and died the death of a slave. He was thus perfected (cf. John 19:30; Heb. 2:9) and exalted (Acts 2:33,36) as man in the image of God. It is only as God in person and man in nature that Jesus could serve as man the mediator and give himself as a ransom for man (cf. 1 Tim. 2:5f.).

5. Jesus the Man, the perfected image of God, sits exalted and crowned with glory (Heb. 2:9, cf. John 17:5,24; Eph. 1:20-23) at God’s right hand as the pioneer, priest and representative of his people (Rom. 8:29; 2 Cor. 4:4; Col. 1:15; Heb. 1:3; Rev. 3:21, cf. Dan. 7:13f.). He is notably Jesus Christ our Lord, the King of kings.

6. Jesus as glorified man is forever subordinate to God (1 Cor. 15:24-28) in accordance with the covenant of redemption freely entered into by the immanent Trinity. No wonder Paul, like John (1 John 3:1) was both overawed and overwhelmed by his sheer love and humility.

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References

L.Berkhof, Systematic Theology, London, 1959.

G.C.Berkouwer, The Person of Christ, GrandRapids, 1954.

Gerald Bray, The Doctrine of God, Downers Grove, 1993.

F.F.Bruce, Philippians, Basingstoke, 1984.

1 & 2 Thessalonians, Waco, 1982.

The Epistle to the Hebrews, London, 1965.

Dale Ralph Davis, The Message of Daniel, Nottingham, 2013.

G.D.Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians, Grand Rapids, 1987.

Paul’s Letters to the Philippians, Grand Rapids, 1995.

Norman L. Geisler, The Battle for the Resurrection, Nashville, 1992.

Kevin Giles, The Eternal Generation of the Son, Downers Grove, 2012.

M.Green, The Books The Church Suppressed, Oxford, 2005.

Wayne Grudem, Systematic Theology, Grand Rapids/Leicester, 1994.

1 Peter, Leicester/Grand Rapids, 1988.

M.J.Harris, From Grave to Glory, Grand Rapids, 1990.

P.E.Hughes, A Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews, Grand Rapids, 1997.

D.B.Knox, The Everlasting God, Homebush West, 1988.

Leon Morris, The Gospel According To John, Grand Rapids, 1971.

J.I.Packer, Christianity Today, March 2004.

Bruce R.Reichenbach in The Nature of the Atonement, ed. Beilby & Eddy, Downers Grove, 2006.

Alan Richardson, An Introduction to the Theology of the New Testament, London, 1958.

W.H.Griffith Thomas, The Principles of Theology, London, 1930.

Bruce A.Ware, God’s Greater Glory, Illinois, 2004.

The Man Christ Jesus, Wheaton, 2013.

A Note on Giles

1. Giles implies that the Fathers said one thing but meant another. They were both confused and confusing.

2. The language of the Fathers is subordinationist because they were covert docetists who logically if not intentionally undermined the incarnation. They inevitably contributed to the rampant subordinationism evident in modern theology.

3. The term eternal generation or procession of the Son and of the Spirit is contradictory and implicitly denies the equality of both. Again it contributes to modern subordinationism and docetism.

4. It cannot be biblically justified (see e.g., p.66). John 1:1-18, which summarizes the immanent Trinity of the OT, that is, God the Creator, the Word and the Spirit, studiously avoids this language and stands in violent contrast with it.

5. The term ‘eternal generation of the Son’ is conditioned by and culled from the economic Trinity, yet Giles strongly insists that the immanent Trinity should not be construed or determined by it, rather the reverse. In other words, Giles, like his mentor Athanasius, holds to a false view of the immanent Trinity where there is neither Father nor (implicitly subordinate) Son but God, Word and Spirit in equality.

6. The term ‘eternal generation’ of the Son like the term ‘eternal Son’ is inherently docetic since it implies that there can be no change in the nature as opposed to the person of the Word, yet it is this change in nature which is integral to both the humiliation of God (kenosis) and of the incarnate Son, as Paul affirms.

7. It is only when the time had fully come (Gal. 4:4) that the eternal Word became the Son and the creator God the Father in relational change (cf. Heb. 1:5). (Note how in Hebrews 1 the prophets speak first and are followed by the Son who according to Deuteronomy 18:18-22 succeeded Moses.) In other words, the Trinity as Father, Son and Holy Spirit is confined to the NT and to Christianity. It illustrates the progress of both covenantal revelation and dogma (cf. John 17:3). It is as incarnate Son that Jesus invaded the devil’s domain and conquered (Mt. 12:22-32, cf. Rom. 8:3; Heb. 2:14f.).

Arius and Athanasius

It might usefully be added in clarification at this point that both Arius and Athanasius especially as expounded by Giles were wrong. Neither understood the nature of the immanent Trinity. Athanasius, who used the language of subordinationism but sought to deny the fact, clearly thinks of the immanent Trinity in terms of the economic Trinity and denies that Jesus was by nature a creature like all other human beings (cf. pp. 113f.). His attempt to avoid the charge of subordinationism must therefore be pronounced a failure (pace Pannenberg who opined that “Athanasius vanquished subordinationism”, p.113). In contrast, Arius wrongly believed that God was a divine monad (cf. Greek philosophy) not a Trinity (p.102, cf. pp.67,113f.). This being so, it was impossible for him to believe in the incarnation, as I suggested earlier in my essay. Given his presupposition, Jesus was a creature and could not be anything else no matter how exalted. On the other hand, if he had recognized with Scripture that Jesus was God in person but visibly a creature in nature (see especially Luke 24:39; John 20:28), he would have hit the nail on the head. Again I must point out that man cannot see the unveiled God, who is both a consuming fire and dwells in unapproachable light (1 Tim. 6:16), and live. When Jesus returns in his glory and that of God (Mt. 16:27; Luke 9:26), he will come as fire and light. And he will come to destroy his enemies but also to rescue and transform his people.

In my view Giles’ book, though reflecting profundity of thought, genuine erudition and given his presuppositions considerable powers of argumentation, resembles John Murray’s The Imputation of Adam’s Sin (Grand Rapids, 1959) in that it is founded on a glaring fallacy (see my D.M.Lloyd-Jones and J.Murray on the Imputation of Adam’s Sin, Straightforward Arguments against the Imputation of Adam’s Sin to his Posterity). He fails to appreciate, first, that the Son as Son does not belong to the immanent Trinity. If he did, he would not be equal, and both his incarnation and his humiliation would be diminished, if not impossible. Second, at the incarnation Jesus, the Word, remained God in person but not in nature (pace the Athanasian Creed’s “not by conversion of the Godhead into flesh, but by taking of the Manhood into God” where the former is indispensable to the latter). In him the invisible God changed his nature and became visible (cf. John 14:9; 20:28f.) temporal, even temporary, flesh (2 Cor. 4:18; Heb. 2:7,9).

In light of this, I for one will not be joining with Giles in confessing the Nicene Creed which refers to Jesus Christ as eternally begotten of the Father and begotten not made (p.261). Denial that Jesus was made denies that he was ‘made by hand’ (cheiropoietos) and hence flesh. In other words, it inexorably implies denial of the incarnation. The plain fact is that far from being eternally begotten the Son as son was made, as teaching about the Virgin Birth in particular amply demonstrates (Mt. 1:18-25; Luke 2:1-20, cf. Rom. 8:3; Gal. 4:4; Heb. 2:14,17; 10:5). It is simply not correct to say following Augustine that the economy reveals what is eternally true (p.158), for he who was God humbled himself and became flesh in time (John 1:14; Gal. 4:4). The salvation of mankind was no mere demonstration of power as in Islam but required a change in the very nature of God himself. In love and humility he made that change. In his humiliation he became flesh like a flower of the grass but in his exaltation he rejoiced (cf. James 1:9f.; Heb. 2:7.9; 12:2).  The language of eternal Sonship leads inexorably to original subordinationism, docetism, obfuscation and confusion. Rather than protecting the Trinity, it has the effect of jeopardizing both it and the incarnation. It is safer by far to use the language and logic of Scripture and avoid that of creeds and confessions where misunderstanding is permanently enshrined.

A note on Carson’s ‘Jesus The Son of God’

Since writing the above I have read the important little book Jesus The Son of God (Wheaton, 2012) by Don Carson. He does not directly address the problem of docetism and he does not refer to it. However, he accepts the eternal generation of the Son without equivocation and so fails to appreciate its ramifications and implications. For example, on pages 66f., where he is dealing with John 5:16-30, he talks of the Son’s functional subordination. But surely Jesus’ subordination was much more than merely functional. While he retained his eternal deity as a person (cf. Heb. 7:8,16; 13:8), he was clearly subordinate in nature or he did not become mortal flesh and play the role of a servant. (As a well-known commentator on John’s gospel Carson has apparently failed to notice the change in nature implied in 1:10f. and 1:12f., cf. John 3:1-8, not to mention that in verse 14.) Carson says (ibid.) that Jesus’ imitation of his Father was exhaustive. It was indeed, praise God!, but as man in the flesh (cf. Rom. 8:3; Heb. 2:14f.). If he was still the so-called eternal Son of God this would be quite unremarkable! But it was as man that he was made perfect like his Father (Mt. 5:48) and as his perfect(ed) image (Heb. 1:3) able to blaze a trail for us into his presence (Heb. 2:10; 12:2, etc.). Carson also says that the Son in contrast with us created a universe, but he fails to add ‘but as the Word and definitely not as the Son’. Indeed, as the latter he was part of creation himself (cf. Col. 1:15)!

However, it is on page 41 that Carson makes his position crystal clear. Here he denies in effect the difference between the immanent and the economic Trinity and hence logically denies the Word’s incarnational change or change in nature so clearly taught in John 1:14. My contention is that Jesus was NOT the Son of God from eternity but the eternal Word equal with God, God as such in fact (John 1:1, cf. Phil. 2:6), who became the Son of God when, not after as Carson suggests, he arrived in the fullness of time (Gal. 4:4). (It is here that adoptionism is rigorously excluded.) If it is ‘fanciful’ (Carson’s word) to think this way, then I respectfully suggest that he has misunderstood the biblical position. It has long been a mystery to me that John should begin his gospel with reference to the Word as (equal with) God if the notion of the eternal generation of the Son is true. If it is a genuine biblical doctrine, here of all places it ought to have found prominence. In fact, however, the apostle’s prologue is a distillation of the somewhat recondite OT teaching on the Trinity where God, the Word and the Spirit all appear, albeit sporadically. (The Spirit, of course, is not referred to in the prologue but appears unmistakably as the third person of the Trinity later in the gospel.) Again, I conclude that the Trinity conceived as Father, Son and Holy Spirit belongs to the new and certainly not to the old covenant. The change in covenant involved a change in the nature of God.

But it is his manifest misunderstanding of Hebrews that really upends Carson. He states rather naively in comment on Hebrews on page 41, “the Son (his italics) is the one by whom God made the universe”. But where in the whole Bible is this taught? Here he clearly fails to see that the author employs the term Son (of God) in projectionist fashion, as I suggested above. The author’s intention throughout Hebrews 1 is surely to demonstrate the superiority of the incarnate Jesus, the man. As God and Creator he was obviously superior to angels (cf. Heb. 1:14a), but, after being made man and hence lower than them for a little while (Heb. 2:7,9), having made purification for sins, he is now superior again but this time as man (Heb. 1:4). It is of interest to note too that when Jesus is arrested, he does not say he will command the angels but ask his Father to send them to his aid. (More than 40 years ago in an appendix on 1 Peter 3:19ff. to an unpublished book I wrote challenging the Church with reformation I argued in comment on 1 Peter 4:6 that the reference to proclaiming the gospel to the dead meant those who had since died, not to the dead as such. Failure to get our chronology and its associated implications and intentions right leads inexorably to false doctrine. This is what has frequently happened during the course of church history. See also Grudem, ad loc. as above.)

It is in Hebrews 7, however, that the author makes his point indisputably clear. Here part of his stress on the eternality of the Son of God (cf. 7:8,16,24f.) is based on the fact that in eternity he had neither father nor mother (7:3). This is in stark contrast with his human situation where he had both and was hence both mortal and corruptible significantly unlike God his Father in nature (Rom. 1:23; 1 Tim. 1:17; 6:16, etc.). Indeed, Melchizedek’s resemblance to the Son of God lies precisely in the fact that he (i.e. Jesus, the incarnate Son of God) in eternity had no genealogy (= he had no mother or father, neither birth nor death and therefore neither beginning nor end in direct contrast with the material creation which again has both). In other words, if by his reference to the Son of God our author meant the eternal Son of God, he would be involved in a blatant contradiction. The plain fact is that it was as the eternal Word, not as the so-called eternal Son, that he created (obviously) before his incarnation when for the first and only time he became a son, the unique Son of God, the Son of Mary. And once he became flesh at his incarnation he was a dependent, mortal, corruptible, temptable and salvable human being like the rest of us (Heb. 2:14,17; 4:15; 5:7, etc.), an integral part of his own creation or property (Carson) (cf. John 1:10f.). Whereas he was by the grace of God triumphant through unwavering faith and unswerving obedience (cf. 1 Pet. 1:5; Heb. 4:15, etc.), we are failures (Rom. 8:3, cf. Heb. 12:1f.). But for all that, we are saved through him (Rev. 3:21).

So in eternity as the Word, Christ was equal with God (Phil. 2:6), in fact he was God. And it is only as he emptied himself and became the incarnate Son that he was subordinate and totally dependent on his Father as a true human being. Denial of this leads inevitably to docetism on the one hand and diminishes his achievement on the other.

Later in his book Carson has some very useful things to say about Muslims and translation work in general. I agree with his conclusions, all the more so because he recognizes that purity of theology is of paramount importance. It is vital then that we get our beliefs regarding the Trinity and the incarnation, not to mention other things, right. Otherwise, false conversions will be inevitable. But not only that, we shall be hindering evangelism in general through failure to tell the devotees of the world religions and various ideologies what true Christianity really is. In other words, we need doctrinal reformation for their sake as well as for ours. If we really care for Muslims, Jews and the rest, it is high time that we got the planks out of our own eyes in order to see clearly the splinters in their eyes.

Our God is a great God not simply because he is our sovereign Creator but because he is love demonstrated not least in his humiliation and sacrifice in Christ. Greater love has no one than this that someone lays down his life (psyche) for his friends (John 15:13, cf. 10:11; Rom. 5:7f.). He is not merely a friend as he was to Abraham and Moses, however, but our Father and we are his children, born of his Spirit (1 John 3:1-3). What a God! Soli Deo Gloria.

Note on Monotheletism and Dyotheletism

The notion that Jesus had two wills rises directly from the idea enshrined in Chalcedon that he had two natures at one and the same time. (1* See, for example, Bray, p.207, and Hill, pp.102f.) The problem again is that a person who has two wills is no longer one person but two. It must be conceded, however, that a human being is pulled in two directions because he is both flesh (cf. Gen. 2:7) and spirit (cf. Zech. 12:1) by nature. (2* In John 3:1-8 Jesus and Paul in 1 Corinthians 15:53 regard our condition as both flesh and spirit as natural, that is, created as such by God but that we need to be spiritually born again and corporeally transformed in order to enter the kingdom of God irrespective of sin which neither mentions, pace Augustine. See further my Death and Corruption, Two ‘Natural’ Necessities.) As Paul explains in Romans 7, while he, like the psalmist (119:14-16, etc.), may love the law as one who is a rational person made in the image of God, he cannot keep it because the law in his fleshly members is too strong for him. Like Adam and Eve (cf. Gen. 3:6) before him he falls into sin (Rom. 7:9f., cf. Rom. 3:23; 5:12) and so finds it impossible to attain to the perfection God requires of him as a creature mandate (Gen. 2:17). With Jesus the situation is different. Though he also is tempted at all points like the rest of us, he succeeds in conquering his natural passions according to the law (Heb. 4:15, etc.). And his success at this point is made clear by the fact that at his baptism he gained eternal life as man (cf. Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5, cf. Heb. 7:16, etc.). It was at this time that the Spirit descended and remained on him because he had pleased his Father by keeping the law (Mt. 3:17). He had passed the test to his Father’s satisfaction (cf. Gal. 4:1-4) and continued to do so till he was finally exalted (Mt. 17:5; Rom. 1:4).

But the point to note is that he does this in the flesh (Rom. 8:3; Heb. 2:14), that is, as a true human being like all his fellows (Heb. 2:17). Thus it is that we read that Jesus as man seeks always to please his Father (not to harmonize his human will with his own divine will) as we all should as the following references among others indicate (John 4:34; 5:30; 6:38; 8:29). Most of all he submits himself to death in accordance with his Father’s will (Mt. 26:39). And that it is his Father’s will is made clear by Paul who says he did not please himself (Rom. 15:3). In other words, he had to deny himself as flesh (cf. Mark 8:34f.; Gal. 5:16f.) in order to accomplish the will of God.

But a further point needs consideration. According to James, God himself is not tempted (1:13), but Jesus clearly was even though in the event he overcame it (vv.14f., cf. Mt. 4:1-11). So yet again we are forced to draw the conclusion that he was truly human by nature. If he had retained his divine nature, he could not have been truly tempted. As it was he endured a titanic struggle with his flesh as all human beings do. Where he differs from us is that in the power of the Spirit he triumphed over his fleshly tendency to sin (Heb. 4:15; 1 Pet. 2:22).

It is a sad fact that tradition especially under the influence of Augustine has made Jesus an exception (e.g. though a son of Adam, Luke 3:38, no original sin and no regeneration*) and has given us an excluded and therefore a docetic Jesus. According to Scripture Jesus was by nature truly human and differed from the rest of us only in that he did not sin (Heb. 2:17; 1 Pet. 2:22).

* See my Was Jesus Born Again?The Ecclesiastical Christ.

More problems

While we can accept that the person of the Word took on human nature and became flesh, it is more than a little difficult to imagine him taking on the nature of God which could not be contained in temples in the flesh. Acts 7:49f. scuttles this idea. In any case John tells us that the Word ‘tabernacles’ among us. Can we really believe that the entire nature of the universal God could be confined to a tent made by hand, cf. John 1:14; 2 Pet. 1:14? Of course, if we accept two separate natures as in Nestorianism, God clearly did not become man. And the same holds with regard to Chalcedon. Again, on the assumption of his eternal sonship, Jesus was clearly two sons since the one is eternal and immortal while the other, the incarnate son, is temporal and mortal. He did in fact die!

This, of course, raises another question: if there are two sons there are two births. Here the author of Hebrews specifically denies this. In 7:3 with reference to Melchisedek, he plainly denies a birth to the so-called eternal Son. The more we probe, the more problematic the whole scenario.

Note on Stott’s ‘The Authentic Jesus’ (Basingstoke, 1985)

Having on page 30 maintained the Chalcedonian two-nature idea, on page 74 Stott maintains that Jesus remains forever flesh and as such sits at God’s right hand. To say this means he directly contradicts Paul’s assertion in 1 Corinthians 15:50 (also implicit in John 3:1-8). Amidst much confusion of thought on Romans 8:18-25 he affirms the destruction of the flesh but not the body on page 243 of his The Message of Romans (Leicester, 1994). If the flesh is destroyed, so is the physical creation from which it stems, and the notion that creation, which is temporary by nature, will be renewed is clearly fallacious. It is an OT idea which is superseded by the revelation of heaven brought by Jesus in the NT. 2 Peter 3:13 and Revelation 21:1 rightly interpreted in context do nothing to undermine this. Furthermore, to argue that flesh can dwell in the very presence of God who is by nature a consuming fire (cf. Job 25:5f.; Isa. 33:14; Heb. 12:29; James 5:3) is clearly erroneous. The plain fact is that if Jesus was truly flesh, he could not possibly have retained his divine nature for it, not zeal, would have consumed him. At his ascension transformation, he rid himself of corruptible flesh forever (cf. Acts 13:34) and so sat at his Father’s right hand.

Chalcedon or the hypostatic union (the union of Jesus’ divine and human natures in one person) is manifestly false for yet other reasons. First, Paul flatly denies that the fleshly body (dust) and the body of glory (spirit) exist in the one person contemporaneously. He explicitly informs us in 1 Corinthians 15:46 that the physical or natural body comes first and is followed by the spiritual which comes second (cf. vv.47,49). While all who are redeemed have both bodies, they have them successively not simultaneously. Otherwise expressed, just as Jesus was given a fleshly body as a son of Adam (Luke 3:38) at his incarnation, after his ascension he was given a body of glory (Phil. 3:21). How otherwise could the fullness of deity have indwelt him (Col. 2:9, cf. 1:19)? Chalcedon’s two-nature theory is both illogical and patently unbiblical.

Second, it must further be added that Doubting Thomas addresses Jesus as God while he is still in the flesh. Here the difference between his person and his physical human nature is beyond reasonable dispute (John 20:27f., cf. 12:45; 14:9).

Reflections on Re-reading Berkouwer

(1) Most Christological speculation seems to stem from the (Greek) denial of the possibility that the Word could become man (cf. e.g. Calvin, p.354 and almost all others both before and after). This is plainly contrary to what John (cf. also 1 John 1:1-3) and Paul are saying. Unless man is to become literally God (cf. Hinduistic pantheism, Nirvana, etc.) as opposed to his child (1 John 3:1-3), a change in nature for both God (cf. Eph. 3:15) and man is at the heart of biblical revelation. Without it man cannot be saved as John 3:1-8 and 1 Corinthians 15:35-54 clearly indicate. (See further my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities) In becoming the Son of God in the fullness of time and born of woman at his incarnation, Jesus ever remains his Son. Though he is the eternal Word in person, he remains man forever. As such he is uniquely the bridge between God, now Father, and man his son in Christ. (The idea that Jesus is God’s eternal Son, that is Son before the incarnation, is not only a dreadful misunderstanding in itself but it generates a host of theological problems.)

(2) Berkouwer fails to see that one person cannot have two natures at one and the same time. Far from proving a bastion against docetism Chalcedon inevitably fosters it, since a person with two natures is not and cannot be a true man. The union of two natures (hypostatic union) is not merely incomprehensible, an ineffable mystery, etc., (pp.286,295, etc.), it is an impossibility which Scripture clearly rejects.

(3) Committed to Chalcedon, Berkouwer constantly uses it as his touchstone instead of Scripture (e.g. p.313).

(4) Berkouwer correctly identifies the dilemma facing readers of the Bible. On page 361 he maintains that on the left lies the ravine of theopaschitism, the idea that God as such suffered on the cross; on the right the complete humanization of God. Though Berkouwer seeks to evade the logic of the issue, the latter, the complete humanization of God is what Scripture teaches as I have sought to demonstrate above. The plain truth is that if the Word retained his divine nature as opposed to his personal identity, God did indeed suffer on the cross, and from this multiple problems arise. Church tradition in general is built on Chalcedon and is inevitably docetic. At bottom, by denying the kenosis, it inexorably denies the incarnation. In other words, ecclesiastical orthodoxy is biblical heresy. It has failed to heed the warning pinpointed in 1 John 4:2f. and 2 John 7.

(5) The truth is that the Word’s humiliation led to his exaltation and he remains forever the Lamb seated at the right hand of God (Rev. 5, cf. 22:1-5), the very image of God (Heb. 1:3).

(6) Not enough is traditionally made of the delegation of power to Jesus as the ultimately triumphant Son (cf. Mt. 11:27; 28:18; John 5:26; Rom. 1:4; Phil. 2:10f.; 1 Pet. 3:22, etc.). During the days of his flesh his power as the true Son resides not in himself but in his Father (e.g. Mt. 26:53; John 11:41f., etc.). As Jesus himself says without his Father he can do nothing (John 5:19., cf. v.17; 8:28; 12:49; 14:10). As flesh, Jesus is as weak as the rest of us (Mt. 26:41; 2 Cor. 13:4, cf. Jer. 17:5; Rom. 7:18; 8:6-11). His strength like that of Samson so long as he remains faithful resides in his Father (cf. Jud. 15:18; 16:28; Heb. 3:2). Since he always did what pleased his Father, he was heard, strengthened and enabled, all to the glory of God (cf. Phil 2:10f.). When God forsakes him, he dies (Mt. 27:46). But then God raises him from the dead (Acts 2:22-24) and proleptically empowers him before he takes his seat at his right hand (Mt. 28:18; Rom. 1:4, etc.). (It is again worth reminding ourselves of Joseph’s elevation to power but not to the primacy that Pharaoh enjoyed, cf. 1 Cor. 15:24-28.)

Reflections on Re-reading Kelly on ‘Early Christian Doctrines’ (2nd ed. London, 1960)

(1) The variety of thought is quite astounding.

(2) Recapitulation is rather wider spread than I had thought and is not confined to Irenaeus (cf. Alan Richardson, Introduction, p.242).

(3) Platonic realism is prominent.

(4) Augustine sums up much of the thought that preceded him (p.390).

(5) Chalcedon was hardly the end of the road. In the nature of the case, it left unanswered questions. The monophysite (one nature) charge that Chalcedonian dyophysitism was Nestorian (two natures) is surely sustainable. It remains for us in the 21st century to address some of the problems it left without denying that ultimately we are dealing with mystery. We still see as in a glass darkly. One thing seems clear and that is that the doctrine of the Trinity is the indispensable precondition of incarnation (cf. Gen. 1:26f.).

Reflections on Re-reading Alan Stibbs on ‘God Became Man’ (London, 1957)

I must have bought and read this monograph in the late 1950s while still at Nottingham. Since I have always been an admirer of Stibbs I must have been impressed with it at the time. However, judging by notes in my copy I must have re-read it in the late sixties and was surprisingly critical even at that stage.

Stibbs’ prime problem like that of so many others is his uncritical acceptance of Chalcedonian orthodoxy. Since he stresses the importance of relying on Scripture his assumption is plainly that Chalcedon and its two-nature (Nestorian!) Christology is fully scriptural. It is not. In effect, Chalcedon is Nestorian (two separate natures) if not Eutychian (denial of two distinct natures) and denies the incarnation. The plain fact is that if the eternal Word retained his divine nature when he became man, he never became man. And if he did he was docetic, not truly man. While Stibbs rightly criticizes (on pages 13f.) the views of Archbishop Temple and Prof. Donald Bailey, he fails to understand the real weakness of their objections to kenoticism which was not so much their failure to understand the communicatio idiomatum but their traditional denial of a change in nature which God becoming man inevitably involved. Furthermore, Bailey was quite wrong to think of Christ being God, then man then God again (a view I myself have tended to hold over the years). The truth is, as I have tried to make plain above, that in his love and humility the Word changed his nature (obviously not his person) and became man forever, so that while Paul can teach that he was originally equal with God (Phil. 2:6) he is now as man the perfected image of God (2 Cor. 4:4; Col. 1:15; Heb. 1:3; Rev. 3:14, etc.) and, despite his delegated powers and lordship (Mt. 11:27; 28:18; 1 Pet. 3:22), permanently subordinate (1 Cor. 15:24-28) as Joseph was to Pharaoh.

In face of the ‘contradictory conditions’ the traditional view involves (p.12) Stibbs’ resort to arguments based on hypnotism and psychology is quite inadequate and wrong-headed. The plain truth is that a genuine man with two natures at one and the same time is a contradiction in terms on the one hand and a denial of the incarnation on the other. How could Jesus truly and completely depend on his Father (p.28) while retaining and holding in reserve his own divine powers (cf. Jud. 6:31)? The Jesus depicted in Hebrews 5:7f. does not make sense if he retained his divine nature. At the end of the day Stibbs reminds us of the pot calling the kettle black. In effect if not in intention, he is as much opposed to Scripture as those he criticizes. Basically, he is imprisoned by tradition.

There is irony in the very title of his monograph, God Became Man, since Stibbs’ main intention following Chalcedon seems to be to uphold Jesus as God. By contrast Scripture tells us in no uncertain terms that it is the faithful (Heb. 3:1f.) perfected (Heb. 7:28)* Son of Man who sits at God’s right hand (Mt. 26:64, cf. 16:27; Heb. 8:1; Rev. 1:5-7; 14:14, etc.).
(* The perfecting process to which Jesus was subject would seem to undermine the very idea of his retention of his divine nature.)

Reflections on re-reading ‘The Forgotten Christ’, ed. S.Clark (Nottingham, 2007)

The book is dominated, arguably over-powered, by what I call the Augustinian worldview (cf. p.46) and inevitably leads to some absurd conclusions (e.g. the idea that Adam in contrast with Jesus, the second Adam, was created fully adult!). I have dealt with Gaffin on the Last Adam (pp.191-231), who treats 1 Corinthians 15 as if, like Romans 5:12-21, it is covenantal in structure and relates to original sin, fall and curse, in my essay Did Jesus Rise Physically From The Grave?.

Needless to say Chalcedonian dyophysitism (p.53), along with Constantinopolitan dyotheletism (p.56) and the eternal sonship (p.69), is strongly affirmed and not merely in the first chapter. This is supported by opposition to kenoticism where it is stated (quoting Stibbs) that kenotic theories ‘do not do justice to the biblical and historic doctrine as defined by Chalcedon’ (pp.56ff.). In other words, as with Berkouwer, Chalcedon is simply assumed to be scriptural and so becomes our standard of judgement. It is not without interest that on the basis of Chalcedon and its Christological two-nature theory we read of an intra-personal (?) communio idiomatum (mutual participation of attributes/properties) and communicatio gratiarum (charismatum) (communication of gifts/graces) as distinguished from the usual intra-Trinitarian communicatio idiomatum or communication of properties (pp.55f.). Given its assumptions, this is a reasonable inference. In the event, however, it implies docetism and thus compels us to believe that God did not become man after all.

Note on the non posse peccare

If Jesus had two natures he never became incarnate. What is more, if he had two natures he could not possibly sin and his temptations were all a charade (cf. Heb. 4:15; 5:7). (Arguably, an alternative would be that he could not sin as God but could as man, in which case he would have been a split personality, truly schizophrenic.) If he, the Word of God, was truly incarnate (John 1:14; Phil.2:7), he was able not to sin (posse non peccare). He thus proved his pedigree as the genuine Son of God through the VB. This is surely the wonder of Jesus, a genuine human being who uniquely did not sin (1 Pet. 2:22) but overcame sin in the flesh (Rom. 8:3; Heb. 2:14f.; 4:15).

This of course impinges on the idea of original sin. If it is true, then Jesus was a sinner at birth, and, assuming that one rejects the VB theory of Roman Catholicism, the idea that he was cleansed by the Spirit at his birth is failure to recognize that blood, not spirit, is the divine detergent! With regard to this, P.H.Eveson, The Forgotten Christ, p.64, quite wrongly says that this is the Bible’s answer to the non-transmission of sin to Jesus. Eveson of course makes two mistakes: first, he accepts original sin as biblical when it is in fact heretical, even blasphemous; second, he fails to recognize that if it is true and Adam’s sin is not imputed to Jesus, then he is not genuinely human but docetic, as I indicated in my first paragraph.

It is worth making another point here. If Jesus’ potential to be regarded as a victim of original sin as a son of the first Adam (Luke 3:38) in whose image he was made (Gen. 5:1-3) was obviated by the Spirit, why then was there ever an atonement at all? If the Spirit could work in Jesus’ case, why not in all others? Why should not Christianity function like Islam, that is by power? The fact is that Christ and his atonement are intrinsic to Christianity and true religion. And the only way in which Jesus could atone for sins before a holy God was first by becoming flesh (Heb. 2:17) and second by not sinning (Rom. 8:3; Heb. 2:14f.). Jesus, like the OT sacrifices, had to be perfect, unblemished, blameless. It is only after he as man first received the Spirit himself and then made atonement that the Spirit could come (John 7:39). (Cf. Paul’s insistence in 1 Cor. 15:46 that flesh precedes spirit.)

When Jesus was born, sin had not been atoned for! In the event, like the innocent children of the sinful adult Israelites (Dt. 1:39; Isa. 7:15f.), he was able to wend his way to the Promised Land (Num. 14:31, cf. v.3., cf. Mt. 2:15) and in his own personal case eventually into heaven itself (Heb. 9:24, etc.). The fact is that he was like the rest of us but while he never personally sinned, we all did and so died as a consequence (Rom. 3:23; 5:12; 6:23)! His virgin birth is totally irrelevant to the issue of sin. All it proves is that he was the incarnate Son of God, truly human and no longer divine in nature. (On the imputation of sin see espec. my Straightforward Arguments against the Imputation of Adam’s Sin to his Posterity.)

Reflections on reading Robert Letham on ‘The Person of Christ’, Nottingham, 2013

On page 175 Letham avers “Misconceptions take a long time to eradicate.” They certainly do and this statement applies to him as much as to others (and doubtless to me!). While in fairness he is not entirely uncritical of Chalcedon and correctly comments on page 240 that it left a good deal of unfinished business on the table*, the main problem with his book is that its author is tied to tradition and inhabits a false, that is, an Augustinian rather than a biblical universe which leads him inevitably into error. It also fails to inspire our confidence in him as a christologist. (* His appendix, pp.229-246, involving the question ‘Did the church get it wrong?’ is important and should have produced a more positive answer.)

Of course, despite his doubts he adheres to Chalcedon and to the eternal generation of the Son. In the event, his book, though highly informative and wide-ranging, does not really get us far. His commitment to tradition comes well short of paving the way to deeper understanding and reformation.

It is worth remembering that Letham provides an introduction to Giles’ book on the eternal generation. Here he confesses his laudable respect for but too ready reliance on ecclesiastical tradition. However, as an individual whom he might wish to dismiss as a freewheeler (p.7), I suggest he needs to take a more critical attitude to what we have inherited from the past and not simply in the realm of Christology. (See further my essay Have We Inherited Lies?, etc.) History, including the teaching of the prophets, the apostles and especially of the Lord Jesus himself (e.g. Mark 7), warns of the dangers inherent in over-ready acceptance of tradition especially as it enshrined in time-honoured but questionable creeds. It seems to me at least that the entire church has lapsed in its understanding of the love and humility displayed by our awe-inspiring God, at once omnipotent and sovereign but amazingly loving and humble. But the idea that the doctrine of the eternal generation somehow protects and even reinforces the doctrine of the Trinity eludes me. It seems rather to do the opposite.

Personal Notes

1. John MacArthur writes: “Christ divested Himself of His glory. He went from sovereign supernatural deity, to taking upon Himself the form of a servant – and ultimately to a death on a cross ….” (Quoted from Evangelical Action, June/July 2013, p.11).

2. On the Trinity in the OT see Ottley, pp.565ff.

3. On Greek or Platonistic conception of God as a divine monad, immutability, etc., see Ottley, pp.373f.,580, cf. 401f. etc. Tony Lane, Christian Thought, pp.12f.

4. Ottley, p.584, tells us that Athanasius deprecates the use of technical language re eternal generation “on the ground that it is non-scriptural”.

5. On Romans 1:4, see Fee on God’s Empowering Presence, pp.478-484, Pauline Christology, pp.243f..

6. On perichoresis, etc., communicatio idiomatum, appropriation and mutuality of powers, see Ottley, pp. 573,581,591, cf. Richardson, p.123.

7. On salvation by ‘power’, or omnipotence or fiat, see Ottley, pp.646f.

Transgression And Transformation

According to traditional Augustinian theology the entire creation is ‘fallen’ and under a curse as a consequence of Adam’s (original) sin. (1* See e.g. Stott, pp. 41,121,153,231; C.Wright, pp. 198,395, etc.) The assumption is that as the work of a perfect God all creation was initially not simply ‘good’, that is, useful, as Scripture surely teaches, but perfect. It follows that Adam and Eve likewise as emanating from a perfect creation at the hands of a perfect Creator were from the start holy, righteous, immortal and incorruptible. The problem here is that this assumption prompts some very difficult questions.

For a start, if Adam was created righteous and righteousness is the precondition of eternal life (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5, etc.), how did he not remain forever in his blessed state? Apart from the fact that it is no more than an inference which does not seem to be supported by Scripture, his so-called sin and fall is in any case not easily explained. Furthermore, if it is maintained that he could fall from perfection, are we not likely to draw the conclusion that even God himself who is perfect could likewise fall or at least decide to maintain his righteousness no longer? Have we any guarantee that he also like the devil will not fall like lightning from heaven (cf. Luke 10:18)? If this is a possibility, how can we be sure that he will honour his promises to us? Perhaps the anchor of our souls is less secure than we thought (Heb. 6:13-20). Obviously the questions are endless and the answers doubtful! Fortunately, however, we are in a position to dismiss the initial premise that a perfect God is necessarily obliged to produce perfect artifacts. All he needs to do is to produce what is useful, whatever serves his purposes (cf. Ps. 119:90f.), and even evil for which he is not directly responsible can do that (cf. 2 Chr. 10:15; Isa. 10:5-11; Acts 2:23; Rom. 8:28; Eph. 1:11, etc.)! The author of Hebrews realizes that the builder of the house has more honour than the house itself (3:3).

Creation Imperfect

On reflection, we ourselves become aware that throughout Scripture all created things are regarded depreciatively in comparison with their Creator and his word (Ps. 90:2; 102:25-27; Isa. 45:11f.; 51:6,8; Heb. 1:10-12; ; 1 John 2:17, etc.). They are but shadows of the real (cf. Heb. 8:1-7). What is ‘created by hand’ (cheiropoietos) is not to be compared with what is ‘not created by hand’ (acheiropoietos, Heb. 1:10-12; 9:11,24, etc.). (2* See my Manufactured Or Not So.) While creation may have a certain glory of its own (Ps. 19; Rom. 1:20), it pales when compared with its Author just as the old covenant pales in comparison with the new (2 Cor. 3). (3* See my Covenant Continuity and Discontinuity) In fact creation merely testifies to God’s power and divine nature and is certainly not divine or sacred in itself as the heathen world frequently believed. Thus it is not at all surprising that God’s chosen people were forbidden to worship creation in any form (Ex. 20:3f.; Dt. 4:15-19).

Man’s Native Imperfection

Man himself as a product of the earth is intrinsically imperfect; he is both physically and morally immature and incomplete and needs to be perfected (Phil. 3:12-14; Heb. 6:1, etc., cf. Gal. 3:3). Physically he achieves perfection or maturity relatively quickly, but his moral perfection is stunted by sin (cf. 1 Cor.15:46). However, he cannot and does not become sinful until like Adam (cf. Dt. 1:39) he breaks the parental commandment (Rom. 4:15; 7:8, cf. Prov. 1:8; 4:1-9; 6:20, etc.). As flesh which derives from the ground he is mere dust, clay, grass (Isa. 40:6, ESV) like the rest of the animal creation (Ps. 103:14, etc.).

What this suggests is that nature as such is inherently defective and needs to be upheld by the sovereign providence of God on the one hand and the delegated dominion of man created in the image of God on the other. Apart from man’s habitation and cultivation creation like the temple at a later date (Mt. 23:38) is a desolate wilderness (Isa. 6:11, etc.). An untended garden like Eden rapidly deteriorates (cf. Prov. 24:30-34).

Assertions like this are supported by other biblical evidence. For instance, quite apart from sin, creation has by nature a beginning (Gen. 1:1) and an end (Mt. 24:35), and is hence temporal and not eternal. It is initially uncovenanted, and since it is visible it is impermanent (2 Cor. 4:18; 1 John 2:17). It is also imperfect (Gen. 1), corruptible (Heb. 1:10-12; Rom. 8:18-25), shakable (Heb. 12:27) and destined for ultimate destruction (Zeph. 1:18; 2 Pet. 3:7,10-12).

The initial lack of a guarantee for creation is made evident by the contrast between the commandment given to Adam and the covenant made with Noah who, having metaphorically been weaned, could see and appreciate the significance of a rainbow. But though his covenant is still operative, it is so only as long as the earth remains (Gen. 8:22). Put another way, the flood which threatened total destruction makes it plain that an uncovenanted creation had no guarantee of permanence. And it was not until God had made the covenant that Noah, in contrast with Adam, could undertake to exercise dominion with any hope of success. Even then it was only for a limited time (Gen. 8:22), but nonetheless enough time (cf. Jer. 31:35-37; 33:19-26) for the completion of the plan of salvation from the corruptible earth (Rev. 14:3, cf. vv.14-20). Even Jesus who overcame the world (John 16:33) could not reverse its inherent corruption (subjection to decay) and inevitable dissolution which were clearly ordained by God (Mt. 24:35; Rom. 8:18-25; Heb. 1:10-12; 12:27, etc.). Even he had to escape from it by keeping the law which promised life (regeneration) and being crowned with glory and honour (transformation) in heaven (Heb. 2:9, cf. Rom. 2:7,10; 1 Pet. 1:7). For just as the law of Moses which relates to the flesh and to this world (cf. Rom. 7:1; Mt. 5:18) is obsolescent and provisional by nature (2 Cor. 3; Heb. 8:13), so is creation itself, and of course the flesh that emanates from it. Since neither creation nor the law can perfect anything (Heb. 7:19), escape by transformation is inherently necessary (1 Cor. 15:50-54). Thankfully, by the grace of God both creation and the law have a better, that is, an invisible hope in prospect (Rom. 8:20,24f.; 2 Cor. 4:16-18; Heb. 7:18f.; 11:35, cf. Heb. 10:20; 1 Pet. 1:3).

Two Factors

There are then two factors involved so far as man is concerned: he must exercise dominion (Gen. 1:26-28; Ps. 8) if he is to gain glory, honour and praise (Rom. 2:7,10; 1 Pet. 1:7, cf. Heb. 2:9), and he must keep the law if he is to gain the (eternal) life graciously promised to man (who is naturally mortal and corruptible) from the beginning (Gen. 2:17, cf. Rom. 7:10). Thus sin and nature frequently appear together and though intimately related they must as separate entities both be overcome. A clear illustration of the distinction between sin based on law and corruption or decay by nature appears in Luke 13:1-5. This passage makes it plain that though they can operate disparately, they both achieve the same result, that is, death. Luke 13:4, which deals with natural corruption, can be linked with 12:33 (cf. Mt. 6:19f. and Rom. 8:18-25; Heb. 1:10-12). Thus the tower of Siloam was like the temple ‘made by hand’ (Mark 14:58) and hence corruptible. In the event, the temple was razed by the Romans but like the Colosseum and the Parthenon (damaged by Venetian bombardment in 1687) it was naturally vulnerable to corruption as we are well aware today. Luke 13:1-3 corresponds with sections of Luke 21:5-36 where some of the events referred to occur by necessity, that is, as part of the divine purpose. Obviously, if creation is naturally corruptible, it will show increasing signs of its corruptibility as it ages in more frequent earthquakes, celestial portents, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions and so forth. But interspersed with these, as in Luke 13:1-5 there is plenty of evidence of sin in assassinations, wars, insurrections and international hostilities (Luke 21:9f.). (See further additional note below.) The sack of Jerusalem by the Romans is a type of the end and hardly surprisingly the two appear interconnected in Scripture (Luke 21:20-26). These events both natural (cf. the flood and Sodom and Gomorrah, Luke 17:26-30) and sinful will be capped off by the second coming of Christ (Luke 21:27f.).

Paul

No one reading carefully about Paul’s missionary journeys can fail to note that he constantly has to cope with both sin and nature. We see this in Acts 27 where nature perhaps predominates in contrast with Jonah where sin and nature are arguably treated more even-handedly. In 2 Corinthians 6 (cf. 4:8-12 where the apostle refers to his ‘mortal flesh’), however, sin and nature are more obviously interwoven. On the one hand Paul has to cope by means of great endurance with afflictions, hardships, calamities, labours, sleepless nights and hunger, on the other hand he has to submit to beatings, imprisonments, riots and the like. Again, in chapter 11:23-28 we read of labours, shipwreck, being adrift at sea, danger from rivers and the wilderness, toil and hardship, sleepless nights, hunger, thirst, cold and exposure on the one hand and of imprisonments, beatings, lashes, stonings, hostility from Jews and Gentiles in the city, and so forth. In chapter 12 the apostle talks of his mysterious thorn in the flesh from which God did not see fit to relieve him, and in verse 10 the mixture of sufferings stemming from both sin and nature.

Yet again, in Romans 8:35 Paul refers on the one hand to tribulation, distress, famine, nakedness and danger and on the other to persecution and sword. Admittedly, tribulation and danger, for example, are general words which could arguably come under the rubric of sin, but this does not affect the basic distinction I am making. (4* Dunn goes into some detail as to the meaning of various afflictions in comment on Rom. 8:35, 2:9 and 5:3.) Furthermore, it should be noted that while verse 36 suggests sinful persecution, his general reference to ‘all creation’ (ESV, lit. any other creature) in verse 39 is all inclusive. (The apparent distinction between tribulation and persecution would appear comparable to that between affliction and distress (ananke) in 1 Thes. 3:7.)

Peter and John

Peter and John both differentiate between nature and sin. For Peter material things like gold (1:7), silver (1:18), flesh and grass (1:24) are naturally perishable and futile. It is imperishable seed (1:23) and the word of the Lord (cf. James 1:18,21) that produces the new birth “to a living hope … to an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven” (1:3f.) which endures forever (1:25, cf. John 3:16). What a contrast there is between these and the eventual destruction of the material universe in 2 Peter 3. On the other hand, as 2 Peter 2 makes clear sin is a separate issue and produces its own bondage (2:19f.) and destruction (2:1-3). For John the material world and the things in the world like darkness (2:8) pass away (Rev. 21:1, cf. 1 Cor. 7:31). By contrast, those who do the will of God live forever (1 John 2:15-17).

Jesus

The fact that Jesus as incarnate was both mortal (like all flesh he was subject to death, Heb. 5:7, and so unlike his Father, was capable of dying) and corruptible (he got older, Luke 3:23; John 8:57, cf. Gen. 6:3) should teach us something about creation. (5* See my Death and Corruption, Romans 8:18-25.) If he was subject to nature even apart from sin (as Adam had originally been before he sinned), he had to overcome both in order to attain to heaven. And despite all his trials and temptations (Mt. 4:1-11; Luke 22:28; Heb. 4:15, etc.), praise God, he did precisely that (2 Tim. 1:10). He kept the law which promised life and defeated sin in the flesh (Rom. 8:3; Heb. 2:14f.). He thus freely, that is, by the grace of God through faith, tasted death for everyone (Heb. 2:9). This can only mean that since he did not undergo decay in the grave, he rose from it still corruptible flesh (Luke 24:39). But in accordance with the promise of God, having finished his work (John 17:4; 19:30) and thereby gained honour and praise, he was necessarily transformed at his ascension (1 Cor. 15:53). (6* Note the Greek ‘dei’ as in John 3:7.) In other words, Jesus’ resurrection which relates to sin and death on our behalf was, since it was vicarious, not essential to his natural life. On the other hand, his ascension, which involved his transformation, most definitely was. It related to the decay ordained by God in hope quite apart from sin (Rom. 8:20). It completed the plan of salvation once righteousness and new life had been gained. In fact, the resurrection and the transformation of Jesus were totally separate events, and to merge them as many do today in the 21st century is a massive mistake. For, while transgression leads to death and requires resurrection to counter it, transformation leads naturally to the perfection of life. (7* See more below and my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities, Did Jesus Rise Physically From The Grave?)

Before leaving Jesus, it is important to observe that both sin and nature brought their own challenges to his work. While he overcame the personal temptation and pressure to sin (Heb. 4:15; 1 Pet. 2:22), he had to deal with the sins of others including forces of evil like demons (Luke 11:20). We read of him exercising his authority to forgive sin and eventually to die for sins in general. Again he exercised his dominion over recalcitrant nature as when he rebuked the stormy sea (Luke 8:24) and unruly fevers in people (Luke 4:39); he also dealt with ordinary needs like hunger (e.g. Mark 6:30-44) and sickness. While sin is evident in some cases, it certainly is not in others. In fact, sin is specifically denied at the time when he healed the man born blind (John 9:3) and raised Lazarus from the dead (John 11:4). This should remind us that Sarah’s barrenness, Moses’ speech and the eunuch’s infertility (Isa. 56:3-5, cf. Mt. 19:12) were unrelated to personal transgression (cf. Mt. 19:12). Not all animals could be used as old covenant sacrifices since some were naturally blemished. Jesus was perfect(ed) both physically and morally (Luke 2:40-52; Mt. 19:21; Heb. 2:10; 7:28).

Creation Defective By Nature

All this points again to the fact that nature or creation as such is inherently defective and stands in stark contrast with divine perfection. What we noted above with regard to the hand-made temple (Mark 14:58) is also true of the human body of flesh (2 Cor. 5:1). (8* As Hughes, p.164 n.22, pointed out long ago the Greek especially of these two verses is remarkably similar. Both temple and body can fall foul of sinful destruction and/or of natural corruption. Some Christians apparently still look forward to the rebuilding of the ‘hand-built’ temple failing to see that it was provisional and transient like creation itself by nature! Even Solomon recognized this, 1 K. 8:27; 2 Chr. 2:6; Acts 7:48. After all it was only a type of the true, Heb. 8:1-5. They also think that there will be a thousand-year millennium in the flesh! The fact is that earth(l)y and heavenly bodies are essentially different, as different as flesh and spirit, as earth and heaven, 1 Cor. 15:46-49; 2 Cor. 5:1.) It is therefore of prime importance for us to recognize that death is often the result of nature, not sin. For example, animals which do not know the law cannot earn the wages of sin but they all nonetheless die in conformity with the law of a corruptible creation. Even sinless embryos (cf. Job 3:16; Eccl. 6:3) and babies (cf. Dt. 1:39) die on occasion. Ignorance in children guarantees that they cannot respond to the law by which to sin (Rom. 4:15) or to exercise faith in its promise (Dt. 30:20; Rom. 7:10). Like Adam and Eve at creation, they are uncovenanted and undeveloped, and so if they die they do so in innocence. They will not come to judgement since, like the animal world to which they belong as flesh, without (the) law they can do neither good nor evil (cf. Rom. 9:11), neither believe nor sin.

Unregenerate Man

In 1 Corinthians 2:14f., Paul, like Jesus in John 3:1-8, clearly distinguishes between the natural and the regenerate man apart from sin. So he is fully aware of the natural ignorance that characterizes us all, including Jesus (Isa. 7:15f.), in our infancy and minority. To stress this otherwise, sin is not the only problem confronting mankind. Even Jesus spent thirty years of his life on earth as a ‘natural’ man, a true son of Adam (Luke 3:38), but in contrast with Adam after keeping the law that promised life to his Father’s satisfaction, he was born from above at his baptism. He thus became the first and only man in all history to receive the Spirit and gain life by his obedience. Prior to his time all had failed (1 K. 8:46; Ps. 130:3; 143:2; Rom. 3:9-20,23, etc.) and continue to fail to this day (Gal. 2:16). Only when the time had fully come did God send forth his Son born of woman and put him in a position to redeem all the rest who were under (the) law (Rom. 8:3; Gal. 4:4f.). This had been his intention from the start (Rom. 3:20; 11:32; Gal. 3:22). Refusing to give his glory to any other (Isa. 42:8; 48:11), he had planned from before the foundation of the world that before him no flesh would boast. But the point to note is that by nature, quite apart from sin, man like an animal can neither see nor enter the kingdom of heaven. His regeneration is a ‘natural’ necessity.

The Body

However, if man’s rebirth is spiritual, what about his body? A spiritual birth prepares the way but does not provide for a resurrection from the dead. And since flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, transformation of the body becomes a ‘natural’ necessity quite apart from sin (1 Cor. 15:50-54). After all, it was God himself who subjected the temporal creation to futility because he always had a better hope in view (Rom. 8:20,24f.; 2 Cor. 4:16-18; 5:5). So, even Jesus as uncorrupted flesh following his resurrection had to undergo transformation as he had at his incarnation. This time, however, it was in reverse and it obviously took place at the end of his earthly pilgrimage, that is, at his ascension (John 20:17; Luke 44:51). So it was by transformation that he returned to glory to receive a body of glory (cf. John 17:5,24; Phil. 3:21).

The Importance of Sin

If transgression of the law, its wages as death and the need for resurrection on the one hand and transformation on the other are both factors playing a fundamental role in mankind’s life on earth, it is vital for us to see that sin or transgression derives its importance from the fact that it prevents both the necessary new birth and hence the ultimate change from occurring. The original promise of life and glory that God made to Adam in his natural mortality and corruptibility was conditional on his keeping the commandment and exercising proper dominion. If the commandment was not kept and life not gained, then death as wages (Gen. 2:17; Rom. 6:23) and consequent complete decay (Gen. 3:19) inevitably followed. Thus if all sinned, all died (Rom. 3:23; 5:12) and decayed. Only Jesus despite being tried and tested to the utmost overcame sin (1 Pet. 2:22), the world (John 16:33; Heb. 2:9) and the devil (John 14:30) in the flesh (Rom. 8:3). Only he as a true man, the second Adam to whom the original promise of life (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5) and glory (Gen. 1:26-28) made to the first Adam also applied, was able to serve as Saviour (Heb. 2). So while the OT made it crystal clear that only God could save and that before him no flesh would boast (Isa. 42:8; 48:11, cf. Rom. 3:20; 1 Cor. 1:29; Eph. 2:9), only Jesus as both God and man could hope to triumph.

Conclusion

By blindly following the sin-obsessed Augustine traditional theology has inevitably confused and merged sin with nature as modern translation and interpretation of Romans 8:18-25 indicates. (9* See my Romans 8:18-25. It is important to add in this connection that only in 2011 has the revision of the NIV, which has an Augustinian bias, changed its usual translation of the Greek word sarx as ‘sinful nature’ back to ‘flesh’ as it should be. See e.g. Rom. 8:13 and Gal. 6:8. Unlike the Greeks the Bible does not consider the flesh as such to be evil. As part of a ‘good’ creation it is meant to be subdued by man made in the image of God. Flesh, and nature in general for that matter, is just transient and hence defective (cf. 1 Cor. 15:42-44) and so is regarded pejoratively when compared with spirit (Spirit).) As hinted above in the title of this essay, transgression, death and resurrection are in a different category from transformation which, like regeneration, is a natural necessity. For though Jesus did not have to die and so be raised since he did not sin, he certainly had to be transformed for the simple reason that he had been made flesh only ‘for a little while’ (Heb. 2:7,9). So when writers like John Stott (ch.4), Murray Harris (pp.103,139ff.,413f., who virtually makes the ascension redundant by reducing it to drama), and Tom Wright (pp.143f.) all insist that Jesus’ resurrection constituted his transformation, a strong protest must be lodged. They are all in effect telling us that transgression and transformation as well as sin and regeneration are correlated. (10* As a matter of indisputable fact, both Jesus in John 3:1-8 and Paul in 1 Corinthians 15:35-54 fail to refer to sin.) Of course, neither is true for both regeneration and transformation are ‘natural’ necessities apart from sin. By contrast, Jesus’ resurrection was not essential to his own incarnate career at all since his death was both voluntary and vicarious. Having already gained life by keeping the law and received the Spirit at his baptism, he personally could have escaped from this futile world without it (resurrection, that is), as is implied by his prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane (Mt. 26:39,42) before his death. However, his transformation after (John 20:17) but definitely not at his resurrection (Luke 24:39, etc.) was, as Paul insisted, inherently necessary (Greek ‘dei’, 1 Cor. 15:53).

The fact is that the Augustinian confusion of sin with nature or of transgression with transformation constitutes a gargantuan gaffe not least because it links Jesus’ resurrection with the impossible redemption of the naturally corruptible temporal creation and gives us a profoundly distorted worldview. It has helped to obscure the truth of the gospel for so long and put the church as opposed to the Bible at odds with experience, history and the genuine findings of modern science. From an Englishman’s point of view, the harsh reality of the last fifty years or so is that the influential British quaternion of Murray, Lloyd-Jones, Stott and Packer, despite much good work on their part, have helped to embed us in a theological quagmire from which it is more than high time for us in these tumultuous days to be rescued. Though like the rest of the animal creation we are all part of and hence captive to nature, nonetheless as those who are also created in the image of God we are given the opportunity of escaping from our bondage by keeping the law and so receiving life on the one hand and of gaining glory on the other by exercising our delegated dominion (Gen. 1:26-28; Ps. 8:5, cf. Rom. 2:7,10; Heb. 2:9; 1 Pet. 1:7). But since on account of our susceptibility to sin we find this impossible, the only means of salvation open to us is faith, justification and life in Christ (John 14:6; Acts 4:12). He alone as our covenant head and representative triumphed over the world (nature), the flesh and the devil and hence redeemed us (Heb. 2:9) who failed (cf. Gal. 4:1-7). It is man, the image of God, who is saved, not his flesh and the material creation from which he derives (1 Cor. 15:50). Though dead and decayed on account of sin (Rom. 8:10) but nonetheless born again through faith, resurrected and transformed, man takes his place in his Father’s house and worships before his throne in heaven (Rev. 7:9).

Additional Note

While many scientists are telling us that global warming on planet earth is the consequence of man’s ‘sin’ (abuse, etc.), others say that climate change is natural and has occurred throughout history. Who is right? The answer is that both are provided that they do not hold exclusively to the one or the other. Those who accept the Augustinian worldview blame all on the sin of Adam and the subsequent curse under which we now labour. The truth is that God subjected the visible creation to futility (Rom. 8:20) from the start (2 Cor. 4:18) for the simple reason that he had an invisible hope in mind as the ultimate goal (Rom. 8:20,24f.). Sin just made the existing situation worse, and there can be little doubt that man’s profligacy, abuse and neglect of his environment has played its part. After all, the human individual, who is creation in miniature and naturally corruptible like the earth from which he stems, can hasten his demise by failing to conduct himself with appropriate care. (The figures quoted on ABCTV regarding smoking deaths in October 2013 tell their own story!)

Thoughts Worth Pondering:

1. To merge Jesus’ resurrection with his transformation is an egregious attempt to mix oil (sin) and water (nature). While his resurrection, which was a consequence of his death, was vicarious, his transformation, which was a consequence of his incarnation, was a ‘natural’ necessity.

2. Transgression relates to death, transformation relates to nature (creation).

3. Transgression leads to death, transformation leads to glory.

4. Transgression is a wage-earning act of man, transformation is a free act of God intrinsic to his plan of salvation.

5. Transgression is not a necessity, transformation is (cf. Jesus).

6. Regeneration and transformation are both ‘natural’ necessities supernaturally accomplished by God. Note the ‘dei’ in John 3:7 and 1 Corinthians 15:53.

7. Regeneration is spiritual, transformation is corporeal (1 Cor. 15:44; 2 Cor. 5:1).

8. Resurrection overcomes the effect of human transgression and death, transformation overcomes the effect of divinely ordained corruption and futility. Otherwise expressed, resurrection relates to sin and death, transformation relates to nature and decay.

9. Resurrection is a requirement of salvation (cf. Acts 2:24; 1 Cor. 15:20-23), transformation is a requirement of nature (creation). Thus resurrection, though needful, is nowhere said to be inherently necessary. God is indebted to no one (Rom. 11:35). He acts freely in grace or judgement according to his sovereign will and good pleasure.

10. Those who inhabit the Augustinian universe merge sin and nature in a cosmic curse, flesh and spirit in resurrection transformation, earth and heaven in redemption and old and new covenants in organic unity. The Bible distinguishes and separates them as it does the present age and the age to come (Luke 20:34-36, etc.).

(11* Relevant essays on topics touched on above can be found on this website.
In addition to the essays referred to above see also, e.g., Not Only But Also, What Fall?, Escape, Cosmic Curse?, John Stott on the Putative Resurrection Transformation of Jesus, Death and Corruption).

___________________________________________

References

J.D.G.Dunn, Romans 1-8, Dallas, 1988.

M.J.Harris, From Grave to Glory, Grand Rapids, 1990.

P.E.Hughes, Paul’s Second Epistle to the Corinthians, London/Edinburgh, 1962.

John Stott, The Contemporary Christian, Leicester, 1992.

C.J.H.Wright, The Mission of God, Nottingham, 2006.

N.T.Wright, The Challenge of Jesus, Downers Grove, 1999.

 

Cur Deus Homo or Why the Incarnation?

Why God became man is an ancient question posed in particular by Anselm. We might well ask why the all-powerful, sovreign God took the trouble to become man and at tremendous personal cost. Why didn’t he make us like the angels and the heavenly host? Why didn’t he just save us according to his own whim as apparently Muslims believe Allah does. Bluntly, God became man to save or rescue us, but to be intelligible this assertion requires explication and elaboration.

The Background

First, God himself as the Creator is immortal (1 Tim. 6:16) and incorruptible (1 Tim. 1:17): unlike his creation he neither dies nor succumbs to corruption or age (Gen. 1:1; Heb. 1:11f.). On the other hand, man who derives from a creation that is both temporary and corruptible is by nature dust and hence, in contrast with his creator, he is both mortal and corruptible. (1* It is vitally important to see this since the Church’s Augustinian heritage has led us to believe that man (Adam) was created perfect and immortal. From this ‘high estate’ (Milton) he was deemed to have fallen, sinned and brought a curse on the entire physical universe over which he was to have exercised lordship under God!) But the Creator from before the foundation of the earth planned that the human beings whom he formed in his (potential) image should have eternal life (2 Tim. 1:1,9; Tit.1:2; 1 John 2:25) attain to glory (Rom. 2:7,10; Heb. 2:9; 1 Pet. 1:7) as his adopted children (Eph. 1:4f., Rom. 8:12-17; 1 John 3:1-3).

The Promise of Eternal Life

In light of this it is unsurprising that we read in Genesis 2 that our holy and righteous God promised eternal life to Adam the first man he created out of the dust of the earth on the condition that he kept the commandment (Gen. 2:17, cf. 1 John 2:25)). In the event, however, Adam and Eve tempted by the flesh and deceived by the devil (Gen. 3:1-6) proved incapable of keeping the commandment and so forfeited the opportunity of living forever. Since Adam lived in a favourable environment in Eden devoid of a defective moral inheritance from erring predecessors yet nonetheless failed, it is to be expected that his descendants in less favourable conditions followed him in his sin (cf. Rom. 5:12-21). Thus as the OT itself testifies no one under the old covenant lived a sinless life (1 K. 8:46; Eccl. 7:20, etc.) and as a consequence no one escaped. All died reaping the wages of sin (Gen. 2:17; Rom. 6:23).

The Law Ineffective

But if the law which promised life (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5; Rom. 7:10) could not deliver it (Gal. 3:21), man was in desperate straits. How could he possibly attain to eternal life? The answer to this quandary is made clear as the Bible progresses. There are two points to consider: first, the promise of life was made to man and so had to be fulfilled by man. Second, God himself is always presented as man’s Saviour and the idea that man can somehow save himself is scouted absolutely. The paradox eventually becomes both intelligible and soluble when it is made clear that God himself in the person of Christ becomes man. In other words, God’s promise is affirmed and fulfilled in Christ who was truly God and man.

This picture becomes clear when we consider passages like Isaiah 45:21-25 in the OT and Romans 14:10f. and Philippians 2 in the NT. First, the prophet calls on all the ends of the earth to turn to him and be saved since only in the Lord are righteousness and strength and only in him will the offspring of Israel triumph and glory. Then in Philippians 2 (cf. Rom. 14:11) the apostle re-interprets this passage and applies it to the Lord Jesus. This time, though all is for the glory of God, it is at the name of Jesus that every knee will bow and every tongue confess that Christ is Lord. Truly is it then that God saves but he does so specifically in Christ (cf. Rom. 14:10-12).

The Incarnation Necessary

On the assumption that God planned to fulfil his purpose for man despite Adam’s failure and to glorify himself in the salvation of man there was no other way. The way of Islam involving the mere power of an all-powerful deity is out of the reckoning. In the Bible salvation is certainly the act of a sovereign God but amazingly his love, grace, holiness and righteousness, not his might, are to the fore. And they are demonstrated most fully in the incarnate life, death, resurrection and transformation of Christ. In this way he became the pioneer of our pilgrimage into heaven and the very presence of God. It is because he, the Word, became man that God’s original promise to Adam was fulfilled. He alone of all men that ever lived met the divine conditions and achieved perfection in the flesh. In the words of Paul “God has done what the law, weakened by the flesh, could not do. By sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, he condemned sin in the flesh” (Rom. 8:3). It was for our sakes that Christ became poor so that we might become rich. As Irenaeus long ago put it, “Christ became what we are in order that we might become what he is” (Adv.Haer. 5, preface).

Colossians 1:15-20

God’s purpose from before the foundation of the world was to glorify himself in Christ (Eph. 1:4f., etc.). Man as Adam according to the flesh was never intended to triumph in his own strength (Rom. 3:19f.; 1 Cor. 1:29; Eph. 3:9). It was the incarnate Son of God himself who alone was able to conquer in the flesh (cf. Rom. 8:3). It was he who became the image (cf. Heb. 1:3) of the invisible God and the firstborn of all creation. It was he who made peace by the blood of his cross and became pre-eminent. According to Paul all things were created through him and for him.

Why Does God Love Us?

But it may well be asked why God loves us. This mystery is posed in Deuteronomy 7. There in verses 7 and 8 Moses tells his fellow Israelites it is because the Lord loves them. In one sense this is not an answer. It is however rather like asking parents why they love their children. The same question is prompted by the most famous verse in Scripture, that is, John 3:16. Why does God love us? Parents have the habit of loving their children even when they don’t deserve it and they seem to derive this habit from God himself. Of course there is more to it. In Deuteronomy, stress is laid on the fact that God is bent on keeping the oath he had sworn to the fathers. But why had he sworn such an oath? The Bible ultimately makes it clear that apart from or in addition to his love God was concerned to glorify himself by saving his people. Indeed, he was to do it most amazingly in Christ who was thereby highly exalted (Acts 2:33-36; Heb. 4:14; 7:26, etc.). In light of this it is hardly surprising that in the book of Revelation both God and the Lamb receive unparalleled praise and honour (Rev. 4 & 5).

So God became man in order to fulfil his original purpose disclosed to Adam. This is why Jesus at his incarnation became the second Adam or God incarnate. In this way God was glorified, for Christ was the supreme manifestation of the glory of God (Phil. 2:9-11). Truly is our God unique, the only true God both Creator and Redeemer.
Gloria Soli Deo

 

More Meditation On Original Sin

(Though I have already written fairly extensively on original sin elsewhere, in view of the fact that the nefarious dogma is still so widely accepted in 2012, I feel under an obligation to add further comment to other articles that appear on this website.  Having just read Bridges and Bevington on The Great Exchange, I refer to it in the main partly for the convenience of the reader as well as myself, and partly because it provides standard Reformed doctrine and is likely to be quite widely read. It is a pity that what is in essence a fine book on its primary subject should be so marred by its stance on original sin.)

It is not as well known as it ought to be that the Jews, like the Orthodox, do not accept the so-called Christian doctrine of original sin (1* See e.g. Edersheim, p.165 as referred to by Sanday and Headlam, p.137.). While the OT frequently acknowledges that all men sin (1 K. 8:46; Ps. 130:3; Eccl. 7:20, etc.), it nonetheless quite unmistakably individualizes them (Neh. 9:2; Ps. 106:6; Dan. 9:16, ESV, etc.) by pointedly distinguishing between fathers and sons (cf. Dt. 24:16; Jer. 31:29f.; Ezek. 18). In light of this we are virtually forced to infer that when Paul says in Romans 5:12 (cf. 3:23) that all (have) sinned, he is not thinking of our sinful solidarity ‘in Adam’ as Augustine taught (2* Omnes peccarunt, Adamo peccante, all sinned when Adam sinned, as Bengel put it. See Sanday and Headlam, p134.) but of the fact that all who know the law fail to keep it for their own part (Rom. 7:1,7, cf. John 9:41; 15:22,24). He confirms this inference when he says that all in contrast with Jesus (cf. Rom. 8:3) prove incapable of keeping the law when it is revealed to them (Rom. 3:19f.; Gal. 2:16), which surely makes the dogma of original sin unnecessary and therefore redundant. Though it was always the preceptive will of God that men should be obedient for their own good (Dt. 30:20; 32:46f., etc.), it was clearly his decretive will that they should fail and thus turn to him for salvation through faith in Jesus (cf. Isa. 45:22-25; Rom. 9:30-10:4). But this is an entirely different kettle of fish from attributing sin to them before they actually sin.

Theological Considerations

What Christians fail to realize is that apart from exegetical considerations the theology of the OT not to mention the NT frequently militates against the notion of original sin as taught in the Augustinian tradition. Otherwise expressed, important events occur which necessarily exclude the idea of death being the wages of original sin. (3* In Protestant theology original sin involves the imputation of Adam’s sin. On the assumption that it exists at all, it can no more pay the wages of death than imputed righteousness can pay the wages of life, Rom. 4:4. Since imputation involves free gift, wages are excluded. No one properly understanding justification by faith can possibly pretend that what Luther called an ‘alien’ righteousness constitutes wages. By the same token, he cannot possibly regard his condemnation ‘in Adam’ as wages.) A prime example is provided by the exodus from Egypt.

The Exodus

In Numbers 14 the sinfulness of the fathers is sharply contrasted with the innocence of their children just as it is in significant verses like Deuteronomy 1:39. The former who have seen the glory and signs performed by God in Egypt and in the wilderness, have tested him, disobeyed and despised him are told in no uncertain terms that they will not see the land he swore to give to their ancestors (vv. 22f.). They are clearly held responsible for their own actions and, having rejected the evidence given to them, are left without excuse (cf. John 15:24; 10:25,32,37f.; 14:11; Rom. 1:19f.; 2:1). As a consequence of their sins they will all be paid wages (Rom. 6:23) and will die in the wilderness (v.29). On the other hand, the latter, who the fathers claimed would become booty, will, despite suffering as shepherds for forty years (v.33), nonetheless be brought in (v.31). That they eventually arrived safely in the Promised Land is a fact of history which points indisputably to their innocence at birth. They were not punished for the sins of their fathers (Dt. 24:16). It should be carefully noted, however, that they in their turn were in danger of repeating the sins of their fathers when they attained the age of accountability (cf. Num. 32:14f.) and were frequently warned against it (Jer. 35:15; Zech. 1:4, etc.).

Church Dogma

The conclusion we are compelled to draw from this is that all human beings, though certainly affected by the sins of their parents (v.33, cf. Ex. 20:5; 32:33; Rom. 5:12-21), sin for themselves. Despite this, it is patently obvious that the church has argued along the same lines as the sinful parents in Numbers 14 and repeated their error. Believing that Adam’s sin has been either transmitted (Catholics) or imputed (Protestants), it has assumed that children along with their fathers are tarnished with sin from birth and even conception and cannot possibly enter the heavenly Promised Land. To remedy the situation it has developed the dogma of infant baptism involving the regeneration of babies apart from righteousness by faith which is its necessary precondition (Lev. 18:5, etc.). But as we saw above when referring to Psalm 106:6, etc., the sins of the fathers are not transferred to the children who are responsible only for their own sins. In other words, contrary to the denial expressed in Article 9 of the Church of England the sins of the fathers are only punished in the children when they are repeated by them (cf. Jer. 31:29f.). The same teaching is evident in chapters like Ezekiel 18 where again the sins of fathers are differentiated from those of sons and cannot be credited to them.

In light of the evidence provided by the exodus, not to mention the fact that the imputation of sin cannot pay wages in death (Rom. 4:4), we are bound to consider that the so-called Pelagian interpretation of Romans 5:12 is correct. Augustine’s theology and his exegesis were both wrong, and his exclusive obsession with sin in Adam was a major error that contaminated so much of his thinking and as a consequence infected church dogma over which he continues to preside to this day (2012).

Sin and Righteousness

Historically, Christian tradition has failed to recognize the importance of the role of (the) law in the achievement of both sin and righteousness (cf. Rom. 6:16; 2 Pet. 2:19-21). It can hardly escape notice that Adam began his career like a baby or an animal in blissful ignorance (cf. Gen. 2:17; 3:5,22). Initially he knew neither the law, as encapsulated in a single commandment, nor good and evil, and so lived in a state of moral innocence. It was only when he had developed sufficient understanding that he was given the commandment promising life (Gen. 2:17). When he failed to keep it, he earned the wages of death. The truth of this is brought out especially by Paul in Romans 7:9f. where the apostle claims to have undergone the same experience. Here he says that he was born ‘alive’, and it was not until he learned and broke the commandment that he ‘died’. In fact, in Romans, one of Paul’s main platforms is the impossibility of sin apart from knowledge of (the) the law. He underlines this in Romans 4:15 and 7:1-13 in particular. But if law is necessary for sin to exist and is its power (1 Cor. 15:56). (4* Cf. Rom. 7:5 which, sadly, is usually mistranslated. In the Greek there is no word for ‘aroused’, ESV etc., and not with out reason, for Paul is here simply confirming and underlining what he is saying throughout 7:1-13, that is, that sin is ‘through the law’. In other words, the law is foundational of sin. By definition sin is transgression of the law and apart from it sin does not exist, 1 Sam. 15:24; 1 Cor. 15:56; James 2:9-11; 1 John 3:4, etc.) the same must be true with regard to righteousness. With the implicit teaching of Genesis and the more explicit teaching of Deuteronomy 6:25 and 24:13 in mind Paul maintains that it is only by obeying the commandment or law that righteousness can be achieved (Rom. 6:16).

Since like Adam and Eve in whose image we are created (Gen. 5:1-3) we are all prone to the temptations of the world, the flesh and the devil we have no trouble becoming sinful (cf. Jer. 4:22; Rom. 1-3), we might well convince ourselves that we can just as easily keep the law and gain righteousness. This, however, is far from being the case. As Paul teaches elsewhere, for those who are flesh the law proves not to be the power of righteousness but of sin (1 Cor. 15:56, cf. Rom. 7:14; 2 Cor. 3). As a consequence, we all come under its sway (Rom. 6) and, since sin is paid the wages of death, we find ourselves in desperate need of righteousness from another source. That source is Christ who alone of all men that ever lived kept the law (Rom. 8:3), gained righteousness and so both met and provided the precondition of life (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5, etc.). Having qualified himself (as man) by his own obedience, he then in the words of Peter suffered for sins once for all, the righteous for the unrighteous to bring us to God (1 Pet. 3:18).

What does this teach us? Surely that Romans 5:12-21 does not provide the frequently claimed exact parallel between Adam and Christ. (On this, see my An Exact Parallel?) Whatever impact Adam as the natural father of the race had on his progeny, it could not possibly involve the imputation of his sin for the simple reason that faith in him was not only lacking but impossible. It is a biblical axiom that sin cannot be legitimately imputed to the innocent, to those who have not committed any (Ex. 23:7; 1 Sam. 22:15; 1 K. 21; Prov. 17:15; Luke 23:4, etc.). If this is true, the very idea of original sin is excluded. No wonder, for if it were true, even Jesus, whose human father through his mother was Adam, no less (Luke 3:38), would have been born sinful! The plain fact is that the idea of the imputation of sin is Augustinian not biblical. Of course, it may immediately be countered that our sin was imputed to Jesus. It was indeed (cf. 2 Cor. 5:21), but the Bible makes it clear beyond reasonable dispute that he received it willingly by faith. Otherwise expressed, he gave himself freely, in love (Gal. 2:20) not compulsion, to atone for our sins. He bought us at the price of his own blood (1 Pet. 1:18f.) voluntarily shed (John 10:17f.) on our behalf.

Native Innocence

Traditional theology usually makes much of the fact that in contrast with Jesus whose conception was immaculate, we ordinary mortals are born with sinful natures. (5* See e.g. Bridges and Bevington, p.167. These authors’ reference to ‘immaculate conception’ is dangerously confusing since, historically speaking, it applies (wrongly) to Mary.) The assumption behind this is that as the offspring of Adam we are sinful not merely at birth but even at conception (6* B & B, pp.19f.) Verses like Genesis 5:1-3, 8:21 and Psalm 51:5 are appealed to but on close examination prove exegetically unconvincing. But my point here is that their relevance and validity are undermined by other teaching of Scripture. For a start, it is clear from the evidence of Genesis that Adam began life in ignorance of the law and was innocent. The same is true of his posterity (cf. Rom. 9:11). We have already seen that Paul in effect claims in Romans 7:9f. to have repeated Adam’s experience and was ‘alive’ until that commandment dawned on his developing consciousness. When it did, like Adam (pace Art. 9 of the C of E) he broke it and earned the wages of sin which is death.

Moral Nature Determined by Actual Sin or Obedience

The truth is that our moral nature is determined not by birth when we are innocent and ignorant (Dt. 1:39; Rom. 9:11), which if it were true would surely impugn the righteousness and holiness of God our Creator and make him the author of sin, but by our reaction to the commandment when we eventually receive it. This is surely implied by Jesus who states in John 8:34 that it is the man (or woman) who sins, that is, commits actual sin like Adam and Eve (Gen. 3:1-6; 1 Tim. 2:13) who is the slave of sin (cf. Jer. 13:23; 2 Pet. 2:19-21). Paul takes the same stance in Ephesians 2:1-3 (cf. Tit. 3:3-7) where he clearly places personal will, that is, actual sin before nature.

Recapitulation

What the Bible in fact teaches is the truth of recapitulation which was taught by the father of theology, Irenaeus, but lost to view in the theology of Augustine who eclipsed him. As the offspring of Adam we all begin where he began, that is, morally innocent or neutral, and this would appear to be the point of verses like Deuteronomy 1:39 and so forth. What is more, only on the basis of it could Jesus become the second Adam who began where Adam began but in contrast with him achieved perfection (cf. Eph. 4:9f.). Only by recapitulation could he live a fully human life and die for the sins of the whole world (1 John 2:2).

Sins Not Sin

If this is in fact the case, it is less than surprising that Paul and other writers constantly talk in terms of our sins (e.g. Rom. 1:18-32), of our being dead in our trespasses and sins (Eph. 2:1; Col. 2:13) and of Jesus dying for our sins rather than for sin in the abstract (e.g. Heb. 1:3, cf. 1 Pet. 3:18). In other words, Jesus died for our personally perpetrated sins not for our sinful nature acquired by birth from Adam. There is not the faintest suggestion in Scripture that Jesus who, according to Bridges and Bevington on account of his immaculate conception did not have a sinful nature (p.167), died for our sin in Adam (p.202). Indeed, to suggest that he did is deeply problematic theologically. For a start, it depicts Jesus as dying for what he did not himself assume, that is, a sinful human nature (cf. Heb. 2:17). (7* Cf. Gregory Nazianzen on whom see e.g. H.Cunliffe-Jones, p.126.) He was voluntarily made sin (2 Cor. 5:21) but was neither a sinner by nature (birth) nor by personal commission of sins (1 Pet. 2:22). He died for our actual sins not for our sinful nature acquired by imputation or transmission. After all, if the latter were true he himself would have been implicated since he necessarily shared our birth nature. If this is denied, he was docetic and not a true human being at all. The fact is that sin imputed putatively at birth apart from faith would clearly be a gift of nature like the colour of our skin and hence incapable of redemption (8* On page 202, B & B gratuitously inform us that we are redeemed from every transgression of God’s law, from both original and personal sin. Just how we can be redeemed from what has been freely imputed to us by God himself is more than a little difficult to understand! They say, however, that original sin was imputed to us by Adam (!), an astonishing thesis with numerous intolerable implications!), forgiveness (contrast Col. 1:14) or being repented of (9* Pace B.B.Warfield, pp.278-282. Warfield though undeniably a great theologian was surely in error at this point. On page 278, he defines original sin, first, as Adam’s personal sin made ours by an external act of imputation, and, secondly, as “our own inborn depravity, common to us and the whole race of man.” Again, on page 279, he says that original sin is “not merely adherent but also inherent sin, not merely the sinful act of Adam imputed to us, but also the sinful state of our own souls conveyed to us by the just judgment of God”! Regarding repentance he says that all sin must be repented of that it may be forgiven and proceeds to argue that original sin falls within its parameters. This is highly debatable. Here, however, I confine myself to saying with Roger Nicole: “No one can repent of sin except the one who committed it. Christ … did not and could not repent in our place”, p.451, and observing that if we can repent of imputed sin we can derive personal glory from imputed righteousness. Warfield himself would, I am sure, have promptly repudiated the latter suggestion. If so, in consistency he ought to have repudiated the former.) not least because not having committed it we cannot be held responsible for it. How can we be redeemed from what is freely given to us and has become an attribute of our nature like the colour of our skin? (10* On page 220, B & B actually go so far as to argue full in the face of Hebrews 2:17 that Jesus and the rest of us differ in birth nature. While we are compelled (sic) to sin, Jesus remains innocent. I submit that this is far from what the Bible teaches. For a start it delivers a mortal blow at the incarnation. According to my Bible we all as the offspring of Adam share the same nature as flesh.) It is God’s doing, not ours. According to Paul, however, it is personal transgression of the law that makes us accountable (Rom. 3:19f.). On the other hand, if we are sinners by birth, we are under an obligation to act in accordance with nature and failure to do so is reprehensible (Rom. 1:26f.). At this point we enter the realm of absurdity.

Restoration of Fellowship

Writers frequently maintain that our redemption by Christ restores our fellowship with God. In the words of B & B: “Atonement allows for restoration of the previously disrupted fellowship” (p.23). But this is an implicit denial of the original sin and the sinful birth nature that they contend for. Why? Because apart from the fact that it makes God himself open to the charges of creating us evil and of illegitimately imputing sin to the innocent, if we are sinful even at conception there is never any fellowship to restore. In contrast, the Genesis story makes it crystal clear that mankind (Adam) enjoyed a relationship with God at the beginning, and from this we must infer that since we are all created as his offspring we too in our infancy enjoy what might be called an embryonic relationship with him as his creatures. This continues until it is broken as it was in Paul’s case (Rom. 7:9f.). The same inference may be drawn from the story of the Prodigal Son who voluntarily left his father’s house into which he was born. In light of this, the traditional attempt to lump all together in seminal identity and solidarity in sinful Adam thereby implicitly denying individual separation is false to the Bible. After all, Jesus, though a son of Adam (Luke 3:38) provides us with a clear instance of separation since he remained innocent all his earthly life. In any case, the Bible itself addresses this issue in Number 16:22 by posing the question: “Shall one man sin, and will you be angry with all the congregation?” In view of what follows in verse 45, that is, the separation of the implicitly innocent congregation from those who sinned and died, the answer is clear (cf. Num. 26:11; 27:3; 2 Sam. 24:17, and Caleb and Joshua at a later stage). Thus the principle propounded in the Lord’s assertion to Moses in Exodus 32:33 that the one who sins will be blotted out of his book is upheld. Along with human solidarity there is a scriptural doctrine of individual separation. (11* See further my article on Solidarity and Separation.) Thank God that this is so, since Jesus though a true human being born of woman separated himself not by birth but by not sinning (1 Pet. 2:22). (12* As indicated above, writers like B & B sadly even go so far as to argue that Jesus’ very nature was different from that of the rest of humanity, p.220, ignoring the biblical insistence that Jesus was truly a son of Adam through his mother, Luke 3:38, cf. Gen. 5:1-3, and in fact the second or last Adam. They thus draw the conclusion that on account of the imputation of Adam’s sin we are ‘compelled’ to sin. All else apart this is surely implicit blasphemy.)

The fact is that restoration of fellowship, or reconciliation which is a major NT doctrine, only makes sense if as God’s children by creation we are initially by nature in the Father’s house. It is personal sin that alienates us as it did Adam and Eve from Eden, the womb of the race. In our mother’s womb like Paul (Rom. 7:9, cf. 9:11) we still have access to the tree of life and regain it when we enter heaven through faith in Jesus (Rev. 22:2).

Union with Christ

According to the NT as believers we die in union with Christ since he acted on our behalf. By faith his death becomes ours. Since this is so, we are baptized into his death and crucified with him (Rom. 6:1-14; Gal. 5:24). Thus in him as our federal (covenant) head and representative received by faith we die to the law and to sin. But can it be said that we die in union with Adam? Did he act on our behalf? Do we exercise faith in him and become linked with him covenantally? A negative response is required for two basic reasons: on the one hand as babies we cannot exercise faith and on the other God made no covenant with Adam. Certainly Paul uses the words “die in Adam” (1 Cor. 15:22) once only, but what does he mean? As the first Adam was clearly representative man according to the flesh and we are all, including Jesus, ‘in Adam’ in the sense that we are made in his image (Gen. 5:1-3), we all die as such. But this does not imply that he sinned for us any more than any other father sinned on his son’s behalf (cf. Ezek 18, etc.). Such an idea is the invention of men not a teaching of the Bible which implicitly denies it when it informs us that we cannot be punished for the sins of our fathers (Dt. 24:16; 2 K.14:6, cf. Ex. 32:33; Num. 27:3).

Once more I conclude that original sin is radically false and needs to be repudiated with rigour and dispatch. Verses like Psalm 51:5 relatively unremarkable among the Jews is in Christian exegesis made to dance to the devil’s tune. It thus distorts our entire theology and sacramental practice. Little wonder that Christians remain so hopelessly divided on the one hand and find the Jews an enigma on the other.

______________________________________________

References

J.Bridges & Bob Bevington, The Great Exchange, Wheaton, 2007.

Sandy and Headlam, ICC on The Epistle to the Romans, fifth ed., 1902.

R.Nicole in The Glory of the Atonement, ed. C.Hill & F.James III, Downers Grove, 2004.

B.B.Warfield, Selected Shorter Writings ed. Meeter, Nutley, 1970.

 

 

Comment On ‘Why On Earth Did Jesus Come? by John Blanchard

This widely advertised booklet (Faverdale North, Darlington, 2009) which is likely to find a wide readership contains some useful information and here and there makes good points. But as an exposition of what the Bible teaches in certain critical areas it is something of a disaster.

On page 12, in opposition to the Roman Catholic dogma of the Immaculate Conception, Blanchard tells us correctly that the Virgin Mary was not born without sin and refers to Psalm 51:5 to prove his case. However, bearing in mind that the Jews and the Orthodox have never accepted the Augustinian interpretation of this verse, we do well to be suspicious. The problem is that depending on its correct translation and interpretation, it could arguably apply to the sinless Jesus himself who certainly came into a wicked world and was born of a sinful woman.

Our author then generalizes by adding that “at birth” (Gk “by nature”) all human beings are “children of wrath”. The difficulty here is that Ephesians 2:3b to which Blanchard refers is preceded by reference to actual sin and evil living prior to the attribution of nature. In other words, the passage cannot refer to babies and birth sin but only to those who have already sinned and come short of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23).

On page 31, however, Blanchard draws the opposite conclusion and claims that what we do is the result of what we are, that is, sinners at birth. While it is clear that what we do later in life is conditioned by what we are (e.g. Mt. 7:17), this is not true of babies who have not committed any sins. As Jesus says, it is those who commit sin that are the slaves of sin (John 8:34). So, we are forced to infer that what we do early in life determines our nature. This was certainly true in Adam’s case and since we all recapitulate Adam and Eve’s experience, it is true in all other cases. In Romans 7:9f. Paul, for example, claims that far from being guilty at birth he was “alive”, but like Adam died when he broke the commandment that promised (eternal) life. Again, in 9:11 Paul’s assumption of the innocence or moral neutrality of Esau and Jacob in the womb is vital to his argument regarding election.

What the Bible teaches then is that like Adam we acquire our sinful natures by disobedience (Rom. 3:23; 5:12; 6:16) and our righteous natures by obedience (Dt. 6:25; 24:13; Rom. 2:13; 6:16; 1 John 3:7, etc.). (1* Throughout the Bible sin is defined by law. See further my Law and Sin) We follow either Adam or Jesus. In the event, like Adam we all prove incapable of obedience (cf. Rom. 7) and have to rely on the alien righteousness provided for us by Jesus.

Blanchard is so conditioned by his Augustinian tradition that he tells us on page 30 that Adam at first had a natural inclination to do good. This is in compete opposition to the teaching of Paul who having first characterized Adam as flesh or dust (1 Cor. 15) tells us that nothing good dwells in his own flesh (Rom. 7:18, cf. John 6:63) and further informs us that by divine design no flesh will boast in the presence of God (Rom. 3:19f.; 1 Cor. 1:29; Gal. 2:16; Eph. 2:9). The real reason why we have a fatal tendency to break God’s law is not because we have inherited “a guilty fallen nature” but because in contravention of the law we give way to our animal appetites which like Adam and Eve we fail to control (cf. Gen. 3:6; Rom. 7:14; James 1:14f., etc.).(Of course, I do not intend to deny a la Pelagius the unspecified role of Adam in Romans 5:12-21 and the machinations of the devil.)

Next, Blanchard introduces a colossal contradiction into his argument and unwittingly undermines his entire thesis regarding birth sin. On page 31 he tells us correctly that “where there is no law there is no transgression” (Rom. 4:15; 5:13; 7:8). However, he fails to recognize that since embryos and babies, like animals, know neither good nor evil, there is no law to be broken and therefore there is no sin (Dt. 1:39; Rom. 7:9f.; 9:11, etc.).

Referring back to page 30 our author tells us that Adam was not only the natural but also the representative head of the human race. Needless to say, he produces no evidence to support this lamentable assertion for the simple reason that there isn’t any. Adam was simply prototypical representative man according to the flesh with whom God failed conspicuously to make a covenant. (On this see my Did God Make a Covenant with Creation?) He then goes on to say that Adam began to father children “in his own likeness, after his image” (Gen. 5:3). And to make his point clear he adds that they and their successors inherited not only their father’s physical nature but also his spiritual nature! If this is true, then Jesus was born a sinner since Scripture certainly teaches that along with other unsavoury characters mentioned in his family tree (Mt. 1:1-6) Adam was his father too (Luke 3:38). The plain truth of Scripture is that while the children of man and woman are born with human natures (flesh, cf. John 1:13; Gal. 4:4) they do not and cannot inherit their moral natures which can only be acquired by reacting with (the) law. Fathers and sons often differ substantially. A good father can beget a bad son and vice versa as Ezekiel 18 in particular affirms and as Hezekiah and Manasseh and Amon and Josiah demonstrate. While solidarity is important, personal responsibility remains intact (Ex. 32:33; Dt. 24:16; Jer. 31:29f.; 1 Cor. 4:5; Heb. 9:27). It is worth adding, however, that Jesus confirmed his own divine sonship by keeping the law in the flesh (Rom. 8:3). In this he was of course unique.

Conclusion

The degree to which Blanchard has uncritically allowed tradition to colour his interpretation of the Bible is frightening. It reminds us of Jesus’ reference to the nullification of the word of God in Mark 7:13.

It remains to add that the reason why Jesus came to earth was to rescue us who were unable to meet the condition of eternal life which was to keep the law (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5; Rom 7:10, etc.). He alone of all men that have ever lived attained to righteousness by his perfect obedience (Heb. 2:17f.; 4:15; 5:7-9; 1 Pet. 2:22) and as a consequence inherited the promise. This permitted him to die on our behalf and serve as the pioneer of our salvation (Heb. 2:10, etc.). In our author’s words, “He came to solve our greatest problem and to bring us into a living relationship with God that will transform our lives here and now and enrich them in heaven for ever” (p.38).

Note

The reader is urged to read along with other relevant articles my Augustine: Asset or Liability?

Solidarity and Separation

SOLIDARITY AND SEPARATION
Traditionally much is made of human solidarity or seminal identity in sin. The contention, following Augustine of Hippo, is that we all sinned ‘in Adam’ or in the words of Bengel: when Adam sinned, so did everyone else (Adamo peccante omnes peccarunt). The question this prompts is: Does the Bible teach this? The mere fact that the words ‘in Adam’ are missing from Romans 5:12 renders it suspect. (1* It is generally agreed that Augustine, who knew little Greek, misinterpreted the words ‘eph’ ho’ which mean ‘because’ in this verse. His ‘in quo’, that is, ‘in whom’ or ‘in Adam’, which appears in the Vulgate, is erroneous.)
Since Augustine’s day Catholics have based their view of solidarity in sin on physical transmission; Protestants on imputation. Catholics contend that the Virgin Birth obviated ‘carnal concupiscence’ or sinful lust when Jesus was born. But their assumption that sin can be transferred is undermined by the Scriptural teaching that the son cannot be punished for the sins of the father (Dt. 24:16; Ezek. 18, etc.). Protestants are less sure of themselves than Catholics. Apart from the Virgin Birth they offer no adequate reason for the non-imputation of sin to  Jesus. They simply suppose that it is impossible. It is. But to imply that with Jesus God made a new beginning is only acceptable if we recognize that it was a different sort of beginning from that God suggested to Moses when testing him in the wilderness (Ex. 32:10; Num 14:12; Dt. 9:27-29). If the plan of salvation was to be universally effective, the atonement had to be retro-active as well as prospective (cf. 1 John 2:2) and so cover all who exercise faith throughout the history of the human race (cf. Heb. 11). To say this, however, requires that Jesus had to assume what needed to be healed (Gregory Nazianzen, cf. Heb. 2). In other words, he had to live a complete or perfect human life beginning at the beginning and recapitulating man’s minority before pioneering his majority or maturity. This is precisely what Scripture presents him as doing. He became our moral and generic exemplar, the perfect(ed) man (Heb. 2:10; 5:9; 7:28).
Faith
The plain truth is that sin, like righteousness, cannot be imputed apart from faith. As babies none of us, even Jesus himself, have faith and the knowledge on which to base it (cf. Dt. 1:39; Isa. 7:15f.). This observation makes it obvious that the imputation of Adam’s sin taught by the Reformed in particular is false. If righteousness is imputed by faith, then clearly so is sin. If this is indeed the case, then it follows as surely as night follows day that the only instance in the Bible of imputed sin occurs when the voluntary sins of men are imputed by faith to Jesus, thereby enabling him to bear their punishment voluntarily and vicariously (1 Pet. 2:24, cf. 2 Cor. 5:21).
Solidarity in the Flesh
No matter what, it is indisputable that Paul teaches the solidarity and universality in sin in Romans 5:12. In view of this the question must be posed: How is this solidarity achieved? How is it that Paul can say that all have sinned (Rom. 5:12) and that all have come short of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23)? The answer must be that all who die have committed actual wage-earning sins; they have one and all broken the law. However, it must be quickly added that only those who know the law can commit sin, for the apostle tells us that apart from the law there is no transgression (Rom. 4:15). (Note how in Nehemiah 8:3,7f.,12 the reading of the law is addressed to those who could understand.) So what about those who do not know the law, babies, for example? On occasion, they die (e.g. Job 3:16). The answer is that they die as a consequence of their solidarity with the entire animal world. Bluntly, they are flesh and like fleshly animals they die as such (Ps. 49:12,20; Eccl. 3:18-21). It is necessary here to stress the solidarity of all human beings without exception as flesh (cf. John 3:6a). While Jesus may have been unique in that he did not sin (1 Pet. 2:22, etc.), he was nonetheless one with all his fellows as born of woman (Gal. 4:4, cf. Heb. 2:14). He underwent a genuine incarnation.
The Wages and Sting of Death
It may be argued at this point that the Bible teaches that death is the wages of sin (Gen. 2:17; Rom. 6:23; 7:10) and is not native to man. Paul seems to underscore this when he says that the sting of death is sin. But he goes on to assert that the power of sin is the law (1 Cor. 15:56). This is fundamentally important because it underlines the fact that where there is no law there is no sin (Rom. 4:15; 7:8, cf. 9f.). Here we have to remember that only men and women who are created in the image of God and have gained knowledge of the law are capable of breaking it. From this we are compelled to conclude by sheer force of logic that when death occurs apart from the law, sin is not involved. In light of the evidence, our inference must be that the material creation as such, and especially the flesh which derives from it, is destructible and corruptible by nature. God made it that way. And this Paul and the author of Hebrews surely teach in Romans 8:18-25 and Hebrews 1:10-12, to go no further. (2* See my Romans 8:18-25.)
Separation
The dogma of original sin leads us to believe that we are all born sinners. Unfortunately for this view, as I have already hinted there was one glaring exception – Jesus. He is unmistakably portrayed as sinless. (3* According to Bock there are seven confessions of his innocence in Luke 23 alone, p.1864.) So unless original sin, indeed sin of any kind, can be legitimately attributed to Jesus, the church dogma is founded on a quagmire. The problem is that Jesus cannot simultaneously be one with all the sinful sons of Adam and sinless (cf. Heb. 2:17). Yet the Bible makes it clear beyond dispute that he was. So, how do we solve this conundrum?
1. Docetism may be proposed. Jesus appeared to be a man but in reality was not so. This would appear to offer a solution to our problem. It fails, however, because from the beginning life was conditionally promised to man (Gen. 2:17), not to a representative who only appeared to be a man.
2. Jesus must be accepted as an exception. However, if he was an exception, he would be disqualified (cf. John 3:3,5). (4* L.Berkhof, truer to his word than he realized, claimed that Jesus’ statement regarding regeneration in John 3:3 was absolute and left no room for exceptions, p.472. The reason why Jesus was no exception at this point, pace Augustine, was that, as we have seen above, he enjoyed fleshly solidarity with all his fellows! And flesh which is naturally corruptible cannot be glorified and go to heaven, cf. 1 Cor. 15:50.) As in Docetism, he would not be a true man. In effect, his sacrifice would be no better than the animal sacrifices of the OT he replaced. What is more, his exception would involve blemish and therefore be unacceptable.
3. The Augustinian dogma of original sin is in fact false.
4. If this is so and all children who are born knowing neither the law nor good nor evil are innocent (Dt. 1:39, etc.), irrespective of the impact of their parents (Ex. 20:5f., etc.) including Adam (Rom. 5:12-21), they are in a position to keep the commandment/law as Adam and Eve were before them. The problem here is that like them they lack the ability to keep the law (Rom. 3:19f.; Gal. 2:16, cf. 2 Pet. 2:19, etc.). The world, the flesh and the devil prove too strong. But Jesus, the second Adam, conquered even though he was genuinely flesh (Rom. 8:3) and, along with all his fellows, a son of the first Adam (Luke 3:38). This being so, we are compelled to conclude that the dogma of original sin is untrue.
The evidence then forces us to infer that while Jesus shared human nature with all humans experiencing solidarity and seminal identity with them as flesh (Heb. 2:14), he did not share their sinful nature. Why not? The simple answer is that he proved himself capable of keeping the law and so did not sin (Rom. 8:3; Heb. 4:15; 1 Pet. 2:22). In this he remained both separate and unique. By contrast, all his fellows without exception, though born innocent like Adam and Eve before them, broke the law and earned wages in death (1 K. 8:46; Rom. 3:23; 5:12; 1 Cor. 15:56, cf. Rom. 7:9f.).
So, by living a sinless life from infancy to manhood, Jesus underlined both his solidarity with and his separation from ordinary men and women (cf. Heb. 7:26). He was thus able to serve as their Saviour. It is necessary to add, however, that while solidarity in sin is true in general, it is not necessarily so in specific sins. The Bible makes this evident on numerous occasions. For example, it was vital for those who delivered a good report on the Promised Land to be recognized as separate from the rest. The same is true regarding Korah’s rebellion recorded in Numbers 16. Had the whole congregation perished on account of the sins of the rebels (cf. 16:22), the very plan of salvation would have foundered. So while solidarity must be stressed, so must separation.
The Sins of the Fathers
Though children are frequently urged not to repeat the sins of their fathers (Zech. 1:4, etc.), they usually do, yet, as Ezekiel 18 indicates, not necessarily. On the other hand, if original sin is true, they have no choice and they are all without exception tarnished by Adam’s sin. But as we have seen, this is impossible. The imputation of sin to the innocent is regarded as evil throughout the Bible (1 K. 21; Prov. 17:15, etc.). By contrast, imitation is a pervasive Scriptural theme. (4* See my Imitation.) For all that, it is vital to be aware that Scripture constantly distinguishes between the sins of the fathers and of the children (e.g. Num. 26:11; 27:3). This suggests that what is known as generational benediction and malediction (cf. Ex. 20:5f.), though real enough, excludes the punishment (Dt. 24:16) as opposed to the suffering of the innocent (cf. Num. 14:33). Thus, in Psalm 106:6, ESV, we read: “Both we and our fathers have sinned; we have committed iniquity, we have done wickedness.” Numerous other references are to the same effect: Leviticus 26:39f.; 2 K. 17:41; Neh. 1:6; Isa. 65:7; Jer. 31:29f.; Ezekiel 18; 20:18,21,24,27-30; Daniel 9:8,11,16, and so forth. While Jeremiah 32:18 might suggest indiscriminate solidarity, this illusion is quickly dispelled by the very next verse where individual accountability is affirmed (cf. Jer. 31:29f.). (David explicitly separates himself from his people in 2 Sam. 24:17, cf. Num. 16:22.)
Conclusion
So I conclude that the Bible teaches solidarity in sin to the extent that all who attain to knowledge of (the) law fail to obey it and so pay the penalty (Rom. 5:12; 6:23). All come short of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23) and are the slaves of sin of their own volition (John 8:34) even if social and especially parental pressure is great. As those who are disobedient like Paul (Rom. 7:10) we are all by nature children of wrath (Eph. 2:2f.). But we are not born so (cf. Rom. 7:9a), since at that time we have no knowledge of the law or of good and evil apart from which there is no transgression (Rom. 4:15, etc.). Native depravity is manifestly contrary to Scripture (5* Ps. 58:3, cf. 51:5, like Job 31:18, is clearly hyperbolic.) and rules out of court meritorious generational recompense for the innocent. Children are inevitably caught up in the circumstances of their parents whether for good or evil. However, as James 2:10 indicates, confirming the words of Jesus in John 8:34, only one sin is necessary to enslave us (cf. Adam) and hence to determine our nature as sinful from our youth (Gen. 8:21; Rom. 7:9f.). Unless we can keep the commandments to perfection, we all need a saviour, and the only Saviour is Jesus.
It must finally be added here that the nature of our salvation involves family solidarity since God is our Father (John 1:13) and Jesus our elder brother. Just as Jesus by his incarnation experienced solidarity with us in flesh (Heb. 2:14a), so we by faith enjoy solidarity with him in spirit (Heb. 2:10-13, cf. John 3:3-8), for he is the firstborn among many brothers (Rom. 8:29). By contrast, deliberate separation from Christ means family solidarity with the devil who is the father of sin and death (John 8:44; Heb. 2:14b).
Collateral Considerations
Once we recognize that solidarity does not necessarily nullify separation but that both can be true, other matters become clear. There is a troublesome tendency in traditional theology to universalize or generalize the particular and to stress solidarity to the detriment of separation. Just as Adam’s particular sin is accredited and extended to all his offspring despite the obvious innocence of Jesus who like the rest of us as a baby knew neither the law not good and evil (Dt. 1:39; Isa. 7:15f.), so is his curse. However, the Bible tells us that all particular (separate) sins result in punishment or curse (Heb. 2:2) unless they are forgiven (e.g. Eph. 1:7, etc.). But if babies have not sinned, though they may suffer to some extent the consequences of and inherit the conditions engineered by their sinful parents, as already indicated they cannot be punished for them. If this is not the case, then no one would have reached the Promised Land since all would have been sinners subject to death (cf. Dt. 1:31; Num. 14:31). In light of this alone we are forced to call in question other aspects of traditional theology and cast doubt on the so-called cosmic curse resulting from Adam’s “Fall”. (Genesis 3:17-19 reflects the difference between the garden of Eden, the womb of the race, and the harsh world outside where man as he develops is called to exercise his dominion. As a sinner this proves as impossible for Adam to do successfully as it did for Cain and those who followed him. The problem is in man not the land which is naturally recalcitrant and subject to corruption, cf. Hag. 1:6; Mic. 6:12ff.; 7:13. When it is properly worked it yields its increase, Lev. 26:3-13; Dt. 28: 1-14; when it is not, it is cursed, Lev. 26:14-43 and Dt. 28:15-68 passim.)  At this point we do well to remind ourselves not only that both peoples and individuals differ (cf. Gen. 18:25) but so do lands. If Adam’s sin led to a universal curse of corruption, how did it come about that Lot “saw that the Jordan Valley was well watered everywhere like the garden of the Lord, like the land of Egypt, in the direction of Zoar” (Gen. 13:10, cf. Jud. 18:7,9f.)? How could there ever have been a promised land which was exceedingly good despite its defilement by the Canaanites (Num. 13:27; 14:7; Dt. 1:25)? Again, how could Paul claim that “everything created by God is good” (1 Tim. 4:4)? If traditional Augustinian thinking is true, ought he not to have said that everything is cursed? (Cf. Heb. 1:10-12 and see further my Romans 8:18-25).
We are remiss as readers of Genesis 19 if we do not to realize that the particular curse on Sodom and Gomorrah which is used symbolically throughout Scripture is not generalized or universalized till the end of the world (Luke 17:28f.). In other words, the idea that creation was initially perfect but was subjected to a universal curse of corruption (solidarity) because our first parents sinned (particularity) is nonsense and involves a gross misreading of the Bible’s teaching. As “made by hand” creation including man (Isa. 45:11f.) was divinely subjected to corruption (decay). Even the sinless Jesus himself was susceptible to it and, in contrast with his Father (Ps. 102:27), he noticeably aged (John 8:57). From the start he intended returning to the glory he had left with his people in train (cf. John 17:5,24). In other words, like Paul he was plainly conscious of the “invisible hope” (Rom. 8:24f.) involved in creation’s subjection to corruption which lay ahead of him (Heb. 12:2).
In Deuteronomy 29 we are given an explicit illustration of the particular (separation) distinguished from the general (solidarity). First, the individual is differentiated from the community and threatened with curse (29:20, cf. Num. 16:22). Second, the land itself is threatened with a repetition or re-enactment of the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah (29:23) if the community imitates, tolerates or concurs with the idolatry of the individual. In this case, both moist and dry will be swept away (29:19), for the sun shines and the rain falls on good and evil alike (Mt. 5:45). Perhaps even more to the point, the other nations which are obviously not affected will ask why the land has been devastated (29:24). The answer is not that the people are being punished for the sin of Adam but for their own wilful abandonment of the covenant of the Lord. All this underscores repetition and imitation which is nullified by indiscriminate appeal to solidarity (pace Art. 9 of the C of E). Traditional Augustinian theology frequently generalizes when it should particularize.
At the end of the day the traditional creation-fall-restoration schema beloved of Reformed theology is false. Creation was never perfect, the ‘fall’ was personal though apart from Jesus universally repeated Rom. 3:23; 5:12), and restoration under the new covenant is spiritual not physical (John 3:1-8; 1 Cor. 15:50). Tradition fails to distinguish between the general and the particular. While Adam’s impact may have been universal (Rom. 5:12-21) it did not negate personal accountability. Hence Adam died for his own sin, and we die for our own (Ex. 32:33; Dt. 29:18-20; Ezek. 18:4,20). Having said this we must be ready to acknowledge (pace Pelagius) that our sin like Adam’s has a deleterious effect on others and the environment if it is repeated. Where it is not, as in Jesus’ case, the world, the flesh and the devil are overcome (Heb. 2:9, etc.). But while death is conquered, corruption (decay) is not so. Even Jesus could not prevent black hair turning white (Mt. 5:36, cf. John 8:57). Since the latter is by divine decree (Rom. 8:20), Jesus had to escape to glory by transformation at his ascension (cf. 2 Tim. 1:10). Whether dead or alive we do the same (1 Cor. 15:50-53).
Note
See further my articles on original sin and especially my Are We Sinners By Birth?, Death and Corruption.
Note 1 Chron. 21:17 and 2 Tim. 2:20f. re separation.
REFERENCES
L.Berkhof, Systematic Theology, repr. London, 1959.
D.L.Bock, Luke 9:51-24:53, Grand Rapids, 2002.

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Traditionally much is made of human solidarity or seminal identity in sin. The contention, following Augustine of Hippo, is that we all sinned ‘in Adam’ or in the words of Bengel: when Adam sinned, so did everyone else (Adamo peccante omnes peccarunt). The question this prompts is: Does the Bible teach this? The mere fact that the words ‘in Adam’ are missing from Romans 5:12 renders it suspect. (1* It is generally agreed that Augustine, who knew little Greek, misinterpreted the words ‘eph’ ho’ which mean ‘because’ in this verse. His ‘in quo’, that is, ‘in whom’ or ‘in Adam’, which appears in the Vulgate, is erroneous.)

Since Augustine’s day Catholics have based their view of solidarity in sin on physical transmission; Protestants on imputation. Catholics contend that the Virgin Birth obviated ‘carnal concupiscence’ or sinful lust when Jesus was born. But their assumption that sin can be transferred is undermined by the Scriptural teaching that the son cannot be punished for the sins of the father (Dt. 24:16; Ezek. 18, etc.). Protestants are less sure of themselves than Catholics. Apart from the Virgin Birth they offer no adequate reason for the non-imputation of sin to  Jesus. They simply suppose that it is impossible. It is. But to imply that with Jesus God made a new beginning is only acceptable if we recognize that it was a different sort of beginning from that God suggested to Moses when testing him in the wilderness (Ex. 32:10; Num 14:12; Dt. 9:27-29). If the plan of salvation was to be universally effective, the atonement had to be retro-active as well as prospective (cf. 1 John 2:2) and so cover all who exercise faith throughout the history of the human race (cf. Heb. 11). To say this, however, requires that Jesus had to assume what needed to be healed (Gregory Nazianzen, cf. Heb. 2). In other words, he had to live a complete or perfect human life beginning at the beginning and recapitulating man’s minority before pioneering his majority or maturity. This is precisely what Scripture presents him as doing. He became our moral and generic exemplar, the perfect(ed) man (Heb. 2:10; 5:9; 7:28).

Faith

The plain truth is that sin, like righteousness, cannot be imputed apart from faith. As babies none of us, even Jesus himself, have faith and the knowledge on which to base it (cf. Dt. 1:39; Isa. 7:15f.). This observation makes it obvious that the imputation of Adam’s sin taught by the Reformed in particular is false. If righteousness is imputed by faith, then clearly so is sin. If this is indeed the case, then it follows as surely as night follows day that the only instance in the Bible of imputed sin occurs when the voluntary sins of men are imputed by faith to Jesus, thereby enabling him to bear their punishment voluntarily and vicariously (1 Pet. 2:24, cf. 2 Cor. 5:21).

Solidarity in the Flesh

No matter what, it is indisputable that Paul teaches the solidarity and universality in sin in Romans 5:12. In view of this the question must be posed: How is this solidarity achieved? How is it that Paul can say that all have sinned (Rom. 5:12) and that all have come short of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23)? The answer must be that all who die have committed actual wage-earning sins; they have one and all broken the law. However, it must be quickly added that only those who know the law can commit sin, for the apostle tells us that apart from the law there is no transgression (Rom. 4:15). (Note how in Nehemiah 8:3,7f.,12 the reading of the law is addressed to those who could understand.) So what about those who do not know the law, babies, for example? On occasion, they die (e.g. Job 3:16). The answer is that they die as a consequence of their solidarity with the entire animal world. Bluntly, they are flesh and like fleshly animals they die as such (Ps. 49:12,20; Eccl. 3:18-21). It is necessary here to stress the solidarity of all human beings without exception as flesh (cf. John 3:6a). While Jesus may have been unique in that he did not sin (1 Pet. 2:22, etc.), he was nonetheless one with all his fellows as born of woman (Gal. 4:4, cf. Heb. 2:14). He underwent a genuine incarnation.

The Wages and Sting of Death

It may be argued at this point that the Bible teaches that death is the wages of sin (Gen. 2:17; Rom. 6:23; 7:10) and is not native to man. Paul seems to underscore this when he says that the sting of death is sin. But he goes on to assert that the power of sin is the law (1 Cor. 15:56). This is fundamentally important because it underlines the fact that where there is no law there is no sin (Rom. 4:15; 7:8, cf. 9f.). Here we have to remember that only men and women who are created in the image of God and have gained knowledge of the law are capable of breaking it. From this we are compelled to conclude by sheer force of logic that when death occurs apart from the law, sin is not involved. In light of the evidence, our inference must be that the material creation as such, and especially the flesh which derives from it, is destructible and corruptible by nature. God made it that way. And this Paul and the author of Hebrews surely teach in Romans 8:18-25 and Hebrews 1:10-12, to go no further. (2* See my Romans 8:18-25.)

Separation

The dogma of original sin leads us to believe that we are all born sinners. Unfortunately for this view, as I have already hinted there was one glaring exception – Jesus. He is unmistakably portrayed as sinless. (3* According to Bock there are seven confessions of his innocence in Luke 23 alone, p.1864.) So unless original sin, indeed sin of any kind, can be legitimately attributed to Jesus, the church dogma is founded on a quagmire. The problem is that Jesus cannot simultaneously be one with all the sinful sons of Adam and sinless (cf. Heb. 2:17). Yet the Bible makes it clear beyond dispute that he was. So, how do we solve this conundrum?

1. Docetism may be proposed. Jesus appeared to be a man but in reality was not so. This would appear to offer a solution to our problem. It fails, however, because from the beginning life was conditionally promised to man (Gen. 2:17), not to a representative who only appeared to be a man.

2. Jesus must be accepted as an exception. However, if he was an exception, he would be disqualified (cf. John 3:3,5). (4* L.Berkhof, truer to his word than he realized, claimed that Jesus’ statement regarding regeneration in John 3:3 was absolute and left no room for exceptions, p.472. The reason why Jesus was no exception at this point, pace Augustine, was that, as we have seen above, he enjoyed fleshly solidarity with all his fellows! And flesh which is naturally corruptible cannot be glorified and go to heaven, cf. 1 Cor. 15:50.) As in Docetism, he would not be a true man. In effect, his sacrifice would be no better than the animal sacrifices of the OT he replaced. What is more, his exception would involve blemish and therefore be unacceptable.

3. The Augustinian dogma of original sin is in fact false.

4. If this is so and all children who are born knowing neither the law nor good nor evil are innocent (Dt. 1:39, etc.), irrespective of the impact of their parents (Ex. 20:5f., etc.) including Adam (Rom. 5:12-21), they are in a position to keep the commandment/law as Adam and Eve were before them. The problem here is that like them they lack the ability to keep the law (Rom. 3:19f.; Gal. 2:16, cf. 2 Pet. 2:19, etc.). The world, the flesh and the devil prove too strong. But Jesus, the second Adam, conquered even though he was genuinely flesh (Rom. 8:3) and, along with all his fellows, a son of the first Adam (Luke 3:38). This being so, we are compelled to conclude that the dogma of original sin is untrue.

The evidence then forces us to infer that while Jesus shared human nature with all humans experiencing solidarity and seminal identity with them as flesh (Heb. 2:14), he did not share their sinful nature. Why not? The simple answer is that he proved himself capable of keeping the law and so did not sin (Rom. 8:3; Heb. 4:15; 1 Pet. 2:22). In this he remained both separate and unique. By contrast, all his fellows without exception, though born innocent like Adam and Eve before them, broke the law and earned wages in death (1 K. 8:46; Rom. 3:23; 5:12; 1 Cor. 15:56, cf. Rom. 7:9f.).

So, by living a sinless life from infancy to manhood, Jesus underlined both his solidarity with and his separation from ordinary men and women (cf. Heb. 7:26). He was thus able to serve as their Saviour. It is necessary to add, however, that while solidarity in sin is true in general, it is not necessarily so in specific sins. The Bible makes this evident on numerous occasions. For example, it was vital for those who delivered a good report on the Promised Land to be recognized as separate from the rest. The same is true regarding Korah’s rebellion recorded in Numbers 16. Had the whole congregation perished on account of the sins of the rebels (cf. 16:22), the very plan of salvation would have foundered. So while solidarity must be stressed, so must separation.

The Sins of the Fathers

Though children are frequently urged not to repeat the sins of their fathers (Zech. 1:4, etc.), they usually do, yet, as Ezekiel 18 indicates, not necessarily. On the other hand, if original sin is true, they have no choice and they are all without exception tarnished by Adam’s sin. But as we have seen, this is impossible. The imputation of sin to the innocent is regarded as evil throughout the Bible (1 K. 21; Prov. 17:15, etc.). By contrast, imitation is a pervasive Scriptural theme. (4* See my Imitation.) For all that, it is vital to be aware that Scripture constantly distinguishes between the sins of the fathers and of the children (e.g. Num. 26:11; 27:3). This suggests that what is known as generational benediction and malediction (cf. Ex. 20:5f.), though real enough, excludes the punishment (Dt. 24:16) as opposed to the suffering of the innocent (cf. Num. 14:33). Thus, in Psalm 106:6, ESV, we read: “Both we and our fathers have sinned; we have committed iniquity, we have done wickedness.” Numerous other references are to the same effect: Leviticus 26:39f.; 2 K. 17:41; Neh. 1:6; Isa. 65:7; Jer. 31:29f.; Ezekiel 18; 20:18,21,24,27-30; Daniel 9:8,11,16, and so forth. While Jeremiah 32:18 might suggest indiscriminate solidarity, this illusion is quickly dispelled by the very next verse where individual accountability is affirmed (cf. Jer. 31:29f.). (David explicitly separates himself from his people in 2 Sam. 24:17, cf. Num. 16:22.)

Conclusion

So I conclude that the Bible teaches solidarity in sin to the extent that all who attain to knowledge of (the) law fail to obey it and so pay the penalty (Rom. 5:12; 6:23). All come short of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23) and are the slaves of sin of their own volition (John 8:34) even if social and especially parental pressure is great. As those who are disobedient like Paul (Rom. 7:10) we are all by nature children of wrath (Eph. 2:2f.). But we are not born so (cf. Rom. 7:9a), since at that time we have no knowledge of the law or of good and evil apart from which there is no transgression (Rom. 4:15, etc.). Native depravity is manifestly contrary to Scripture (5* Ps. 58:3, cf. 51:5, like Job 31:18, is clearly hyperbolic.) and rules out of court meritorious generational recompense for the innocent. Children are inevitably caught up in the circumstances of their parents whether for good or evil. However, as James 2:10 indicates, confirming the words of Jesus in John 8:34, only one sin is necessary to enslave us (cf. Adam) and hence to determine our nature as sinful from our youth (Gen. 8:21; Rom. 7:9f.). Unless we can keep the commandments to perfection, we all need a saviour, and the only Saviour is Jesus.

It must finally be added here that the nature of our salvation involves family solidarity since God is our Father (John 1:13) and Jesus our elder brother. Just as Jesus by his incarnation experienced solidarity with us in flesh (Heb. 2:14a), so we by faith enjoy solidarity with him in spirit (Heb. 2:10-13, cf. John 3:3-8), for he is the firstborn among many brothers (Rom. 8:29). By contrast, deliberate separation from Christ means family solidarity with the devil who is the father of sin and death (John 8:44; Heb. 2:14b).

Collateral Considerations

Once we recognize that solidarity does not necessarily nullify separation but that both can be true, other matters become clear. There is a troublesome tendency in traditional theology to universalize or generalize the particular and to stress solidarity to the detriment of separation. Just as Adam’s particular sin is accredited and extended to all his offspring despite the obvious innocence of Jesus who like the rest of us as a baby knew neither the law not good and evil (Dt. 1:39; Isa. 7:15f.), so is his curse. However, the Bible tells us that all particular (separate) sins result in punishment or curse (Heb. 2:2) unless they are forgiven (e.g. Eph. 1:7, etc.). But if babies have not sinned, though they may suffer to some extent the consequences of and inherit the conditions engineered by their sinful parents, as already indicated they cannot be punished for them. If this is not the case, then no one would have reached the Promised Land since all would have been sinners subject to death (cf. Dt. 1:31; Num. 14:31). In light of this alone we are forced to call in question other aspects of traditional theology and cast doubt on the so-called cosmic curse resulting from Adam’s “Fall”. (Genesis 3:17-19 reflects the difference between the garden of Eden, the womb of the race, and the harsh world outside where man as he develops is called to exercise his dominion. As a sinner this proves as impossible for Adam to do successfully as it did for Cain and those who followed him. The problem is in man not the land which is naturally recalcitrant and subject to corruption, cf. Hag. 1:6; Mic. 6:12ff.; 7:13. When it is properly worked it yields its increase, Lev. 26:3-13; Dt. 28: 1-14; when it is not, it is cursed, Lev. 26:14-43 and Dt. 28:15-68 passim.)  At this point we do well to remind ourselves not only that both peoples and individuals differ (cf. Gen. 18:25) but so do lands. If Adam’s sin led to a universal curse of corruption, how did it come about that Lot “saw that the Jordan Valley was well watered everywhere like the garden of the Lord, like the land of Egypt, in the direction of Zoar” (Gen. 13:10, cf. Jud. 18:7,9f.)? How could there ever have been a promised land which was exceedingly good despite its defilement by the Canaanites (Num. 13:27; 14:7; Dt. 1:25)? Again, how could Paul claim that “everything created by God is good” (1 Tim. 4:4)? If traditional Augustinian thinking is true, ought he not to have said that everything is cursed? (Cf. Heb. 1:10-12 and see further my Romans 8:18-25).

We are remiss as readers of Genesis 19 if we do not to realize that the particular curse on Sodom and Gomorrah which is used symbolically throughout Scripture is not generalized or universalized till the end of the world (Luke 17:28f.). In other words, the idea that creation was initially perfect but was subjected to a universal curse of corruption (solidarity) because our first parents sinned (particularity) is nonsense and involves a gross misreading of the Bible’s teaching. As “made by hand” creation including man (Isa. 45:11f.) was divinely subjected to corruption (decay). Even the sinless Jesus himself was susceptible to it and, in contrast with his Father (Ps. 102:27), he noticeably aged (John 8:57). From the start he intended returning to the glory he had left with his people in train (cf. John 17:5,24). In other words, like Paul he was plainly conscious of the “invisible hope” (Rom. 8:24f.) involved in creation’s subjection to corruption which lay ahead of him (Heb. 12:2).

In Deuteronomy 29 we are given an explicit illustration of the particular (separation) distinguished from the general (solidarity). First, the individual is differentiated from the community and threatened with curse (29:20, cf. Num. 16:22). Second, the land itself is threatened with a repetition or re-enactment of the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah (29:23) if the community imitates, tolerates or concurs with the idolatry of the individual. In this case, both moist and dry will be swept away (29:19), for the sun shines and the rain falls on good and evil alike (Mt. 5:45). Perhaps even more to the point, the other nations which are obviously not affected will ask why the land has been devastated (29:24). The answer is not that the people are being punished for the sin of Adam but for their own wilful abandonment of the covenant of the Lord. All this underscores repetition and imitation which is nullified by indiscriminate appeal to solidarity (pace Art. 9 of the C of E). Traditional Augustinian theology frequently generalizes when it should particularize.

At the end of the day the traditional creation-fall-restoration schema beloved of Reformed theology is false. Creation was never perfect, the ‘fall’ was personal though apart from Jesus universally repeated Rom. 3:23; 5:12), and restoration under the new covenant is spiritual not physical (John 3:1-8; 1 Cor. 15:50). Tradition fails to distinguish between the general and the particular. While Adam’s impact may have been universal (Rom. 5:12-21) it did not negate personal accountability. Hence Adam died for his own sin, and we die for our own (Ex. 32:33; Dt. 29:18-20; Ezek. 18:4,20). Having said this we must be ready to acknowledge (pace Pelagius) that our sin like Adam’s has a deleterious effect on others and the environment if it is repeated. Where it is not, as in Jesus’ case, the world, the flesh and the devil are overcome (Heb. 2:9, etc.). But while death is conquered, corruption (decay) is not so. Even Jesus could not prevent black hair turning white (Mt. 5:36, cf. John 8:57). Since the latter is by divine decree (Rom. 8:20), Jesus had to escape to glory by transformation at his ascension (cf. 2 Tim. 1:10). Whether dead or alive we do the same (1 Cor. 15:50-53).

Note

See further my articles on original sin and especially my  Are We Sinners by Birth?Death and Corruption.

Note 1 Chron. 21:17 and 2 Tim. 2:20f. re separation.

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References

L.Berkhof, Systematic Theology, repr. London, 1959.

D.L.Bock, Luke 9:51-24:53, Grand Rapids, 2002.

No Law No Sin

NO LAW NO SIN
The apostle Paul tells us in Romans 4:15 that where there is no law there is no sin (cf. Rom. 5:13; 7:1-13; 1 Cor. 15:56, cf. Gal. 5:23). In saying this he clearly assumes that we sin only when we break the law (1 Sam. 15:24; James 2:9-11; 1 John 3:4; 5:17). The question is: Does this conform with normal Scripture usage? It is worth examining the issue, not least because tradition would have us believe that we are born sinners and so must have sinned in some sense before we were born.
Animals
First, there is no suggestion in the Bible that animals sin. The reason must be of course that since unlike man they are not made in the image of God, they do not know the law, and without law there is no transgression (Rom. 4:15). Admittedly they can be held accountable in the sense that stock are subject to destruction, but the reason for this is that they are dangerous, not sinful (Ex. 21:28). It is noticeable that when they are not properly restrained their owner who does know the law is responsible (21:29). In Hebrews 12:20 the point is made that even an animal that touches Mount Sinai is to be stoned to death. Why? The reason is apparently that flesh as such apart from sin cannot live with the holiness of God who is a consuming fire. This would seem to support the notion that all created (material) things give way before the presence of God (Rev. 20:11, cf. Gen. 16:13; 32:30; Isa. 33:14; 1 Cor. 3:12-15; 1 Tim. 1:17; 6:16; Heb. 12:27; James 5:3; 2 Pet. 3:7,10-12, etc.).
Adam and the One Commandment
In contrast with the animals mankind (Adam) is created in the potential (since it has to be acquired, Rom. 8:29; 2 Cor. 3:18) but not the actual image of God (Gen. 1:26-28). In other words, he is subject to development and signs of the image of God are not evident at the start. As a race man is epitomized by Adam, the individual. The line between Adam as mankind and Adam as individual is somewhat difficult to draw since mutatis mutandis, or making the necessary adjustments, what is true of the one is true of the other. In accordance with divine intention, he develops and transcends his merely animal nature (flesh) when he achieves rationality and becomes capable like a child of receiving and understanding the commandment. Prior to this time he does not know the law on which moral standing is based and so is innocent, that is, neither righteous not sinful, neither good nor evil as the following references indicate (Gen. 2:17; 3:5,22; Dt. 1:39; Rom. 7:1,7-11; Heb. 5:12-14, etc.). Though physically adult he lives morally innocent (1* The traditional notion of original righteousness is an absurdity. How could Adam be righteous if he did not know the law on the basis of which he could become either good or evil?) in the Garden of Eden which by parity of reasoning is the womb of mankind. When the commandment eventually makes its impact on his mind, he breaks it and forfeits the (eternal) life it promises. Thus he is cast out of the Garden as a baby is expelled from the womb to fend for himself in a new and harsh environment. Inevitably, after procreating offspring he finally dies having earned his wages in death (Gen. 5:1-5).  (2* Procreation and death are both ‘the way of all the earth’, Gen. 19:31; 1 Kings 2:2. The former counteracts the latter, Luke 20:34-36.) Thus it is that in a temporal creation all the descendants of Adam, though born potentially capable of gaining the likeness of God (2 Cor. 3:18), begin as flesh and, like the rest of the animal creation, are subject to natural death apart from sin. However, as they develop and become capable of receiving the commandment they are promised (eternal) life on the condition that they keep it. In the event, all fail and so earn death as wages (Gen. 3:22-24; Rom. 5:12; 6:23). Otherwise expressed, all as one come short of the glory of God (cf. Rom. 3:23) promised to all who exercise dominion and keep the law (Gen. 1:26-28; 2:17; Lev. 18:5; Dt. 30:15-20; 32:47, etc.). It is therefore left to the second Adam alone to prove successful.
Children
Once Adam, the first man according to the flesh, has established the pattern, all his descendants who are made in his image (Gen. 5:1-5) copy it and follow in his steps. Not unnaturally they react to the world as he did and under his influence (Rom 5:12). Though born ignorant as Adam himself was and therefore innocent (Dt. 1:39, cf. Rom. 9:11), they all die as a result of their own transgression (Gen. 5, cf. Rom. 3:23; 5:12; 6:23). Despite parental prohibition, usually in the form of a simple negative (Prov. 1:8; 4:1-9; 6:20), all children imitate or rather repeat their first parent’s sin and pay the penalty (pace Art. 9 of the C of E). As James says, it is necessary to break only one commandment to acquire a sinful nature (2:10, cf. John 8:34). A good example of this pattern of conduct is Paul, no less. He claims that he was (like an animal) born biologically ‘alive’ but that when the commandment eventually dawned on his consciousness, he broke it and so (eventually) died (Rom. 7:9f.). For him as for the rest of us his body of flesh was a body of death (Rom. 7:24).
Abimelech
The rest of the Bible rings the changes on this basic pattern established by Adam. Initial ignorance is followed by rational consciousness, knowledge (law), sin, loss of innocence and death (cf. Genesis 5). In Genesis 20 Abimelech provides an example of someone later in life illustrating this same pattern. In ignorance he takes Sarah, Abraham’s wife, into his harem. But when God warns him in a dream that he is infringing (the) law, Abimelech protests his innocence. God acknowledges his basic integrity but nonetheless warns him that death is sure to follow if he does not return Sarah to her husband.
Jonathan
Later in the OT, the pattern of sin and death is reinforced and still holds good. In 1 Samuel 14:24-46 we read of Saul issuing a foolish order to his men not to eat while they are on campaign. Jonathan, however, is blissfully ignorant of his father’s instruction and takes the opportunity to eat with beneficial effect. However, he is soon made aware that he has unwittingly transgressed his father’s command and become subject to the curse on any man who eats food that day. Like Abimelech before him, however, he has committed a ‘sin of ignorance’ and so is upheld by the rest of the Israelite army.
Ahimelech
In 1 Samuel 22 in another incident when death is threatened, Ahimelech one of the priests of Nob asks Saul not to impute sin to him since he was unaware of any infringement of Saul’s commands (22:15). On this occasion, though Saul’s servants refuse to carry out his illegitimate execution order, Doeg the Edomite does it for them. However, the reader is left in no doubt of the innocence of the people of Nob who are culpably slaughtered. The true culprit is Saul himself who has knowingly transgressed the sixth commandment.
Abigail
In 1 Samuel 25:25 Abigail, the wife of Nabal whose name apparently means ‘Fool’, claims that she was not aware of the request made by the young men sent by David. Clearly she herself is innocent of failure to provide hospitality and in the event prevents David himself from taking the law into his own hands and exacting vengeance (1 Sam. 25:26-35). Thus it is God himself who takes Nabal’s life and David is left conscience free, not having shed blood without adequate cause.
David
David of course is well known for his restraint regarding Saul who persecuted him unmercifully. He takes the view that the God who has promised him the kingdom will give it to him when the time is ripe and even when he has the opportunity to dispatch Saul he refrains from doing so. In 2 Samuel 3, however, we learn that Joab and Abishai have no such inhibitions and unbeknown to David (vv.26,28) they kill Abner because he had earlier killed their brother Asahel in the battle at Gibeon. Emphasis is placed on David’s ignorance of the dastardly deed (2:5) in 3:28 and 37 (cf. 39) and yet again in 1 Kings 2:32.
The Old Testament In General
Throughout the OT it is made clear that sin relates to law and constitutes its infraction (Jer. 31:29f.; Ezek. 18). If the law is not transgressed, there is innocence. (This is not to deny of course that supporting, participating, encouraging and delighting in sin perpetrated by others is deemed to be sinful.) But precisely because man, even the heathen (e.g. Amos 1:3-2:3), knows the law in some sense, his failure to obey that law means he becomes a sinner. Confirmation of this is found in references like 1 Kings 8:46, Psalms 130:3 and 143:2. On the other hand, if he does not break the law, sin cannot legitimately be imputed to him. Thus the false charge laid against Naboth in 1 Kings 21 (cf. Luke 23) is regarded with abhorrence: it is a clear breach of the law laid down by Moses in Exodus 23:7. The view of good and evil first manifested in Genesis is supported by Proverbs 17:15 (cf. 1 K. 8:32, etc.) where we read that the justification of the wicked and the condemnation of the righteous are alike an abomination to the Lord. If this is so, two things become immediately clear: first, since Adam like a baby did not initially know the law, he could not possibly have been created righteous, and, second, since all his descendants follow in his steps and begin at the beginning in ignorance of the law and of good and evil, they cannot be sinners at birth. So, if we accept the authority of the OT we are forced to query the traditional “Christian” idea that we are born sinners. These inferences, needless to say, are supported by verses such as Exodus 32:33, which tell us that it is only the soul that (actually) sins dies, and Deuteronomy 1:39 which informs us unmistakably that babies that do not know the difference between good and evil are implicitly innocent (cf. 1 K. 3:7,9; Isa. 7:15f.).
The New Testament
It now behoves us to ask if the inferences just drawn hold in the NT. Bearing in mind that the Jews and even the Orthodox have always rejected the “Christian” idea of original sin that teaches us that we are guilty ‘in Adam’ (cf. Rom. 5:12; 1 Cor. 15:22. Bengel gave this idea classical expression when he taught that all sinned implicitly in the sin of Adam, omnes peccarunt, Adamo peccante.) it is important to note that the NT itself lays heavy stress on the need for knowledge as the basis for guilt. To suggest what is known as the imputation of Adam’s sin would appear to be a false inference from Romans 5:12 where the crucial words ‘in Adam’ are conspicuously absent. And if it is argued that they do appear in 1 Corinthians 15:22 where Paul’s subject is the flesh and the body to come, it must be countered that their transference to Romans 5 is illegitimate and inevitably leads to a contradiction within the Bible itself. This can be demonstrated by reference to other teaching.
Jesus
First, Jesus himself implies that where there is no knowledge or law, there can be no guilt. This cannot but imply that babies, like Adam and Eve at the beginning, are born innocent and potentially blessed (Mark 10:14). In John 9:41 Jesus tells the Pharisees that if they were blind, they would not have any sin and adds that precisely because they claim to be able to see their sin remains (cf. 8:24). Again in John 15:22 he tells his listeners that if he had not come and spoken to them, they would not be regarded as sinful, but in the circumstances they have no excuse for their sin. Then in verse 24 he reminds them of the unique works he has performed among them. Since these testify to his origin from the Father their rejection of him involves their rejection of his Father too (cf. 5:36-47). He then concludes that their attitude fulfils the teaching of the law that they hated him without a cause.
Paul
Next, Paul, having taught that the heathen are without excuse since they deliberately suppress truth evident in creation (Rom. 1:18-20), ignore the voice of conscience (2:15) and the standards that they themselves apply to others, points out as Amos had done many years before (3:2) that the Jews were the beneficiaries of the law (Rom. 2:17-3:2, cf. 9:4f.) about which they boasted. The problem here was as the apostle points out that circumcision that signifies law is valuable only if it is obeyed (2:25). Otherwise expressed, the greater the light, the greater the responsibility, which is what Jesus himself had taught in somewhat different words elsewhere (Luke 12:48). So while the Jews had an undeniable advantage in one sense, they also had a greater responsibility than the heathen whom they despised. Of course, it was on account of their deliberately self-induced blindness that, as Jesus had warned, the Jews finally lost the kingdom (Mt. 21:43) entrusted to them by God when he chose them from among the nations (Dt. 7:6; 14:2) to be a light and a blessing to them (Isa. 42:6; 49:6; Acts 13:47). The fact that their house or temple was left to them desolate testifies to the judgement God heaped on his own people (Mt. 23:38) who had failed to live up to their privileges and responsibilities.
The importance of knowledge as the basis of sin is taught elsewhere. On the cross Jesus asks God to forgive those who do not know what they are doing. This draws attention to a neglected feature of biblical teaching, that is, diminished responsibility on which we have already touched in differentiating between the Jews and the heathen. Throughout Scripture ignorance is seen as a mitigating factor in the apportionment of blame, and where ignorance is total, so is mitigation. This had been made plain by Moses in Deuteronomy 1:39 (cf. Num. 14:3,29-33) as we have already seen. Babies who like Adam and Eve at the beginning do not know the law are innocent, neither righteous nor evil. Recognition of this immediately calls in question traditional Augustinian teaching that we sin ‘in Adam’, and the idea that Adam’s sin is imputed to us apart from faith is clearly false. If not, then such imputation would as Paul himself indicates be non-meritorious (Rom. 4:1-8). If death is the wages of sin, death must be earned, not imputed. The same is true of life. If it is wages, the law must be kept. (Only Jesus proved capable of keeping the law so as to gain life, Lev. 18:5. According to Scripture even he did not, strictly speaking, earn it. God is indebted to no one, Rom. 11:35, cf. Luke 17:7-10. What Jesus as man did do was meet his Father’s gracious condition of life. With him his Father was well pleased, Mt. 3:17, etc.)
The need for knowledge to establish sin is underscored by 2 Peter 2:20-22 where we are told that if having escaped temporarily from the defilements of the world, we are again entangled in them, our last state is worse than the first. We are reduced to the level of animals from which we originally emerged. In this event, the apostle goes on to indicate that it would have been better that we had never known the way of righteousness than after knowing it to turn back from the holy commandment. Clearly knowledge of the commandment enhanced responsibility. It had done so in the case of Adam in contrast with Eve; it did so in the case of the Jews in contrast with the heathen (Amos 3:2). At this point we need to note that knowledge and commandment are virtually equated and that turning back involves rejection of the commandment. In other contexts this is like sinning against the light, and the author of Hebrews especially has strong words to say when this occurs (see Heb. 6:4-6 and 10:26-31). It might usefully be added that turning back is repeatedly condemned in Scripture for it almost always involves turning back from greater knowledge to lesser, from even minimal human light to animal darkness (2 Pet. 2:22, cf. Jude and note 1 Cor. 6:9-11; Gal. 5:21; Eph. 5:5, etc.). Thus the desire of the Israelites to go back to Egypt was strongly condemned. And when the Jews who had the law wanted to follow the nations later in their history, their reprehensibility was asserted in no uncertain terms (e.g. Ezek. 20:18- 39, cf. Lev. 18:1-5). Going back to Egypt was not just a question of returning to leeks and garlic (Num. 11:4f.) but to idolatry (Jos. 24; Ezek. 20,23, etc.). Not surprisingly idolatry was regarded as the worst of sins, sin against the light (cf. Ps. 106:20; 115; Jer. 2:11, etc.) and bound to provoke God’s jealousy since in his love and mercy his purpose was to save them.
Conclusion
In view of the evidence briefly alluded to above, I conclude that far from being born sinners we are born in total ignorance, knowing nothing. At this stage as flesh we are at one with the animals (cf. Gen. 6:17) which lack the image of God and by nature remain perpetually ignorant of (the) law which promises life. If this is the case, plain logic ought to tell us that mere (animal) flesh is at best only preserved by a general temporary covenant which it does not understand (Gen. 8:22). However, for children who survive like Noah and the heathen there is a limited degree of understanding on the basis of which faith in God and the stability of his creation can be exercised. It cannot go without notice that initially faith begins by recognition that God exists (Heb. 11:6) and from that point it matures as revelation increases till maturity is reached by faith in Christ. In other words, a proper appreciation of biblical covenant theology enables us to see that the progress of the race is reflected or encapsulated in the maturation of the individual. Expressed more succinctly, progressive revelation is matched by progressive maturation. As individuals we progress from animal, to heathen (Noah), to law (Moses) to grace (Christ, cf. Gal. 4:1-7). It is here of course that certain things are made clear that have traditionally been hidden. If we postulate as Augustine did original perfection, fall, curse and ultimate restoration on the basis of arbitrary election, we are blinded to biblical realities and our understanding of the big picture is distorted. On the level of the individual birth or original sin traditionally takes precedence. This is followed by infant baptism which according to Rome automatically (ex opere operato) conveys regeneration. This immediately puts the church in the driving seat and the priest becomes all powerful as the indispensable mediator of eternal life. The reality is wholly otherwise. Just as Adam was ‘born’ innocent so are all his offspring (Dt. 1:39, etc.). Thus mutatis mutandis when a degree of development occurs and knowledge of good and evil or law is attained, faith, which is impossible for animals that do not know the law, becomes possible for all humans who begin to take on the image of God. This teaches us two things: first, this has always been God’s intention and, second, it epitomizes diminished responsibility. This is no where better illustrated than in Hebrews 11 where perfection is achieved only in verses 39 and 40. In other words, Irenaeus’ doctrine of recapitulation as opposed to Augustine’s original perfection, fall, curse and restoration is of the essence of the plan of salvation. Bluntly, uncritical commitment to tradition has nullified the word of God (Mark 7:13).
If this is the biblical picture it follows that Christian faith belongs to the spiritually mature not to infants. Jesus himself progressed from incarnation, through Egyptian heathenism (Mt. 2:15), Jewish law (Luke 2:40-52), (Christian) baptism (Mt. 3:13-17) to final ascension and return to heavenly glory. No wonder that they who through justification by faith have received the Spirit are regarded as more accountable than all others (Heb. 10:26-31). And if we have any queries regarding this, we have only to remember that Jesus as the second Adam recapitulated the experience of all his predecessors and then pioneered that of all who succeeded him, making him the Saviour of all. His atonement was both retrospective (Heb. 9:15) and prospective (Rom. 3:21-31; 1 John 2:2). And all who have faith are manifestly its beneficiaries. Christians have proved remarkably slow to appreciate the truth of John 3:16.
So, in sum, while it is true that where there is no law there is no transgression, it is also true that where there is law there is promise of life (Rom. 7:10; Gal. 3:12).* And since justification by faith precedes life in the order of salvation (Rom. 5:21), we can be sure that the plan of salvation will prove wonderfully successful (Heb. 11; Rev. 7:9). Jesus did not die in vain (Rom. 8:31-39).
* We do well to note that in the NT the all-important commandment is that we believe in Jesus (John 6:29; 1 John 3:23.)

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The apostle Paul tells us in Romans 4:15 that where there is no law there is no sin (cf. Rom. 5:13; 7:1-13; 1 Cor. 15:56, cf. Gal. 5:23). In saying this he clearly assumes that we sin only when we break the law (1 Sam. 15:24; James 2:9-11; 1 John 3:4; 5:17). The question is: Does this conform with normal Scripture usage? It is worth examining the issue, not least because tradition would have us believe that we are born sinners and so must have sinned in some sense before we were born.

Animals

First, there is no suggestion in the Bible that animals sin. The reason must be of course that since unlike man they are not made in the image of God, they do not know the law, and without law there is no transgression (Rom. 4:15). Admittedly they can be held accountable in the sense that stock are subject to destruction, but the reason for this is that they are dangerous, not sinful (Ex. 21:28). It is noticeable that when they are not properly restrained their owner who does know the law is responsible (21:29). In Hebrews 12:20 the point is made that even an animal that touches Mount Sinai is to be stoned to death. Why? The reason is apparently that flesh as such apart from sin cannot live with the holiness of God who is a consuming fire. This would seem to support the notion that all created (material) things give way before the presence of God (Rev. 20:11, cf. Gen. 16:13; 32:30; Isa. 33:14; 1 Cor. 3:12-15; 1 Tim. 1:17; 6:16; Heb. 12:27; James 5:3; 2 Pet. 3:7,10-12, etc.).

Adam and the One Commandment

In contrast with the animals mankind (Adam) is created in the potential (since it has to be acquired, Rom. 8:29; 2 Cor. 3:18) but not the actual image of God (Gen. 1:26-28). In other words, he is subject to development and signs of the image of God are not evident at the start. As a race man is epitomized by Adam, the individual. The line between Adam as mankind and Adam as individual is somewhat difficult to draw since mutatis mutandis, or making the necessary adjustments, what is true of the one is true of the other. In accordance with divine intention, he develops and transcends his merely animal nature (flesh) when he achieves rationality and becomes capable like a child of receiving and understanding the commandment. Prior to this time he does not know the law on which moral standing is based and so is innocent, that is, neither righteous not sinful, neither good nor evil as the following references indicate (Gen. 2:17; 3:5,22; Dt. 1:39; Rom. 7:1,7-11; Heb. 5:12-14, etc.). Though physically adult he lives morally innocent (1* The traditional notion of original righteousness is an absurdity. How could Adam be righteous if he did not know the law on the basis of which he could become either good or evil?) in the Garden of Eden which by parity of reasoning is the womb of mankind. When the commandment eventually makes its impact on his mind, he breaks it and forfeits the (eternal) life it promises. Thus he is cast out of the Garden as a baby is expelled from the womb to fend for himself in a new and harsh environment. Inevitably, after procreating offspring he finally dies having earned his wages in death (Gen. 5:1-5).  (2* Procreation and death are both ‘the way of all the earth’, Gen. 19:31; 1 Kings 2:2. The former counteracts the latter, Luke 20:34-36.) Thus it is that in a temporal creation all the descendants of Adam, though born potentially capable of gaining the likeness of God (2 Cor. 3:18), begin as flesh and, like the rest of the animal creation, are subject to natural death apart from sin. However, as they develop and become capable of receiving the commandment they are promised (eternal) life on the condition that they keep it. In the event, all fail and so earn death as wages (Gen. 3:22-24; Rom. 5:12; 6:23). Otherwise expressed, all as one come short of the glory of God (cf. Rom. 3:23) promised to all who exercise dominion and keep the law (Gen. 1:26-28; 2:17; Lev. 18:5; Dt. 30:15-20; 32:47, etc.). It is therefore left to the second Adam alone to prove successful.

Children

Once Adam, the first man according to the flesh, has established the pattern, all his descendants who are made in his image (Gen. 5:1-5) copy it and follow in his steps. Not unnaturally they react to the world as he did and under his influence (Rom 5:12). Though born ignorant as Adam himself was and therefore innocent (Dt. 1:39, cf. Rom. 9:11), they all die as a result of their own transgression (Gen. 5, cf. Rom. 3:23; 5:12; 6:23). Despite parental prohibition, usually in the form of a simple negative (Prov. 1:8; 4:1-9; 6:20), all children imitate or rather repeat their first parent’s sin and pay the penalty (pace Art. 9 of the C of E). As James says, it is necessary to break only one commandment to acquire a sinful nature (2:10, cf. John 8:34). A good example of this pattern of conduct is Paul, no less. He claims that he was (like an animal) born biologically ‘alive’ but that when the commandment eventually dawned on his consciousness, he broke it and so (eventually) died (Rom. 7:9f.). For him as for the rest of us his body of flesh was a body of death (Rom. 7:24).

Abimelech

The rest of the Bible rings the changes on this basic pattern established by Adam. Initial ignorance is followed by rational consciousness, knowledge (law), sin, loss of innocence and death (cf. Genesis 5). In Genesis 20 Abimelech provides an example of someone later in life illustrating this same pattern. In ignorance he takes Sarah, Abraham’s wife, into his harem. But when God warns him in a dream that he is infringing (the) law, Abimelech protests his innocence. God acknowledges his basic integrity but nonetheless warns him that death is sure to follow if he does not return Sarah to her husband.

Jonathan

Later in the OT, the pattern of sin and death is reinforced and still holds good. In 1 Samuel 14:24-46 we read of Saul issuing a foolish order to his men not to eat while they are on campaign. Jonathan, however, is blissfully ignorant of his father’s instruction and takes the opportunity to eat with beneficial effect. However, he is soon made aware that he has unwittingly transgressed his father’s command and become subject to the curse on any man who eats food that day. Like Abimelech before him, however, he has committed a ‘sin of ignorance’ and so is upheld by the rest of the Israelite army.

Ahimelech

In 1 Samuel 22 in another incident when death is threatened, Ahimelech one of the priests of Nob asks Saul not to impute sin to him since he was unaware of any infringement of Saul’s commands (22:15). On this occasion, though Saul’s servants refuse to carry out his illegitimate execution order, Doeg the Edomite does it for them. However, the reader is left in no doubt of the innocence of the people of Nob who are culpably slaughtered. The true culprit is Saul himself who has knowingly transgressed the sixth commandment.

Abigail

In 1 Samuel 25:25 Abigail, the wife of Nabal whose name apparently means ‘Fool’, claims that she was not aware of the request made by the young men sent by David. Clearly she herself is innocent of failure to provide hospitality and in the event prevents David himself from taking the law into his own hands and exacting vengeance (1 Sam. 25:26-35). Thus it is God himself who takes Nabal’s life and David is left conscience free, not having shed blood without adequate cause.

David

David of course is well known for his restraint regarding Saul who persecuted him unmercifully. He takes the view that the God who has promised him the kingdom will give it to him when the time is ripe and even when he has the opportunity to dispatch Saul he refrains from doing so. In 2 Samuel 3, however, we learn that Joab and Abishai have no such inhibitions and unbeknown to David (vv.26,28) they kill Abner because he had earlier killed their brother Asahel in the battle at Gibeon. Emphasis is placed on David’s ignorance of the dastardly deed (2:5) in 3:28 and 37 (cf. 39) and yet again in 1 Kings 2:32.

The Old Testament In General

Throughout the OT it is made clear that sin relates to law and constitutes its infraction (Jer. 31:29f.; Ezek. 18). If the law is not transgressed, there is innocence. (This is not to deny of course that supporting, participating, encouraging and delighting in sin perpetrated by others is deemed to be sinful.) But precisely because man, even the heathen (e.g. Amos 1:3-2:3), knows the law in some sense, his failure to obey that law means he becomes a sinner. Confirmation of this is found in references like 1 Kings 8:46, Psalms 130:3 and 143:2. On the other hand, if he does not break the law, sin cannot legitimately be imputed to him. Thus the false charge laid against Naboth in 1 Kings 21 (cf. Luke 23) is regarded with abhorrence: it is a clear breach of the law laid down by Moses in Exodus 23:7. The view of good and evil first manifested in Genesis is supported by Proverbs 17:15 (cf. 1 K. 8:32, etc.) where we read that the justification of the wicked and the condemnation of the righteous are alike an abomination to the Lord. If this is so, two things become immediately clear: first, since Adam like a baby did not initially know the law, he could not possibly have been created righteous, and, second, since all his descendants follow in his steps and begin at the beginning in ignorance of the law and of good and evil, they cannot be sinners at birth. So, if we accept the authority of the OT we are forced to query the traditional “Christian” idea that we are born sinners. These inferences, needless to say, are supported by verses such as Exodus 32:33, which tell us that it is only the soul that (actually) sins dies, and Deuteronomy 1:39 which informs us unmistakably that babies that do not know the difference between good and evil are implicitly innocent (cf. 1 K. 3:7,9; Isa. 7:15f.).

The New Testament

It now behoves us to ask if the inferences just drawn hold in the NT. Bearing in mind that the Jews and even the Orthodox have always rejected the “Christian” idea of original sin that teaches us that we are guilty ‘in Adam’ (cf. Rom. 5:12; 1 Cor. 15:22. Bengel gave this idea classical expression when he taught that all sinned implicitly in the sin of Adam, omnes peccarunt, Adamo peccante.) it is important to note that the NT itself lays heavy stress on the need for knowledge as the basis for guilt. To suggest what is known as the imputation of Adam’s sin would appear to be a false inference from Romans 5:12 where the crucial words ‘in Adam’ are conspicuously absent. And if it is argued that they do appear in 1 Corinthians 15:22 where Paul’s subject is the flesh and the body to come, it must be countered that their transference to Romans 5 is illegitimate and inevitably leads to a contradiction within the Bible itself. This can be demonstrated by reference to other teaching.

Jesus

First, Jesus himself implies that where there is no knowledge or law, there can be no guilt. This cannot but imply that babies, like Adam and Eve at the beginning, are born innocent and potentially blessed (Mark 10:14). In John 9:41 Jesus tells the Pharisees that if they were blind, they would not have any sin and adds that precisely because they claim to be able to see their sin remains (cf. 8:24). Again in John 15:22 he tells his listeners that if he had not come and spoken to them, they would not be regarded as sinful, but in the circumstances they have no excuse for their sin. Then in verse 24 he reminds them of the unique works he has performed among them. Since these testify to his origin from the Father their rejection of him involves their rejection of his Father too (cf. 5:36-47). He then concludes that their attitude fulfils the teaching of the law that they hated him without a cause.

Paul

Next, Paul, having taught that the heathen are without excuse since they deliberately suppress truth evident in creation (Rom. 1:18-20), ignore the voice of conscience (2:15) and the standards that they themselves apply to others, points out as Amos had done many years before (3:2) that the Jews were the beneficiaries of the law (Rom. 2:17-3:2, cf. 9:4f.) about which they boasted. The problem here was as the apostle points out that circumcision that signifies law is valuable only if it is obeyed (2:25). Otherwise expressed, the greater the light, the greater the responsibility, which is what Jesus himself had taught in somewhat different words elsewhere (Luke 12:48). So while the Jews had an undeniable advantage in one sense, they also had a greater responsibility than the heathen whom they despised. Of course, it was on account of their deliberately self-induced blindness that, as Jesus had warned, the Jews finally lost the kingdom (Mt. 21:43) entrusted to them by God when he chose them from among the nations (Dt. 7:6; 14:2) to be a light and a blessing to them (Isa. 42:6; 49:6; Acts 13:47). The fact that their house or temple was left to them desolate testifies to the judgement God heaped on his own people (Mt. 23:38) who had failed to live up to their privileges and responsibilities.

The importance of knowledge as the basis of sin is taught elsewhere. On the cross Jesus asks God to forgive those who do not know what they are doing. This draws attention to a neglected feature of biblical teaching, that is, diminished responsibility on which we have already touched in differentiating between the Jews and the heathen. Throughout Scripture ignorance is seen as a mitigating factor in the apportionment of blame, and where ignorance is total, so is mitigation. This had been made plain by Moses in Deuteronomy 1:39 (cf. Num. 14:3,29-33) as we have already seen. Babies who like Adam and Eve at the beginning do not know the law are innocent, neither righteous nor evil. Recognition of this immediately calls in question traditional Augustinian teaching that we sin ‘in Adam’, and the idea that Adam’s sin is imputed to us apart from faith is clearly false. If not, then such imputation would as Paul himself indicates be non-meritorious (Rom. 4:1-8). If death is the wages of sin, death must be earned, not imputed. The same is true of life. If it is wages, the law must be kept. (Only Jesus proved capable of keeping the law so as to gain life, Lev. 18:5. According to Scripture even he did not, strictly speaking, earn it. God is indebted to no one, Rom. 11:35, cf. Luke 17:7-10. What Jesus as man did do was meet his Father’s gracious condition of life. With him his Father was well pleased, Mt. 3:17, etc.)

The need for knowledge to establish sin is underscored by 2 Peter 2:20-22 where we are told that if having escaped temporarily from the defilements of the world, we are again entangled in them, our last state is worse than the first. We are reduced to the level of animals from which we originally emerged. In this event, the apostle goes on to indicate that it would have been better that we had never known the way of righteousness than after knowing it to turn back from the holy commandment. Clearly knowledge of the commandment enhanced responsibility. It had done so in the case of Adam in contrast with Eve; it did so in the case of the Jews in contrast with the heathen (Amos 3:2). At this point we need to note that knowledge and commandment are virtually equated and that turning back involves rejection of the commandment. In other contexts this is like sinning against the light, and the author of Hebrews especially has strong words to say when this occurs (see Heb. 6:4-6 and 10:26-31). It might usefully be added that turning back is repeatedly condemned in Scripture for it almost always involves turning back from greater knowledge to lesser, from even minimal human light to animal darkness (2 Pet. 2:22, cf. Jude and note 1 Cor. 6:9-11; Gal. 5:21; Eph. 5:5, etc.). Thus the desire of the Israelites to go back to Egypt was strongly condemned. And when the Jews who had the law wanted to follow the nations later in their history, their reprehensibility was asserted in no uncertain terms (e.g. Ezek. 20:18- 39, cf. Lev. 18:1-5). Going back to Egypt was not just a question of returning to leeks and garlic (Num. 11:4f.) but to idolatry (Jos. 24; Ezek. 20,23, etc.). Not surprisingly idolatry was regarded as the worst of sins, sin against the light (cf. Ps. 106:20; 115; Jer. 2:11, etc.) and bound to provoke God’s jealousy since in his love and mercy his purpose was to save them.

Conclusion

In view of the evidence briefly alluded to above, I conclude that far from being born sinners we are born in total ignorance, knowing nothing. At this stage as flesh we are at one with the animals (cf. Gen. 6:17) which lack the image of God and by nature remain perpetually ignorant of (the) law which promises life. If this is the case, plain logic ought to tell us that mere (animal) flesh is at best only preserved by a general temporary covenant which it does not understand (Gen. 8:22). However, for children who survive like Noah and the heathen there is a limited degree of understanding on the basis of which faith in God and the stability of his creation can be exercised. It cannot go without notice that initially faith begins by recognition that God exists (Heb. 11:6) and from that point it matures as revelation increases till maturity is reached by faith in Christ. In other words, a proper appreciation of biblical covenant theology enables us to see that the progress of the race is reflected or encapsulated in the maturation of the individual. Expressed more succinctly, progressive revelation is matched by progressive maturation. As individuals we progress from animal, to heathen (Noah), to law (Moses) to grace (Christ, cf. Gal. 4:1-7). It is here of course that certain things are made clear that have traditionally been hidden. If we postulate as Augustine did original perfection, fall, curse and ultimate restoration on the basis of arbitrary election, we are blinded to biblical realities and our understanding of the big picture is distorted. On the level of the individual birth or original sin traditionally takes precedence. This is followed by infant baptism which according to Rome automatically (ex opere operato) conveys regeneration. This immediately puts the church in the driving seat and the priest becomes all powerful as the indispensable mediator of eternal life. The reality is wholly otherwise. Just as Adam was ‘born’ innocent so are all his offspring (Dt. 1:39, etc.). Thus mutatis mutandis when a degree of development occurs and knowledge of good and evil or law is attained, faith, which is impossible for animals that do not know the law, becomes possible for all humans who begin to take on the image of God. This teaches us two things: first, this has always been God’s intention and, second, it epitomizes diminished responsibility. This is no where better illustrated than in Hebrews 11 where perfection is achieved only in verses 39 and 40. In other words, Irenaeus’ doctrine of recapitulation as opposed to Augustine’s original perfection, fall, curse and restoration is of the essence of the plan of salvation. Bluntly, uncritical commitment to tradition has nullified the word of God (Mark 7:13).

If this is the biblical picture it follows that Christian faith belongs to the spiritually mature not to infants. Jesus himself progressed from incarnation, through Egyptian heathenism (Mt. 2:15), Jewish law (Luke 2:40-52), (Christian) baptism (Mt. 3:13-17) to final ascension and return to heavenly glory. No wonder that they who through justification by faith have received the Spirit are regarded as more accountable than all others (Heb. 10:26-31). And if we have any queries regarding this, we have only to remember that Jesus as the second Adam recapitulated the experience of all his predecessors and then pioneered that of all who succeeded him, making him the Saviour of all. His atonement was both retrospective (Heb. 9:15) and prospective (Rom. 3:21-31; 1 John 2:2). And all who have faith are manifestly its beneficiaries. Christians have proved remarkably slow to appreciate the truth of John 3:16.

So, in sum, while it is true that where there is no law there is no transgression, it is also true that where there is law there is promise of life (Rom. 7:10; Gal. 3:12).* And since justification by faith precedes life in the order of salvation (Rom. 5:21), we can be sure that the plan of salvation will prove wonderfully successful (Heb. 11; Rev. 7:9). Jesus did not die in vain (Rom. 8:31-39).

* We do well to note that in the NT the all-important commandment is that we believe in Jesus (John 6:29; 1 John 3:23.)

Nature Red in Tooth and Claw

NATURE RED IN TOOTH AND CLAW
As a Lincolnshire man born near Burgh le Marsh not far from Somersby, the birth place of Alfred Lord Tennyson, I am well aware that it was the latter who once said that nature was red in tooth and claw. It is.  We do indeed live in ‘a world of plunder and prey’. This is made especially plain nowadays even to city dwellers who watch the TV nature programs of Sir David Attenborough and others. As a Christian I am supposed to be perturbed at this and in urgent need of a theodicy, a way of justifying God as a good Creator. Perhaps as a countryman who has been used to animal death since childhood I may appear somewhat hard-hearted. At the age of three I was present and ritually bloodied when a hunted fox was driven to ground and shot in its den and, at about four still before WW2, I distinctly remember watching a pig being killed without the use of a humane killer or stun gun. Even then, I was not unduly upset by the loud squealing and the flood of blood. Perhaps over the years my sensibilities have been somewhat further coarsened but, though I am hotly opposed to the deliberate mistreatment of animals, I am not as inclined to anthropomorphism as many are today. (1* With a knee-jerk reaction the Australian government in 2011 put an immediate ban on the live animal trade with Indonesia because certain people were upset by the admittedly disturbing TV images of cattle being mishandled at slaughterhouses. By doing this the entire trade and millions of dollars of investment were jeopardized. In Britain, on the basis of popular sentiment, fox hunting had earlier suffered a less dramatic demise like bull fighting in Spain, I believe.) For all that, Tennyson’s graphic phraseology deserves a reasonable response. So here goes.
The Cruelty of the Creator
The all-important relevant question is: Is God cruel? Does God treat animals as wanton boys treat flies and kill them for their sport (King Lear)? Job, like the Psalmist (104:24,27f.; 145:13b-17), implies that he does not. He says in Job 39:13-18 that the ostrich leaves its eggs on the ground forgetting that they may get trampled. From this he concludes that the ostrich itself adopts a cruel attitude towards its young and treats them as if they were not its own. This superficially strange behaviour is put down to the fact that God has made it forget wisdom and given it no share in understanding.  The Psalmist agrees and says that the horse or mule is also without understanding (32:9) and has to be curbed with a bit and bridle (cf. James 3:3). And while Isaiah tells us that horses are flesh and not spirit (31:3), Elihu informs us in Job 35:11 that the beasts and birds are not as well taught and as wise as man is. Doubtless there are inferences to be drawn from these references and comments, as we shall see.
Animals Irrational
Elsewhere in Scripture animals are regarded as irrational creatures of instinct born to be caught and killed. Where they are not being prepared for the slaughterhouse and the butcher’s knife, they are perpetually involved in mutual predation. Observation underlines the truth of this. On the other hand, people who act like them can expect to be treated like them (2 Pet. 2:12; Jude 10; Rev. 21:8, etc.). The fact that animal sacrifice was basic to the OT cultus, which was specifically ordained by God himself, would suggest that cruelty, and therefore sin, was not involved. Indeed, it is almost ironic to point out that the sacrifices were designed to atone for sin. However, if it is insisted that the slaughter of animals is sinful, then the rivers of blood spilt by sacrificing priests testify ominously against the goodness of our Creator God.
Jesus and Meat Eating
Though in mankind’s infancy meat was, not surprisingly, not on the menu (cf. Gen. 2:9; 3:6), it was so later (Gen. 9:3). Under the law of Moses the Israelites rejoiced in eating meat as God blessed them (Dt. 12:15, etc.), but there were definite restrictions on their diet (Dt. 14:1-21). Jesus, however, made all foods clean (Mark 7:19, cf. 1 Tim. 4:3f.) and was even personally accused of being a wine bibber and a glutton. After his resurrection he certainly ate fish (Luke 24:41-43). It would appear from this that if God is to be charged with evil for allowing animals to be slaughtered, so is Jesus. Clearly Christianity is no friend of strict vegetarianism. One is prompted to ask why.
Child Sacrifice
In contrast with Israel some of the heathen nations resorted to child sacrifice, something Abraham, who was prepared to sacrifice Isaac at God’s bidding, could hardly have been entirely unaware of. It was certainly taboo later in Israel’s history as is pointed out in Leviticus 18:21 and Jeremiah 7:31, 19:5 and 32:35. The reason for this is doubtless to be found in the teaching of Genesis 9:6 where human beings who are made in the image of God are regarded in a different light from mere animals. (2* We need to be careful here. It is evident from history, experience, observation and the teaching of Scripture that man is only potentially (made) in the image of God. It is not until rationality and moral consciousness dawn that man begins to show evidence of being different from other animals. Prior to that, he is ‘flesh’, 1 Cor. 15:46.  See further my Are Babies Saved? Did God Make a Covenant With Creation?   at www.kenstothard.com /.) We might well ask why. (3* On this, see e.g. my Plan 1.)
Circumcision
Then there is the question of circumcision on the eighth day. It may well be argued that this was the commandment of a cruel God who gratuitously caused pain (Gen. 17:12) to the innocent, to those who knew neither good nor evil (Dt. 1:39). But it is never so regarded. Why? After all, Genesis 34 and Joshua 5 make it evident that so far as adults are concerned it could be both painful and incapacitating. Why the apparent difference?
Man an Animal
While all this may be true, it hardly solves our problem. Another question may be posed. Since on the level of the flesh man is an animal (cf. Gen. 6:3,7,17), why should he not be susceptible to slaughter in the same way as an animal is? Why is cannibalism to be regarded as beyond the pale? Again, the answer doubtless has to do with man’s rationality rather than his physicality and his being made in the image of God. Let us take a closer look.
Death the Wages of Sin
Because of our Augustinian tradition, evangelicals, especially fundamentalists, tend to think that all death is the result of sin and rush to prove it by appeal to Romans 6:23. However, this cannot be true for, first, life is promised to Adam, who in contrast with his Creator (Rom. 1:23) is naturally mortal, on the condition that he keeps the commandment (Gen. 2:17, cf. Lev. 18:5, etc.). Second, if death is solely the wages of sin (Gen. 2:17; Rom. 6:23), wages which involve work can only be earned by breaking the law (Rom. 4:15). Animals, however, cannot break a law that they do not have and understand (Rom. 4:15), yet they all die. So, since their death cannot be wages, it must be the result of something else. What is that something else? The traditional answer has been the so-called Adamic curse which resulted in a “Fallen” creation, but this is prone to criticism on a number of fronts. (4* See my various articles on original sin, e.g., Does Romans Teach Original Sin?) Most obviously, it lacks adequate support and is contradicted by other evidence. (5* See, for example, my Cosmic Curse?) The truth is surely that in contrast with the immortal and incorruptible God (Rom. 1:23; 1 Tim. 1:17; 6:16), death in a temporal creation which has both a beginning and an end is natural and corruption or aging is universal as Paul plainly indicates in Romans 8:18-25 (6* This is widely denied by both translators and commentators who are clearly conditioned by traditional Augustinianism. See further my Romans 8:18-25, Augustine: Asset or Liability.) and the author of Hebrews in 1:10-12. It is imperative to appreciate the fact that while Jesus only avoided death as wages by not sinning (1 Pet. 2:22, cf. Heb. 5:7-9), even he got older (Luke 3:23; John 8:57, etc.) and so would have died naturally (cf. 2 Cor. 4:16; Heb. 8:13b) in a creation which had been subjected to futility if he had not been transformed at his ascent into heaven. (7* On this, see, for example, my Death and Corruption, Romans 8:18-25,  Two ‘Natural’ Necessities, Are Believers Butterflies?)
Our First Parents
This, however, raises another point of profound significance. If we humans at our baby beginning as both race and individual are merely animal flesh (cf. 1 Cor. 15:46), we must resemble mutatis mutandis Adam and Eve when they were first created and knew neither the commandment (law) nor the good and evil which it determined and defined (Gen. 2:17; 3:5,22, cf. Dt. 1:39, etc.). In light of the increase in Eve’s pain (Gen. 3:16) we are inexorably led to the conclusion that as babies we may feel pain but do not know it. We do not remember being born, for example, though a difficult birth involving forceps and the rest may well be extremely painful and in some cases even lead to death. Though our bodies may react to pain, we are totally unconscious of it. How many of us remember the bumps and bruises of our infancy? It is only as we become self-conscious and moral to some degree (that is, capable of understanding our parents’ negative commandment like Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, cf. Prov. 1:8; 4:1-9; 6:20) that conscious pain makes its impact on us.
(Note. The increase in Eve’s pain implies (a) that she was a corporate personality as well as an individual and, (b) that as the former she had had fleshly offspring before. However, it was only as she developed self-consciousness that she became aware of it. This confirms Paul’s view expressed in 1 Corinthians 15:46 that we are flesh before we are spirit. This is true of both the race and of the individual. See further my Creation and/or Evolution.)
Animals
Now if this is true of babies, it must also be true of animals. Since the latter never develop moral awareness which implies self-consciousness, they never consciously experience pain. And their death simply plays a role in the ecology of which they are so obviously a part.  What is more, far from being the result of sin which, I stress again, implies a degree of moral awareness (8* It is absolutely vital to realize that sin, which depends on law and apart from law is non-existent, Rom. 3:20b; 4:15; 7:7f.; 1 John 3:4, etc., is by definition conscious no matter how minimally. Pace those who believe in original sin and baptize innocent and unself-conscious babies to remedy the situation. See further my various articles on original sin and baptism.), pain is the inevitable concomitant of self-consciousness. In other words, as the old adage has it: no brain, no pain. Put plainly, sin, which implies growing (self-) consciousness, does not cause pain as our Augustinian tradition would have it but is simply co-incidental or contemporaneous with it. We may demonstrate the connection as follows:
The Relationship Between Sin and Pain
(1) Where there is no law or knowledge, there is neither sin (Rom. 4:15; 7:7; John 9:41; 15:22,24) nor pain (cf. Job 3:20; 5:7; 7:1; 14:1; Jer. 20:18). Thus both Job and Jeremiah who suffered much despite their relative righteousness wished they had stayed in the womb which clearly symbolized the Garden of Eden recapitulated in miniature. (9* It might be usefully observed at this point that neither Adam, Gen. 3:22-24, nor Nicodemus, John 3:4, once they were outside could re-enter the womb. Even the second Adam had to find a different way to enter the true paradise his mother’s womb had merely typified, Luke 23:43! It is interesting to note that when Tennyson’s son was strangled by his cord at birth the poet wrote, “He was – not born … but he was released from the prison where he moved for nine months ….” See Tennyson, p.254, by Michael Thorn, London, 1992.)
(2) Where there is sin, there is both knowledge and pain. Alternatively expressed, knowledge or intelligent consciousness is common to both sin and pain. The one implies the other except in the case of Jesus who experienced pain but not sin because he kept the law he knew only too well.
Nature’s Apparent Cruelty
If this is true, then nature’s apparent cruelty is precisely that – apparent. So, to say that death and suffering in general entered the world through human sin reflects profound misunderstanding. If animal perceptions are purely sensory and do not involve intelligent consciousness, it should cause us no surprise to read how it is precisely God himself who of set purpose feeds the carnivorous lions (Ps. 104:21,27-29) and the rest of the animal creation (Job 38:39-41; 39:28-30; Mt. 6:26). At the end of the day all flesh, in contrast with God himself (Rom. 1:23), is grass (Isa. 40:6-8, cf. 1 Pet. 1:23-25), and, because it is corruptible and destructible on the one hand and lacks self-awareness on the other, it has no moral value (cf. Col. 2:22a). It has been subjected to futility as part of creation as a whole (Rom. 8:18-25). It will eventually disappear and be replaced without regret (Isa. 65:17; Rev. 21:1-4).
All this ties in with other Scriptural teaching. We can hardly fail to notice that the flesh, though not evil as such as the Greeks imagined, is regarded pejoratively throughout the Bible (cf. Jer. 17:5, etc.).   For example, in John 6:63 and Romans 7:18 we are expressly told that it is unprofitable. Indeed, Paul goes so far as to say in Romans 8:6 (cf. v.13; Gal. 6:7f.) that to set the mind on the flesh in contrast with the spirit is death (cf. Rom. 8:13; Gal. 6:7f.). Why? The answer is that the flesh is by nature non-rational, non-moral and hence ephemeral like the rest of the physical creation (cf. Rom. 8:10). No matter how much or how well we and other animals eat to nurture the flesh we nonetheless die. Jesus made this plain when he quoted Moses in Matthew 4:4 to the effect that man as one who is made in the image of God cannot live on bread alone. He harps on the same theme again in some detail in John 6:22-63.
The Atonement
Another point must be made. As a rational man Jesus knew that the laying down of his life for his friends would involve great suffering which was quite alien to the many amoral animals that were constantly and repeatedly sacrificed in the OT cultus (Heb. 10:11, etc.). In other words, in contrast with Levitical animal sacrifice, his sin-offering gained its significance from the fact that it was consciously, morally and intentionally offered at great personal cost (Heb. 10:12). Perhaps this is why suffering is so important to the Christian life which involves fleshly self-denial (Mark 8:34-37). Little wonder that Paul once wrote: “I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the sharing of his suffering by becoming like him in his death” (Phil. 3:10, NRSV).  The truth is that if salvation is to be achieved, the flesh along with earthly things in general (cf. Gal. 5:24; 6:14) must be put to death both metaphorically (Col. 3:1-5a; Phil. 3:19) and literally (1 Cor. 15:42-50; 2 Cor. 5:1). By contrast, the spirit must be nurtured (Gal. 5:16,18,22-24), for its destination is the heavenly city and its destiny corporeal glory (2 Cor. 5:1; Phil. 3:20f.) not obliteration (cf. Isa. 43:15-21; 65:17; 2 Pet. 3:13).
Conclusion
Far from providing a good excuse for postulating atheism and naturalistic evolution, I believe that the death and corruption which pervade the entire physical world (this present ‘evil’ age, cf. Rom. 7:24; 8:18; 2 Cor. 4:17; Gal. 1:4; Eph. 5:16; 1 Pet. 5:1) from which we must of necessity escape (1 Cor. 15:50; 2 Tim. 1:10) is the seed-bed of the gospel which points to the hope of salvation in Christ. (10* Dusty Adam, like the rest of his posterity including Paul, was clearly created mortal and corruptible but was promised (eternal) life if he kept the commandment, Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5; Rom. 7:9f.) In other words, far from being a blind watchmaker God has intentionally made creation futile because he has an invisible hope in mind (Rom. 8:20,24). We were never intended to live forever in corruptible flesh (cf. Gen. 6:3) on an intrinsically impermanent earth. (11* Pace again those who think in terms of a ‘Fall’ from original perfection and postulate an OT-style restoration! See further my essays on the redemption of creation.) What Sir David Attenborough and others are showing us in spectacular fashion in the twenty-first century is that as flesh we along with the entire (animal) creation are trapped in futility (Ps. 146:4; Rom. 8:20) and, apart from procreation which itself is temporary and ultimately futile, have no way of escape (Luke 21:35, cf. Ps. 31:3-5). (12* The idea that we survive in our offspring is in my view poor comfort and does little to offset the reality of final futility. See further my Death Before Genesis 3, Escape.) But as creatures who are being fashioned in the image of God (2 Cor. 3:18), we have received a heavenly call (Heb. 3:1, cf. Phil 3:14) to eternal life and spiritual perfection (Heb. 6:1; Phil. 3:12f.) which we dare not neglect (Heb. 2:3) on pain of death, the second death (Rev. 2:11). This latter is a much more serious matter than mere physical death, as Jesus plainly implied (Mt. 10:28; John 11:25).
(The reader may find it helpful to read my Creation and/or Evolution, I Believe in Recapitulation, Correspondences, and various essays dealing with the putative redemption of creation at www.kenstothard.com  /.)
Note: In his Evil and the God of Love (Fontana Library, 1968) John Hick initially expresses doubt about the consciousness of animals (p.346) but appears to conclude that they lack it (p.349). On page 350 he suggests that on the whole an animal is immune to distinctively human forms of suffering and concludes that the picture of animal life as a dark ocean of agonizing fear and pain is quite gratuitous.

.

As a Lincolnshire man born near Burgh le Marsh not far from Somersby, the birth place of Alfred Lord Tennyson, I am well aware that it was the latter who once said that nature was red in tooth and claw. It is.  We do indeed live in ‘a world of plunder and prey’. This is made especially plain nowadays even to city dwellers who watch the TV nature programs of Sir David Attenborough and others. As a Christian I am supposed to be perturbed at this and in urgent need of a theodicy, a way of justifying God as a good Creator. Perhaps as a countryman who has been used to animal death since childhood I may appear somewhat hard-hearted. At the age of three I was present and ritually bloodied when a hunted fox was driven to ground and shot in its den and, at about four still before WW2, I distinctly remember watching a pig being killed without the use of a humane killer or stun gun. Even then, I was not unduly upset by the loud squealing and the flood of blood. Perhaps over the years my sensibilities have been somewhat further coarsened but, though I am hotly opposed to the deliberate mistreatment of animals, I am not as inclined to anthropomorphism as many are today. (1* With a knee-jerk reaction the Australian government in 2011 put an immediate ban on the live animal trade with Indonesia because certain people were upset by the admittedly disturbing TV images of cattle being mishandled at slaughterhouses. By doing this the entire trade and millions of dollars of investment were jeopardized. In Britain, on the basis of popular sentiment, fox hunting had earlier suffered a less dramatic demise like bull fighting in Spain, I believe.) For all that, Tennyson’s graphic phraseology deserves a reasonable response. So here goes.

The Cruelty of the Creator

The all-important relevant question is: Is God cruel? Does God treat animals as wanton boys treat flies and kill them for their sport (King Lear)? Job, like the Psalmist (104:24,27f.; 145:13b-17), implies that he does not. He says in Job 39:13-18 that the ostrich leaves its eggs on the ground forgetting that they may get trampled. From this he concludes that the ostrich itself adopts a cruel attitude towards its young and treats them as if they were not its own. This superficially strange behaviour is put down to the fact that God has made it forget wisdom and given it no share in understanding.  The Psalmist agrees and says that the horse or mule is also without understanding (32:9) and has to be curbed with a bit and bridle (cf. James 3:3). And while Isaiah tells us that horses are flesh and not spirit (31:3), Elihu informs us in Job 35:11 that the beasts and birds are not as well taught and as wise as man is. Doubtless there are inferences to be drawn from these references and comments, as we shall see.

Animals Irrational

Elsewhere in Scripture animals are regarded as irrational creatures of instinct born to be caught and killed. Where they are not being prepared for the slaughterhouse and the butcher’s knife, they are perpetually involved in mutual predation. Observation underlines the truth of this. On the other hand, people who act like them can expect to be treated like them (2 Pet. 2:12; Jude 10; Rev. 21:8, etc.). The fact that animal sacrifice was basic to the OT cultus, which was specifically ordained by God himself, would suggest that cruelty, and therefore sin, was not involved. Indeed, it is almost ironic to point out that the sacrifices were designed to atone for sin. However, if it is insisted that the slaughter of animals is sinful, then the rivers of blood spilt by sacrificing priests testify ominously against the goodness of our Creator God.

Jesus and Meat Eating

Though in mankind’s infancy meat was, not surprisingly, not on the menu (cf. Gen. 2:9; 3:6), it was so later (Gen. 9:3). Under the law of Moses the Israelites rejoiced in eating meat as God blessed them (Dt. 12:15, etc.), but there were definite restrictions on their diet (Dt. 14:1-21). Jesus, however, made all foods clean (Mark 7:19, cf. 1 Tim. 4:3f.) and was even personally accused of being a wine bibber and a glutton. After his resurrection he certainly ate fish (Luke 24:41-43). It would appear from this that if God is to be charged with evil for allowing animals to be slaughtered, so is Jesus. Clearly Christianity is no friend of strict vegetarianism. One is prompted to ask why.

Child Sacrifice

In contrast with Israel some of the heathen nations resorted to child sacrifice, something Abraham, who was prepared to sacrifice Isaac at God’s bidding, could hardly have been entirely unaware of. It was certainly taboo later in Israel’s history as is pointed out in Leviticus 18:21 and Jeremiah 7:31, 19:5 and 32:35. The reason for this is doubtless to be found in the teaching of Genesis 9:6 where human beings who are made in the image of God are regarded in a different light from mere animals. (2* We need to be careful here. It is evident from history, experience, observation and the teaching of Scripture that man is only potentially (made) in the image of God. It is not until rationality and moral consciousness dawn that man begins to show evidence of being different from other animals. Prior to that, he is ‘flesh’, 1 Cor. 15:46.  See further my Are Babies Saved?Did God Make a Covenant with Creation?) We might well ask why. (3* On this, see e.g. my The Plan of Salvation – in outline (1))

Circumcision

Then there is the question of circumcision on the eighth day. It may well be argued that this was the commandment of a cruel God who gratuitously caused pain (Gen. 17:12) to the innocent, to those who knew neither good nor evil (Dt. 1:39). But it is never so regarded. Why? After all, Genesis 34 and Joshua 5 make it evident that so far as adults are concerned it could be both painful and incapacitating. Why the apparent difference?

Man an Animal

While all this may be true, it hardly solves our problem. Another question may be posed. Since on the level of the flesh man is an animal (cf. Gen. 6:3,7,17), why should he not be susceptible to slaughter in the same way as an animal is? Why is cannibalism to be regarded as beyond the pale? Again, the answer doubtless has to do with man’s rationality rather than his physicality and his being made in the image of God. Let us take a closer look.

Death the Wages of Sin

Because of our Augustinian tradition, evangelicals, especially fundamentalists, tend to think that all death is the result of sin and rush to prove it by appeal to Romans 6:23. However, this cannot be true for, first, life is promised to Adam, who in contrast with his Creator (Rom. 1:23) is naturally mortal, on the condition that he keeps the commandment (Gen. 2:17, cf. Lev. 18:5, etc.). Second, if death is solely the wages of sin (Gen. 2:17; Rom. 6:23), wages which involve work can only be earned by breaking the law (Rom. 4:15). Animals, however, cannot break a law that they do not have and understand (Rom. 4:15), yet they all die. So, since their death cannot be wages, it must be the result of something else. What is that something else? The traditional answer has been the so-called Adamic curse which resulted in a “Fallen” creation, but this is prone to criticism on a number of fronts. (4* See my various articles on original sin, e.g., Does Romans Teach Original Sin?) Most obviously, it lacks adequate support and is contradicted by other evidence. (5* See, for example, my Cosmic Curse?) The truth is surely that in contrast with the immortal and incorruptible God (Rom. 1:23; 1 Tim. 1:17; 6:16), death in a temporal creation which has both a beginning and an end is natural and corruption or aging is universal as Paul plainly indicates in Romans 8:18-25 (6* This is widely denied by both translators and commentators who are clearly conditioned by traditional Augustinianism. See further my Romans 8:18-25Augustine: Asset or Liability?.) and the author of Hebrews in 1:10-12. It is imperative to appreciate the fact that while Jesus only avoided death as wages by not sinning (1 Pet. 2:22, cf. Heb. 5:7-9), even he got older (Luke 3:23; John 8:57, etc.) and so would have died naturally (cf. 2 Cor. 4:16; Heb. 8:13b) in a creation which had been subjected to futility if he had not been transformed at his ascent into heaven. (7* On this, see, for example, my Death and CorruptionRomans 8:18-25,   Two ‘Natural’ NecessitiesAre Believers Butterflies?)

Our First Parents

This, however, raises another point of profound significance. If we humans at our baby beginning as both race and individual are merely animal flesh (cf. 1 Cor. 15:46), we must resemble mutatis mutandis Adam and Eve when they were first created and knew neither the commandment (law) nor the good and evil which it determined and defined (Gen. 2:17; 3:5,22, cf. Dt. 1:39, etc.). In light of the increase in Eve’s pain (Gen. 3:16) we are inexorably led to the conclusion that as babies we may feel pain but do not know it. We do not remember being born, for example, though a difficult birth involving forceps and the rest may well be extremely painful and in some cases even lead to death. Though our bodies may react to pain, we are totally unconscious of it. How many of us remember the bumps and bruises of our infancy? It is only as we become self-conscious and moral to some degree (that is, capable of understanding our parents’ negative commandment like Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, cf. Prov. 1:8; 4:1-9; 6:20) that conscious pain makes its impact on us.

(Note. The increase in Eve’s pain implies (a) that she was a corporate personality as well as an individual and, (b) that as the former she had had fleshly offspring before. However, it was only as she developed self-consciousness that she became aware of it. This confirms Paul’s view expressed in 1 Corinthians 15:46 that we are flesh before we are spirit. This is true of both the race and of the individual. See further my  Creation and / or Evolution.)

Animals

Now if this is true of babies, it must also be true of animals. Since the latter never develop moral awareness which implies self-consciousness, they never consciously experience pain. And their death simply plays a role in the ecology of which they are so obviously a part.  What is more, far from being the result of sin which, I stress again, implies a degree of moral awareness (8* It is absolutely vital to realize that sin, which depends on law and apart from law is non-existent, Rom. 3:20b; 4:15; 7:7f.; 1 John 3:4, etc., is by definition conscious no matter how minimally. Pace those who believe in original sin and baptize innocent and unself-conscious babies to remedy the situation. See further my various articles on original sin and baptism.), pain is the inevitable concomitant of self-consciousness. In other words, as the old adage has it: no brain, no pain. Put plainly, sin, which implies growing (self-) consciousness, does not cause pain as our Augustinian tradition would have it but is simply co-incidental or contemporaneous with it. We may demonstrate the connection as follows:

The Relationship Between Sin and Pain

(1) Where there is no law or knowledge, there is neither sin (Rom. 4:15; 7:7; John 9:41; 15:22,24) nor pain (cf. Job 3:20; 5:7; 7:1; 14:1; Jer. 20:18). Thus both Job and Jeremiah who suffered much despite their relative righteousness wished they had stayed in the womb which clearly symbolized the Garden of Eden recapitulated in miniature. (9* It might be usefully observed at this point that neither Adam, Gen. 3:22-24, nor Nicodemus, John 3:4, once they were outside could re-enter the womb. Even the second Adam had to find a different way to enter the true paradise his mother’s womb had merely typified, Luke 23:43! It is interesting to note that when Tennyson’s son was strangled by his cord at birth the poet wrote, “He was – not born … but he was released from the prison where he moved for nine months ….” See Tennyson, p.254, by Michael Thorn, London, 1992.)

(2) Where there is sin, there is both knowledge and pain. Alternatively expressed, knowledge or intelligent consciousness is common to both sin and pain. The one implies the other except in the case of Jesus who experienced pain but not sin because he kept the law he knew only too well.

Nature’s Apparent Cruelty

If this is true, then nature’s apparent cruelty is precisely that – apparent. So, to say that death and suffering in general entered the world through human sin reflects profound misunderstanding. If animal perceptions are purely sensory and do not involve intelligent consciousness, it should cause us no surprise to read how it is precisely God himself who of set purpose feeds the carnivorous lions (Ps. 104:21,27-29) and the rest of the animal creation (Job 38:39-41; 39:28-30; Mt. 6:26). At the end of the day all flesh, in contrast with God himself (Rom. 1:23), is grass (Isa. 40:6-8, cf. 1 Pet. 1:23-25), and, because it is corruptible and destructible on the one hand and lacks self-awareness on the other, it has no moral value (cf. Col. 2:22a). It has been subjected to futility as part of creation as a whole (Rom. 8:18-25). It will eventually disappear and be replaced without regret (Isa. 65:17; Rev. 21:1-4).

All this ties in with other Scriptural teaching. We can hardly fail to notice that the flesh, though not evil as such as the Greeks imagined, is regarded pejoratively throughout the Bible (cf. Jer. 17:5, etc.).   For example, in John 6:63 and Romans 7:18 we are expressly told that it is unprofitable. Indeed, Paul goes so far as to say in Romans 8:6 (cf. v.13; Gal. 6:7f.) that to set the mind on the flesh in contrast with the spirit is death (cf. Rom. 8:13; Gal. 6:7f.). Why? The answer is that the flesh is by nature non-rational, non-moral and hence ephemeral like the rest of the physical creation (cf. Rom. 8:10). No matter how much or how well we and other animals eat to nurture the flesh we nonetheless die. Jesus made this plain when he quoted Moses in Matthew 4:4 to the effect that man as one who is made in the image of God cannot live on bread alone. He harps on the same theme again in some detail in John 6:22-63.

The Atonement

Another point must be made. As a rational man Jesus knew that the laying down of his life for his friends would involve great suffering which was quite alien to the many amoral animals that were constantly and repeatedly sacrificed in the OT cultus (Heb. 10:11, etc.). In other words, in contrast with Levitical animal sacrifice, his sin-offering gained its significance from the fact that it was consciously, morally and intentionally offered at great personal cost (Heb. 10:12). Perhaps this is why suffering is so important to the Christian life which involves fleshly self-denial (Mark 8:34-37). Little wonder that Paul once wrote: “I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the sharing of his suffering by becoming like him in his death” (Phil. 3:10, NRSV).  The truth is that if salvation is to be achieved, the flesh along with earthly things in general (cf. Gal. 5:24; 6:14) must be put to death both metaphorically (Col. 3:1-5a; Phil. 3:19) and literally (1 Cor. 15:42-50; 2 Cor. 5:1). By contrast, the spirit must be nurtured (Gal. 5:16,18,22-24), for its destination is the heavenly city and its destiny corporeal glory (2 Cor. 5:1; Phil. 3:20f.) not obliteration (cf. Isa. 43:15-21; 65:17; 2 Pet. 3:13).

Conclusion

Far from providing a good excuse for postulating atheism and naturalistic evolution, I believe that the death and corruption which pervade the entire physical world (this present ‘evil’ age, cf. Rom. 7:24; 8:18; 2 Cor. 4:17; Gal. 1:4; Eph. 5:16; 1 Pet. 5:1) from which we must of necessity escape (1 Cor. 15:50; 2 Tim. 1:10) is the seed-bed of the gospel which points to the hope of salvation in Christ. (10* Dusty Adam, like the rest of his posterity including Paul, was clearly created mortal and corruptible but was promised (eternal) life if he kept the commandment, Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5; Rom. 7:9f.) In other words, far from being a blind watchmaker God has intentionally made creation futile because he has an invisible hope in mind (Rom. 8:20,24). We were never intended to live forever in corruptible flesh (cf. Gen. 6:3) on an intrinsically impermanent earth. (11* Pace again those who think in terms of a ‘Fall’ from original perfection and postulate an OT-style restoration! See further my essays on the redemption of creation.) What Sir David Attenborough and others are showing us in spectacular fashion in the twenty-first century is that as flesh we along with the entire (animal) creation are trapped in futility (Ps. 146:4; Rom. 8:20) and, apart from procreation which itself is temporary and ultimately futile, have no way of escape (Luke 21:35, cf. Ps. 31:3-5). (12* The idea that we survive in our offspring is in my view poor comfort and does little to offset the reality of final futility. See further my Death Before Genesis 3Escape.) But as creatures who are being fashioned in the image of God (2 Cor. 3:18), we have received a heavenly call (Heb. 3:1, cf. Phil 3:14) to eternal life and spiritual perfection (Heb. 6:1; Phil. 3:12f.) which we dare not neglect (Heb. 2:3) on pain of death, the second death (Rev. 2:11). This latter is a much more serious matter than mere physical death, as Jesus plainly implied (Mt. 10:28; John 11:25).

(The reader may find it helpful to read my  Creation and / or EvolutionI Believe in RecapitulationCorrespondences, and various essays dealing with the putative redemption of creation)

Notes

1. The Contrast between Painless Birth and Painful Delivery

The violent contrast between the painlessness of (unconscious) birth and the usually excruciating pain of the conscious giving of birth ought to ring a bell in our reflections. The former is never referred to in Scripture presumably because it was taken for granted; the latter receives frequent mention and in both Testaments (e.g. Isa. 13:8; John 16:21). At birth we do not know the commandment (law) and hence neither good nor evil (Dt. 1:39; Rom. 9:11, etc.); in their conscious maturity mothers know both (Gen. 3:6f.,16,22-24; Rom. 7:11) and they may involve pain, sin and even death (Gen. 35:16-20, cf. Ps. 51:5 ESV)!

2. The Contrast between Human and Animal Delivery

It is perhaps more important still to recognize the difference between a conscious woman’s pain and the near painlessness of animals’ giving birth. Nowadays we see numerous animal births, of wildebeest, for example, on TV. Conscious pain seems to be absent and mothers seem to be ready for flight at approaching danger almost immediately. When we bear this in mind, Genesis 3:16 makes a great deal of sense. The difference between knowledge and instinct is implicit especially in Job 39:1-4 (cf. Jer. 12:3; 2 Pet. 2:12-22; Jude 10). With a rational woman God can make a covenant (cf. Noah), but not with the wild ox and Leviathan who like most animals are beyond domestication (cf. Job 39:9; 41:4). (See further my Did God Make a Covenant with Creation?)

3. In his Evil and the God of Love (Fontana Library, 1968) John Hick initially expresses doubt about the consciousness of animals (p.346) but appears to conclude that they lack it (p.349). On page 350 he suggests that on the whole an animal is immune to distinctively human forms of suffering and concludes that the picture of animal life as a dark ocean of agonizing fear and pain is quite gratuitous.

4. According to some, brain disorder can lead eventually to inability to feel pain. A friend of mine tells me that her mother who suffered from acute Altzheimer’s disease broke her leg when she fell out of bed. The injury was not discovered till some time later. Arguably, the reason for this was that she was unable to tell anyone of her pain. More likely, she was as blissfully unaware of the fact as she was of everything else including her closest relatives. (Since writing this I have seen on TV a lion running after a fashion on a broken foreleg. The commentator pointed out that such an injury in the animal world foreboded certain premature death.)

Another friend of mine has a very interesting story to tell of her mother who also suffered from Altzheimer’s disease. She also didn’t recognize anyone even her own daughter. But amazingly when Jesus was mentioned, she ‘recognized’ him immediately and readily joined in the singing of hymns she had known all her life. Her daughter says she is sure that her mother was not conscious of pain. Eventually she too fell out of bed and died of pneumonia as a result.

5.  In 1 Corinthians 15:56 Paul tells us that the sting of death is sin and that the power of sin is the law.  In other words, if where there is no law there is no sin (cf. Rom. 4:15), then death has no sting. Animals die but since they have neither the law nor sin, they do not experience death’s sting.  The difference between human and animal pain is that human pain is known, animal pain is not.

See further my Animal RightsCreation and / or Evolution.

Further Reflection on Romans 8:18-25 – An Alternative Approach

Further Reflection on ROMANS 8:18-25 – An Alternative Approach
Church dogma would have us believe that creation is under a curse stemming from the sin of Adam. It is held that this is taught or implied by Genesis 3:17-19 in particular and underscored by Paul in Romans 8:18-25. (1* See e.g. Cranfield, p.413.) Thus the well-known schema promulgated by Reformed theology, for example, is that of creation, fall and restoration. (Even as I write in October 2011 I have a book under that title on my book shelves.)
I have sought to deal with the subject elsewhere (2* See my Cosmic Curse, Romans 8:18-25, Another Shot at Romans 8:18-25, Regarding the Restoration of Creation, etc. at www.kenstothard.com /.) though with what success in the eyes of others I have yet to learn since editors and publishers seem unwilling to grapple with the issue. However, in order to buttress the views I have already propounded I am adopting here an alternative approach.
First, the Bible begins with the beginning of creation. The mere fact that a beginning is mentioned suggests that creation is not eternal and that it will inevitably have an end. If this is deemed mere conjecture, it has to be recognized that it is supported by what is taught later about the nature of creation and its native corruption. For instance, Jesus himself refers to the fact that heaven and earth, that is, the material creation as a whole will in contrast with his own words pass away (Mt. 24:35). Categorical statements like this can readily be supplemented by a good deal of other material like Psalm 102:25-27, Isaiah 34:4; 51:6,8; 54:10, Zeph. 1:18; 3:8, Matthew 6:19f., Luke 12:33; 17:28-30, Hebrews 1:10-12; 12:27, 2 Peter 3:7,10-12, and so forth. Of course, as Motyer, for example, recognizes in comment on Isaiah 34:4, the universe is not eternal (p.270, cf. 406f.). But he goes on to say that human sin has infected it with built-in obsolescence and its span of life is only as long as the purpose planned for it. (3* Cf. Mounce who states that corruption (that is, decay) “is first of all an element of the natural world ever since the sin of Adam and Eve (Rom. 8:21)”, p.138). There is obvious confusion in statements like this. For, if the universe is not eternal by nature, reference to sin is irrelevant since creation is clearly temporal and obsolescent by design. Sin only makes a ‘bad’ situation worse (cf. 2 Cor. 4:17; Gal. 1:4). (4* It is surely wrong to say that the situation is ‘bad’. After all correct exegesis of Romans 8:18-25 makes it abundantly clear that natural corruption is all in the purpose of God who has always had something better than this world in mind for his adopted children. Our hope is an invisible hope and Christ is the hope of glory, Col. 1:27, cf. Rom. 5:2; 1 John 3:1f.)  Like the law and the old covenant which relates to it (Rom. 3:20; 7:1), this present world is naturally obsolescent as Paul implies in 2 Corinthians 3 and the author of Hebrews especially in 8:13 (cf. 2 Cor. 4:16-18) who also reminds us that we who are called are to receive the promised eternal inheritance (9:15).
Job and Habakkuk
For Job life was an enigma. While he did not regard himself as sinless, he nonetheless maintained his basic integrity which even God acknowledged (1:1,8). In light of the view that God always rewards the righteous and punishes the unrighteous held by some of his so-called comforters, he finds his suffering difficult to understand. Indeed, despite his eventual vindication, he never properly understands as Paul is to do at a much later date (cf. Rom. 8:18:25 and 2 Cor. 4:7-5:10 on which see my The Correspondence Between Romans 8:18-25 and 2 Corinthians 4:7-5:10). However, despite maintaining in his speech in chapter five that though the innocent prosper, Eliphaz provocatively comments that affliction and trouble come neither from the dust nor from the ground but that man is born to trouble as the sparks fly upward (Job 5:6f.). The truth of man’s troubles receives support elsewhere (cf. e.g. 7:1; 14:1; Eccl. 2:23) and it should occasion no surprise that Job (ch.3), like Jeremiah (20:14-18), wishes that he had remained permanently in his mother’s womb. In this regard, a reading of the early chapters of Genesis helps to put things into better perspective. Once Adam and Eve are out of Eden, which, on the assumption of recapitulation, is the womb of the race, they run into difficulty even apart from sin. The dominion they are meant to exercise over a recalcitrant earth is hard work (cf. Gen. 3:17). And since having already sinned they are in fact sinful by nature (cf. John 8:34; Eph. 2:3), that work is more than they can bear (cf. Prov. 24:30-34). The same is true with regard to Cain (4:11f.) and later Lamech who apparently looks to Noah to relieve the situation in which he finds himself (5:29). Of course, as a man of faith Noah like Abraham at a later date proves his faith by his works and is rescued (finds redemption). (Regarding the great ages referred to in Genesis we must bear in mind again on the assumption of the truth of recapitulation that the antediluvians were like infants. On the one hand individuals in contrast with groups are barely distinguishable. Adam, for instance, is both individual and community, one and many. On the other hand children as individuals have little idea of age, time and even identity. It would appear that both Adam and Noah as individuals simply stood out from the rest of the members of their tribes by which they were identified and in which they were absorbed. Solidarity loomed large for the simple reason that babies through lack of personal development are largely lumped together even today. For all that, even early in the history of mankind there was an element of separation. Indeed, some scientists suggest that man as such was separated from other hominids, the Neanderthals, for example, and developed separately. I see no reason to dispute this on biblical grounds. After all, ‘flesh’ is often understood globally, e.g. Gen. 6:17.)
In Habakkuk 3:8 the prophet tells us that when God gains victory, his anger is not vented against the rivers and the sea but against his human enemies. In light of this it is hardly surprising to find the prophet portraying God’s fury in nature as also serving the salvation of his people (3:9-15). But there is something else that we must not miss. While the day of calamity comes on the enemies of God’s people, the prophet is himself apparently caught up in the maelstrom reminding us of Jesus’ comment that the sun shines and the rain falls on good and evil alike. But at the end of his book when even he is affected by nature which seems to have failed, Habakkuk expresses his faith in God in a marvellously moving passage of trust. As so many of the OT prophets stressed, it is God who is our hope, refuge and salvation (Ps. 18:2, etc.).
The above-mentioned passages of Scripture are not alone in expressing God’s use of nature to punish his enemies. Isaiah 64:1-4 is but a variation on a regular theme which makes the point even more poignantly in 66:15f. In the NT the punishment of God’s enemies is equally graphic in 2 Thessalonians 1:7f., for example, (cf. 2:8). In Luke 17:26-30 Jesus himself endorses the idea that God can employ nature to overwhelm sinful man. His references to Noah and to Sodom and Gomorrah would be even more familiar to his audience than they are to us today. But the point to note is that despite cataclysmic forces let loose on the earth, there is rescue or deliverance for those who put their trust in their Creator whose basic intention is to save (cf. 2 Pet. 3:9; Rom. 2:4; 1 John 3:3). Again if nature is God’s universal weapon of war as in 2 Peter 3 we might be prompted to ask, as Paul did about the law (Rom. 7:7), whether nature itself is evil (cf. Gal. 1:4) and not ‘good’ as it is portrayed to be in Genesis 1. 2 Peter 3:7, however, indicates that as in Habakkuk 3:8 there is no suggestion in the destruction of creation that God is punishing it as cursed and ‘fallen’ as traditional Augustinian theology holds! On the contrary, it is inanimate, but as it grows old naturally and suffers ultimate corruption, God uses it to judge and destroy godless human beings. This point is underscored in 2 Peter 3:9 and 11 where as in Luke 17:26-30 the stories of Noah and Lot serve as types of the end of the world. Then the godly are rescued from what is an inevitable calamity for the rest of society.
The word ‘inevitable’ needs elaboration, for two points are at issue. First, according to the NT there are two ‘natural’ necessities which contrary to tradition are totally unrelated to sin: human regeneration and transformation. (5* See my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities.) Why? Since heaven and earth are fundamentally different (cf. e.g. Mt. 5:34f.), we cannot enter the kingdom of heaven in our natural state. John 3:1-8 and 1 Corinthians 15:35-55, where sin is not mentioned, make it abundantly clear that we are the captives of a natural condition which without transformation cannot possibly bridge the gap between earth and heaven. But corresponding with these two necessities is, secondly, the necessity under which nature itself labours. This is brought out, for example, in Luke 21:9 and Romans 8:20. Thus in Luke 21:23 the Greek word ananke is used for ‘distress’. Basically it means ‘necessity’, something that must happen in the nature of things as Romans 8:20, usually translated ‘not willingly’ but pointing to divine necessity, implies. In verse 23 Jesus illustrates this by referring to pregnant women at the sack of Jerusalem (also a type of the end) who in the nature of the case must eventually give birth. We all, like them, are caught in a trap which since it is set will necessarily be sprung and bring destruction (vv.34-36, cf. Mt. 24:42-44; 1 Thes. 5:2f.; 2 Pet. 3:10). In John 16:20ff. Jesus uses pregnancy to describe his disciples’ experience in this world: it will be one of suffering but it will end in joy. In light of this, it is not at all surprising that Paul in Romans 8:22 uses the word ‘travail’ suggesting that creation is like a expectant woman about to give birth. Otherwise expressed, creation is the ‘womb’ of those who will eventually be the children of God (cf. 1 Cor. 15:46-49). Just as they are freed from their mother’s womb to live life in the present world, so they will be set free from their present bondage to decay (8:21,23) to an invisible (cf. 2 Cor. 4:18), that is, a spiritual hope where all the grief and tears of this material world will have passed away (Rev. 21:4). There they will attain to a paradise of which the first was only a type, as Revelation 22 indicates.
I suggest then that the evidence alluded to above points not to a curse on the earth requiring eventual restoration but to a naturally obsolescent and hence corruptible creation which serves the purposes of God. (6* Note how the sinless Jesus gets older and is incarnate only for a little while, Heb. 2:7,9. As a product of creation through his mother he himself as flesh was obsolescent, Luke 3:23; John 8:57, but spiritually indestructible, Heb. 7:16.). In this scenario, God uses nature (Hab. 3:5-7) which was slated for destruction from the start (7* See my The Destruction of the Material Creation, The Transience of Creation.) to inflict punishment on those who rebel against him as he did at the time of the Exodus (7:19; 14:16,21; 15:4-10, cf. Ps. 77:16-20; 2 Sam. 22:8-20). There God did not muster an army as he was to do in Joshua’s (Jos. 8) and David’s time (1 Sam. 13, etc.) to gain victory; rather he used plagues, signs and wonders that manifested his power over nature (cf. Jos. 6:20; 10:12-14). At the same time he made a distinction between the Egyptians and his people indicating that he can use nature to save as well as to destroy.
If it is true that at the end all shakable, that is, visible, impermanent things, are to be removed, only the invisible unshakable things will remain (Rom. 1:20; 2 Cor. 4:18; Heb. 12:27). In light of this we cannot but conclude that Paul’s reference to the subjection of creation to futility has always been part and parcel of the purpose of God and has nothing to do with sin. While Greek thought presented material things as evil, biblical thought presents them as being simply transient. They are futile by nature; that is the way God made them. (8* See my Concerning Futility.) If the flesh which stemmed from creation was unprofitable (John 6:63, cf. Rom. 7:18), so is creation itself. It has no permanent purpose or raison d’etre and, once its harvest has been reaped, it will be destroyed.
While Jesus focuses effectively on the flood and Sodom and Gomorrah, the NT like the OT (e.g. Jer. 50f.) also draws attention to Babylon in the book of Revelation. Babylon, like Egypt, doubtless symbolizes this world, not simply ungodly human beings but the world of creation itself. And it should be noted, as in Genesis 19 where both inhabitants and habitat alike are destroyed, that Babylon’s destruction represents that of the physical world which has no ultimate future (Rev. 18). This point is underscored in Revelation 20:11 and 21:1-4, for example, where we learn as elsewhere that the material creation itself will pass away.
So, I conclude that just as God can use heathen nations like Assyria as the rod of his anger (Isa. 10:5),  Nebuchadnezzar as his servant (Jer. 25:9; 27:6)  and Cyrus as his shepherd (Isa. 44:28; 45:1) to punish or even to save his own people, so he can use the natural forces of creation. (In view of the fact that early in their history God used Egypt to save the Israelites, Jeremiah’s apparent betrayal of his nation to Babylon ought not to come as a great surprise, Jer. 21:9; 27:5-11, etc. Truly does God work “all things according to the counsel of his will,” Eph. 1:11, ESV.) If the plagues of Egypt and the crossing of the Red Sea make this point, so do Jonah, Paul in Acts 27 and Jesus when he calms the storm and walks on the water. As the Psalmist says, all things are his servants (Ps. 119:91) and so even creation obeys his commands (Jer. 33:25, etc.) for good and/or evil. On the one hand, all things work together for the good of those who love God (Rom. 8:28, cf. John 17:9-11,15; 2 Pet. 2:9a; Rev. 1:9; 3:10), on the other, despite superficial appearances (Rev. 11:10), they ultimately conspire to test and judge those who do evil (Ps. 37:20; 49:13f.; 73:27; 119:155, etc.). In the book of Revelation it is “those who dwell on the earth” who will finally be condemned (6:10; 8:13; 17:8, cf. 2 Pet. 2:9b). And when the material earth in which they invested so exclusively is destroyed, they lose everything (Ps. 49:16-19; James 4:4; 1 John 2:15-17; Rev. 18).
I finish this brief excursus on the day (5/10/11) when, according to the TV news, scientists using the latest equipment are saying that the expansion of the universe is accelerating ever more rapidly. In response, an Australian secular newspaper, “The Age”, after quoting Aldous Huxley’s claim that “the more we know (about science), the more fantastic the world becomes and the profounder the surrounding darkness”, somewhat oddly heads one of its editorials with the words “Hope at the end of the universe”. It reminds me of Revelation 20:11 where we are told that from the presence of the Lord of creation, creation itself will flee away, for he who can create can either save or destroy (2 Pet. 3:11*, cf. Mt. 10:28).  We are therefore well advised to sing the praises of him who rides in the ancient heavens to give power and strength to his people (Ps. 68:32-35, cf. Dt. 33:26f.; Ps. 18; Hab. 3).
* Michael Green comments relevantly on this verse (pp.152f.). Regrettably, taking his cue from Bauckham, he goes on quite inconsistently to talk of the fall and restoration (pp.154f.).
REFERENCES
Michael Green, 2 Peter and Jude, rev. ed., Leicester, 1987.
J.A.Motyer, The Prophecy of Isaiah, Leicester, 1993.
W.D.Mounce, ed. Mounce’s Complete Expository Dictionary of Old & New Testament Words, Grand Rapids, 2006.

Church dogma would have us believe that creation is under a curse stemming from the sin of Adam. It is held that this is taught or implied by Genesis 3:17-19 in particular and underscored by Paul in Romans 8:18-25. (1* See e.g. Cranfield, p.413.) Thus the well-known schema promulgated by Reformed theology, for example, is that of creation, fall and restoration. (Even as I write in October 2011 I have a book under that title on my book shelves.)

I have sought to deal with the subject elsewhere (2* See my Cosmic Curse?Romans 8:18-25Another Shot at Romans 8:18-25Regarding the Restoration of Creation) though with what success in the eyes of others I have yet to learn since editors and publishers seem unwilling to grapple with the issue. However, in order to buttress the views I have already propounded I am adopting here an alternative approach.

First, the Bible begins with the beginning of creation. The mere fact that a beginning is mentioned suggests that creation is not eternal and that it will inevitably have an end. If this is deemed mere conjecture, it has to be recognized that it is supported by what is taught later about the nature of creation and its native corruption. For instance, Jesus himself refers to the fact that heaven and earth, that is, the material creation as a whole will in contrast with his own words pass away (Mt. 24:35). Categorical statements like this can readily be supplemented by a good deal of other material like Psalm 102:25-27, Isaiah 34:4; 51:6,8; 54:10, Zeph. 1:18; 3:8, Matthew 6:19f., Luke 12:33; 17:28-30, Hebrews 1:10-12; 12:27, 2 Peter 3:7,10-12, and so forth. Of course, as Motyer, for example, recognizes in comment on Isaiah 34:4, the universe is not eternal (p.270, cf. 406f.). But he goes on to say that human sin has infected it with built-in obsolescence and its span of life is only as long as the purpose planned for it. (3* Cf. Mounce who states that corruption (that is, decay) “is first of all an element of the natural world ever since the sin of Adam and Eve (Rom. 8:21)”, p.138). There is obvious confusion in statements like this. For, if the universe is not eternal by nature, reference to sin is irrelevant since creation is clearly temporal and obsolescent by design. Sin only makes a ‘bad’ situation worse (cf. 2 Cor. 4:17; Gal. 1:4). (4* It is surely wrong to say that the situation is ‘bad’. After all correct exegesis of Romans 8:18-25 makes it abundantly clear that natural corruption is all in the purpose of God who has always had something better than this world in mind for his adopted children. Our hope is an invisible hope and Christ is the hope of glory, Col. 1:27, cf. Rom. 5:2; 1 John 3:1f.)  Like the law and the old covenant which relates to it (Rom. 3:20; 7:1), this present world is naturally obsolescent as Paul implies in 2 Corinthians 3 and the author of Hebrews especially in 8:13 (cf. 2 Cor. 4:16-18) who also reminds us that we who are called are to receive the promised eternal inheritance (9:15).

Job and Habakkuk

For Job life was an enigma. While he did not regard himself as sinless, he nonetheless maintained his basic integrity which even God acknowledged (1:1,8). In light of the view that God always rewards the righteous and punishes the unrighteous held by some of his so-called comforters, he finds his suffering difficult to understand. Indeed, despite his eventual vindication, he never properly understands as Paul is to do at a much later date (cf. Rom. 8:18:25 and 2 Cor. 4:7-5:10 on which see my  The Correspondence Between Romans 8:12-25 and 2 Corinthians 4:7-5:10). However, despite maintaining in his speech in chapter five that though the innocent prosper, Eliphaz provocatively comments that affliction and trouble come neither from the dust nor from the ground but that man is born to trouble as the sparks fly upward (Job 5:6f.). The truth of man’s troubles receives support elsewhere (cf. e.g. 7:1; 14:1; Eccl. 2:23) and it should occasion no surprise that Job (ch.3), like Jeremiah (20:14-18), wishes that he had remained permanently in his mother’s womb. In this regard, a reading of the early chapters of Genesis helps to put things into better perspective. Once Adam and Eve are out of Eden, which, on the assumption of recapitulation, is the womb of the race, they run into difficulty even apart from sin. The dominion they are meant to exercise over a recalcitrant earth is hard work (cf. Gen. 3:17). And since having already sinned they are in fact sinful by nature (cf. John 8:34; Eph. 2:3), that work is more than they can bear (cf. Prov. 24:30-34). The same is true with regard to Cain (4:11f.) and later Lamech who apparently looks to Noah to relieve the situation in which he finds himself (5:29). Of course, as a man of faith Noah like Abraham at a later date proves his faith by his works and is rescued (finds redemption). (Regarding the great ages referred to in Genesis we must bear in mind again on the assumption of the truth of recapitulation that the antediluvians were like infants. On the one hand individuals in contrast with groups are barely distinguishable. Adam, for instance, is both individual and community, one and many. On the other hand children as individuals have little idea of age, time and even identity. It would appear that both Adam and Noah as individuals simply stood out from the rest of the members of their tribes by which they were identified and in which they were absorbed. Solidarity loomed large for the simple reason that babies through lack of personal development are largely lumped together even today. For all that, even early in the history of mankind there was an element of separation. Indeed, some scientists suggest that man as such was separated from other hominids, the Neanderthals, for example, and developed separately. I see no reason to dispute this on biblical grounds. After all, ‘flesh’ is often understood globally, e.g. Gen. 6:17.)

In Habakkuk 3:8 the prophet tells us that when God gains victory, his anger is not vented against the rivers and the sea but against his human enemies. In light of this it is hardly surprising to find the prophet portraying God’s fury in nature as also serving the salvation of his people (3:9-15). But there is something else that we must not miss. While the day of calamity comes on the enemies of God’s people, the prophet is himself apparently caught up in the maelstrom reminding us of Jesus’ comment that the sun shines and the rain falls on good and evil alike. But at the end of his book when even he is affected by nature which seems to have failed, Habakkuk expresses his faith in God in a marvellously moving passage of trust. As so many of the OT prophets stressed, it is God who is our hope, refuge and salvation (Ps. 18:2, etc.).

The above-mentioned passages of Scripture are not alone in expressing God’s use of nature to punish his enemies. Isaiah 64:1-4 is but a variation on a regular theme which makes the point even more poignantly in 66:15f. In the NT the punishment of God’s enemies is equally graphic in 2 Thessalonians 1:7f., for example, (cf. 2:8). In Luke 17:26-30 Jesus himself endorses the idea that God can employ nature to overwhelm sinful man. His references to Noah and to Sodom and Gomorrah would be even more familiar to his audience than they are to us today. But the point to note is that despite cataclysmic forces let loose on the earth, there is rescue or deliverance for those who put their trust in their Creator whose basic intention is to save (cf. 2 Pet. 3:9; Rom. 2:4; 1 John 3:3). Again if nature is God’s universal weapon of war as in 2 Peter 3 we might be prompted to ask, as Paul did about the law (Rom. 7:7), whether nature itself is evil (cf. Gal. 1:4) and not ‘good’ as it is portrayed to be in Genesis 1. 2 Peter 3:7, however, indicates that as in Habakkuk 3:8 there is no suggestion in the destruction of creation that God is punishing it as cursed and ‘fallen’ as traditional Augustinian theology holds! On the contrary, it is inanimate, but as it grows old naturally and suffers ultimate corruption, God uses it to judge and destroy godless human beings. This point is underscored in 2 Peter 3:9 and 11 where as in Luke 17:26-30 the stories of Noah and Lot serve as types of the end of the world. Then the godly are rescued from what is an inevitable calamity for the rest of society.

The word ‘inevitable’ needs elaboration, for two points are at issue. First, according to the NT there are two ‘natural’ necessities which contrary to tradition are totally unrelated to sin: human regeneration and transformation. (5* See my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities.) Why? Since heaven and earth are fundamentally different (cf. e.g. Mt. 5:34f.), we cannot enter the kingdom of heaven in our natural state. John 3:1-8 and 1 Corinthians 15:35-55, where sin is not mentioned, make it abundantly clear that we are the captives of a natural condition which without transformation cannot possibly bridge the gap between earth and heaven. But corresponding with these two necessities is, secondly, the necessity under which nature itself labours. This is brought out, for example, in Luke 21:9 and Romans 8:20. Thus in Luke 21:23 the Greek word ananke is used for ‘distress’. Basically it means ‘necessity’, something that must happen in the nature of things as Romans 8:20, usually translated ‘not willingly’ but pointing to divine necessity, implies. In verse 23 Jesus illustrates this by referring to pregnant women at the sack of Jerusalem (also a type of the end) who in the nature of the case must eventually give birth. We all, like them, are caught in a trap which since it is set will necessarily be sprung and bring destruction (vv.34-36, cf. Mt. 24:42-44; 1 Thes. 5:2f.; 2 Pet. 3:10). In John 16:20ff. Jesus uses pregnancy to describe his disciples’ experience in this world: it will be one of suffering but it will end in joy. In light of this, it is not at all surprising that Paul in Romans 8:22 uses the word ‘travail’ suggesting that creation is like a expectant woman about to give birth. Otherwise expressed, creation is the ‘womb’ of those who will eventually be the children of God (cf. 1 Cor. 15:46-49). Just as they are freed from their mother’s womb to live life in the present world, so they will be set free from their present bondage to decay (8:21,23) to an invisible (cf. 2 Cor. 4:18), that is, a spiritual hope where all the grief and tears of this material world will have passed away (Rev. 21:4). There they will attain to a paradise of which the first was only a type, as Revelation 22 indicates.

I suggest then that the evidence alluded to above points not to a curse on the earth requiring eventual restoration but to a naturally obsolescent and hence corruptible creation which serves the purposes of God. (6* Note how the sinless Jesus gets older and is incarnate only for a little while, Heb. 2:7,9. As a product of creation through his mother he himself as flesh was obsolescent, Luke 3:23; John 8:57, but spiritually indestructible, Heb. 7:16.). In this scenario, God uses nature (Hab. 3:5-7) which was slated for destruction from the start (7* See my The Destruction of the Material CreationThe Transience of Creation.) to inflict punishment on those who rebel against him as he did at the time of the Exodus (7:19; 14:16,21; 15:4-10, cf. Ps. 77:16-20; 2 Sam. 22:8-20). There God did not muster an army as he was to do in Joshua’s (Jos. 8.) and David’s time (1 Sam. 13, etc.) to gain victory; rather he used plagues, signs and wonders that manifested his power over nature (cf. Jos. 6:20; 10:12-14). At the same time he made a distinction between the Egyptians and his people indicating that he can use nature to save as well as to destroy.

If it is true that at the end all shakable, that is, visible, impermanent things, are to be removed, only the invisible unshakable things will remain (Rom. 1:20; 2 Cor. 4:18; Heb. 12:27). In light of this we cannot but conclude that Paul’s reference to the subjection of creation to futility has always been part and parcel of the purpose of God and has nothing to do with sin. While Greek thought presented material things as evil, biblical thought presents them as being simply transient. They are futile by nature; that is the way God made them. (8* See my Concerning Futility.) If the flesh which stemmed from creation was unprofitable (John 6:63, cf. Rom. 7:18), so is creation itself. It has no permanent purpose or raison d’etre and, once its harvest has been reaped, it will be destroyed.

While Jesus focuses effectively on the flood and Sodom and Gomorrah, the NT like the OT (e.g. Jer. 50f.) also draws attention to Babylon in the book of Revelation. Babylon, like Egypt, doubtless symbolizes this world, not simply ungodly human beings but the world of creation itself. And it should be noted, as in Genesis 19 where both inhabitants and habitat alike are destroyed, that Babylon’s destruction represents that of the physical world which has no ultimate future (Rev. 18). This point is underscored in Revelation 20:11 and 21:1-4, for example, where we learn as elsewhere that the material creation itself will pass away.

So, I conclude that just as God can use heathen nations like Assyria as the rod of his anger (Isa. 10:5),  Nebuchadnezzar as his servant (Jer. 25:9; 27:6)  and Cyrus as his shepherd (Isa. 44:28; 45:1) to punish or even to save his own people, so he can use the natural forces of creation. (In view of the fact that early in their history God used Egypt to save the Israelites, Jeremiah’s apparent betrayal of his nation to Babylon ought not to come as a great surprise, Jer. 21:9; 27:5-11, etc. Truly does God work “all things according to the counsel of his will,” Eph. 1:11, ESV.) If the plagues of Egypt and the crossing of the Red Sea make this point, so do Jonah, Paul in Acts 27 and Jesus when he calms the storm and walks on the water. As the Psalmist says, all things are his servants (Ps. 119:91) and so even creation obeys his commands (Jer. 33:25, etc.) for good and/or evil. On the one hand, all things work together for the good of those who love God (Rom. 8:28, cf. John 17:9-11,15; 2 Pet. 2:9a; Rev. 1:9; 3:10), on the other, despite superficial appearances (Rev. 11:10), they ultimately conspire to test and judge those who do evil (Ps. 37:20; 49:13f.; 73:27; 119:155, etc.). In the book of Revelation it is “those who dwell on the earth” who will finally be condemned (6:10; 8:13; 17:8, cf. 2 Pet. 2:9b). And when the material earth in which they invested so exclusively is destroyed, they lose everything (Ps. 49:16-19; James 4:4; 1 John 2:15-17; Rev. 18).

I finish this brief excursus on the day (5/10/11) when, according to the TV news, scientists using the latest equipment are saying that the expansion of the universe is accelerating ever more rapidly. In response, an Australian secular newspaper, “The Age”, after quoting Aldous Huxley’s claim that “the more we know (about science), the more fantastic the world becomes and the profounder the surrounding darkness”, somewhat oddly heads one of its editorials with the words “Hope at the end of the universe”. It reminds me of Revelation 20:11 where we are told that from the presence of the Lord of creation, creation itself will flee away, for he who can create can either save or destroy (2 Pet. 3:11*, cf. Mt. 10:28).  We are therefore well advised to sing the praises of him who rides in the ancient heavens to give power and strength to his people (Ps. 68:32-35, cf. Dt. 33:26f.; Ps. 18; Hab. 3).

* Michael Green comments relevantly on this verse (pp.152f.). Regrettably, taking his cue from Bauckham, he goes on quite inconsistently to talk of the fall and restoration (pp.154f.).

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References

Michael Green, 2 Peter and Jude, rev. ed., Leicester, 1987.

J.A.Motyer, The Prophecy of Isaiah, Leicester, 1993.

W.D.Mounce, ed. Mounce’s Complete Expository Dictionary of Old & New Testament Words, Grand Rapids, 2006.

Are We Sinners by Birth?

ARE WE SINNERS BY BIRTH?
Orthodox evangelicals claim to believe the Bible, but they also believe in original sin. In other words they accept the Augustinian idea that we inherit Adam’s sin. But does the Bible teach this? References like Jeremiah 31:29f. and Ezekiel 18, to go no further, cast doubt on this. Catholics stress ‘carnal concupiscence’ and the transmission of sin by birth. They contend that Jesus avoided inherited sin because Mary was a virgin and ‘lust’ was obviated. Protestants claim that Adam’s sin is imputed to all his offspring though just how is less than clear. Furthermore, they are not at all clear on how Jesus who was a son of Adam (Luke 3:38) avoided this imputation.
Protestants, who do not resort to the Virgin Birth as the means by which Jesus evaded original sin, sometimes imply that with Jesus God made a new beginning. This is impossible as reflection on Exodus 32 (cf. Num. 14:11-19; Dt. 9:26-28; 32:26f.) makes apparent. When testing his servant in the wilderness, God suggests to Moses that he (God) should make a new start with him (32:10). Moses immediately protests pointing out, first, the disastrous effect this will have on the Egyptians, and, secondly, the failure of God to keep the promise he made to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob (32:13). Needless to say, God “changed his mind” (32:14, NRSV). The lesson we learn here is that if the promise was to be kept, the Lord Jesus had to recapitulate the history of the race as the second Adam by going back to the very beginning (cf. Eph. 4:9f.). If he had not assumed what needed to be healed, as Gregory Nazianzen put it, he would have been a failure and sin would have defeated the plan of salvation outlined to Abraham. This, of course, is an intolerable view. The answer to problems relating to original sin lies elsewhere, as we shall see. God is the God of all who have faith (Heb. 11). (There is a sense in which God is our God from birth to death, arguably even before birth, Jer. 1:5; Gal. 1:15, but it is only from our conscious youth that we rely on him in faith, Ps. 22:9f.; 71:5-9,18).
The contention that we are all born sinners is widely if not universally held. But is it a reasonable proposition? Many arguments can be advanced against it as I have indicated in various articles on the subject (1* See for e.g. my Does Romans Teach Original Sin? Some Arguments Against Original Sin, More Arguments Against Original Sin, An Exact Parallel, J.I.Packer on Original Sin, etc. at www.kenstothard.com ). Here I want to deal specifically with the idea that we are sinners by birth.
Sin and Law
First, it must be pointed out that sin is defined by and founded on law (Rom. 3:20; 4:15; 7:7f.), and since it involves active transgression of (the) law (1 Sam. 15:24; James 2:7-9; John 3:4; 5:17), it is a work that earns death as wages (Gen. 2:17; Rom. 6:23). (2* See my Law and Sin.) Second, the Bible teaches that keeping the law leads to and is the precondition of life (Lev. 18:5). If these two statements are both true, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that everyone that comes into this world is morally neutral or innocent and is hence in a position to become either a sinner or a saint. For example, while the apostle Paul claims in Romans 7:9 that he himself was born ‘alive’, he makes it crystal clear in 7:9f. that he failed to remain so. Indeed, in the latter part of chapter 7 he complains that despite his best intentions, he could not keep the law. The inference from what he has to say about himself is that he was not born a sinner but rather sinned of his own volition. What happened to him happens to us all just as it had happened to our first parents in the Garden of Eden. Born without knowledge of law and hence of good and evil (Gen. 2:17; 3:5,22; Dt. 1:39; 1 K. 3:7; Isa. 7:15f.; Heb. 5:12-14), we develop until we gradually gain rational consciousness. When this occurs we are enabled in contrast with mere animals to receive at least one parental commandment (cf. Prov. 1:8; 4:1ff.; 6:20-23), which is almost inevitably a negative one. (3* It is worthy of consideration that adults tend to say ‘no’ to a child as they do to a dog! Apparently tone of voice rather than understanding prompts a reaction in dogs.) At this point we proceed to break the commandment just as our parents all the way back to Adam did before us (cf. Ps. 106:6, etc.). And it is on account of this that, like Paul, we die. If this is the case, it is hardly surprising that Paul teaches in no uncertain terms that where there is no law there is no transgression (Rom. 4:15, cf. 5:13; 7:1-13). But this had been implied long before by Moses who maintained that, like Adam and Eve before them, children who do not know the law, and therefore good and evil, are born innocent (Dt. 1:39, cf. Rom. 9:11). This view of the matter is supported by the fact that while sinful Israelite parents failed to gain entry into the Promised Land, their implicitly sinless children, despite suffering on account of their parents’ disobedience (cf. Ex. 20:5f.; 34:6f.; Rom. 5:12-21), succeeded in entering it (see Num. 14:3,29-35). No wonder Moses had said earlier that it was only the soul that sinned that would die (Ex. 32:33). (4* On Romans 5:12-21 see my Thoughts on Romans 5:12-14.)
Creeds and Confessions
Second,  traditional theology as portrayed in creeds and confessions like The Westminster Confession of Faith and the 39 Articles of the Church of England lead us to believe that we all died ‘in Adam’ and hotly deny that imitation is involved (see espec. Art. 9). (5* ‘Imitation’ is perhaps an unfortunate word used by Pelagius and dismissed by Augustine. ‘Repetition’ would perhaps have led to better understanding. See my Imitation.)  The problem here is that on the basis of a bad Latin translation, Augustine, who knew very little Greek, imported into Romans 5:12 this highly dubious notion which to this day is constantly palmed off on us by tradition. However, the question must be asked: Does it receive support elsewhere?  Some would argue that it does and refer to verses like Galatians 2:15 and Ephesians 2:3 where Paul, superficially at least, appears to come to their aid.
Galatians 2:15
In Galatians 2:15 the apostle talks of people like himself as being Jews ‘by nature’. (If the ‘by nature’ had been applied by Paul to the Gentile sinners to whom he refers, the argument would have been more difficult to refute.) But does this mean ‘by birth’ (e.g. NRSV, NIV)? The answer must be in the negative. The Bible itself makes it very clear that Jews as the children of Abraham were born uncircumcised (= without knowledge of law) human beings like all children and were hence, like Abraham before them, Gentiles before they were marked by circumcision and set apart as Jews. What is more, a boy did not become a son of the commandment until his bar mitzvah at age 13 (cf. Luke 2:41). Even the circumcised Jesus like his forebears had a heathen or Gentile experience in Egypt (Mt. 2:15). As Genesis 17 makes clear, boys were not circumcised until the eighth day and girls, who were often virtually classified with the heathen, not at all. An uncircumcised Jew is a contradiction in terms (Gen. 17). (On the difference between being a Roman citizen and a Jew by birth, see below.)
Ephesians 2:3
In the mind of most commentators, Ephesians 2:3, where Paul tells his readers that they are sinners ‘by nature’, supports the traditional dogma of original sin. But does it? The NIV translates ‘by nature’ correctly but implies that it means ‘by birth’ by referring to ‘the cravings of our sinful nature’, instead of our ‘flesh’, earlier in the verse. The problem is that the sins referred to in verses 1-3 (cf. v.5, cf. Col. 1:14; 2:13) seem to have been personally and accountably committed and are the reason why the Ephesians are by nature the children of wrath like the rest of mankind. (6* It is gratifying to see in the 2011 revision of the NIV, that ‘sinful nature’ has been replaced by ‘flesh’. However, an added note informs us that “the Greek word for flesh, sarx, refers to the sinful state of human beings.” In a sense it does, but the point Paul is making is missed, that is, that the flesh as such ‘lusts’ against the spirit and therefore needs to be controlled as it was by Jesus who alone succeeded in living a sinless life in the flesh, Rom. 8:3. In verse 5 the sins that lead to death are clearly personal works which are paid appropriate wages, Rom. 6:23. They are not the immediate result of Adam’s imputed sin.) In other words, will precedes and determines nature, hence the notion of the bondage of the will. (7* It is important to recognize here an important contrast: on the one hand the bondage of sin is the result of our free will which leads to death, on the other hand the bondage of decay is the result of the will of God which leads to an invisible hope of life and glory, Rom. 8:18-25, cf. 2 Cor. 5:5.) After all, both here and elsewhere Paul highlights personal sins inexcusably perpetrated (Rom. 1:18-3:20,25; 7:9f.; Eph. 2:1,5; 4:17-19; Col. 2:13, cf. 1 Pet. 2:24f.; 2 Pet. 1:9),  not the abstract idea of one inherited sin which if imputed (Rom. 4:1-8) could not without contradiction earn the wages of death (Rom. 6:23). This view of the matter is supported by Jesus who says in John 8:34 that those who sin become the slaves of sin. Otherwise expressed, a sinful nature is acquired by breaking the law (e.g. Paul, Rom. 7:9f., cf. 6:16; Gen. 3:6; Num. 15:39; Isa. 53:6; 56:11; 57:17; 58:3,13; 66:3) just as a righteous nature is acquired by keeping the law (e.g. Jesus, Rom. 2:13; 6:16; 1 Pet. 2:22; 1 John 3:7, etc.). The point is that since we are flesh we find sinning all too easy (Rom. 7:14; Gal. 5:16f.,19-21) but doing what is right virtually impossible  without the aid of the Spirit (Job 4:17; 9:2; Rom. 2:13; Gal. 5:22-24). This is the essence of what Paul is saying in Romans 7 and 8.
Jeremiah 13:23
Long before Paul, Jeremiah had asked, “Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots? Then also can you do good who are accustomed to do evil” (13:23, ESV). At first blush this is a clear instance of nature being acquired by birth, but this inference is somewhat precipitate. What Jeremiah is saying is that what his compatriots have become accustomed to is sinning and as a consequence they have acquired a sinful nature. In other words, he is saying exactly what Jesus said in John 8:34, that is, that those who sin become enslaved by sin (cf. Rom. 6:16) and are no more capable of escaping from this bondage than the Ethiopian is of changing the colour of his skin or the leopard its spots. On reflection this again is the essence of Paul’s complaint in Romans 7. In the weakness of his flesh (7:14) he had been deceived (7:11, cf. Gen. 3:6) and sin had gained a stranglehold on him that he could not break. Try though he would to keep the commandments that he had been taught and had learned to love like the Psalmist before him (Psalm 119:24, etc.), he failed (Rom. 7:12,15,22f., etc.). (7* See my Interpreting Romans 7.) A weak law (cf. Heb. 7:18) hardly enabled him to overcome his weak flesh (Rom. 7:14)!
Matthew 7:16-20
Matthew 7:16-20 (cf. 1 Samuel 24:13; Jer. 31:29) is occasionally used in support of birth sin. Clearly, if we are born bad, we shall produce bad fruit by nature and can do no other. However, in Romans 1:26f. Paul argues that the Gentiles who are bearing bad fruit are doing so “contrary to nature” (Rom. 1:26, ESV) like thistles bearing figs. It is clear here that Paul expects the Gentiles to act according to their birth nature not contrary to it, and the mere fact that he highlights the penalty (wages) stemming from their aberrant behaviour (1:27) makes this incontrovertible. So when the conclusion is drawn that since we all sin, we must all have been born sinful, there is something wrong with the premises. The truth is that Jesus, like Paul, is not referring to babies who in the nature of the case have never sinned but to false prophets who have personally and wilfully committed sin and continue to do so (cf. Jer. 23; Ezek. 13). As Jeremiah, like Moses (Ex. 32:33), averred, they will die for their own sin (Jer. 31:30), not that of Adam though the latter’s impact on them is undeniable, pace Pelagius.
(The argument of homosexuals who claim they are born the way they are is in my view unassailable. However, their premise must be questioned and we must ask: Are they really born that way?)
So Paul argues that to act against our birth nature is sinful. If this is indeed the case, those who teach that our birth nature is sinful are compelled to conclude that when the Gentiles do by nature what the law requires (Rom. 2:14) they are acting sinfully. This is absurd. But it points up something else, that is, that the devotees of original or birth sin are false prophets. They are in the same league as the Pharisees (John 9:2,34).
Acts 22:28
In Acts 22:28 Paul claims he is a Roman citizen by birth unlike the tribune who had to purchase       his citizenship with money. In view of this, it might well be argued that Jewishness was acquired by birth (cf. Gal. 2:15). It must be pointed out, however, that being a Jew by birth is different from being a Roman citizen by birth. In the Bible, Jewishness certainly depends on being set apart in the purpose of God (cf. Lev. 20:26) but this must also be ratified by human ceremony, namely circumcision which does not occur till the eighth day (Gen. 17). And as was pointed out above, it was not until adolescence that a circumcised boy became a son of the commandment and took responsibility for keeping the law himself. By contrast, Roman citizenship depended on a state law which operated literally from birth. It depended entirely on legal descent and could not be ignored as authorities like the tribune were only too aware (cf. Acts 16:37-39). So what needs to be considered here is the fact that it is impossible to be a sinner by birth. Why? Because at birth the law cannot be broken for the simple reason that there is no law (Rom. 4:15). A baby knows neither the law nor good and evil. Even Jesus as a true human being was at birth similarly ignorant (Isa. 7:15f.; Dt. 1:39; Rom. 9:11). He was neither righteous nor unrighteous but had to become the one or the other by reaction to the law as it dawned on his consciousness. If he was to be perfected, that is, achieve the perfection of his Father (Mt. 5:48)   (8* Perfection or maturation is fundamental to human development as the letter to the Hebrews in particular makes clear.), he was to be so first under (the) law, then under the leading of the Spirit after his baptism as the acknowledged Son of God (Mt. 3:13-17; 19:21; Heb. 2:10; 7:28). Alternatively expressed, while he was under the law he had to keep the commandments flawlessly in order to inherit life (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5). Then once he had gained life, he had to fulfil all righteousness (Mt. 3:15), that is, keep the standards etched in the Sermon on the Mount under the direction of the Spirit. We who are accounted righteous through faith in Christ have also received the Spirit (Gal. 3:2) and are called on to do the same (Mt. 5:1f.).
Dt. 24:16
Deuteronomy 24:16 (cf. 2 K. 14:6; 2 Chron. 25:4; Jer. 31:29f.; Ezek. 18:4,20, etc.), lays it down that the son shall not be punished for the sins of the father but will die for his own sins. The Augustinian dogma of original sin, however, flies in the face of this. It teaches that we all die (are punished with death!) for Adam’s sin. The death of babies is held to be proof positive of this and thus baptism is erroneously applied. The false assumption is that all death results from sin. It manifestly does not as Hebrews 1:10-12, not to mention Romans 8:18-25 where sin does not figure, shows. (9* See, e.g., my Death Before Genesis 3, Romans 8:18-25, Death and Corruption.) In light of the evidence we are forced to ask whether we should believe Scripture or tradition. The biblical answer is unequivocal, as Jesus himself made clear in Mark 7:8, cf. v.3). In John 9:41 and 15:22,24, Jesus establishes beyond equivocation personal responsibility.
Romans 5:12
Since it has had such a profound influence on Christian thinking, it is necessary to take a quick look at Romans 5:12. Augustine famously based his view on the idea that we all sinned ‘in Adam’ though this is not in the text. Nygren claimed that “Paul’s main idea is entirely clear and beyond doubt: it was through one man, Adam, that all men are sinners and are subject to death” (quoted by Morris, p.230 n.49). True, but Paul fails to be specific as to how and why. In fact, he cannot be saying more than that we all fail to overcome the effects of Adam’s evil influence (cf. Ex. 20:5f.). After all, if Adam sinned without parental conditioning, how much more are his descendants likely to sin given his. As David said in Psalm 51:5, we are all born ‘in iniquities’, or, in view of our solidarity with the race, with a sinful pedigree (cf. Mt. 1:1-5). We must also consider that since we are made in Adam’s image (Gen. 5:1-3), we all tend to ‘imitate’ our parents as Pelagius maintained (pace Art. 9 of the C of E), though not necessarily (cf. Ezek. 18). This is important since if Paul’s stance was ‘Augustinian’, then even Jesus was born sinful. (10* See further my Thoughts on Romans 5:12-14; Does Romans Teach Original Sin; Imitations, Solidarity and Separation, etc.)
The plain fact is that if Scripture teaches original sin, then the Bible contradicts itself. Throughout Scripture babies are regarded as innocent since they do not know the law (Dt. 1:39; 1 K. 3:7,9; Isa. 7:15f.; 8:4; Heb. 5:12-14). And Paul maintains that he himself was ‘alive’ until he broke the law (Rom. 7:9f.).  
Psalm 51:5 and 58:3
These verses are well known and readily exploited by Christians to “prove” birth sin. In response I would point out, first, that it needs to be recognized that neither the Jews nor the Orthodox accept that they teach original sin as traditionally held by Christians in the West. Second, 51:5 is frequently mistranslated. For example, the NIV version reads: “Surely I was sinful at birth, sinful from the time my mother conceived me.” This is tendentious to say the least. Unless it is strictly accurate (which it certainly is not), it assumes what needs to be proved. By contrast, Green’s literal translation of the Hebrew reads: “Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me” (cf. ESV). Bagster’s literal translation of the LXX or Greek version reads, “For behold, I was conceived in iniquities, and in sins did my mother conceive me.” This puts a different complexion on the issue not least because it makes room for a different interpretation. After all, was not Jesus himself brought forth ‘in iniquities’ and was not his mother sinful like Rahab and Ruth before her (cf. Mt. 1:5)? Did he not come into a sinful world in which the impact of the sin of Adam and all his other progeny was all too evident and indeed provided the very reason for his coming?  In view of his own sin, presumably with Bathsheba, is there any wonder that a deeply contrite David expressed himself in such vivid, arguably hyperbolic, language? This is especially true of Psalm 58:3 which may be compared with Job 31:18. Judging by what he says elsewhere David was deeply impressed by the way he had been made (Ps. 139:14) even though he was dust (Ps. 103:14, cf. 139:16). And it is precisely this aspect of first Adamic man that Paul emphasizes in 1 Corinthians 15:47-49 rather than sin which he completely omits to mention.
2 Peter 2:12
The only place in Scripture known to me where death is directly related to birth is in 2 Peter 2:12 where we are explicitly informed that animals are born to be caught and killed (cf. Jude 10, Ps. 104:21). Whether they are eaten or not is beside the point: as flesh they are ultimately going nowhere. In 1 Corinthians 15:50 we are pointedly told that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of heaven (cf. John 3:1-8). Why? Because as the product of a corruptible creation they are naturally corruptible (cf. Rom. 8:18-25; Heb. 1:10-12). All animal flesh is inescapably subject to decay but since man is made in the image of God he can hope for a heavenly body (2 Cor. 5:1) a body of glory (Phil. 3:21). It should be noted at this point that sin (except in men who conduct themselves like animals) is not on the horizon, not surprisingly since animal death was used by God for food (Ps. 104:21), to atone for old covenant sin and to herald the eventual sacrifice of Jesus’ flesh. All this points to the reality of creation’s natural corruption and destruction taught by Paul in Romans 8:18-25 (cf. 2 Cor. 4:7-5:10; Heb. 1:10-12). (11* See also my The Correspondence between Romans 8:12-25 and 2 Corinthians 4:7-5:10; Romans 8:18-25).
Jesus
If all the offspring of Adam are born sinners, how did Jesus who also was a son of Adam (Luke 3:38) avoid being born likewise? As we have seen, at this point Catholics and some Protestants call in the Virgin Birth, but this has its own problems. If we believe in the imputation of Adam’s sin and Jesus was a genuine man (Heb. 2:17), it is difficult to find a reason for his sinlessness at birth. Denial of it seems to entail Docetism. On the other hand, if we accept the principle of native innocence (Dt. 1:39; Isa. 7:15f.), his sinless life lived according to the dictates of the law becomes a reasonable, if a highly improbable, proposition (cf. Rom. 8:3). Though born innocent like Adam, nonetheless in contrast with Adam he simply did not sin (1 Pet. 2:22) but obeyed the law. Considering that everyone else like Adam broke the law in some way and proved incapable of doing otherwise (Acts 13:39; Rom. 3:19f.; 1 Cor. 1:29; Gal. 2:16; 3:11), this was the miracle that Scripture portrays it as. As man Jesus was unique in that he alone proved capable of living a sinless life in the flesh (Rom. 8:3). To put the issue bluntly, all that is necessary to explain human sin (cf. Rom. 7:14) is the inability of all flesh to keep the law (Rom. 3:20; 7:14; Gal. 2:16 Gk, cf. 2 Pet. 2:19) as even Job appeared to recognize (9:2; 15:14). Furthermore, it is all that is necessary to explain the fact that under the old covenant regeneration was never anything more than a promise (Dt. 29:4; 30:6, etc.). For until someone kept the law, eternal life was a chimera (Lev. 18:5). If this is so, birth sin is redundant even allowing, contrary to Pelagius, for the impact of Adam’s and indeed all parents’ sin (cf. Num. 14:33; Rom. 5:12-21).
Conclusion
At the end of the day we are forced by the evidence to deny that we are born sinners. If we were, God himself as our Creator would be chargeable. Rather, like father like son, we are born as Adam was created without knowledge of law or of good and evil (Dt. 1:39, etc.). According to the Bible, not least Jesus himself, where there is no law there is no transgression. This being the case, babies, like animals, are innocent and, like Paul, only cease to be so when they break the commandment. In view of this it is scarcely surprising that the Bible tells us that we sin in our youth, not our infancy (Gen. 8:21, cf.  Jer. 3:24f.; 22:21; 32:30, etc.). Until we gain knowledge and hence accountability, we remain innocent flesh like the animals (cf. Gen. 6:17). Furthermore, babies die like them on account of the natural corruptibility of creation, irrespective of sin (Job 14:1f.; Ps. 49:12,20; Eccl. 3:18-20; Rom. 8:18-25; Heb. 1:10-12; James 1:10, etc.). (12* If Job and Jeremiah had thought they were sinners at conception and/or birth, I fancy they would have been less wishful of death in the womb, 3:11; 10:18; Jer. 20:14-18. After all, Augustine taught that all unbaptized babies went to hell!)
Assuming then that the findings of this brief study are valid, it is apparent, first, that original sin is alien to the Bible, and, second, that recapitulation is at the heart of the Christian faith. As (human) animals we all begin as unprofitable flesh (John 6:63; Rom. 7:18; 8:8).  But when, as those created in the potential image of God we develop and gain knowledge, even though we sin we can nonetheless please God by exercising faith (Heb. 11:6). If Jesus was the second or last Adam, this must be so, for he had to assume what he intended to heal. He had to re-cover to perfection the ground that Adam and all his offspring had covered so unsuccessfully under (the) law. And because he succeeded, he was able in his love and grace to lay down his life for his friends and so blaze a trail into heaven itself. In this way he fulfilled the promise to Adam and hence to mankind in general outlined in Genesis 1:26-28, 2:16f., Psalm 8:4-6 and Hebrews 2:8-13. Truly is our Creator God a God of grace and redemption in Christ. Soli Deo Gloria.
REFERENCE
L.L.Morris, The Epistle to the Romans, Grand Rapids, 1988.

Orthodox evangelicals claim to believe the Bible, but they also believe in original sin. In other words they accept the Augustinian idea that we inherit Adam’s sin. But does the Bible teach this? References like Jeremiah 31:29f. and Ezekiel 18, to go no further, cast doubt on this. Catholics stress ‘carnal concupiscence’ and the transmission of sin by birth. They contend that Jesus avoided inherited sin because Mary was a virgin and ‘lust’ was obviated. Protestants claim that Adam’s sin is imputed to all his offspring though just how is less than clear. Furthermore, they are not at all clear on how Jesus who was a son of Adam (Luke 3:38) avoided this imputation.

Protestants, who do not resort to the Virgin Birth as the means by which Jesus evaded original sin, sometimes imply that with Jesus God made a new beginning. This is impossible as reflection on Exodus 32 (cf. Num. 14:11-19; Dt. 9:26-28; 32:26f.) makes apparent. When testing his servant in the wilderness, God suggests to Moses that he (God) should make a new start with him (32:10). Moses immediately protests pointing out, first, the disastrous effect this will have on the Egyptians, and, secondly, the failure of God to keep the promise he made to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob (32:13). Needless to say, God “changed his mind” (32:14, NRSV). The lesson we learn here is that if the promise was to be kept, the Lord Jesus had to recapitulate the history of the race as the second Adam by going back to the very beginning (cf. Eph. 4:9f.). If he had not assumed what needed to be healed, as Gregory Nazianzen put it, he would have been a failure and sin would have defeated the plan of salvation outlined to Abraham. This, of course, is an intolerable view. The answer to problems relating to original sin lies elsewhere, as we shall see. God is the God of all who have faith (Heb. 11). (There is a sense in which God is our God from birth to death, arguably even before birth, Jer. 1:5; Gal. 1:15, but it is only from our conscious youth that we rely on him in faith, Ps. 22:9f.; 71:5-9,18).

The contention that we are all born sinners is widely if not universally held. But is it a reasonable proposition? Many arguments can be advanced against it as I have indicated in various articles on the subject (1* See for e.g. my Does Romans Teach Original Sin?Some Arguments Against Original SinMore Arguments on Original SinAn Exact Parallel?J.I.Packer on Original Sin). Here I want to deal specifically with the idea that we are sinners by birth.

Sin and Law

First, it must be pointed out that sin is defined by and founded on law (Rom. 3:20; 4:15; 7:7f.), and since it involves active transgression of (the) law (1 Sam. 15:24; James 2:7-9; John 3:4; 5:17), it is a work that earns death as wages (Gen. 2:17; Rom. 6:23). (2* See my Law and Sin) Second, the Bible teaches that keeping the law leads to and is the precondition of life (Lev. 18:5). If these two statements are both true, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that everyone that comes into this world is morally neutral or innocent and is hence in a position to become either a sinner or a saint. For example, while the apostle Paul claims in Romans 7:9 that he himself was born ‘alive’, he makes it crystal clear in 7:9f. that he failed to remain so. Indeed, in the latter part of chapter 7 he complains that despite his best intentions, he could not keep the law. The inference from what he has to say about himself is that he was not born a sinner but rather sinned of his own volition. What happened to him happens to us all just as it had happened to our first parents in the Garden of Eden. Born without knowledge of law and hence of good and evil (Gen. 2:17; 3:5,22; Dt. 1:39; 1 K. 3:7; Isa. 7:15f.; Heb. 5:12-14), we develop until we gradually gain rational consciousness. When this occurs we are enabled in contrast with mere animals to receive at least one parental commandment (cf. Prov. 1:8; 4:1ff.; 6:20-23), which is almost inevitably a negative one. (3* It is worthy of consideration that adults tend to say ‘no’ to a child as they do to a dog! Apparently tone of voice rather than understanding prompts a reaction in dogs.) At this point we proceed to break the commandment just as our parents all the way back to Adam did before us (cf. Ps. 106:6, etc.). And it is on account of this that, like Paul, we die. If this is the case, it is hardly surprising that Paul teaches in no uncertain terms that where there is no law there is no transgression (Rom. 4:15, cf. 5:13; 7:1-13). But this had been implied long before by Moses who maintained that, like Adam and Eve before them, children who do not know the law, and therefore good and evil, are born innocent (Dt. 1:39, cf. Rom. 9:11). This view of the matter is supported by the fact that while sinful Israelite parents failed to gain entry into the Promised Land, their implicitly sinless children, despite suffering on account of their parents’ disobedience (cf. Ex. 20:5f.; 34:6f.; Rom. 5:12-21), succeeded in entering it (see Num. 14:3,29-35). No wonder Moses had said earlier that it was only the soul that sinned that would die (Ex. 32:33). (4* On Romans 5:12-21 see myThoughts on Romans 5:12-14)

Creeds and Confessions

Second,  traditional theology as portrayed in creeds and confessions like The Westminster Confession of Faith and the 39 Articles of the Church of England lead us to believe that we all died ‘in Adam’ and hotly deny that imitation is involved (see espec. Art. 9). (5* ‘Imitation’ is perhaps an unfortunate word used by Pelagius and dismissed by Augustine. ‘Repetition’ would perhaps have led to better understanding. See my Imitation.)  The problem here is that on the basis of a bad Latin translation, Augustine, who knew very little Greek, imported into Romans 5:12 this highly dubious notion which to this day is constantly palmed off on us by tradition. However, the question must be asked: Does it receive support elsewhere?  Some would argue that it does and refer to verses like Galatians 2:15 and Ephesians 2:3 where Paul, superficially at least, appears to come to their aid.

Galatians 2:15

In Galatians 2:15 the apostle talks of people like himself as being Jews ‘by nature’. (If the ‘by nature’ had been applied by Paul to the Gentile sinners to whom he refers, the argument would have been more difficult to refute.) But does this mean ‘by birth’ (e.g. NRSV, NIV)? The answer must be in the negative. The Bible itself makes it very clear that Jews as the children of Abraham were born uncircumcised (= without knowledge of law) human beings like all children and were hence, like Abraham before them, Gentiles before they were marked by circumcision and set apart as Jews. What is more, a boy did not become a son of the commandment until his bar mitzvah at age 13 (cf. Luke 2:41). Even the circumcised Jesus like his forebears had a heathen or Gentile experience in Egypt (Mt. 2:15). As Genesis 17 makes clear, boys were not circumcised until the eighth day and girls, who were often virtually classified with the heathen, not at all. An uncircumcised Jew is a contradiction in terms (Gen. 17). (On the difference between being a Roman citizen and a Jew by birth, see below.)

Ephesians 2:3

In the mind of most commentators, Ephesians 2:3, where Paul tells his readers that they are sinners ‘by nature’, supports the traditional dogma of original sin. But does it? The NIV translates ‘by nature’ correctly but implies that it means ‘by birth’ by referring to ‘the cravings of our sinful nature’, instead of our ‘flesh’, earlier in the verse. The problem is that the sins referred to in verses 1-3 (cf. v.5, cf. Col. 1:14; 2:13) seem to have been personally and accountably committed and are the reason why the Ephesians are by nature the children of wrath like the rest of mankind. (6* It is gratifying to see in the 2011 revision of the NIV, that ‘sinful nature’ has been replaced by ‘flesh’. However, an added note informs us that “the Greek word for flesh, sarx, refers to the sinful state of human beings.” In a sense it does, but the point Paul is making is missed, that is, that the flesh as such ‘lusts’ against the spirit and therefore needs to be controlled as it was by Jesus who alone succeeded in living a sinless life in the flesh, Rom. 8:3. In verse 5 the sins that lead to death are clearly personal works which are paid appropriate wages, Rom. 6:23. They are not the immediate result of Adam’s imputed sin.) In other words, will precedes and determines nature, hence the notion of the bondage of the will. (7* It is important to recognize here an important contrast: on the one hand the bondage of sin is the result of our free will which leads to death, on the other hand the bondage of decay is the result of the will of God which leads to an invisible hope of life and glory, Rom. 8:18-25, cf. 2 Cor. 5:5.) After all, both here and elsewhere Paul highlights personal sins inexcusably perpetrated (Rom. 1:18-3:20,25; 7:9f.; Eph. 2:1,5; 4:17-19; Col. 2:13, cf. 1 Pet. 2:24f.; 2 Pet. 1:9),  not the abstract idea of one inherited sin which if imputed (Rom. 4:1-8) could not without contradiction earn the wages of death (Rom. 6:23). This view of the matter is supported by Jesus who says in John 8:34 that those who sin become the slaves of sin. Otherwise expressed, a sinful nature is acquired by breaking the law (e.g. Paul, Rom. 7:9f., cf. 6:16; Gen. 3:6; Num. 15:39; Isa. 53:6; 56:11; 57:17; 58:3,13; 66:3) just as a righteous nature is acquired by keeping the law (e.g. Jesus, Rom. 2:13; 6:16; 1 Pet. 2:22; 1 John 3:7, etc.). The point is that since we are flesh we find sinning all too easy (Rom. 7:14; Gal. 5:16f.,19-21) but doing what is right virtually impossible  without the aid of the Spirit (Job 4:17; 9:2; Rom. 2:13; Gal. 5:22-24). This is the essence of what Paul is saying in Romans 7 and 8.

Jeremiah 13:23

Long before Paul, Jeremiah had asked, “Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots? Then also can you do good who are accustomed to do evil” (13:23, ESV). At first blush this is a clear instance of nature being acquired by birth, but this inference is somewhat precipitate. What Jeremiah is saying is that what his compatriots have become accustomed to is sinning and as a consequence they have acquired a sinful nature. In other words, he is saying exactly what Jesus said in John 8:34, that is, that those who sin become enslaved by sin (cf. Rom. 6:16) and are no more capable of escaping from this bondage than the Ethiopian is of changing the colour of his skin or the leopard its spots. On reflection this again is the essence of Paul’s complaint in Romans 7. In the weakness of his flesh (7:14) he had been deceived (7:11, cf. Gen. 3:6) and sin had gained a stranglehold on him that he could not break. Try though he would to keep the commandments that he had been taught and had learned to love like the Psalmist before him (Psalm 119:24, etc.), he failed (Rom. 7:12,15,22f., etc.). (7* See my Interpreting Romans 7.) A weak law (cf. Heb. 7:18) hardly enabled him to overcome his weak flesh (Rom. 7:14)!

Matthew 7:16-20

Matthew 7:16-20 (cf. 1 Samuel 24:13; Jer. 31:29) is occasionally used in support of birth sin. Clearly, if we are born bad, we shall produce bad fruit by nature and can do no other. However, in Romans 1:26f. Paul argues that the Gentiles who are bearing bad fruit are doing so “contrary to nature” (Rom. 1:26, ESV) like thistles bearing figs. It is clear here that Paul expects the Gentiles to act according to their birth nature not contrary to it, and the mere fact that he highlights the penalty (wages) stemming from their aberrant behaviour (1:27) makes this incontrovertible. So when the conclusion is drawn that since we all sin, we must all have been born sinful, there is something wrong with the premises. The truth is that Jesus, like Paul, is not referring to babies who in the nature of the case have never sinned but to false prophets who have personally and wilfully committed sin and continue to do so (cf. Jer. 23; Ezek. 13). As Jeremiah, like Moses (Ex. 32:33), averred, they will die for their own sin (Jer. 31:30), not that of Adam though the latter’s impact on them is undeniable, pace Pelagius.

(The argument of homosexuals who claim they are born the way they are is in my view unassailable. However, their premise must be questioned and we must ask: Are they really born that way?)

So Paul argues that to act against our birth nature is sinful. If this is indeed the case, those who teach that our birth nature is sinful are compelled to conclude that when the Gentiles do by nature what the law requires (Rom. 2:14) they are acting sinfully. This is absurd. But it points up something else, that is, that the devotees of original or birth sin are false prophets. They are in the same league as the Pharisees (John 9:2,34).

Acts 22:28

In Acts 22:28 Paul claims he is a Roman citizen by birth unlike the tribune who had to purchase his citizenship with money. In view of this, it might well be argued that Jewishness was acquired by birth (cf. Gal. 2:15). It must be pointed out, however, that being a Jew by birth is different from being a Roman citizen by birth. In the Bible, Jewishness certainly depends on being set apart in the purpose of God (cf. Lev. 20:26) but this must also be ratified by human ceremony, namely circumcision which does not occur till the eighth day (Gen. 17). And as was pointed out above, it was not until adolescence that a circumcised boy became a son of the commandment and took responsibility for keeping the law himself. By contrast, Roman citizenship depended on a state law which operated literally from birth. It depended entirely on legal descent and could not be ignored as authorities like the tribune were only too aware (cf. Acts 16:37-39). So what needs to be considered here is the fact that it is impossible to be a sinner by birth. Why? Because at birth the law cannot be broken for the simple reason that there is no law (Rom. 4:15). A baby knows neither the law nor good and evil. Even Jesus as a true human being was at birth similarly ignorant (Isa. 7:15f.; Dt. 1:39; Rom. 9:11). He was neither righteous nor unrighteous but had to become the one or the other by reaction to the law as it dawned on his consciousness. If he was to be perfected, that is, achieve the perfection of his Father (Mt. 5:48)   (8* Perfection or maturation is fundamental to human development as the letter to the Hebrews in particular makes clear.), he was to be so first under (the) law, then under the leading of the Spirit after his baptism as the acknowledged Son of God (Mt. 3:13-17; 19:21; Heb. 2:10; 7:28). Alternatively expressed, while he was under the law he had to keep the commandments flawlessly in order to inherit life (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5). Then once he had gained life, he had to fulfil all righteousness (Mt. 3:15), that is, keep the standards etched in the Sermon on the Mount under the direction of the Spirit. We who are accounted righteous through faith in Christ have also received the Spirit (Gal. 3:2) and are called on to do the same (Mt. 5:1f.).

Dt. 24:16

Deuteronomy 24:16 (cf. 2 K. 14:6; 2 Chron. 25:4; Jer. 31:29f.; Ezek. 18:4,20, etc.), lays it down that the son shall not be punished for the sins of the father but will die for his own sins. The Augustinian dogma of original sin, however, flies in the face of this. It teaches that we all die (are punished with death!) for Adam’s sin. The death of babies is held to be proof positive of this and thus baptism is erroneously applied. The false assumption is that all death results from sin. It manifestly does not as Hebrews 1:10-12, not to mention Romans 8:18-25 where sin does not figure, shows. (9* See, e.g., my Death Before Genesis 3Romans 8:18-25Death and Corruption.) In light of the evidence we are forced to ask whether we should believe Scripture or tradition. The biblical answer is unequivocal, as Jesus himself made clear in Mark 7:8, cf. v.3). In John 9:41 and 15:22,24, Jesus establishes beyond equivocation personal responsibility.

Romans 5:12

Since it has had such a profound influence on Christian thinking, it is necessary to take a quick look at Romans 5:12. Augustine famously based his view on the idea that we all sinned ‘in Adam’ though this is not in the text. Nygren claimed that “Paul’s main idea is entirely clear and beyond doubt: it was through one man, Adam, that all men are sinners and are subject to death” (quoted by Morris, p.230 n.49). True, but Paul fails to be specific as to how and why. In fact, he cannot be saying more than that we all fail to overcome the effects of Adam’s evil influence (cf. Ex. 20:5f.). After all, if Adam sinned without parental conditioning, how much more are his descendants likely to sin given his. As David said in Psalm 51:5, we are all born ‘in iniquities’, or, in view of our solidarity with the race, with a sinful pedigree (cf. Mt. 1:1-5). We must also consider that since we are made in Adam’s image (Gen. 5:1-3), we all tend to ‘imitate’ our parents as Pelagius maintained (pace Art. 9 of the C of E), though not necessarily (cf. Ezek. 18). This is important since if Paul’s stance was ‘Augustinian’, then even Jesus was born sinful. (10* See further my Thoughts on Romans 5:12-14Does Romans Teach Original Sin?ImitationSolidarity and Separation, etc.)

The plain fact is that if Scripture teaches original sin, then the Bible contradicts itself. Throughout Scripture babies are regarded as innocent since they do not know the law (Dt. 1:39; 1 K. 3:7,9; Isa. 7:15f.; 8:4; Heb. 5:12-14). And Paul maintains that he himself was ‘alive’ until he broke the law (Rom. 7:9f.).  

Psalm 51:5 and 58:3

These verses are well known and readily exploited by Christians to “prove” birth sin. In response I would point out, first, that it needs to be recognized that neither the Jews nor the Orthodox accept that they teach original sin as traditionally held by Christians in the West. Second, 51:5 is frequently mistranslated. For example, the NIV version reads: “Surely I was sinful at birth, sinful from the time my mother conceived me.” This is tendentious to say the least. Unless it is strictly accurate (which it certainly is not), it assumes what needs to be proved. By contrast, Green’s literal translation of the Hebrew reads: “Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me” (cf. ESV). Bagster’s literal translation of the LXX or Greek version reads, “For behold, I was conceived in iniquities, and in sins did my mother conceive me.” This puts a different complexion on the issue not least because it makes room for a different interpretation. After all, was not Jesus himself brought forth ‘in iniquities’ and was not his mother sinful like Rahab and Ruth before her (cf. Mt. 1:5)? Did he not come into a sinful world in which the impact of the sin of Adam and all his other progeny was all too evident and indeed provided the very reason for his coming?  In view of his own sin, presumably with Bathsheba, is there any wonder that a deeply contrite David expressed himself in such vivid, arguably hyperbolic, language? This is especially true of Psalm 58:3 which may be compared with Job 31:18. Judging by what he says elsewhere David was deeply impressed by the way he had been made (Ps. 139:14) even though he was dust (Ps. 103:14, cf. 139:16). And it is precisely this aspect of first Adamic man that Paul emphasizes in 1 Corinthians 15:47-49 rather than sin which he completely omits to mention.

2 Peter 2:12

The only place in Scripture known to me where death is directly related to birth is in 2 Peter 2:12 where we are explicitly informed that animals are born to be caught and killed (cf. Jude 10, Ps. 104:21). Whether they are eaten or not is beside the point: as flesh they are ultimately going nowhere. In 1 Corinthians 15:50 we are pointedly told that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of heaven (cf. John 3:1-8). Why? Because as the product of a corruptible creation they are naturally corruptible (cf. Rom. 8:18-25; Heb. 1:10-12). All animal flesh is inescapably subject to decay but since man is made in the image of God he can hope for a heavenly body (2 Cor. 5:1) a body of glory (Phil. 3:21). It should be noted at this point that sin (except in men who conduct themselves like animals) is not on the horizon, not surprisingly since animal death was used by God for food (Ps. 104:21), to atone for old covenant sin and to herald the eventual sacrifice of Jesus’ flesh. All this points to the reality of creation’s natural corruption and destruction taught by Paul in Romans 8:18-25 (cf. 2 Cor. 4:7-5:10; Heb. 1:10-12). (11* See also my The Correspondence Between Romans 8:12-25 and 2 Corinthians 4:7-5:10Romans 8:18-25).

Jesus

If all the offspring of Adam are born sinners, how did Jesus who also was a son of Adam (Luke 3:38) avoid being born likewise? As we have seen, at this point Catholics and some Protestants call in the Virgin Birth, but this has its own problems. If we believe in the imputation of Adam’s sin and Jesus was a genuine man (Heb. 2:17), it is difficult to find a reason for his sinlessness at birth. Denial of it seems to entail Docetism. On the other hand, if we accept the principle of native innocence (Dt. 1:39; Isa. 7:15f.), his sinless life lived according to the dictates of the law becomes a reasonable, if a highly improbable, proposition (cf. Rom. 8:3). Though born innocent like Adam, nonetheless in contrast with Adam he simply did not sin (1 Pet. 2:22) but obeyed the law. Considering that everyone else like Adam broke the law in some way and proved incapable of doing otherwise (Acts 13:39; Rom. 3:19f.; 1 Cor. 1:29; Gal. 2:16; 3:11), this was the miracle that Scripture portrays it as. As man Jesus was unique in that he alone proved capable of living a sinless life in the flesh (Rom. 8:3). To put the issue bluntly, all that is necessary to explain human sin (cf. Rom. 7:14) is the inability of all flesh to keep the law (Rom. 3:20; 7:14; Gal. 2:16 Gk, cf. 2 Pet. 2:19) as even Job appeared to recognize (9:2; 15:14). Furthermore, it is all that is necessary to explain the fact that under the old covenant regeneration was never anything more than a promise (Dt. 29:4; 30:6, etc.). For until someone kept the law, eternal life was a chimera (Lev. 18:5). If this is so, birth sin is redundant even allowing, contrary to Pelagius, for the impact of Adam’s and indeed all parents’ sin (cf. Num. 14:33; Rom. 5:12-21).

Conclusion

At the end of the day we are forced by the evidence to deny that we are born sinners. If we were, God himself as our Creator would be chargeable. Rather, like father like son, we are born as Adam was created without knowledge of law or of good and evil (Dt. 1:39, etc.). According to the Bible, not least Jesus himself, where there is no law there is no transgression. This being the case, babies, like animals, are innocent and, like Paul, only cease to be so when they break the commandment. In view of this it is scarcely surprising that the Bible tells us that we sin in our youth, not our infancy (Gen. 8:21, cf.  Jer. 3:24f.; 22:21; 32:30, etc.). Until we gain knowledge and hence accountability, we remain innocent flesh like the animals (cf. Gen. 6:17). Furthermore, babies die like them on account of the natural corruptibility of creation, irrespective of sin (Job 14:1f.; Ps. 49:12,20; Eccl. 3:18-20; Rom. 8:18-25; Heb. 1:10-12; James 1:10, etc.). (12* If Job and Jeremiah had thought they were sinners at conception and/or birth, I fancy they would have been less wishful of death in the womb, 3:11; 10:18; Jer. 20:14-18. After all, Augustine taught that all unbaptized babies went to hell!)

Assuming then that the findings of this brief study are valid, it is apparent, first, that original sin is alien to the Bible, and, second, that recapitulation is at the heart of the Christian faith. As (human) animals we all begin as unprofitable flesh (John 6:63; Rom. 7:18; 8:8).  But when, as those created in the potential image of God we develop and gain knowledge, even though we sin we can nonetheless please God by exercising faith (Heb. 11:6). If Jesus was the second or last Adam, this must be so, for he had to assume what he intended to heal. He had to re-cover to perfection the ground that Adam and all his offspring had covered so unsuccessfully under (the) law. And because he succeeded, he was able in his love and grace to lay down his life for his friends and so blaze a trail into heaven itself. In this way he fulfilled the promise to Adam and hence to mankind in general outlined in Genesis 1:26-28, 2:16f., Psalm 8:4-6 and Hebrews 2:8-13. Truly is our Creator God a God of grace and redemption in Christ. Soli Deo Gloria.

_________________________________________________________________________

Reference

L.L.Morris, The Epistle to the Romans, Grand Rapids, 1988.

Are Believers Butterflies?

ARE BELIEVERS BUTTERFLIES?
Few passages in Scripture are more well-known yet more misunderstood than John 3:1-8 and 1 Corinthians 15:35-58 which deal respectively with spiritual regeneration and bodily transformation.
In the latter passage where Paul is trying to answer the questions he has himself posed regarding how the dead are raised and with what kind of body they come, he begins with well-known, easily understood illustrations intended to demonstrate that, despite being genetically identical, seeds, full-grown plants and bodies differ. He then adds that there are both earthly and heavenly bodies which also differ but possess their own unique kind of glory.
So, by establishing in verses 36-39 that seeds die and differ from the plants/bodies they produce and that there is variation among the different species, Paul is really stating what must have been obvious to his readers and he does not bother to illustrate his point. Had he been looking for an analogy, he might well have resorted to the truly marvellous metamorphosis of the butterfly, but he did not. In the course of my reading, however, I have come across writers who do use this analogy in ways that suggest that they do not fully appreciate what Scripture is teaching.
For example, in his book Classic Christianity (p.78) Bob George uses the butterfly to illustrate the new birth as follows:
“Being made into a new creation is like a caterpillar becoming a butterfly. Originally an earth-bound crawling creature, a caterpillar weaves a cocoon and is totally immersed in it. Then a marvelous process takes place, called a metamorphosis. Finally, a totally new creature – a butterfly – emerges. Once ground-bound, the butterfly can now soar above the earth. It can now view life from the sky downward.”
Unfortunately, what George has tried to do is use a physical analogy to illustrate a spiritual change, and it doesn’t work. The fact is that the butterfly is not “a totally new creature”. All that has happened to it is that it has undergone a physical change in form like a seed which becomes a plant or a body. If this is so, its illustrative and apologetic value for the Christian is very limited. As far as atheists are concerned, it comes well short of proving the existence of God and of undermining their belief in naturalistic evolution. Moreover, it must be added that one who experiences spiritual regeneration through faith in Christ remains physically the same like the butterfly. He will not be “a totally a new creature” in the biblical sense until he has died, decayed and undergone resurrection transformation.
This brings us to Michael Green who in his book You Must Be Joking uses the metamorphosis of the butterfly to illustrate the resurrection of Jesus and says that Jesus’ body emerged from the grave clothes as a butterfly emerges from its chrysalis (pp.121f.). Again, though the illustration is superficially apt, it is important to realize that what Green as a good Anglican is intent on proving is that Jesus underwent a bodily transformation at his resurrection. Apart from the fact that this has a very dubious foundation in Scripture, his use of the totally physical or natural metamorphosis of a butterfly undermines his argument that Jesus’ fleshly body had undergone the necessary change, in kind as opposed to form, to prepare it for heaven (1 Cor. 15:50-53). The point is this: Green is among the many who contend, quite contrary to the evidence in my view, that when Jesus emerged from the tomb he had been corporeally transformed even though Jesus himself explicitly maintained that he was still flesh (Luke 24:39). In fact, if he was still physical flesh like the butterfly, he could not have been changed in the way Green says he was. After all, apart from his visibility, audibility, tangibility and manifest lack of glory, he ate material food (Luke 24:41-43), and these were all signs that he had retained his first Adamic nature. While they proved his genuinely physical resurrection on the one hand, they indicated that he had not yet ascended on the other (John 20:17), and hence, according to Paul, had not yet undergone the universally necessary change for entry into heaven (1 Cor. 15:53). Bluntly, he had not yet undergone bodily glorification as he had when Paul ‘saw’ him on the road to Damascus (Acts 26:19; 1 Cor. 9:1).
It is here that there is serious misunderstanding. The reason is that it is assumed that resurrection involves not merely bodily but fleshly continuity. This is required by the so-called Fall from original perfection characteristic of Augustinian theology. But Paul implicitly denies this idea, first, by insisting that what is naturally perishable cannot inherit what is naturally imperishable and, second, that the temporal earthly body is intrinsically different, different in kind, that is, from the eternal heavenly body. The difference is basically that between dust and spirit (1 Cor. 15:42-49).
There is no denying that the metamorphosis of the butterfly is one of nature’s wonders, but from a Christian point of view it provides a flawed illustration of resurrection transformation. The problem is that if Jesus, though spiritually regenerate, was still flesh (Luke 24:39), he could not as such inherit the kingdom of God (1 Cor. 15:50). Just as Jesus says we must, that is, by divine design (dei), be spiritually born again (John 3:7), so Paul says that we must (dei) all be corporeally changed (1 Cor. 15:53). If the necessity is universal and Jesus had not yet ascended (John 20:17), then his still fleshly body had not changed at all. It had simply been healed, restored and raised, scars and all. (1* See my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities at www.kenstothard.com /.) The problem with the butterfly is that, despite its change in form, it is never more than an ordinary butterfly that undergoes its own unique process of development. It permanently remains, however, one of God’s natural creatures adapted and confined to this world. By contrast, at his ascension Jesus’ body of flesh was necessarily replaced by a body of glory and was different in kind (Phil. 3:21, cf. 1 Cor. 15:47-49). Looked at from a somewhat different angle, we might simply say that his incarnation was reversed (cf. John 3:13) and he regained the glory he had before the foundation of the earth (John 17:5).
The Resurrection of Jesus and of the Believer
At this point it is vital for us to distinguish between the resurrection of Jesus and that of the believer. It is often said that the former provides the model or paradigm of the latter’s, but both Peter (Acts 2:29-35) and Paul (Acts 13:36) make it indubitably clear that this is not the case. They differentiate definitively between Jesus who did not experience corruption (decay) and David who did. In other words, it is David who provides the model of the resurrection of the dead and decayed, and they constitute the majority of us. What is true is that the resurrection of Jesus is the ground of the believer’s resurrection (1 Cor. 15:20-23), but it provides neither its manner nor its model. For, how can a body that has undergone decay be restored and raised like that of Jesus? As Paul makes crystal clear, while resurrection transformation is common and necessary to both the dead and the living (1 Cor. 15:51-53), the gospels indicate that the resurrection of Jesus occurred separately from his transformation. It was a two-stage affair like the conversion regeneration of the disciples who were believers before the resurrection but were not born again till Pentecost when the Spirit was poured out (John 7:39). First, like Lazarus and others Jesus rose fully restored as he had predicted (John 2:19-21; 10:17f.) but since he had already gained life by keeping the law, unlike Lazarus he was never to die again when he rose (Rom. 6:9; Rev. 1:18). In fact, the only reason why he died at all was not to earn wages but in order to make voluntary atonement for his sheep (Acts 2:23f.). Looked at from this perspective we can say that in his unique case death and hence resurrection were aberrations or deviations from normality. Had he not freely died, he would never have experienced resurrection at all. This can only mean that resurrection (from the grave) was not essential to his incarnate life. By contrast, transformation, like regeneration, is a divine necessity. Both are ‘natural’ necessities to those who are naturally flesh. Thus, later, in order to inherit his eternal heavenly kingdom (cf. Luke 1:32f., etc.), Jesus necessarily had to ascend. And it was then that he was transformed. In this way he provided the paradigm of the ascension transformation of the saints at the end of history who do not die and so do not experience resurrection. If we argue against all the evidence noted above that Jesus was changed at his re-appearance from the grave, then we are forced to make two inferences: first, that his transformation dispensed with his physical resurrection and, second, that it rendered his ascension redundant and turned it into mere drama. (The idea held by many that he made sporadic appearances from heaven during the interlude between his resurrection and his ascension is surely contrary to the evidence.) This clearly undermines the gospel.
The Believer’s Transformation
The bodily transformation, like the spiritual regeneration, that the believer undergoes is much more radical than a butterfly metamorphosis; it involves a change in nature from flesh to spirit (1 Cor. 15:42-46), a change from a body of humiliation (cf. Phil. 2:7f.) to a body of glory (Phil. 3:21), in other words a change in kind not merely in form (1 Cor. 15:44). At this point the temple provides an appropriate analogy. In its natural state the “hand-made” temple (cheiropoietos, Mark 14:58) is subject to both decay and destruction and is replaced by one that is “not made by hand” (acheiropoietos. Cf. John 2:19f.; 1 Peter 2:4-8). Likewise the fleshly or natural body of the believer which is also “hand-made” (Job 10:8, etc.) and hence naturally mortal and corruptible is totally replaced by one that is “not made by hand” (2 Cor. 5:1). (2* See my Manufactured or Not So.)
To pinpoint the issue at stake, while there is continuity of body, there is definite discontinuity of flesh. In the words of Dunn, whereas soma (body) can cross the boundary of the ages, sarx (flesh) belongs firmly to this present age (p.391). Looked at from a slightly different perspective, though the believer remains the same person, he becomes corporeally or somatically different in kind.  Paul puts the issue in a nutshell in 1 Corinthians 15:50 where he says that flesh and blood cannot (by nature) inherit the kingdom of God. And since the perishable (corruption, decay) cannot inherit the imperishable (incorruption), it must by divine necessity be changed. The plain fact is that the butterfly, despite its manifestly marvellous metamorphosis, is perishable through and through. In the final analysis, it is in principle nothing more than a perennially earthbound natural physical phenomenon.
The Butterfly Misleading
Used as an illustration of regeneration, of Jesus’ resurrection and of Christian transformation the butterfly is dangerously misleading and, in view of some of the false deductions made from 1 Corinthians 15 especially, better avoided. It can easily give the impression that we simply evolve by a naturalistic process till we arrive physically perfected in heaven. (3* See, for example, the highly compromising language of Stott in comment on Romans 8, p.240, and my John Stott and the PUTATIVE RESURRECTION TRANSFORMATION of Jesus.) This is not what either Jesus or Paul is suggesting. Rather in the words of Gordon Fee in comment on the two parts of verse 50 we must say: “Together they declare most decisively that the body in its present physical expression cannot inherit the heavenly existence of vv.47-49” (p.798). This is surely Paul’s basic theme from verse 42 through to 54. The change is not natural (verses 36-38) but supernatural, not partial but total, not earthly but heavenly, not terrestrial but spiritual, not evolutionary but revolutionary, not superficial but radical. When we see this, we also see that butterflies are inherently incapable of providing an adequate analogy.
Peter
But Paul is not alone in his views. In 1:1:23, Peter says in very similar words regarding the new birth what Paul says in 15:42 regarding the resurrection. He states categorically that believers have been born again “not of perishable seed but of imperishable, through the living and abiding word of God” (cf. 1 John 3:9). Bluntly, a perishable physical seed cannot produce an imperishable spiritual body fit for eternity. (4* John Stott’s contention in Understanding the Bible, p.134, that our resurrected bodies will be as different as the plant is from the seed out of which it grows falls well short of the mark.) The point is that unlike the natural metamorphosis of the butterfly the process of Christian transformation far from being merely natural is supernatural on both the spiritual and corporeal levels. Jesus plainly indicates in John 3:1-8 that while we remain physically the same when we are born again, we are changed spiritually. Again, John points out in 1:13 that we are born of different fathers. The seed of an ordinary or natural man decides our physical birth, but it is the ‘seed’ of our eternal God which determines our second or spiritual birth. According to Paul we even have different mothers: the earthly and the heavenly Jerusalems are categorically different (Gal. 4:25f.)! What is born of the flesh (nature) is flesh (natural), what is born of the Spirit is spirit (John 3:6, cf. 1 Cor. 15:48). Corruptible flesh dies either naturally as in animals and innocent babies or as a result of sin (Rom. 5:12). (5* It needs to be observed that even the incarnate Jesus would eventually have died if he had remained untransformed on the earth. After all, he visibly aged, John 8:57, and aging leads inevitably to death, 2 Cor. 4:16; Heb. 8:13.) So, if man is to survive death, he can only do so as spirit (Rom. 8:10). (6* 1 Pet. 3:18, cf. 4:1,6; Col. 1:22, would appear to prove conclusively that Jesus’ death was only physical. At his resurrection his spirit, which he had committed to the care of his Father, Luke 23:46, returned to his fleshly body like that of the daughter of Jairus, Luke 8:55). His ascension therefore must involve bodily transformation to enable his regenerate spirit to live forever clothed in a spiritual body (1 Cor. 15:44, cf. 2 Cor. 5:1-5) or a body of glory (Rom. 8:30; Phil. 3:21).  So again it must be stressed that while there is continuity of body, there is patent discontinuity of flesh. As merely earthly creatures, butterflies all die and undergo permanent decay.
Composition
All this is made even plainer by Paul’s insistence in 1 Corinthians 15:47-49 that the basic composition of the natural and the spiritual bodies is different. Dust is carefully and unmistakably differentiated from spirit. While the former is perishable since it stems from Adam (man) who was formed in the (temporal) ground, the latter is imperishable because it stems from the (eternal) heaven. As his children we are necessarily destined to share God’s generic nature (1 Pet. 4:6; 2 Pet. 1:4), and like Jesus we eventually receive a spiritual body of glory like his (Phil. 3:21, cf. John 17:5,24).
It is important to note that it is widely denied by those who are conditioned by the Augustinian worldview that the redeemed or restored body is composed of spirit. Thinking that creation was originally perfect but was marred by sin and is now “fallen”, they argue that the heavenly, still physical, restored body is not composed of but is now completely motivated by the spirit. This, however, was the intention even in this life on earth as Genesis 1:26-28 make clear, but the exercise of dominion proved a failure in all cases but that of Jesus.
The Body of Jesus
This raises the question of Jesus himself. When we consider that he successfully exercised dominion throughout his earthly life, just as we are compelled to ask if he underwent the new birth so we must ask if his body needed to be changed? In view of what he himself implies in John 20:17 and what Paul says especially in 1 Corinthians 15:50 and 53, it did. To deny this is to deny his incarnation and humiliation (Phil. 2:7). As with the new birth, change is divinely and universally decreed (note the dei in both John 3:7 and 1 Cor. 15:53). Jesus was anxious that his disciples should see his glory (John 17:24) which being invisible (cf. 2 Cor. 4:18) was obviously not seen on earth. So the widely held idea that he was changed at his resurrection despite his express assertion that he was still flesh (Luke 24:39) and hence incapable, according to Paul, of inheriting the kingdom of God (1 Cor. 15:50), is obviously wrong. If change is universally necessary, on the assumption that he was genuinely incarnate, it was as necessary in Jesus’ case as in any other. (7* See further my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities.)
Conclusion
To sum up, Jesus was no butterfly.* Just as he underwent transformation from spirit to flesh at his incarnation, so he underwent transformation from flesh to spirit at his ascension (John 3:13; 6:62f.; 17:5; Eph. 4:9f.). He did not take his flesh to heaven as even a careful reading of Acts 1:1-11 in light of 1 Corinthians 15 makes clear. The point being made by Luke is that he will return from heaven implicitly in the glory of God to rescue his own (John 14:3). That is our blessed hope (Tit. 2:13).
* Unlike Tithonus the lover of Aurora in classical mythology he was not changed into a grasshopper either. As Paul indicates in 2 Timothy 1:10, he brought both immortality and incorruption to light.
(See further my essays Was Jesus Born Again, When Was Jesus Transformed?, Did Jesus Rise Physically From The Grave? Creation Corruptible By Nature, Death and Corruption, Some Arguments Against Original Sin, etc.)
REFERENCES
J.D.G.Dunn, Romans, Dallas, 1988.
G.D.Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians, Grand Rapids, 1987.
Bob George, Classic Christianity, Oregon, 1989, Crowborough, UK, 1994.
M.Green, You Must Be Joking in omnibus edition, London, 1997.
J.R.W.Stott, BST Romans, Leicester, 1994.
Understanding The Bible, rev.ed., Homebush West, 1984.

Few passages in Scripture are more well-known yet more misunderstood than John 3:1-8 and 1 Corinthians 15:35-58 which deal respectively with spiritual regeneration and bodily transformation.

In the latter passage where Paul is trying to answer the questions he has himself posed regarding how the dead are raised and with what kind of body they come, he begins with well-known, easily understood illustrations intended to demonstrate that, despite being genetically identical, seeds, full-grown plants and bodies differ. He then adds that there are both earthly and heavenly bodies which also differ but possess their own unique kind of glory.

So, by establishing in verses 36-39 that seeds die and differ from the plants/bodies they produce and that there is variation among the different species, Paul is really stating what must have been obvious to his readers and he does not bother to illustrate his point. Had he been looking for an analogy, he might well have resorted to the truly marvellous metamorphosis of the butterfly, but he did not. In the course of my reading, however, I have come across writers who do use this analogy in ways that suggest that they do not fully appreciate what Scripture is teaching.

For example, in his book Classic Christianity (p.78) Bob George uses the butterfly to illustrate the new birth as follows:

“Being made into a new creation is like a caterpillar becoming a butterfly. Originally an earth-bound crawling creature, a caterpillar weaves a cocoon and is totally immersed in it. Then a marvelous process takes place, called a metamorphosis. Finally, a totally new creature – a butterfly – emerges. Once ground-bound, the butterfly can now soar above the earth. It can now view life from the sky downward.”

Unfortunately, what George has tried to do is use a physical analogy to illustrate a spiritual change, and it doesn’t work. The fact is that the butterfly is not “a totally new creature”. All that has happened to it is that it has undergone a physical change in form like a seed which becomes a plant or a body. If this is so, its illustrative and apologetic value for the Christian is very limited. As far as atheists are concerned, it comes well short of proving the existence of God and of undermining their belief in naturalistic evolution. Moreover, it must be added that one who experiences spiritual regeneration through faith in Christ remains physically the same like the butterfly. He will not be “a totally a new creature” in the biblical sense until he has died, decayed and undergone resurrection transformation.

This brings us to Michael Green who in his book You Must Be Joking uses the metamorphosis of the butterfly to illustrate the resurrection of Jesus and says that Jesus’ body emerged from the grave clothes as a butterfly emerges from its chrysalis (pp.121f.). Again, though the illustration is superficially apt, it is important to realize that what Green as a good Anglican is intent on proving is that Jesus underwent a bodily transformation at his resurrection. Apart from the fact that this has a very dubious foundation in Scripture, his use of the totally physical or natural metamorphosis of a butterfly undermines his argument that Jesus’ fleshly body had undergone the necessary change, in kind as opposed to form, to prepare it for heaven (1 Cor. 15:50-53). The point is this: Green is among the many who contend, quite contrary to the evidence in my view, that when Jesus emerged from the tomb he had been corporeally transformed even though Jesus himself explicitly maintained that he was still flesh (Luke 24:39). In fact, if he was still physical flesh like the butterfly, he could not have been changed in the way Green says he was. After all, apart from his visibility, audibility, tangibility and manifest lack of glory, he ate material food (Luke 24:41-43), and these were all signs that he had retained his first Adamic nature. While they proved his genuinely physical resurrection on the one hand, they indicated that he had not yet ascended on the other (John 20:17), and hence, according to Paul, had not yet undergone the universally necessary change for entry into heaven (1 Cor. 15:53). Bluntly, he had not yet undergone bodily glorification as he had when Paul ‘saw’ him on the road to Damascus (Acts 26:19; 1 Cor. 9:1).

It is here that there is serious misunderstanding. The reason is that it is assumed that resurrection involves not merely bodily but fleshly continuity. This is required by the so-called Fall from original perfection characteristic of Augustinian theology. But Paul implicitly denies this idea, first, by insisting that what is naturally perishable cannot inherit what is naturally imperishable and, second, that the temporal earthly body is intrinsically different, different in kind, that is, from the eternal heavenly body. The difference is basically that between dust and spirit (1 Cor. 15:42-49).

There is no denying that the metamorphosis of the butterfly is one of nature’s wonders, but from a Christian point of view it provides a flawed illustration of resurrection transformation. The problem is that if Jesus, though spiritually regenerate, was still flesh (Luke 24:39), he could not as such inherit the kingdom of God (1 Cor. 15:50). Just as Jesus says we must, that is, by divine design (dei), be spiritually born again (John 3:7), so Paul says that we must (dei) all be corporeally changed (1 Cor. 15:53). If the necessity is universal and Jesus had not yet ascended (John 20:17), then his still fleshly body had not changed at all. It had simply been healed, restored and raised, scars and all. (1* See my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities) The problem with the butterfly is that, despite its change in form, it is never more than an ordinary butterfly that undergoes its own unique process of development. It permanently remains, however, one of God’s natural creatures adapted and confined to this world. By contrast, at his ascension Jesus’ body of flesh was necessarily replaced by a body of glory and was different in kind (Phil. 3:21, cf. 1 Cor. 15:47-49). Looked at from a somewhat different angle, we might simply say that his incarnation was reversed (cf. John 3:13) and he regained the glory he had before the foundation of the earth (John 17:5).

The Resurrection of Jesus and of the Believer

At this point it is vital for us to distinguish between the resurrection of Jesus and that of the believer. It is often said that the former provides the model or paradigm of the latter’s, but both Peter (Acts 2:29-35) and Paul (Acts 13:36) make it indubitably clear that this is not the case. They differentiate definitively between Jesus who did not experience corruption (decay) and David who did. In other words, it is David who provides the model of the resurrection of the dead and decayed, and they constitute the majority of us. What is true is that the resurrection of Jesus is the ground of the believer’s resurrection (1 Cor. 15:20-23), but it provides neither its manner nor its model. For, how can a body that has undergone decay be restored and raised like that of Jesus? As Paul makes crystal clear, while resurrection transformation is common and necessary to both the dead and the living (1 Cor. 15:51-53), the gospels indicate that the resurrection of Jesus occurred separately from his transformation. It was a two-stage affair like the conversion regeneration of the disciples who were believers before the resurrection but were not born again till Pentecost when the Spirit was poured out (John 7:39). First, like Lazarus and others Jesus rose fully restored as he had predicted (John 2:19-21; 10:17f.) but since he had already gained life by keeping the law, unlike Lazarus he was never to die again when he rose (Rom. 6:9; Rev. 1:18). In fact, the only reason why he died at all was not to earn wages but in order to make voluntary atonement for his sheep (Acts 2:23f.). Looked at from this perspective we can say that in his unique case death and hence resurrection were aberrations or deviations from normality. Had he not freely died, he would never have experienced resurrection at all. This can only mean that resurrection (from the grave) was not essential to his incarnate life. By contrast, transformation, like regeneration, is a divine necessity. Both are ‘natural’ necessities to those who are naturally flesh. Thus, later, in order to inherit his eternal heavenly kingdom (cf. Luke 1:32f., etc.), Jesus necessarily had to ascend. And it was then that he was transformed. In this way he provided the paradigm of the ascension transformation of the saints at the end of history who do not die and so do not experience resurrection. If we argue against all the evidence noted above that Jesus was changed at his re-appearance from the grave, then we are forced to make two inferences: first, that his transformation dispensed with his physical resurrection and, second, that it rendered his ascension redundant and turned it into mere drama. (The idea held by many that he made sporadic appearances from heaven during the interlude between his resurrection and his ascension is surely contrary to the evidence.) This clearly undermines the gospel.

The Believer’s Transformation

The bodily transformation, like the spiritual regeneration, that the believer undergoes is much more radical than a butterfly metamorphosis; it involves a change in nature from flesh to spirit (1 Cor. 15:42-46), a change from a body of humiliation (cf. Phil. 2:7f.) to a body of glory (Phil. 3:21), in other words a change in kind not merely in form (1 Cor. 15:44). At this point the temple provides an appropriate analogy. In its natural state the “hand-made” temple (cheiropoietos, Mark 14:58) is subject to both decay and destruction and is replaced by one that is “not made by hand” (acheiropoietos. Cf. John 2:19f.; 1 Peter 2:4-8). Likewise the fleshly or natural body of the believer which is also “hand-made” (Job 10:8, etc.) and hence naturally mortal and corruptible is totally replaced by one that is “not made by hand” (2 Cor. 5:1). (2* See my Manufactured Or Not So.)

To pinpoint the issue at stake, while there is continuity of body, there is definite discontinuity of flesh. In the words of Dunn, whereas soma (body) can cross the boundary of the ages, sarx (flesh) belongs firmly to this present age (p.391). Looked at from a slightly different perspective, though the believer remains the same person, he becomes corporeally or somatically different in kind.  Paul puts the issue in a nutshell in 1 Corinthians 15:50 where he says that flesh and blood cannot (by nature) inherit the kingdom of God. And since the perishable (corruption, decay) cannot inherit the imperishable (incorruption), it must by divine necessity be changed. The plain fact is that the butterfly, despite its manifestly marvellous metamorphosis, is perishable through and through. In the final analysis, it is in principle nothing more than a perennially earthbound natural physical phenomenon.

The Butterfly Misleading

Used as an illustration of regeneration, of Jesus’ resurrection and of Christian transformation the butterfly is dangerously misleading and, in view of some of the false deductions made from 1 Corinthians 15 especially, better avoided. It can easily give the impression that we simply evolve by a naturalistic process till we arrive physically perfected in heaven. (3* See, for example, the highly compromising language of Stott in comment on Romans 8, p.240, and my John Stott on the Putative Resurrection Transformation of Jesus.) This is not what either Jesus or Paul is suggesting. Rather in the words of Gordon Fee in comment on the two parts of verse 50 we must say: “Together they declare most decisively that the body in its present physical expression cannot inherit the heavenly existence of vv.47-49” (p.798). This is surely Paul’s basic theme from verse 42 through to 54. The change is not natural (verses 36-38) but supernatural, not partial but total, not earthly but heavenly, not terrestrial but spiritual, not evolutionary but revolutionary, not superficial but radical. When we see this, we also see that butterflies are inherently incapable of providing an adequate analogy.

Peter

But Paul is not alone in his views. In 1:1:23, Peter says in very similar words regarding the new birth what Paul says in 15:42 regarding the resurrection. He states categorically that believers have been born again “not of perishable seed but of imperishable, through the living and abiding word of God” (cf. 1 John 3:9). Bluntly, a perishable physical seed cannot produce an imperishable spiritual body fit for eternity. (4* John Stott’s contention in Understanding the Bible, p.134, that our resurrected bodies will be as different as the plant is from the seed out of which it grows falls well short of the mark.) The point is that unlike the natural metamorphosis of the butterfly the process of Christian transformation far from being merely natural is supernatural on both the spiritual and corporeal levels. Jesus plainly indicates in John 3:1-8 that while we remain physically the same when we are born again, we are changed spiritually. Again, John points out in 1:13 that we are born of different fathers. The seed of an ordinary or natural man decides our physical birth, but it is the ‘seed’ of our eternal God which determines our second or spiritual birth. According to Paul we even have different mothers: the earthly and the heavenly Jerusalems are categorically different (Gal. 4:25f.)! What is born of the flesh (nature) is flesh (natural), what is born of the Spirit is spirit (John 3:6, cf. 1 Cor. 15:48). Corruptible flesh dies either naturally as in animals and innocent babies or as a result of sin (Rom. 5:12). (5* It needs to be observed that even the incarnate Jesus would eventually have died if he had remained untransformed on the earth. After all, he visibly aged, John 8:57, and aging leads inevitably to death, 2 Cor. 4:16; Heb. 8:13.) So, if man is to survive death, he can only do so as spirit (Rom. 8:10). (6* 1 Pet. 3:18, cf. 4:1,6; Col. 1:22, would appear to prove conclusively that Jesus’ death was only physical. At his resurrection his spirit, which he had committed to the care of his Father, Luke 23:46, returned to his fleshly body like that of the daughter of Jairus, Luke 8:55). His ascension therefore must involve bodily transformation to enable his regenerate spirit to live forever clothed in a spiritual body (1 Cor. 15:44, cf. 2 Cor. 5:1-5) or a body of glory (Rom. 8:30; Phil. 3:21).  So again it must be stressed that while there is continuity of body, there is patent discontinuity of flesh. As merely earthly creatures, butterflies all die and undergo permanent decay.

Composition

All this is made even plainer by Paul’s insistence in 1 Corinthians 15:47-49 that the basic composition of the natural and the spiritual bodies is different. Dust is carefully and unmistakably differentiated from spirit. While the former is perishable since it stems from Adam (man) who was formed in the (temporal) ground, the latter is imperishable because it stems from the (eternal) heaven. As his children we are necessarily destined to share God’s generic nature (1 Pet. 4:6; 2 Pet. 1:4), and like Jesus we eventually receive a spiritual body of glory like his (Phil. 3:21, cf. John 17:5,24).

It is important to note that it is widely denied by those who are conditioned by the Augustinian worldview that the redeemed or restored body is composed of spirit. Thinking that creation was originally perfect but was marred by sin and is now “fallen”, they argue that the heavenly, still physical, restored body is not composed of but is now completely motivated by the spirit. This, however, was the intention even in this life on earth as Genesis 1:26-28 make clear, but the exercise of dominion proved a failure in all cases but that of Jesus.

The Body of Jesus

This raises the question of Jesus himself. When we consider that he successfully exercised dominion throughout his earthly life, just as we are compelled to ask if he underwent the new birth so we must ask if his body needed to be changed? In view of what he himself implies in John 20:17 and what Paul says especially in 1 Corinthians 15:50 and 53, it did. To deny this is to deny his incarnation and humiliation (Phil. 2:7). As with the new birth, change is divinely and universally decreed (note the dei in both John 3:7 and 1 Cor. 15:53). Jesus was anxious that his disciples should see his glory (John 17:24) which being invisible (cf. 2 Cor. 4:18) was obviously not seen on earth. So the widely held idea that he was changed at his resurrection despite his express assertion that he was still flesh (Luke 24:39) and hence incapable, according to Paul, of inheriting the kingdom of God (1 Cor. 15:50), is obviously wrong. If change is universally necessary, on the assumption that he was genuinely incarnate, it was as necessary in Jesus’ case as in any other. (7* See further my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities.)

Conclusion

To sum up, Jesus was no butterfly.* Just as he underwent transformation from spirit to flesh at his incarnation, so he underwent transformation from flesh to spirit at his ascension (John 3:13; 6:62f.; 17:5; Eph. 4:9f.). He did not take his flesh to heaven as even a careful reading of Acts 1:1-11 in light of 1 Corinthians 15 makes clear. The point being made by Luke is that he will return from heaven implicitly in the glory of God to rescue his own (John 14:3). That is our blessed hope (Tit. 2:13).

* Unlike Tithonus the lover of Aurora in classical mythology he was not changed into a grasshopper either. As Paul indicates in 2 Timothy 1:10, he brought both immortality and incorruption to light.

(See further my essays  Was Jesus Born Again?When Was Jesus Transformed?Did Jesus Rise Physically From The Grave?Creation Corruptible By NatureDeath and CorruptionSome Arguments Against Original Sin, etc.)

_______________________________________________________________________

References

J.D.G.Dunn, Romans, Dallas, 1988.

G.D.Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians, Grand Rapids, 1987.

Bob George, Classic Christianity, Oregon, 1989, Crowborough, UK, 1994.

M.Green, You Must Be Joking in omnibus edition, London, 1997.

J.R.W.Stott, BST Romans, Leicester, 1994.

J.R.W.Stott, Understanding The Bible, rev.ed., Homebush West, 1984.

Why Infant Baptism is Unchristian

WHY INFANT BAPTISM IS UNCHRISTIAN
Most churches practise infant baptism. Even when the ceremony is called ‘christening’ it is usually regarded as baptism, as when I was a baby. One of the arguments used in its favour is that if circumcision in the OT could occur on the eighth day, why not infant baptism in a more gracious covenant? This is to forget that infant boy circumcision, unlike that of Abraham, was initially a marker of nationality, of belonging, and what is sometimes known as a ‘naming ceremony’ among Christians is more akin to it. In Christendom or the ostensibly theocratic regime that operated in the Middle Ages, baptism also signified belonging. If lack of circumcision robbed a baby boy of national status in the OT, it was deemed to do the same in NT times. Nowadays, it is felt by some that just as circumcision indicated that a baby boy was a true Jew born of Jewish parents and hence legally in the covenant (see Genesis 17), so a naming ceremony held in a church is sufficient to indicate that the baby is in the care and nurture of the Christian church. However, my intention here is to demonstrate that baptism, truly and strictly interpreted, rules infants out of court.
The Baptism of Infants
First, the so-called baptism of infants lacks a biblical foundation; on the face of it, it is an ecclesiastical rite. On what grounds do I say this? Unless it is clearly perceived as belonging exclusively to the new covenant, as opposed to the old, baptism is simply not Christian. Of course, many would argue that we are all now living in new covenant times and therefore, since babies are included, they should be treated accordingly. But infant baptism fails to take into consideration the realities of human development, specifically portrayed in biblical as opposed to traditional covenant theology. (1* See my Covenant Theology, Covenant Theology in Brief, Covenant Continuity and Discontinuity.) The elementary point is that all human beings begin at the beginning. What do I mean? I mean that just as Adam was first created in the ground and Eve emanated from him, so now all human beings without exception are procreated and ‘born of woman’. If the earth is our original mother, then our present human mother symbolizes the earth (flesh). The truth of this was manifest at Jesus’ incarnation; he became flesh when he was born of Mary (Mt. 2; Luke 1,2; Gal. 4:4). The NT indicates his earthly nature, first, by suggesting that in effect through his mother he stemmed like Adam from the ground (Eph. 4:9), second, by drawing attention to his fleshly continuity with Adam whose son he was (Luke 3:38), and, third, by implying that as the second Adam he had to begin as dust like the first Adam (1 Cor. 15:47-49). Indeed, unless he had been capable of re-enacting to perfection the abortive ‘ascension’ (cf. Eph. 4:9f.) of the first Adam and all his successors, he could not have served as man’s Saviour. In other words, he had, first, to be a true human being; second, to assume what had to be healed (Heb. 2:14, cf. Gregory Nazianzen who claimed that what was not assumed was not healed), and, third, to fulfil the law that originally promised (eternal) life to man (Adam) (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5, cf. Rom. 7:10, etc.),
Life From Beginning to End
So as man Jesus, like all other men and women (Heb. 2), had to begin at the beginning and then progress through the various stages of life recapitulating the gestation (cf. the Garden of Eden), infancy, childhood, adolescence, adult manhood (cf. 1 Cor. 13:11; 14:20, etc.) common to man until he attained to its culmination in glory (John 17:5,24; Rom. 8:30). He had in other words to progress from ground to glory or from Eden to eternity. Why is it important to stress this? Because it inevitably means that Jesus could not be baptized until he had lived: first, a fleshly existence like that of the animals without understanding of good and evil (Isa. 7:15f., cf. Dt. 1:39; Rom. 9:11), second, a Gentile or heathen life like his forebear Abraham under Noah and thereby recapitulate the race’s heathen experience in Egypt (Mt. 2:15), third, as a servant under the law of Moses (Luke 2:40-52), and, finally, as a son, the Son, under the leading of the Spirit. All this is conveniently etched and summed up in Galatians 4:1-7. In plain terms, he had as a true son of Adam to live to perfection a fully human, or first Adamic, life in the flesh (cf. Rom. 8:3) until he finally ascended (re)transformed (i.e. back from incarnation to the glory he had before the foundation of the earth, John 17:5) into heaven (John 6:62, etc.) where he took his seat at his Father’s side (Heb. 1:3, etc.).
Perfection
To express the issue another way, since, far from being flatly and statically uniform, human life necessarily, that is, by divine decree, involves dynamic development or progress from immaturity at creation (procreation) to maturity or perfection, Jesus had to begin his incarnation from scratch, that is, as imperfect or immature. (The idea held by fundamentalists that Adam was created fully mature in one literal day must be dismissed as absurd. If it were true, Adam was not a man, least of all prototypical or representative man according to the flesh.) If he was the second Adam, he had to begin where the first Adam began. If his goal from the start was perfection (cf. Heb. 2:9f.; 5:9; 6:1; 7:11,28; 12:23; Phil. 3:12-14), the perfection of God himself (Lev. 11:44f.; 19:2; Mt. 5:48; 19:21), then the perfecting process was inherently necessary till its pinnacle was achieved in the Father’s presence (Heb. 1:3). Perfection involves a teleological or perfecting process (cf. Heb. 7:11,28; 12:1f.) which, like progressive revelation cannot be achieved in one fell swoop. There were no short cuts even for the Son of God himself. As a true human being, genuinely incarnate, he had to pass through the same stages of physical and spiritual growth and development as all other human beings (Luke 2:40-52; 1 Cor. 13:11; 14:20; Heb. 2:10; 5:9, cf. Gal. 4:1-7). Thus his life followed the pattern established by his forebears concisely expressed by Paul as born (or becoming) of woman and under the law (Gal. 4:4). But Paul goes on to add the profoundly significant words: “to redeem those who were under the law so that we might receive adoption as sons” (cf. Heb. 2:9-13).  In order to do this, it is obvious that until he had been circumcised like every other Jewish boy and been rigorously tested and approved under the law, he could not be baptized and confirmed as God’s Son. We may well ask, why?
The Meaning of Baptism
This question prompts us to delve into the meaning of baptism which is an exclusively new covenant rite. It is generally agreed that in contrast with circumcision, which signifies law (Rom. 2:25; Gal. 5:3), baptism is the sign of faith, repentance and regeneration. However, as John the Baptist recognized, since Jesus was the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world (John 1:29, cf. Mt. 3:14), he did not need to repent. Consequently, his baptism indicated not only faith but primarily regeneration. Traditionally, Christians following Augustine have wrongly associated regeneration with (original) sin. In fact, in its pure form it has nothing to do with sin at all, as Jesus’ own case makes clear. Moreover, what he says in John 3:3-8, where he conspicuously fails to mention sin, underlines this view. The reason why, against the natural instinct of John the Baptist (Mt. 3:14), Jesus submitted himself for baptism was that he had successfully completed his test under the law (cf. Ex. 16:4; Dt. 8:2,16), met its requirements to the satisfaction of his Father and was granted eternal life in accordance with the promise first made to Adam (Gen. 2:17) and later extended to all his progeny (Lev. 18:5, etc.). Otherwise expressed, he was the first and only man in history to receive the promised Spirit and eternal life as the result of keeping the law.  To serve uniquely as Saviour he had to become spiritually alive himself (Isa. 45:22-25, cf. Rom. 8:29; Heb. 2:10-13). As the hymn There is a green Hill has it, he had to open the hitherto closed door of heaven and let the rest of us in. Having confirmed his pedigree by his performance, he was baptized by God spiritually and invisibly and by man visibly, audibly and tangibly (Mt. 3:13-17, cf. 1 John 1:1-3). Thus set apart and consecrated (cf. John 1:32), he was confessed and acknowledged (Mark 1:9-11) as the one who belonged to God (cf. Rom. 8:9; 1 John 4:13), in fact as God’s own (regenerate) Son.  What he was by nature, he had proved by action: he had confirmed his ontology by his conduct. So it is that we who follow in his tread by faith and are accounted righteous in him also become by baptism the regenerate sons and daughters of God. For us, his Christian followers, the baptism of Jesus was and remains prototypical and paradigmatic. As God’s firstborn (Rom. 8:29), he was the foundation member (1 Cor. 3:11) of a large family (Heb. 2:10-13), and it was precisely he who as the firstborn was worshipped by angels on arrival in heaven (Heb. 1:6; John 17:5). What is more, since as risen from the dead he was also the first fruits of those who have died (cf. Col. 1:18), he underwrote the resurrection of those who belong to him (1 Cor. 15:20-23; John 6:35-40; 11:25f.; 12:26; 14:3; 17:24).
Church Practice
Of course, the churches in general recognize that baptism signifies regeneration, or birth from above, and eternal life. Without it we cannot finally be saved as passages like John 3:1-8 plainly indicate.  Not unnaturally, however, when our spiritual forebears read such verses, they assumed that the only way they could ensure their children’s salvation was to baptize them. And since original sin was deemed to exclude them, baptism seemed to be an unavoidable necessity. However, this kind of thinking was clearly in error. Why?
Original Sin and Human Development
First, it cannot be stated too emphatically that the Augustinian dogma of original sin which teaches that Adam’s sin was either transmitted (Catholics) or imputed (Protestants) to his offspring is contrary to Scripture. (2* See my various articles on original sin at www.kenstothard.com /.) Paul makes it clear beyond equivocation that where there is no law, there is no transgression (Rom. 4:15; 7:8). In light of this we are compelled to conclude that infants who know neither the law nor good and evil are innocent (Dt. 1:39, etc.). Next, we must recognize that whatever impact our parents including Adam may have on us (cf. Ex. 20:5f.), we all sin on our own account (cf. Ex. 32:33; Ps. 106:6, etc.). Like Adam before us, we all fail to keep the commandment we receive as we emerge from infancy (cf. Dt. 1:39; Prov. 1:8; 4:1-9; 6:20; Rom. 7:9f.). To express this point more positively, we all earn our own wages by breaking the law in our youth (Ex. 32:33; Ezek. 18; Rom. 3:23; 5:12; 6:23; 11:32, etc.). Only Jesus, in contrast with Adam and the rest of his offspring, avoided doing this (1 Pet. 2:22).
Second, once we have gained sufficient knowledge or understanding of the law to make sin a possibility (cf. Rom. 7:7f.), we also have the knowledge on which to base faith even if it is only of a very immature kind. In contrast with the new birth, faith is relative and can be exercised even by children. It was so in OT times, it remains so now. In Hebrews 11 during the minority of the race, while faith is prominent, regeneration is conspicuously absent (though note 11:39f.). Why? Because faith and repentance are the first steps on the road to justification which must of necessity precede the new birth (Lev. 18:5, etc.). (3* See my The Order of Salvation, Cart-Before-the-Horse Theology, etc.) Furthermore, just as we saw above that the Jews were tested under the law (Ex. 15:25; 16:4, etc.), so an immature faith is tested before it is permanently sealed in justification and regeneration. But it must be stressed that until Jesus came and kept the law to perfection, regeneration remained nothing more than a promise (Dt. 29:4; 30:6, etc.). The same remains true even in NT times. While faith of the kind found in the OT may well be exercised, it does not reach its culmination in regeneration until Christ specifically is consciously and intelligently received by faith. It is not till then that we are justified or accounted righteous and receive the Spirit in accordance with the promise (Lev. 18:5; Rom. 10:5, etc.). Any attempt to reverse this order and give the new birth priority is to commit the same kind of error that Paul accused the Galatians of, that is, beginning with the Spirit and ending with the flesh (Gal. 3:3)! No wonder that “baptized” babies have so often historically failed to provide evidence of their Christian commitment. (4* Pace Luther and his famous ‘baptizatus sum’.)
If all this is true, what are the specific grounds for rejecting infant baptism as Christian?
First, infant baptism ignores the human development implied by a truly biblical covenant theology which reflects nature, law and grace (John 1:10-13; Rom. 1-3; 7-8; Gal. 4:1-7). According to the Bible, initial creation, and therefore our own procreation, is uncovenanted, that is, it lacks a covenantal guarantee. The first covenant God made was with Noah when mankind had by his day undergone a degree of development. Indeed, as one who was made in the image of God unlike the animals, he was able to appreciate the significance of the rainbow and to undertake the task originally assigned to Adam in faith and confidence (Gen. 1:28; 9:1). There would never again be a flood to threaten the very existence of the earth (Gen. 8:21f.). (5* See my Did God Make a Covenant With Creation?)
Second, infant baptism fails to treat infants as infants. If the baptism of Jesus, the man who had kept the law, was the occasion of his regeneration or his confirmed and acknowledged sonship, it must serve as the paradigm of every Christian baptism. As we have seen, baptism is the sacrament of the new birth, but the new birth could not occur until Jesus himself had gained righteousness by keeping the law to perfection (Lev. 18:5). So the same must hold in the case of all his disciples who are not greater than their Master. We cannot be properly baptized and hence born again until we gain righteousness by faith exercised specifically in him, the inaugurator of the new covenant. It should be added here that infants, since they know neither good nor evil, are still merely flesh and physically on a par with the animals. In this condition they cannot possibly feed on anything other than material bread (milk) which does nothing to offset their natural corruptibility and mortality (John 6:22-63, cf. Rom. 8:13; Gal. 6:8). It is only when they are capable of eating spiritual food (Mt. 4:4) and drinking spiritual water (John 4:10,13f.) that they are on the road to regeneration and ultimate perfection. In their case the inappropriateness of baptism ought to be obvious. It is not until they have passed through the heathen stage of their lives under Noah (and, if they are Jews, under the law), that they are in a position to graduate to maturity under Christ. It should be noted that Jewish girls who were not circumcised and were in fact often ranked with the heathen, can, given faith in Christ, be baptized and so attain to maturity apart from the law (Gal. 3:28). Technically, all Gentiles who become Christians are likewise uncircumcised and true children of Eve, the mother of all living, whose sin differed from that of Adam and Jewish men (1 Tim. 2:14). But as Paul says, while circumcision and uncircumcision are nothing, obeying the commandments is everything (1 Cor. 7:19).
Third, historically, the raison d’etre or justification of infant baptism is original sin which does not and indeed cannot exist where there is neither law (Rom. 4:15) nor knowledge (Dt. 1:39; Rom. 9:11). Put bluntly, the transmission or imputation of sin is a lie. Little wonder that we cannot be punished for the sins of our fathers (Dt. 24:16; Ezek. 18).
Next, in effect, infant “baptism” ignores both nature under Noah and law under Moses. (6* It is not without significance that Jewish Christians in the early church wanted to have Gentile converts circumcised, Acts 15:1,5. For them progression through the law would have seemed natural. Paul however recognized that circumcision signifying law was unique to the Jews as the chosen people of God. He was obviously not unaware that it was Eve, not Adam, who typified the Gentiles as Romans 7:7ff. indicates!  There is another point to make. Those who stress the so-called unity of the covenant almost inevitably link circumcision (law) with baptism (regeneration). On the basis of an appeal to and bad exegesis of Colossians 2:11-13 some virtually equate circumcision with baptism and thus apply the latter to infants. When they do this they in effect do the very thing that the apostles disallowed.)   Furthermore, it dispenses with faith, since infants who lack all knowledge cannot exercise it.  It implicitly sounds the death knell of justification by faith so grandly re-discovered at the Reformation. It is not without interest therefore that Peter sees Noah as undergoing merely a symbolic form or type of “baptism” when he was saved from the flood (1 Pet. 3:20). Again, Paul regards the Israelites as being symbolically “baptized” into Moses when they passed through the sea at the exodus (1 Cor. 10:2f.). Given this perspective, infant baptism is clearly anomalous. Baptism proper, that is, Christian baptism belongs to the new covenant which is experienced personally only by faith in Christ, our elder brother (cf. Heb. 2:10-13). It involves separation from both the heathen and the Jews. It constitutes them corporately a third race (1 Cor. 10:32).
Fifth, infant baptism inevitably implies baptismal regeneration. It makes the new birth the result of a mechanical act (opus operatum) and empowers priests to play God. What happened at Jesus’ own baptism is relevant at this point. While John the Baptist was the human agent on this occasion, the real baptizer was God himself, as Matthew 3:13-17 makes indisputable. John’s reluctance to baptize Jesus  indicates that he felt himself to be unfitted for his role and in fact confessed his need for Jesus to baptize him. (Indeed, until he had himself been baptized and ascended, Jesus was in no position to baptize him, cf. 1 Cor. 15:45b.; John 7:39.) In sum, the only warrant for Christian baptism is personal confession of faith in Christ. Even John’s own baptism of (with a view to) repentance required personal submission. (The notion of vicarious repentance is unsupported by Scripture and intrinsically alien to it.)
Sixth, infant baptism puts the cart before the horse (cf. Gal. 3:1-5). In the Bible we attain to regeneration by a process of maturation under the sovereign providence of God. Yet in churches ruled by tradition, regeneration comes first in the order of salvation (e.g. the Westminster Confession of Faith ch.10). Apart from it we are regarded as dead in Adam’s sin (contrast Eph. 2:1,5, etc.). Thus what is really the goal of our unregenerate life under law, that is, eternal life (Gen. 2:17) becomes foundational and turns theology upside down.  What a contrast with Paul who informs us that like Adam and Eve he had ‘life’ till he received the commandment but when he broke it, he like them earned its wages in death (Rom. 7:9f., cf. 5:12). Needless to say, he was baptized when he was converted (Acts 9:18). (7* See my Cart-Before-The-Horse Theology.)
Seventh, specious arguments used to support infant baptism like covenant theology, prevenient false grace, family membership and so forth are in fact spurious. To use the idea of human solidarity to the exclusion of individual responsibility is surely to err. (8* See my Solidarity and Separation.)
Conclusion
If what has been argued above is anything like the truth, far from being categorized with the adiaphora (Stott, p.385) infant baptism is a major obstacle to our understanding of biblical theology and anthropology. Man is by nature subject to development and recapitulation and cannot sensibly undergo baptism and the regeneration it implies until he has been tested under (the) law and achieved a degree of intelligent maturity. Since he cannot keep the law (Acts 13:39; Rom. 3:20; Gal. 2:16, etc.) in order to be justified and gain the life it promises (Lev. 18:5, etc.), he can nonetheless by the grace of God be born again through faith specifically in Christ who was justified by keeping the law and so received the Spirit. If biblical history is to be our guide, even this kind of faith needs to be shown to be a credible profession subject to reasonable testing. This, however, is a subject that requires more extensive treatment.
Additional Note on the Law
It is often alleged that since Christ is the end (terminus) of the law, it no longer applies. This is a profound misunderstanding of the biblical position. Christians may have died to the law through faith in Christ (Gal. 2:19) and they are now under the law of Christ (cf. 1 Cor. 9:19-23). For unbelievers, that is, the unregenerate, however, (the) law in one form or another still stands and is not replaced until they enter the new covenant by faith. Hence the need for evangelism and the admonition and care (not the persecution as in the Middle Ages) of the church. Jesus tells us plainly that he did not come to abolish the law but to fulfil it (Mt. 5:17f.). It follows from this that it is fulfilled only for those who believe in him, not for all and sundry.
Reference
John Stott, The Contemporary Christian, Leicester, 1992.

Most churches practise infant baptism. Even when the ceremony is called ‘christening’ it is usually regarded as baptism, as when I was a baby. One of the arguments used in its favour is that if circumcision in the OT could occur on the eighth day, why not infant baptism in a more gracious covenant? This is to forget that infant boy circumcision, unlike that of Abraham, was initially a marker of nationality, of belonging, and what is sometimes known as a ‘naming ceremony’ among Christians is more akin to it. In Christendom or the ostensibly theocratic regime that operated in the Middle Ages, baptism also signified belonging. If lack of circumcision robbed a baby boy of national status in the OT, it was deemed to do the same in NT times. Nowadays, it is felt by some that just as circumcision indicated that a baby boy was a true Jew born of Jewish parents and hence legally in the covenant (see Genesis 17), so a naming ceremony held in a church is sufficient to indicate that the baby is in the care and nurture of the Christian church. However, my intention here is to demonstrate that baptism, truly and strictly interpreted, rules infants out of court.

The Baptism of Infants

First, the so-called baptism of infants lacks a biblical foundation; on the face of it, it is an ecclesiastical rite. On what grounds do I say this? Unless it is clearly perceived as belonging exclusively to the new covenant, as opposed to the old, baptism is simply not Christian. Of course, many would argue that we are all now living in new covenant times and therefore, since babies are included, they should be treated accordingly. But infant baptism fails to take into consideration the realities of human development, specifically portrayed in biblical as opposed to traditional covenant theology. (1* See my Covenant TheologyCovenant Theology in BriefCovenant Continuity and Discontinuity.) The elementary point is that all human beings begin at the beginning. What do I mean? I mean that just as Adam was first created in the ground and Eve emanated from him, so now all human beings without exception are procreated and ‘born of woman’. If the earth is our original mother, then our present human mother symbolizes the earth (flesh). The truth of this was manifest at Jesus’ incarnation; he became flesh when he was born of Mary (Mt. 2; Luke 1,2; Gal. 4:4). The NT indicates his earthly nature, first, by suggesting that in effect through his mother he stemmed like Adam from the ground (Eph. 4:9), second, by drawing attention to his fleshly continuity with Adam whose son he was (Luke 3:38), and, third, by implying that as the second Adam he had to begin as dust like the first Adam (1 Cor. 15:47-49). Indeed, unless he had been capable of re-enacting to perfection the abortive ‘ascension’ (cf. Eph. 4:9f.) of the first Adam and all his successors, he could not have served as man’s Saviour. In other words, he had, first, to be a true human being; second, to assume what had to be healed (Heb. 2:14, cf. Gregory Nazianzen who claimed that what was not assumed was not healed), and, third, to fulfil the law that originally promised (eternal) life to man (Adam) (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5, cf. Rom. 7:10, etc.),

Life From Beginning to End

So as man Jesus, like all other men and women (Heb. 2), had to begin at the beginning and then progress through the various stages of life recapitulating the gestation (cf. the Garden of Eden), infancy, childhood, adolescence, adult manhood (cf. 1 Cor. 13:11; 14:20, etc.) common to man until he attained to its culmination in glory (John 17:5,24; Rom. 8:30). He had in other words to progress from ground to glory or from Eden to eternity. Why is it important to stress this? Because it inevitably means that Jesus could not be baptized until he had lived: first, a fleshly existence like that of the animals without understanding of good and evil (Isa. 7:15f., cf. Dt. 1:39; Rom. 9:11), second, a Gentile or heathen life like his forebear Abraham under Noah and thereby recapitulate the race’s heathen experience in Egypt (Mt. 2:15), third, as a servant under the law of Moses (Luke 2:40-52), and, finally, as a son, the Son, under the leading of the Spirit. All this is conveniently etched and summed up in Galatians 4:1-7. In plain terms, he had as a true son of Adam to live to perfection a fully human, or first Adamic, life in the flesh (cf. Rom. 8:3) until he finally ascended (re)transformed (i.e. back from incarnation to the glory he had before the foundation of the earth, John 17:5) into heaven (John 6:62, etc.) where he took his seat at his Father’s side (Heb. 1:3, etc.).

Perfection

To express the issue another way, since, far from being flatly and statically uniform, human life necessarily, that is, by divine decree, involves dynamic development or progress from immaturity at creation (procreation) to maturity or perfection, Jesus had to begin his incarnation from scratch, that is, as imperfect or immature. (The idea held by fundamentalists that Adam was created fully mature in one literal day must be dismissed as absurd. If it were true, Adam was not a man, least of all prototypical or representative man according to the flesh.) If he was the second Adam, he had to begin where the first Adam began. If his goal from the start was perfection (cf. Heb. 2:9f.; 5:9; 6:1; 7:11,28; 12:23; Phil. 3:12-14), the perfection of God himself (Lev. 11:44f.; 19:2; Mt. 5:48; 19:21), then the perfecting process was inherently necessary till its pinnacle was achieved in the Father’s presence (Heb. 1:3). Perfection involves a teleological or perfecting process (cf. Heb. 7:11,28; 12:1f.) which, like progressive revelation cannot be achieved in one fell swoop. There were no short cuts even for the Son of God himself. As a true human being, genuinely incarnate, he had to pass through the same stages of physical and spiritual growth and development as all other human beings (Luke 2:40-52; 1 Cor. 13:11; 14:20; Heb. 2:10; 5:9, cf. Gal. 4:1-7). Thus his life followed the pattern established by his forebears concisely expressed by Paul as born (or becoming) of woman and under the law (Gal. 4:4). But Paul goes on to add the profoundly significant words: “to redeem those who were under the law so that we might receive adoption as sons” (cf. Heb. 2:9-13).  In order to do this, it is obvious that until he had been circumcised like every other Jewish boy and been rigorously tested and approved under the law, he could not be baptized and confirmed as God’s Son. We may well ask, why?

The Meaning of Baptism

This question prompts us to delve into the meaning of baptism which is an exclusively new covenant rite. It is generally agreed that in contrast with circumcision, which signifies law (Rom. 2:25; Gal. 5:3), baptism is the sign of faith, repentance and regeneration. However, as John the Baptist recognized, since Jesus was the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world (John 1:29, cf. Mt. 3:14), he did not need to repent. Consequently, his baptism indicated not only faith but primarily regeneration. Traditionally, Christians following Augustine have wrongly associated regeneration with (original) sin. In fact, in its pure form it has nothing to do with sin at all, as Jesus’ own case makes clear. Moreover, what he says in John 3:3-8, where he conspicuously fails to mention sin, underlines this view. The reason why, against the natural instinct of John the Baptist (Mt. 3:14), Jesus submitted himself for baptism was that he had successfully completed his test under the law (cf. Ex. 16:4; Dt. 8:2,16), met its requirements to the satisfaction of his Father and was granted eternal life in accordance with the promise first made to Adam (Gen. 2:17) and later extended to all his progeny (Lev. 18:5, etc.). Otherwise expressed, he was the first and only man in history to receive the promised Spirit and eternal life as the result of keeping the law.  To serve uniquely as Saviour he had to become spiritually alive himself (Isa. 45:22-25, cf. Rom. 8:29; Heb. 2:10-13). As the hymn There is a green Hill has it, he had to open the hitherto closed door of heaven and let the rest of us in. Having confirmed his pedigree by his performance, he was baptized by God spiritually and invisibly and by man visibly, audibly and tangibly (Mt. 3:13-17, cf. 1 John 1:1-3). Thus set apart and consecrated (cf. John 1:32), he was confessed and acknowledged (Mark 1:9-11) as the one who belonged to God (cf. Rom. 8:9; 1 John 4:13), in fact as God’s own (regenerate) Son.  What he was by nature, he had proved by action: he had confirmed his ontology by his conduct. So it is that we who follow in his tread by faith and are accounted righteous in him also become by baptism the regenerate sons and daughters of God. For us, his Christian followers, the baptism of Jesus was and remains prototypical and paradigmatic. As God’s firstborn (Rom. 8:29), he was the foundation member (1 Cor. 3:11) of a large family (Heb. 2:10-13), and it was precisely he who as the firstborn was worshipped by angels on arrival in heaven (Heb. 1:6; John 17:5). What is more, since as risen from the dead he was also the first fruits of those who have died (cf. Col. 1:18), he underwrote the resurrection of those who belong to him (1 Cor. 15:20-23; John 6:35-40; 11:25f.; 12:26; 14:3; 17:24).

Church Practice

Of course, the churches in general recognize that baptism signifies regeneration, or birth from above, and eternal life. Without it we cannot finally be saved as passages like John 3:1-8 plainly indicate.  Not unnaturally, however, when our spiritual forebears read such verses, they assumed that the only way they could ensure their children’s salvation was to baptize them. And since original sin was deemed to exclude them, baptism seemed to be an unavoidable necessity. However, this kind of thinking was clearly in error. Why?

Original Sin and Human Development

First, it cannot be stated too emphatically that the Augustinian dogma of original sin which teaches that Adam’s sin was either transmitted (Catholics) or imputed (Protestants) to his offspring is contrary to Scripture. (2* See my various articles on original sin) Paul makes it clear beyond equivocation that where there is no law, there is no transgression (Rom. 4:15; 7:8). In light of this we are compelled to conclude that infants who know neither the law nor good and evil are innocent (Dt. 1:39, etc.). Next, we must recognize that whatever impact our parents including Adam may have on us (cf. Ex. 20:5f.), we all sin on our own account (cf. Ex. 32:33; Ps. 106:6, etc.). Like Adam before us, we all fail to keep the commandment we receive as we emerge from infancy (cf. Dt. 1:39; Prov. 1:8; 4:1-9; 6:20; Rom. 7:9f.). To express this point more positively, we all earn our own wages by breaking the law in our youth (Ex. 32:33; Ezek. 18; Rom. 3:23; 5:12; 6:23; 11:32, etc.). Only Jesus, in contrast with Adam and the rest of his offspring, avoided doing this (1 Pet. 2:22).

Second, once we have gained sufficient knowledge or understanding of the law to make sin a possibility (cf. Rom. 7:7f.), we also have the knowledge on which to base faith even if it is only of a very immature kind. In contrast with the new birth, faith is relative and can be exercised even by children. It was so in OT times, it remains so now. In Hebrews 11 during the minority of the race, while faith is prominent, regeneration is conspicuously absent (though note 11:39f.). Why? Because faith and repentance are the first steps on the road to justification which must of necessity precede the new birth (Lev. 18:5, etc.). (3* See my The Order of SalvationCart-Before-The-Horse Theology, etc.) Furthermore, just as we saw above that the Jews were tested under the law (Ex. 15:25; 16:4, etc.), so an immature faith is tested before it is permanently sealed in justification and regeneration. But it must be stressed that until Jesus came and kept the law to perfection, regeneration remained nothing more than a promise (Dt. 29:4; 30:6, etc.). The same remains true even in NT times. While faith of the kind found in the OT may well be exercised, it does not reach its culmination in regeneration until Christ specifically is consciously and intelligently received by faith. It is not till then that we are justified or accounted righteous and receive the Spirit in accordance with the promise (Lev. 18:5; Rom. 10:5, etc.). Any attempt to reverse this order and give the new birth priority is to commit the same kind of error that Paul accused the Galatians of, that is, beginning with the Spirit and ending with the flesh (Gal. 3:3)! No wonder that “baptized” babies have so often historically failed to provide evidence of their Christian commitment. (4* Pace Luther and his famous ‘baptizatus sum’.)

If all this is true, what are the specific grounds for rejecting infant baptism as Christian?

First, infant baptism ignores the human development implied by a truly biblical covenant theology which reflects nature, law and grace (John 1:10-13; Rom. 1-3; 7-8; Gal. 4:1-7). According to the Bible, initial creation, and therefore our own procreation, is uncovenanted, that is, it lacks a covenantal guarantee. The first covenant God made was with Noah when mankind had by his day undergone a degree of development. Indeed, as one who was made in the image of God unlike the animals, he was able to appreciate the significance of the rainbow and to undertake the task originally assigned to Adam in faith and confidence (Gen. 1:28; 9:1). There would never again be a flood to threaten the very existence of the earth (Gen. 8:21f.). (5* See my Did God Make a Covenant with Creation?)

Second, infant baptism fails to treat infants as infants. If the baptism of Jesus, the man who had kept the law, was the occasion of his regeneration or his confirmed and acknowledged sonship, it must serve as the paradigm of every Christian baptism. As we have seen, baptism is the sacrament of the new birth, but the new birth could not occur until Jesus himself had gained righteousness by keeping the law to perfection (Lev. 18:5). So the same must hold in the case of all his disciples who are not greater than their Master. We cannot be properly baptized and hence born again until we gain righteousness by faith exercised specifically in him, the inaugurator of the new covenant. It should be added here that infants, since they know neither good nor evil, are still merely flesh and physically on a par with the animals. In this condition they cannot possibly feed on anything other than material bread (milk) which does nothing to offset their natural corruptibility and mortality (John 6:22-63, cf. Rom. 8:13; Gal. 6:8). It is only when they are capable of eating spiritual food (Mt. 4:4) and drinking spiritual water (John 4:10,13f.) that they are on the road to regeneration and ultimate perfection. In their case the inappropriateness of baptism ought to be obvious. It is not until they have passed through the heathen stage of their lives under Noah (and, if they are Jews, under the law), that they are in a position to graduate to maturity under Christ. It should be noted that Jewish girls who were not circumcised and were in fact often ranked with the heathen, can, given faith in Christ, be baptized and so attain to maturity apart from the law (Gal. 3:28). Technically, all Gentiles who become Christians are likewise uncircumcised and true children of Eve, the mother of all living, whose sin differed from that of Adam and Jewish men (1 Tim. 2:14). But as Paul says, while circumcision and uncircumcision are nothing, obeying the commandments is everything (1 Cor. 7:19).

Third, historically, the raison d’etre or justification of infant baptism is original sin which does not and indeed cannot exist where there is neither law (Rom. 4:15) nor knowledge (Dt. 1:39; Rom. 9:11). Put bluntly, the transmission or imputation of sin is a lie. Little wonder that we cannot be punished for the sins of our fathers (Dt. 24:16; Ezek. 18).

Next, in effect, infant “baptism” ignores both nature under Noah and law under Moses. (6* It is not without significance that Jewish Christians in the early church wanted to have Gentile converts circumcised, Acts 15:1,5. For them progression through the law would have seemed natural. Paul however recognized that circumcision signifying law was unique to the Jews as the chosen people of God. He was obviously not unaware that it was Eve, not Adam, who typified the Gentiles as Romans 7:7ff. indicates!  There is another point to make. Those who stress the so-called unity of the covenant almost inevitably link circumcision (law) with baptism (regeneration). On the basis of an appeal to and bad exegesis of Colossians 2:11-13 some virtually equate circumcision with baptism and thus apply the latter to infants. When they do this they in effect do the very thing that the apostles disallowed.)   Furthermore, it dispenses with faith, since infants who lack all knowledge cannot exercise it.  It implicitly sounds the death knell of justification by faith so grandly re-discovered at the Reformation. It is not without interest therefore that Peter sees Noah as undergoing merely a symbolic form or type of “baptism” when he was saved from the flood (1 Pet. 3:20). Again, Paul regards the Israelites as being symbolically “baptized” into Moses when they passed through the sea at the exodus (1 Cor. 10:2f.). Given this perspective, infant baptism is clearly anomalous. Baptism proper, that is, Christian baptism belongs to the new covenant which is experienced personally only by faith in Christ, our elder brother (cf. Heb. 2:10-13). It involves separation from both the heathen and the Jews. It constitutes them corporately a third race (1 Cor. 10:32).

Fifth, infant baptism inevitably implies baptismal regeneration. It makes the new birth the result of a mechanical act (opus operatum) and empowers priests to play God. What happened at Jesus’ own baptism is relevant at this point. While John the Baptist was the human agent on this occasion, the real baptizer was God himself, as Matthew 3:13-17 makes indisputable. John’s reluctance to baptize Jesus  indicates that he felt himself to be unfitted for his role and in fact confessed his need for Jesus to baptize him. (Indeed, until he had himself been baptized and ascended, Jesus was in no position to baptize him, cf. 1 Cor. 15:45b.; John 7:39.) In sum, the only warrant for Christian baptism is personal confession of faith in Christ. Even John’s own baptism of (with a view to) repentance required personal submission. (The notion of vicarious repentance is unsupported by Scripture and intrinsically alien to it.)

Sixth, infant baptism puts the cart before the horse (cf. Gal. 3:1-5). In the Bible we attain to regeneration by a process of maturation under the sovereign providence of God. Yet in churches ruled by tradition, regeneration comes first in the order of salvation (e.g. the Westminster Confession of Faith ch.10). Apart from it we are regarded as dead in Adam’s sin (contrast Eph. 2:1,5, etc.). Thus what is really the goal of our unregenerate life under law, that is, eternal life (Gen. 2:17) becomes foundational and turns theology upside down.  What a contrast with Paul who informs us that like Adam and Eve he had ‘life’ till he received the commandment but when he broke it, he like them earned its wages in death (Rom. 7:9f., cf. 5:12). Needless to say, he was baptized when he was converted (Acts 9:18). (7* See my Cart-Before-The-Horse Theology.)

Seventh, specious arguments used to support infant baptism like covenant theology, prevenient false grace, family membership and so forth are in fact spurious. To use the idea of human solidarity to the exclusion of individual responsibility is surely to err. (8* See my Solidarity and Separation)

Conclusion

If what has been argued above is anything like the truth, far from being categorized with the adiaphora (Stott, p.385) infant baptism is a major obstacle to our understanding of biblical theology and anthropology. Man is by nature subject to development and recapitulation and cannot sensibly undergo baptism and the regeneration it implies until he has been tested under (the) law and achieved a degree of intelligent maturity. Since he cannot keep the law (Acts 13:39; Rom. 3:20; Gal. 2:16, etc.) in order to be justified and gain the life it promises (Lev. 18:5, etc.), he can nonetheless by the grace of God be born again through faith specifically in Christ who was justified by keeping the law and so received the Spirit. If biblical history is to be our guide, even this kind of faith needs to be shown to be a credible profession subject to reasonable testing. This, however, is a subject that requires more extensive treatment.

Additional Note on the Law

It is often alleged that since Christ is the end (terminus) of the law, it no longer applies. This is a profound misunderstanding of the biblical position. Christians may have died to the law through faith in Christ (Gal. 2:19) and they are now under the law of Christ (cf. 1 Cor. 9:19-23). For unbelievers, that is, the unregenerate, however, (the) law in one form or another still stands and is not replaced until they enter the new covenant by faith. Hence the need for evangelism and the admonition and care (not the persecution as in the Middle Ages) of the church. Jesus tells us plainly that he did not come to abolish the law but to fulfil it (Mt. 5:17f.). It follows from this that it is fulfilled only for those who believe in him, not for all and sundry.

Reference

John Stott, The Contemporary Christian, Leicester, 1992.

The Human Pilgrimage from Ground to Glory

THE HUMAN PILGRIMAGE FROM GROUND TO GLORY
According to Augustinian tradition God originally made both creation and creature perfect. By contrast, all the Bible says is that he created them “good”, that is, useful or suited to his purpose (Gen. 1). Since the creation of both the world (Ps. 102:25) and of man (Ps. 119:73; Isa. 45:11f.) was performed “by hand” (1* Gk cheiropoietos, an OT expression that denotes inherent defectiveness. See further my Manufactured or Not So at www.kenstothard.com /.), it could not have been perfect. Indeed, if it had been, the so-called “Fall” of man followed by a curse on all creation would have been impossible. Or, if this is disallowed and logic is followed to its inexorable conclusion, God who alone is perfect would himself have been susceptible to a “Fall”! (Note that in Heb. 7:28 Jesus is perfected forever and is therefore perfect like his Father, Mt. 5:48!)
On the assumption that the Augustinian view, riddled with contradictions as it is, is denied, we learn from the Bible that creation is intrinsically inferior to its Creator as a work of art is to its artist or a house is to its builder (Heb. 3:3, cf. Acts 7:48-50). In fact, all material (created) things being visible are impermanent (2 Cor. 4:18, cf. Rom. 1:20) and will eventually be destroyed (Heb. 12:27, cf. 1 Cor. 3:12-15; Col. 2;22). It follows from this that since man as flesh is created from the earth, he too is by nature impermanent (cf. Gen. 6:3; 1 Cor. 15:42-50). Initially, he is animated dust like the rest of the animal creation (Gen. 2:7, cf. Ps. 78:39; 103:14) and to this extent resembles seed. As such after creation by God in (mother) earth (cf. Ps. 139:15; Eph. 4:9; Heb. 10:5) he is then placed in the Garden of Eden, the earthly paradise or the womb of the race, to be nurtured (cf. Gen. 2:8,15). There like a baby gestating he develops and is given a commandment by his Creator to test him or prove his worth (cf. e.g. Dt. 8:2,16). But since as flesh he is subject to temptation (James 1:14f.), he and Eve both give way seduced by the devil and the deceitfulness of fleshly lusts (Gen. 3:6, cf. Eph. 4:22; Heb. 3:13). Thus they forfeit the promise of eternal life (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5). In this way they establish a pattern of sin which all their posterity who are made in their image and under their influence subsequently follow (Rom. 5:12, cf. 3:23; 8:10). Contrary to Article 9 of the Church of England (2* See my Imitation), the child who imitates or repeats his father’s sin is the father of the man (cf. Eph. 2:3). (3* Traditional exegesis of this verse which clearly places actual sin or will before nature, cf. John 8:34, cf. Jer. 13:23; Hos. 5:4, has been perverted in the interests of the Augustinian worldview.) To put the issue otherwise, as the word ‘Adam’, which means both the individual (the one) and mankind (the many), implies, the individual recapitulates the history of the race or community both physically (by necessity) and spiritually (by imitation).
Is this conclusion borne out by the rest of Scripture? Those who accept the Augustinian dogma of original sin and the imputation of Adam’s sin would hotly deny it. However, the idea that we are born sinful as those who are born “in Adam” (4* Cf. Augustine’s “in quo” or “in whom”, a mistranslation of Romans 5:12.) is clearly contrary to the teaching of the Bible as passages like Exodus 32:33, Deuteronomy 24:16, Jeremiah 31:29f. and Ezekiel 18, for example, plainly indicate. In any case, if we are born sinners, then Jesus also was born a sinner. (Traditional attempts to evade this conclusion must be pronounced a failure.) So, I conclude that the notion of recapitulation outlined above and implied in Genesis 1 and 2 is the true view. To make sure, we must follow the story as portrayed in the Bible.
According to Genesis 5:1-3, Adam and Eve produce children who have the potential to become the image and likeness of God as they themselves had (Gen. 1:26f.).  This was implied in Genesis 1 when plants and animals, including man, were created and intended to reproduce according to kind (Heb. 7:23, cf. v.16). From this we infer, first, that we all begin at the beginning, that is, recapitulate the experience of our forebears and, second, that we are naturally mortal. (5* See further my Death Before Genesis 3, A Double Helping.)  Like Adam and Eve themselves who at the start did not know the law and were hence ignorant of good and evil, their children follow the same pattern and begin life in innocence (cf. Dt. 1:39; Isa. 7:15f., etc.). However, once as those in the process of formation in the image of God they come to know the commandment (for a child one commandment is enough), they like their parents break it and sin. The truth of this is borne out by the fact that while the Bible points to infantile ignorance of law which undergirds innocence (Rom. 4:15; 7:8, cf. John 9:41; 15:22,24), it insists that we all sin in our youth, that is, as children when the law in some form impresses itself on our developing minds (Gen. 8:21; Ps. 25:7; Prov. 20:11; Jer. 3:24f.). This is confirmed indisputably by the apostle Paul who describes his own experience which is common to all. Though he is traditionally supposed to teach original sin, in fact he claims that he himself was born “alive” (not dead in sin) but earned death when he broke the parental commandment (Prov. 1:8; 4:1-9; 6:20-23) that had dawned on his childlike mind just as it had long before on that of the similarly maturing Adam (Rom. 7:9f.). And so it is with all of us, says Paul. While as infants we are innocent (cf. Rom. 9:11), as children we all break the commandment and earn the wages of death (Rom. 6:23). Since we all transgress and earn the wages of death (Rom. 5:12; 6:23), we all equally need salvation or rescue (cf. Rom. 3:9,12,19f.).
According to Type
Since we are told that Adam was a type of the second Adam (Rom. 5:14), we are under an obligation to follow the course of the latter, the antitype, on whom we have been given more detailed basic information. Study of him enables us to gain understanding about the progress of man in general since (a) he certainly began in innocence (Isa. 7:15f.) and had to be perfect(ed) (Heb. 2:10; 5:9) and (b) was like us at every point except in the commission of actual sin (Heb. 2:17; Heb. 4:15; 1 Pet. 2:22).
Adam’s Posterity
As those who are the children of Adam like Jesus (Luke 3:38) we all begin “in Adam” (cf. 1 Cor. 15:22) (6* It is surely illegitimate to transfer the phrase “in Adam” as the sin-obsessed Augustine did to Romans 5:12. That we all die in Adam apart from sin is basic to Paul’s understanding of the human body as reflected in 1 Corinthians 15 in general. Flesh and blood are intrinsically mortal and corruptible and cannot by nature inherit the kingdom of God.) as (mortal) flesh in the ground (Gen. 2:7; Ps. 78:39; 103:14; 139:15f.; Eph. 4:9, cf. Heb. 2:17).  Then, after the initial creation of Adam, procreation takes over. Thus we begin in the loins of our fathers (Heb. 7:10; 1 Cor. 11:12) and from their sides we are transferred like Adam to the Garden of Eden to be nurtured in the wombs our mothers (cf. Ps. 139:13; Luke 1:31). On his divine side Jesus of course stemmed from the bosom of his heavenly Father (John 1:14, cf. v.18). While God is in the general sense the Father of spirits (Num. 16:22; Heb. 12:9), in Jesus’ case in the form of the Holy Spirit he overshadowed Mary (Luke 1:35, cf. Gen. 1:2) and incarnated himself in her womb (cf. Gal. 4:4). It was through his mother that Adam was the human father of Jesus (Luke 3:38). We can be sure that Joseph was not his father or Jesus could never have achieved the salvation of his fellows as (the Son of) God (cf. Isa. 45: 22f.; Phil. 2:10f.).
So after the normal nine months’ period of gestation Mary’s pregnancy reached full term and Jesus was born knowing neither the law nor good and evil (Isa. 7:15f., cf. Dt. 1:39; Rom. 9:11). In this as the second Adam Jesus resembled the first Adam but in contrast with him who was apparently nurtured in the Garden of Eden to physical maturity before his “birth” (cf. 1 Cor. 15:46), Jesus was physically a baby who still had to grow to both physical and spiritual adulthood after his birth. The traditional fundamentalist idea prompted by the literal interpretation of the days in Genesis leads well-intentioned but clearly misguided writers to suggest that Adam was created with the appearance of a thirty-year-old. Apart from the implicit deception involved at this point, a man who does not develop is not a man at all, least of all the fleshly prototype of all other men including Jesus! In any case, if he was a type of the second Adam (Rom. 5:14), Adam must have been every bit as subject to development as the second one was. If not, they were not racially related, not of the same species! Of course, the implication of this is that mankind began as an animal before like a baby he eventually developed mental and moral consciousness (cf. 1 Cor. 15:46). And if this is true, then the history of mankind is recapitulated in miniature by every baby that is born or he/she would not be human. Even more to the point, Jesus would not, indeed could not have been the second Adam who atoned for the sin of the world (1 John 2:2).
In sum, I contend that science far from erring at this point is in fact supported by the Bible itself!
Jesus and Recapitulation
It would seem to follow from this that like his forebears whose early experience he recapitulated Jesus, as an infant, lived without a personal covenant guarantee. (7* The covenant with Noah guaranteed life to sentient but unselfconscious flesh only in the general sense.) As with them, it was only as he developed into childhood and became capable of understanding the commandment that promised life that he developed moral awareness. At this point faith and obedience leading to life in contrast with Adam’s disobedience which had led to death became real possibilities (cf. Rom. 6:16). Thus while he recapitulated his ancestors’ particular heathen experience in Egypt (Mt. 2:15), he also underwent the general experience of all minors as a slave under trustees (Gal. 4:1f.).  Again, as a true Jew he was liberated from slavery under Noah to guardianship under the law of Moses at the age of thirteen and became a son of the commandment (cf. Luke 2:40-52). So, according to Paul he was first born of woman a true human being, then tested under the law as his ancestors had been (Dt. 8:2,16, etc.) until he had earned the pleasure of his Father who endowed him with his Spirit at his baptism (cf. Gal. 4:1-7). Alternatively expressed, he had, in contrast with Adam and all others who followed in his footsteps, exercised faith and obedience and gained life in accordance with the promise (Gen. 2:17: Lev. 18:5, etc.).
Man in General
The human experience of Jesus outlined above is also that of the rest of us. The only way in which we differ from him lies in the fact that we all sin but he did not (Heb. 2:17; 1 Pet. 2:22). (8* Of course, to the extent that as a Jew who lived out his adolescence under the law of Moses in contradistinction to the Gentiles he differed. But since all who achieve maturity undergo primary, secondary and tertiary experiences of a kind, the difference is not great, cf. Gal. 3:25, KJV.) We are all born of woman and having outgrown infancy, we all live as children like Gentiles under the covenant with Noah. As adolescents we experience instruction under law of a kind and having undergone our apprenticeship we graduate to maturity. Of course, while many fail to reach intellectual adulthood for various reasons including chronological and/or historical ones, many more come short of spiritual adulthood in Christ. This may or may not be as a result of deliberate sin. Scripture describes the maturation process in terms of perfection especially but by no means exclusively in Hebrews (cf. Phil. 3:12-14, etc.).
Regeneration
Prior to Genesis 2:16f. Adam like an animal or a baby clearly lacked (understanding of) the moral law and was thus innocent. However, since he was destined to attain to the image and likeness of God, when it (the commandment) came, it promised (eternal) life on condition of obedience. In the event he failed to meet this condition. Unsurprisingly, all his posterity, who were also in their turn promised life if they obeyed (Lev. 18:5, cf. Rom. 7:9f.), failed likewise (Rom. 3:23; 5:12, etc.). Jesus alone despite his being truly human and hence mortal kept the whole law and gained that life (received the Spirit, Gal. 3:2), which included personal immunity to death, at his baptism. It was his regeneration precisely that put him in a position (cf. Acts 10:38; Eph. 2:10) to lay down his life freely for his sheep, that is, those who believed in him.
Glory
This, however, was not the end. Regeneration or spiritual rebirth paved the way for sanctification and ultimate glorification. As Paul indicates faith leads to justification, justification to sanctification and sanctification to eternal life. That this means final glorification there can be no doubt (Rom. 8:30). So just as Jesus finished the  work that his Father gave him to do (John 17:4; 19:30) and was glorified, we follow suit (Heb. 2:10). When our pilgrimage or course like that of Jesus (Luke 13:32), of John the Baptist (Acts 13:25), of Paul (Acts  20:24; Phil 3:14; 2 Tim. 4:7) and of Peter (2 Pet. 1:14f.) is finished, then we too in accordance with God’s purpose will enter heaven itself (John 3:3; 1 Cor. 15:50) where we shall see the glory of Jesus (John 17:24) and be with him forever (John 12:26; 1 Thes. 4:17) in his eternal kingdom (2 Pet. 1:11).
Finale
When our glorification has been finally achieved and all things are subjected under Jesus (Col. 1:20; Eph. 1:10),  then the restoration will be complete (Acts 3:21) and God will be all in all (1 Cor. 15:28). In accordance with the original plan of salvation, we shall have travelled from ground to glory to become the children of God.
Additional Note
If what is written above is a reasonable sketch of biblical teaching, it is apparent that much of our inherited theology is seriously astray. If Jesus himself as man despite his dubious pedigree (Mt. 1:1-5) began his earthly career in moral innocence (Isa. 7:15f.) and was challenged to attain to righteousness and life by keeping the law (cf. Acts 3:14, etc.), how much more Adam (Gen. 2:17).  If Jesus had to be perfected both physically and spiritually as man, so Adam and the rest of us who are created in his image. If Jesus progressed from ground (Eph. 4:9) to glory (Eph. 4:10), that is, began at the beginning like Adam but in contrast with him attained his (pre)destined end, how much more the rest of us who trust in him. In other words, the idea that Adam was created righteous, even perfect, yet fell and brought a curse on the entire creation thus necessitating its redemption is Augustinian nonsense. In the twenty-first century it is high time that we abandoned such absurd ideas and ceased to nullify Scripture by our tradition (Mark 7:7f.,13).
The suggestion that unlike Adam himself who not knowing the law was created innocent, all his children inherited his sin at birth is grotesquely false. At birth since we do not know the law we can be nothing other than innocent like Jesus (cf. Rom. 4:15; 7:8; 9:11). And to read into Psalm 51:5 (9* Properly understood, this verse could apply to Jesus every bit as much as to David.) what the Jews and the Orthodox realize is not there is criminal exegesis clearly dancing to the tune that Augustine composed. Well did Jesus warn us against nullifying Scripture by means of tradition (Mark 7:7,13).
Note further my The Ascent of Man, The Journey of Jesus, Following Jesus, Perfection.

According to Augustinian tradition God originally made both creation and creature perfect. By contrast, all the Bible says is that he created them “good”, that is, useful or suited to his purpose (Gen. 1). Since the creation of both the world (Ps. 102:25) and of man (Ps. 119:73; Isa. 45:11f.) was performed “by hand” (1* Gk cheiropoietos, an OT expression that denotes inherent defectiveness. See further my Manufactured Or Not So.), it could not have been perfect. Indeed, if it had been, the so-called “Fall” of man followed by a curse on all creation would have been impossible. Or, if this is disallowed and logic is followed to its inexorable conclusion, God who alone is perfect would himself have been susceptible to a “Fall”! (Note that in Heb. 7:28 Jesus is perfected forever and is therefore perfect like his Father, Mt. 5:48!)

On the assumption that the Augustinian view, riddled with contradictions as it is, is denied, we learn from the Bible that creation is intrinsically inferior to its Creator as a work of art is to its artist or a house is to its builder (Heb. 3:3, cf. Acts 7:48-50). In fact, all material (created) things being visible are impermanent (2 Cor. 4:18, cf. Rom. 1:20) and will eventually be destroyed (Heb. 12:27, cf. 1 Cor. 3:12-15; Col. 2;22). It follows from this that since man as flesh is created from the earth, he too is by nature impermanent (cf. Gen. 6:3; 1 Cor. 15:42-50). Initially, he is animated dust like the rest of the animal creation (Gen. 2:7, cf. Ps. 78:39; 103:14) and to this extent resembles seed. As such after creation by God in (mother) earth (cf. Ps. 139:15; Eph. 4:9; Heb. 10:5) he is then placed in the Garden of Eden, the earthly paradise or the womb of the race, to be nurtured (cf. Gen. 2:8,15). There like a baby gestating he develops and is given a commandment by his Creator to test him or prove his worth (cf. e.g. Dt. 8:2,16). But since as flesh he is subject to temptation (James 1:14f.), he and Eve both give way seduced by the devil and the deceitfulness of fleshly lusts (Gen. 3:6, cf. Eph. 4:22; Heb. 3:13). Thus they forfeit the promise of eternal life (Gen. 2:17; Lev. 18:5). In this way they establish a pattern of sin which all their posterity who are made in their image and under their influence subsequently follow (Rom. 5:12, cf. 3:23; 8:10). Contrary to Article 9 of the Church of England (2* See my Imitation), the child who imitates or repeats his father’s sin is the father of the man (cf. Eph. 2:3). (3* Traditional exegesis of this verse which clearly places actual sin or will before nature, cf. John 8:34, cf. Jer. 13:23; Hos. 5:4, has been perverted in the interests of the Augustinian worldview.) To put the issue otherwise, as the word ‘Adam’, which means both the individual (the one) and mankind (the many), implies, the individual recapitulates the history of the race or community both physically (by necessity) and spiritually (by imitation).

Is this conclusion borne out by the rest of Scripture? Those who accept the Augustinian dogma of original sin and the imputation of Adam’s sin would hotly deny it. However, the idea that we are born sinful as those who are born “in Adam” (4* Cf. Augustine’s “in quo” or “in whom”, a mistranslation of Romans 5:12.) is clearly contrary to the teaching of the Bible as passages like Exodus 32:33, Deuteronomy 24:16, Jeremiah 31:29f. and Ezekiel 18, for example, plainly indicate. In any case, if we are born sinners, then Jesus also was born a sinner. (Traditional attempts to evade this conclusion must be pronounced a failure.) So, I conclude that the notion of recapitulation outlined above and implied in Genesis 1 and 2 is the true view. To make sure, we must follow the story as portrayed in the Bible.

According to Genesis 5:1-3, Adam and Eve produce children who have the potential to become the image and likeness of God as they themselves had (Gen. 1:26f.).  This was implied in Genesis 1 when plants and animals, including man, were created and intended to reproduce according to kind (Heb. 7:23, cf. v.16). From this we infer, first, that we all begin at the beginning, that is, recapitulate the experience of our forebears and, second, that we are naturally mortal. (5* See further my Death Before Genesis 3A Double Helping.)  Like Adam and Eve themselves who at the start did not know the law and were hence ignorant of good and evil, their children follow the same pattern and begin life in innocence (cf. Dt. 1:39; Isa. 7:15f., etc.). However, once as those in the process of formation in the image of God they come to know the commandment (for a child one commandment is enough), they like their parents break it and sin. The truth of this is borne out by the fact that while the Bible points to infantile ignorance of law which undergirds innocence (Rom. 4:15; 7:8, cf. John 9:41; 15:22,24), it insists that we all sin in our youth, that is, as children when the law in some form impresses itself on our developing minds (Gen. 8:21; Ps. 25:7; Prov. 20:11; Jer. 3:24f.). This is confirmed indisputably by the apostle Paul who describes his own experience which is common to all. Though he is traditionally supposed to teach original sin, in fact he claims that he himself was born “alive” (not dead in sin) but earned death when he broke the parental commandment (Prov. 1:8; 4:1-9; 6:20-23) that had dawned on his childlike mind just as it had long before on that of the similarly maturing Adam (Rom. 7:9f.). And so it is with all of us, says Paul. While as infants we are innocent (cf. Rom. 9:11), as children we all break the commandment and earn the wages of death (Rom. 6:23). Since we all transgress and earn the wages of death (Rom. 5:12; 6:23), we all equally need salvation or rescue (cf. Rom. 3:9,12,19f.).

According to Type

Since we are told that Adam was a type of the second Adam (Rom. 5:14), we are under an obligation to follow the course of the latter, the antitype, on whom we have been given more detailed basic information. Study of him enables us to gain understanding about the progress of man in general since (a) he certainly began in innocence (Isa. 7:15f.) and had to be perfect(ed) (Heb. 2:10; 5:9) and (b) was like us at every point except in the commission of actual sin (Heb. 2:17; Heb. 4:15; 1 Pet. 2:22).

Adam’s Posterity

As those who are the children of Adam like Jesus (Luke 3:38) we all begin “in Adam” (cf. 1 Cor. 15:22) (6* It is surely illegitimate to transfer the phrase “in Adam” as the sin-obsessed Augustine did to Romans 5:12. That we all die in Adam apart from sin is basic to Paul’s understanding of the human body as reflected in 1 Corinthians 15 in general. Flesh and blood are intrinsically mortal and corruptible and cannot by nature inherit the kingdom of God.) as (mortal) flesh in the ground (Gen. 2:7; Ps. 78:39; 103:14; 139:15f.; Eph. 4:9, cf. Heb. 2:17).  Then, after the initial creation of Adam, procreation takes over. Thus we begin in the loins of our fathers (Heb. 7:10; 1 Cor. 11:12) and from their sides we are transferred like Adam to the Garden of Eden to be nurtured in the wombs our mothers (cf. Ps. 139:13; Luke 1:31). On his divine side Jesus of course stemmed from the bosom of his heavenly Father (John 1:14, cf. v.18). While God is in the general sense the Father of spirits (Num. 16:22; Heb. 12:9), in Jesus’ case in the form of the Holy Spirit he overshadowed Mary (Luke 1:35, cf. Gen. 1:2) and incarnated himself in her womb (cf. Gal. 4:4). It was through his mother that Adam was the human father of Jesus (Luke 3:38). We can be sure that Joseph was not his father or Jesus could never have achieved the salvation of his fellows as (the Son of) God (cf. Isa. 45: 22f.; Phil. 2:10f.).

So after the normal nine months’ period of gestation Mary’s pregnancy reached full term and Jesus was born knowing neither the law nor good and evil (Isa. 7:15f., cf. Dt. 1:39; Rom. 9:11). In this as the second Adam Jesus resembled the first Adam but in contrast with him who was apparently nurtured in the Garden of Eden to physical maturity before his “birth” (cf. 1 Cor. 15:46), Jesus was physically a baby who still had to grow to both physical and spiritual adulthood after his birth. The traditional fundamentalist idea prompted by the literal interpretation of the days in Genesis leads well-intentioned but clearly misguided writers to suggest that Adam was created with the appearance of a thirty-year-old. Apart from the implicit deception involved at this point, a man who does not develop is not a man at all, least of all the fleshly prototype of all other men including Jesus! In any case, if he was a type of the second Adam (Rom. 5:14), Adam must have been every bit as subject to development as the second one was. If not, they were not racially related, not of the same species! Of course, the implication of this is that mankind began as an animal before like a baby he eventually developed mental and moral consciousness (cf. 1 Cor. 15:46). And if this is true, then the history of mankind is recapitulated in miniature by every baby that is born or he/she would not be human. Even more to the point, Jesus would not, indeed could not have been the second Adam who atoned for the sin of the world (1 John 2:2).

In sum, I contend that science far from erring at this point is in fact supported by the Bible itself!

Jesus and Recapitulation

It would seem to follow from this that like his forebears whose early experience he recapitulated Jesus, as an infant, lived without a personal covenant guarantee. (7* The covenant with Noah guaranteed life to sentient but unselfconscious flesh only in the general sense.) As with them, it was only as he developed into childhood and became capable of understanding the commandment that promised life that he developed moral awareness. At this point faith and obedience leading to life in contrast with Adam’s disobedience which had led to death became real possibilities (cf. Rom. 6:16). Thus while he recapitulated his ancestors’ particular heathen experience in Egypt (Mt. 2:15), he also underwent the general experience of all minors as a slave under trustees (Gal. 4:1f.).  Again, as a true Jew he was liberated from slavery under Noah to guardianship under the law of Moses at the age of thirteen and became a son of the commandment (cf. Luke 2:40-52). So, according to Paul he was first born of woman a true human being, then tested under the law as his ancestors had been (Dt. 8:2,16, etc.) until he had earned the pleasure of his Father who endowed him with his Spirit at his baptism (cf. Gal. 4:1-7). Alternatively expressed, he had, in contrast with Adam and all others who followed in his footsteps, exercised faith and obedience and gained life in accordance with the promise (Gen. 2:17: Lev. 18:5, etc.).

Man in General

The human experience of Jesus outlined above is also that of the rest of us. The only way in which we differ from him lies in the fact that we all sin but he did not (Heb. 2:17; 1 Pet. 2:22). (8* Of course, to the extent that as a Jew who lived out his adolescence under the law of Moses in contradistinction to the Gentiles he differed. But since all who achieve maturity undergo primary, secondary and tertiary experiences of a kind, the difference is not great, cf. Gal. 3:25, KJV.) We are all born of woman and having outgrown infancy, we all live as children like Gentiles under the covenant with Noah. As adolescents we experience instruction under law of a kind and having undergone our apprenticeship we graduate to maturity. Of course, while many fail to reach intellectual adulthood for various reasons including chronological and/or historical ones, many more come short of spiritual adulthood in Christ. This may or may not be as a result of deliberate sin. Scripture describes the maturation process in terms of perfection especially but by no means exclusively in Hebrews (cf. Phil. 3:12-14, etc.).

Regeneration

Prior to Genesis 2:16f. Adam like an animal or a baby clearly lacked (understanding of) the moral law and was thus innocent. However, since he was destined to attain to the image and likeness of God, when it (the commandment) came, it promised (eternal) life on condition of obedience. In the event he failed to meet this condition. Unsurprisingly, all his posterity, who were also in their turn promised life if they obeyed (Lev. 18:5, cf. Rom. 7:9f.), failed likewise (Rom. 3:23; 5:12, etc.). Jesus alone despite his being truly human and hence mortal kept the whole law and gained that life (received the Spirit, Gal. 3:2), which included personal immunity to death, at his baptism. It was his regeneration precisely that put him in a position (cf. Acts 10:38; Eph. 2:10) to lay down his life freely for his sheep, that is, those who believed in him.

Glory

This, however, was not the end. Regeneration or spiritual rebirth paved the way for sanctification and ultimate glorification. As Paul indicates faith leads to justification, justification to sanctification and sanctification to eternal life. That this means final glorification there can be no doubt (Rom. 8:30). So just as Jesus finished the  work that his Father gave him to do (John 17:4; 19:30) and was glorified, we follow suit (Heb. 2:10). When our pilgrimage or course like that of Jesus (Luke 13:32), of John the Baptist (Acts 13:25), of Paul (Acts  20:24; Phil 3:14; 2 Tim. 4:7) and of Peter (2 Pet. 1:14f.) is finished, then we too in accordance with God’s purpose will enter heaven itself (John 3:3; 1 Cor. 15:50) where we shall see the glory of Jesus (John 17:24) and be with him forever (John 12:26; 1 Thes. 4:17) in his eternal kingdom (2 Pet. 1:11).

Finale

When our glorification has been finally achieved and all things are subjected under Jesus (Col. 1:20; Eph. 1:10),  then the restoration will be complete (Acts 3:21) and God will be all in all (1 Cor. 15:28). In accordance with the original plan of salvation, we shall have travelled from ground to glory to become the children of God.

Additional Note

If what is written above is a reasonable sketch of biblical teaching, it is apparent that much of our inherited theology is seriously astray. If Jesus himself as man despite his dubious pedigree (Mt. 1:1-5) began his earthly career in moral innocence (Isa. 7:15f.) and was challenged to attain to righteousness and life by keeping the law (cf. Acts 3:14, etc.), how much more Adam (Gen. 2:17).  If Jesus had to be perfected both physically and spiritually as man, so Adam and the rest of us who are created in his image. If Jesus progressed from ground (Eph. 4:9) to glory (Eph. 4:10), that is, began at the beginning like Adam but in contrast with him attained his (pre)destined end, how much more the rest of us who trust in him. In other words, the idea that Adam was created righteous, even perfect, yet fell and brought a curse on the entire creation thus necessitating its redemption is Augustinian nonsense. In the twenty-first century it is high time that we abandoned such absurd ideas and ceased to nullify Scripture by our tradition (Mark 7:7f.,13).

The suggestion that unlike Adam himself who not knowing the law was created innocent, all his children inherited his sin at birth is grotesquely false. At birth since we do not know the law we can be nothing other than innocent like Jesus (cf. Rom. 4:15; 7:8; 9:11). And to read into Psalm 51:5 (9* Properly understood, this verse could apply to Jesus every bit as much as to David.) what the Jews and the Orthodox realize is not there is criminal exegesis clearly dancing to the tune that Augustine composed. Well did Jesus warn us against nullifying Scripture by means of tradition (Mark 7:7,13).

Note further my  The Ascent of ManThe Journey of JesusFollowing JesusPerfection.

Death and Corruption

DEATH AND CORRUPTION
The NT makes it apparent that our eternal God (Isa. 57:15) who is spirit (John 4:24) is both immortal (1 Tim. 6:16), that is, not subject to death, and incorruptible (1 Tim. 1:17), that is, not subject to decay. By contrast, we his creatures, who are manufactured or ‘made by hand’ from the earth (Ps. 119:73; Isa. 45:11f.; 64:8), are both mortal (Rom. 6:12; 2 Cor. 4:11) and corruptible (Gk. Rom. 1:23) by nature. (1* See my Manufactured Or Not So at www.kenstothard.com /.)
Since man is made in the image of God, his destiny is to take on the generic nature of God as his spiritual child (2 Pet. 1:4, cf. John 1:12f.; 3:6; Heb. 12:23; 1 Pet. 4:6; Rom. 2:7,10; Eph. 1:5,11). However, there is a condition imposed by God from the beginning: man must keep the commandment and exercise dominion over creation including his own flesh (Gen. 2:17, cf. 1:26-28; Ps. 8, etc.). Since he fails to meet this condition and breaks the commandment (Gen. 2:17; cf. Rom. 7:10), he inevitably comes short of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23) and is excluded. In this situation graphically described by Paul in Romans 3:19-20, man is in urgent need of a Saviour. He finds one uniquely in Jesus (Rom. 3:21-26, cf. Heb. 2:5-9).
In 2 Timothy 1:10 Paul tells us that our Saviour Christ Jesus abolished death and brought life and incorruption (Gk) to light. Here, most translations refer to ‘immortality’ rather than ‘incorruption’ (e.g. KJV, RSV, NRSV, ESV, etc.) but Vine maintains that this is a mistranslation (pp. 131,320, cf. Mounce, pp. 484f.). Though the antonym of death may well be considered as both life and ‘immortality’ (athanasia), the nuance Paul introduces by using the word ‘incorruption’ (aphtharsia) is perhaps important, as I shall seek to show below.
Death
First, it is vital to recognize that death in this world is natural. We see evidence of it everywhere. Though natural death is widely denied in the church (which uncritically follows Augustine’s belief that this was not so at the beginning), it should not surprise us that the Bible teaches it. The insistence of the Psalmist can hardly be missed: “Man in his pomp will not remain; he is like the beasts that perish” (49:12, ESV). (Verse 20 is similar but contains an important difference: it refers to man “without understanding” as if distinguishing between man as mere animal flesh and man as made in the image of God.) Again, the book of Ecclesiastes is uncompromising: “For what happens to the children of man and what happens to the beasts is the same; as one dies, so dies the other. They all have the same breath, and man has no advantage over the beasts, for all is vanity. All go to one place. All are from the dust, and to dust all return” (Eccl. 3:19f., cf. Ps. 78:39; 103:14, etc.).
Death and Corruption (decay)
This belief that death is a natural phenomenon is supported by the teaching that what depends on perishable food is itself perishable. In Matthew 4:4 Jesus quotes Moses with approval in support of the idea that man does not live on bread alone but on every word that proceeds from the mouth of God. In light of his contentions in John 6:22-63, Jesus clearly believes that while material bread (and water, see 4:10-15) can sustain animal life for a little while (cf. Heb. 2:7,9, ESV), it is futile for eternal life. As Paul is later to say, “For if you live according to the flesh you will die” (Rom. 8:13, cf. Gal. 6:7f.). While the animals (and man according to the flesh is an animal) clearly eat material food provided by God, they nonetheless die (Job 38:39; Ps. 104:21, etc.). Death as the end result of corruption by creation must then be natural. (2* See my Death Before Genesis 3.)
Sin
So far all appears fairly straightforward. But there is a complication. As Moses did before him (Gen. 2:17; Ex. 32:33), Paul also teaches that death is the wages of sin (Rom. 5:12; 6:23). How can this be? Is not this tantamount to a contradiction, or can it be held at one and the same time that death is both natural and penal? (3* Contrast Mounce who says that “the NT never regards thanatos as a natural process; rather, it is a consequence and punishment for sin (Rom. 6:23)”, p.160.) Since the teaching is so explicit, this must indeed be the case. Man as flesh, as an animal, that is, dies whether he is sinful or not. (In John 6:49, cf. Mt. 4:4, Jesus does not mention sin!) This is made clear by the fact that even innocent babies, who like animals know neither the law nor good and evil (Dt. 1:39, etc.), die. (Cf. Rom. 9:11 with Job 3:16; Eccl. 6:3.) As a conscious sinner, however,  man fails on the one hand to gain the (eternal) life promised to all who keep the commandments (Lev. 18:5, etc.), and on the other he earns death by breaking them. Since sin is defined as transgression of the law, he experiences its sting in death (1 Cor. 15:56). To express the issue another way, the person who knows the law (commandment) has the option of keeping the law and thereby becoming righteous or of breaking it and thereby becoming a sinner (Rom. 6:16; 2 Pet. 2:19). If he keeps it, he can gain the life promised to the righteous (Lev. 18:5; Rom. 10:5, etc.) and so overcome and escape from his native mortality. Or again, he can break it and so earn death as just recompense. If this is the biblical picture, there is little wonder that Scripture depicts human beings who pander exclusively to the flesh as animals fit to be caught and killed (2 Pet. 2:12; Jude 10).
To sum up this section then, we are in a position to say that though death is natural to the entire animal world (flesh), it can nonetheless be earned by man to the extent that he is made in the image of God and therefore knows the law. According to Jesus, the one who sins becomes enslaved by sin (John 8:34) and so dies (cf. John 8:24). Since sin is defined as breaking the law (1 Sam. 15:24; James 2:9-11; 1 John 3:4; 5:17), it is an act of the human will, a work which earns wages in death. The question is: Can the same be said of corruption or decay?
Corruption
We saw above that our eternal Creator God is not only immortal (deathless) but also incorruptible (not subject to decay). As such he has neither beginning nor end (Ps. 90:2; Isa. 41:4; 43:10b, cf. Heb. 7:3). Hebrews 1:11-12 informs us plainly that unlike his creature man, he does not age but remains ever the same (Heb. 1:12, cf. 13:8; James 1:17). Like death, corruption in creation is universal. Whereas the righteous Jesus who kept the law had no need to die but did so for the benefit of his people, even he grew older (Luke 3:23; John 8:57) and clearly shared human physical corruption (decay). Even he could not prevent black hair turning white (Mt. 5:36) Why? Because corruption (decay) is inherent in the entire material creation of which he became a part at his incarnation. (The rejuvenation of creation is a popular concept with some writers. I can think of no instance of Jesus making someone or something younger!)
Corruption By Creation
The corruption of creation or its natural subjection to decay (cf. entropy) is implicitly and explicitly taught in Scripture, though this is almost universally denied by commentators on and modern translators of Romans 8:18-25 (on which see my essay at www.kenstothard.com /.). First, the very first verse of Genesis 1 tells us of its beginning implying its inevitable end (cf. Heb. 7:3). This is supported by Jesus in Matthew 24:35 and 28:20. It should be carefully noted that this was the case before the intrusion of sin which therefore cannot be regarded as its cause. Second, Jesus strongly stresses natural corruption in references like Matthew 6:19-21, Luke 12:33 and 13:1-5. In the latter passage he clearly distinguishes between natural corruption and sin. (4* Cf. 1 Thes. 3:7 where Paul distinguishes between distress, ananke, and affliction, ESV, persecution, NRSV, NIV, pace Bruce. Affliction or thlipsis can be used in more than one sense. In 2 Cor. 4:17, for example, it does not appear to refer to persecution.) Third, the apostle Paul tells us in words the sense of which can hardly be mistaken that all that is physically visible is impermanent by nature (2 Cor. 4:18). Like the law which relates to it, it is temporal and provisional (cf. Mt. 5:18; Rom. 7:1; Heb. 1:11; 8:13; 12:27). As predictions regarding the end of the world indicate, the times of distress which precede it are as (divinely) necessary as the end itself (Luke 21:25-28,33-36, cf. vv. 23f. Cf. also human old age, Mt. 5:36). Again, fourth, Paul tells us in Romans 8:18-25 that God subjected creation, including his creature man, to the futility of decay of express purpose (cf. Heb. 1:10-12). Why did he do this? Because he had something better in mind for those who were made in his image, that is, an invisible hope of glory (Rom. 8:20,24f., cf. 2 Cor. 5:5; Col. 1:5,27; 1 Pet. 1:3f.). This was integral to his plan of salvation. Again, it should be noted that there is no mention of sin in this passage. How could there be if the sinless Jesus was also corruptible and entered this world with the express intention of returning to glory (John 6:62; 17:5,24; Eph. 4:9f.; Heb. 4:14; 7:26)? In any case, Paul, like Jesus in John 6, emphasized the fact that by nature the perishable (corruptible) cannot inherit the imperishable (1 Cor. 15:50). Just as flesh gives birth to flesh, so spirit gives birth to spirit (John 3:6), and God is spirit (John 1:13; 4:24). (5* For more detail, see my Romans 8:18-25.)
2 Timothy 1:10
If all this is true, there is another point to ponder. In 2 Timothy 1:10 with which I started this essay, Jesus is said to have abolished death (which may or may not be the wages of sin) but not corruption. One might well wonder why especially if with Augustinians we believe it to have connections with sin (e.g. the cosmic curse that putatively stems from Adam’s sin). But if in fact sin is not involved, the implication is that Jesus did not abolish corruption when he won a great victory over death on the cross. He clearly did not have to since it was natural, the work of God himself. When he rose from the grave, his failure to experience corruption is brought sharply into focus (Acts 2:27-35; 13:34-37). In light of this we are forced to infer that he not only rose as he had died in the flesh but remained so (cf. John 2:19f.; 10:17f.). To deny this is to deny his physical resurrection.
At this point the reader might well feel profoundly frustrated especially if he/she believes that when Jesus rose he was transformed. (6* In 2011 this is still a common but clearly erroneous perception. Yet Stott claims that it is standard Anglican orthodoxy, The Contemporary Christian, p.72. See my John Stott on the Putative RESURRECTION TRANSFORMATION of Jesus). But since the Saviour was visible, tangible and audible (1 John 1:1-3, etc.) we are forced to infer that he was still in his first Adamic body of dust as he himself explicitly asserts in Luke 24:39 and as a comparison with Hebrews 12:18-21 immediately suggests. (7* Cf. John 20:17,27-29 where again we are confronted with touching, seeing and hearing, not to mention eating, Luke 24:41f., cf. 8:55, proving conclusively, one would have thought, that Jesus was not yet transformed and ascended, cf. John 20:17.) In other words, corporeal transformation which overcomes natural futility is as necessary as spiritual regeneration (Gk ‘dei’, John 3:7; 1 Cor. 15:53), and, since flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom (1 Cor. 15:50), it must occur at ascension. Transformation, like regeneration, is exclusively the work of God and Jesus provides its paradigm at his ascension into heaven (1 Cor. 15:50-54). (8* On Jesus’ resurrection, see my Did Jesus Rise Physically From The Grave? where I argue that Jesus’ transformation occurred at his ascension and not at his resurrection.)  If God spiritually regenerated us but omitted to corporeally transform us, he would have failed to complete his work of salvation (Rom. 8:30; Phil. 1:6). (9* See my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities.)
Incorruption
Assuming the truth of all this, the importance of translating aphtharsia as ‘incorruption’ in 2 Timothy 1:10 is plain for all to see (cf. 1 Cor. 15:53). While death is the result of the will of man and is abolished by the will of man, that is, by Jesus (1 Cor. 15:21f.), corruption or subjection to decay is the result of the will of God by whom it is also finally abolished when its purpose is achieved (Rom. 8:24f.; Heb. 12:25-29; 2 Pet. 3:7,10-12; Rev. 21:1-5). The NRSV translation of Romans 8:20 is helpful here. It reads: “for the creation (and/or creature) was subjected to futility, not of its own will but by the will of the one who subjected it.” Clearly the one who did the subjecting was God himself. In other words, since the physical creation is temporal (Gen. 1:1; 2 Cor. 4:18, etc.) its futility is natural; it is in accordance with the divine will for God created it that way. It is integral to his overall plan and purpose. And since sin is not mentioned, man is in no way responsible (pace those who claim that he is!).
The Generic Nature of God
By referring to ‘incorruption’ here as opposed to ‘immortality’, Paul avoids both repetition and redundancy, for if the abolition of death spells life, it obviously spells immortality. (10* Cf. Stott who in his Guard the Gospel thinks, wrongly in my view, that ‘life’ and ‘immortality’ may be synonymous, p.38. Hendriksen suggests a hendiadys, p.233.) On the other hand, if Paul is deliberately focusing on incorruption as opposed to immortality, his expression is full of significance. It means that we who receive salvation become possessed of the very nature of God as his spiritual children (1 Pet. 4:6; 2 Pet. 1:4; John 1:13; 3:6). Like God himself of whom we are born again (John 1:13) we become both immortal and incorruptible (cf. 1 Cor. 15:53). And so, like Father like son (John 3:6a, cf. 1:13). Through the grace of Christ we are made (generically) perfect in him (cf. Heb. 2:10-13). The image/likeness of God in which we were potentially created is finally consummated (2 Cor. 3:18, cf. Rom. 8:29; Heb. 1:3).
Consequences
If my argument holds, what about tradition which teaches in the words of Mounce’s Dictionary (p.138) that “Corruption is first of all an element of the natural world ever since the sin of Adam and Eve (Rom. 8:21)” What about original sin, the fall of Adam, cosmic curse and the redemption of creation? The answer is that these are misunderstandings inherent in and arising out of the Augustinian worldview. The creation/fall/ restoration scheme of things beloved by so many Christians is fundamentally false. (9* It is little wonder that modern science has its problems with church dogma. By contrast, the Bible presents a different view. Regrettably, atheistic scientists believe the church and so subject both it rightly and the Bible wrongly to ridicule!) The fact is that the physical creation, epitomized by the flesh which derives from it, is regarded pejoratively throughout the Bible. It always comes a distant second best to the Creator himself (e.g. Ps. 102:25-27; Isa. 45:11f.; 51:6,8; Mt. 24:35, cf. Heb. 3:3). In brief, perhaps the most powerful arguments against the corruption of creation by sin are: first, that it is inherently temporal as opposed to eternal. Since it had a beginning (Gen. 1:1), it will certainly have an end (Mt. 24:35; Heb. 12:27; 2 Pet. 3:7,10-12). Second, since it is physically visible, it is inherently impermanent (2 Cor. 4:18). Third, it was ‘made by hand’, a depreciatory OT expression (Job 10:8f.; Isa. 48:13; 64:8) which stands in strong contrast with what is ‘not made by hand’ in the NT (Heb. 9:11,24). Fourth, the sinless Jesus in contrast with his Father (Heb. 1:11) grew older (Luke 3:23; John 8:57, cf. Mt. 5:36) and was about to disappear (Heb. 8:13, cf. Acts 1:9). (11* See my tabulation of the differences at the end of my Creation Corruptible By Nature.) Fifth, the entire argument of the letter to the Hebrews assumes creation’s corruption by nature or, more specifically, by the will of God (Heb. 11:3, cf. Rom. 1:20; 4:17; 2 Cor. 4:18). (12* In this regard, David deSilva’s commentary on Hebrews is the best I have read.)
Conclusion
I conclude then that while death is penal as wages paid to sinful man, decay is ultimately a beneficent  work of God which has eternal life (salvation) or an invisible (Rom. 8:20,24f.), or sure (Heb. 6:19) or living (1 Pet. 1:3) hope and a better resurrection in view (Heb. 11:35, cf. Luke 20:34-36). Whereas the warped will of man deceived by the devil brings in death as penalty (Rom. 5:12) and requires atonement, the perfect will of God brings decay into this present age with a view to transformation and eternal life in the age to come (cf. Rom. 8:21). In other words, man must gain life by regeneration before he can gain imperishability or incorruption by transformation (cf. John 3:16; Rom. 5:8-10). After Jesus had been raised from the dead and was still corruptible flesh (Luke 24:39; John 20:17, etc.), he was necessarily transformed at his ascension and exalted to God’s right hand never again to return to corruption (Acts 13:34). And since it is his will that we be with him (John 6:37,39; 10:28; 12:26; 14:3; 17:24; 1 Thes. 4:17), we follow in his steps (Heb. 2:10-13; 10:19f., etc.).
Summary
To sum up, death as wages depends on the will of man who freely breaks the law; corruption or decay depends on the will of God who gives those who believe justification and eternal life. (This is not to deny, of course, that spiritual or moral corruption impacts on natural physical corruption and becomes an exacerbating factor.)
Final Comment
So, finally, it remains to add that while we are constantly told that we are sinful by birth (13* E.g. Josh & Sean McDowell, pp.149,156, etc.), the unshakable truth is that we cannot earn wages and be sinful till we break the commandment(s), John 8:34; Rom. 3:23; 5:12; 6:23, contrast 1 Pet. 2:22). On the other hand, as flesh, we are, like Jesus, certainly born corruptible, the offspring of the earth and of a creation divinely subjected to decay and aging (Heb. 1:11). That is why innocent babies sometimes die like innocent animals. (Infant mortality was significantly high in the ancient world.) For the rest of us the need to escape from the trap purposely set by God (cf. Luke 21:34-36) and attain to our invisible hope of glory is paramount (Rom. 8:24f., cf. 1 Pet. 1:3f.), and this is achieved through faith in Jesus (Col. 1:27). (14* See my Escape.) Once he had been perfected (Heb. 2:10; 12:2; Acts 5:31), Jesus himself escaped by ascension, transformation, exaltation and heavenly session. He was thus enabled to lead the way of all his brethren into heaven and the presence of the living Father (2 Cor. 4:14; Gal. 1:4; Heb. 2:3,10-13; John 3:16). This had been his goal from the beginning (John 13:3; 16:28). It was the plan of salvation.
A Final Question
If we ask if Jesus would have died if he had remained on the earth, the unequivocal answer must be positive. He would have continued to age or experience decay until he disappeared (Heb. 8:13).* In this case his death would have been natural not penal. However, his ascension transformation was basic to the divine will and purpose (John 3:13; 6:62). As man he achieved perfection in heaven as his Father always intended. Furthermore, by being transformed at his ascension he provided the paradigm of the transformation of the saints at the end of history who neither die nor undergo resurrection. (See further my When Was Jesus Transformed?, Did Jesus Rise Physically From the Grave? At www.kenstothard.com /.)
All this seems to prove conclusively that the idea of the redemption of the physical creation from a putative curse is fallacious.
* In light of classical mythology the failure of theologians to distinguish between immortality and corruption is surprising. According to Bullfinch in The Age of Fable, when the goddess Aurora prevailed on Jupiter to grant Tithonus immortality, she forgot to ask for eternal youth too. As a consequence Tithonus gradually succumbed to age and was shut up in his chamber. Finally, Aurora turned him into a grasshopper.
The moral of this story is that immortality without incorruptibility is futile. 2 Timothy 1:10 along with 1 Timothy 1:17 and Romans 2:7 are usually mistranslated and hence misleading.
REFERENCES
F.F.Bruce, 1 & 2 Thessalonians, Waco, 1982.
D.DeSilva, Perseverance in Gratitude, Grand Rapids, 2000.
W.Hendriksen, The Epistles to Timothy and Titus, London, 1959.
Josh & Sean McDowell, The Unshakable Truth, Milton Keynes, 2010.
W.D.Mounce, WBC Pastoral Epistles, Nashville, 2000.
Complete Expository Dictionary of Old & New Testament Words, Grand Rapids, 2006.
J.R.W.Stott,  Guard the Gospel, London, 1973.
The Contemporary Christian, Leicester, 1992.
Vine’s Complete Expository Dictionary, Nashville, 1985.

The NT makes it apparent that our eternal God (Isa. 57:15) who is spirit (John 4:24) is both immortal (1 Tim. 6:16), that is, not subject to death, and incorruptible (1 Tim. 1:17), that is, not subject to decay. By contrast, we his creatures, who are manufactured or ‘made by hand’ from the earth (Ps. 119:73; Isa. 45:11f.; 64:8), are both mortal (Rom. 6:12; 2 Cor. 4:11) and corruptible (Gk. Rom. 1:23) by nature. (1* See my Manufactured Or Not So.)

Since man is made in the image of God, his destiny is to take on the generic nature of God as his spiritual child (2 Pet. 1:4, cf. John 1:12f.; 3:6; Heb. 12:23; 1 Pet. 4:6; Rom. 2:7,10; Eph. 1:5,11). However, there is a condition imposed by God from the beginning: man must keep the commandment and exercise dominion over creation including his own flesh (Gen. 2:17, cf. 1:26-28; Ps. 8, etc.). Since he fails to meet this condition and breaks the commandment (Gen. 2:17; cf. Rom. 7:10), he inevitably comes short of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23) and is excluded. In this situation graphically described by Paul in Romans 3:19-20, man is in urgent need of a Saviour. He finds one uniquely in Jesus (Rom. 3:21-26, cf. Heb. 2:5-9).

In 2 Timothy 1:10 Paul tells us that our Saviour Christ Jesus abolished death and brought life and incorruption (Gk) to light. Here, most translations refer to ‘immortality’ rather than ‘incorruption’ (e.g. KJV, RSV, NRSV, ESV, etc.) but Vine maintains that this is a mistranslation (pp. 131,320, cf. Mounce, pp. 484f.). Though the antonym of death may well be considered as both life and ‘immortality’ (athanasia), the nuance Paul introduces by using the word ‘incorruption’ (aphtharsia) is perhaps important, as I shall seek to show below.

Death

First, it is vital to recognize that death in this world is natural. We see evidence of it everywhere. Though natural death is widely denied in the church (which uncritically follows Augustine’s belief that this was not so at the beginning), it should not surprise us that the Bible teaches it. The insistence of the Psalmist can hardly be missed: “Man in his pomp will not remain; he is like the beasts that perish” (49:12, ESV). (Verse 20 is similar but contains an important difference: it refers to man “without understanding” as if distinguishing between man as mere animal flesh and man as made in the image of God.) Again, the book of Ecclesiastes is uncompromising: “For what happens to the children of man and what happens to the beasts is the same; as one dies, so dies the other. They all have the same breath, and man has no advantage over the beasts, for all is vanity. All go to one place. All are from the dust, and to dust all return” (Eccl. 3:19f., cf. Ps. 78:39; 103:14, etc.).

Death and Corruption (decay)

This belief that death is a natural phenomenon is supported by the teaching that what depends on perishable food is itself perishable. In Matthew 4:4 Jesus quotes Moses with approval in support of the idea that man does not live on bread alone but on every word that proceeds from the mouth of God. In light of his contentions in John 6:22-63, Jesus clearly believes that while material bread (and water, see 4:10-15) can sustain animal life for a little while (cf. Heb. 2:7,9, ESV), it is futile for eternal life. As Paul is later to say, “For if you live according to the flesh you will die” (Rom. 8:13, cf. Gal. 6:7f.). While the animals (and man according to the flesh is an animal) clearly eat material food provided by God, they nonetheless die (Job 38:39; Ps. 104:21, etc.). Death as the end result of corruption by creation must then be natural. (2* See my Death Before Genesis 3.)

Sin

So far all appears fairly straightforward. But there is a complication. As Moses did before him (Gen. 2:17; Ex. 32:33), Paul also teaches that death is the wages of sin (Rom. 5:12; 6:23). How can this be? Is not this tantamount to a contradiction, or can it be held at one and the same time that death is both natural and penal? (3* Contrast Mounce who says that “the NT never regards thanatos as a natural process; rather, it is a consequence and punishment for sin (Rom. 6:23)”, p.160.) Since the teaching is so explicit, this must indeed be the case. Man as flesh, as an animal, that is, dies whether he is sinful or not. (In John 6:49, cf. Mt. 4:4, Jesus does not mention sin!) This is made clear by the fact that even innocent babies, who like animals know neither the law nor good and evil (Dt. 1:39, etc.), die. (Cf. Rom. 9:11 with Job 3:16; Eccl. 6:3.) As a conscious sinner, however,  man fails on the one hand to gain the (eternal) life promised to all who keep the commandments (Lev. 18:5, etc.), and on the other he earns death by breaking them. Since sin is defined as transgression of the law, he experiences its sting in death (1 Cor. 15:56). To express the issue another way, the person who knows the law (commandment) has the option of keeping the law and thereby becoming righteous or of breaking it and thereby becoming a sinner (Rom. 6:16; 2 Pet. 2:19). If he keeps it, he can gain the life promised to the righteous (Lev. 18:5; Rom. 10:5, etc.) and so overcome and escape from his native mortality. Or again, he can break it and so earn death as just recompense. If this is the biblical picture, there is little wonder that Scripture depicts human beings who pander exclusively to the flesh as animals fit to be caught and killed (2 Pet. 2:12; Jude 10).

To sum up this section then, we are in a position to say that though death is natural to the entire animal world (flesh), it can nonetheless be earned by man to the extent that he is made in the image of God and therefore knows the law. According to Jesus, the one who sins becomes enslaved by sin (John 8:34) and so dies (cf. John 8:24). Since sin is defined as breaking the law (1 Sam. 15:24; James 2:9-11; 1 John 3:4; 5:17), it is an act of the human will, a work which earns wages in death. The question is: Can the same be said of corruption or decay?

Corruption

We saw above that our eternal Creator God is not only immortal (deathless) but also incorruptible (not subject to decay). As such he has neither beginning nor end (Ps. 90:2; Isa. 41:4; 43:10b, cf. Heb. 7:3). Hebrews 1:11-12 informs us plainly that unlike his creature man, he does not age but remains ever the same (Heb. 1:12, cf. 13:8; James 1:17). Like death, corruption in creation is universal. Whereas the righteous Jesus who kept the law had no need to die but did so for the benefit of his people, even he grew older (Luke 3:23; John 8:57) and clearly shared human physical corruption (decay). Even he could not prevent black hair turning white (Mt. 5:36) Why? Because corruption (decay) is inherent in the entire material creation of which he became a part at his incarnation. (The rejuvenation of creation is a popular concept with some writers. I can think of no instance of Jesus making someone or something younger!)

Corruption By Creation

The corruption of creation or its natural subjection to decay (cf. entropy) is implicitly and explicitly taught in Scripture, though this is almost universally denied by commentators on and modern translators of Romans 8:18-25 (on which see my essay at www.kenstothard.com /.). First, the very first verse of Genesis 1 tells us of its beginning implying its inevitable end (cf. Heb. 7:3). This is supported by Jesus in Matthew 24:35 and 28:20. It should be carefully noted that this was the case before the intrusion of sin which therefore cannot be regarded as its cause. Second, Jesus strongly stresses natural corruption in references like Matthew 6:19-21, Luke 12:33 and 13:1-5. In the latter passage he clearly distinguishes between natural corruption and sin. (4* Cf. 1 Thes. 3:7 where Paul distinguishes between distress, ananke, and affliction, ESV, persecution, NRSV, NIV, pace Bruce. Affliction or thlipsis can be used in more than one sense. In 2 Cor. 4:17, for example, it does not appear to refer to persecution.) Third, the apostle Paul tells us in words the sense of which can hardly be mistaken that all that is physically visible is impermanent by nature (2 Cor. 4:18). Like the law which relates to it, it is temporal and provisional (cf. Mt. 5:18; Rom. 7:1; Heb. 1:11; 8:13; 12:27). As predictions regarding the end of the world indicate, the times of distress which precede it are as (divinely) necessary as the end itself (Luke 21:25-28,33-36, cf. vv. 23f. Cf. also human old age, Mt. 5:36). Again, fourth, Paul tells us in Romans 8:18-25 that God subjected creation, including his creature man, to the futility of decay of express purpose (cf. Heb. 1:10-12). Why did he do this? Because he had something better in mind for those who were made in his image, that is, an invisible hope of glory (Rom. 8:20,24f., cf. 2 Cor. 5:5; Col. 1:5,27; 1 Pet. 1:3f.). This was integral to his plan of salvation. Again, it should be noted that there is no mention of sin in this passage. How could there be if the sinless Jesus was also corruptible and entered this world with the express intention of returning to glory (John 6:62; 17:5,24; Eph. 4:9f.; Heb. 4:14; 7:26)? In any case, Paul, like Jesus in John 6, emphasized the fact that by nature the perishable (corruptible) cannot inherit the imperishable (1 Cor. 15:50). Just as flesh gives birth to flesh, so spirit gives birth to spirit (John 3:6), and God is spirit (John 1:13; 4:24). (5* For more detail, see my Romans 8:18-25.)

2 Timothy 1:10

If all this is true, there is another point to ponder. In 2 Timothy 1:10 with which I started this essay, Jesus is said to have abolished death (which may or may not be the wages of sin) but not corruption. One might well wonder why especially if with Augustinians we believe it to have connections with sin (e.g. the cosmic curse that putatively stems from Adam’s sin). But if in fact sin is not involved, the implication is that Jesus did not abolish corruption when he won a great victory over death on the cross. He clearly did not have to since it was natural, the work of God himself. When he rose from the grave, his failure to experience corruption is brought sharply into focus (Acts 2:27-35; 13:34-37). In light of this we are forced to infer that he not only rose as he had died in the flesh but remained so (cf. John 2:19f.; 10:17f.). To deny this is to deny his physical resurrection.

At this point the reader might well feel profoundly frustrated especially if he/she believes that when Jesus rose he was transformed. (6* In 2011 this is still a common but clearly erroneous perception. Yet Stott claims that it is standard Anglican orthodoxy, The Contemporary Christian, p.72. See my John Stott on the Putative Resurrection Transformation of Jesus). But since the Saviour was visible, tangible and audible (1 John 1:1-3, etc.) we are forced to infer that he was still in his first Adamic body of dust as he himself explicitly asserts in Luke 24:39 and as a comparison with Hebrews 12:18-21 immediately suggests. (7* Cf. John 20:17,27-29 where again we are confronted with touching, seeing and hearing, not to mention eating, Luke 24:41f., cf. 8:55, proving conclusively, one would have thought, that Jesus was not yet transformed and ascended, cf. John 20:17.) In other words, corporeal transformation which overcomes natural futility is as necessary as spiritual regeneration (Gk ‘dei’, John 3:7; 1 Cor. 15:53), and, since flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom (1 Cor. 15:50), it must occur at ascension. Transformation, like regeneration, is exclusively the work of God and Jesus provides its paradigm at his ascension into heaven (1 Cor. 15:50-54). (8* On Jesus’ resurrection, see my Did Jesus Rise Physically From The Grave? where I argue that Jesus’ transformation occurred at his ascension and not at his resurrection.)  If God spiritually regenerated us but omitted to corporeally transform us, he would have failed to complete his work of salvation (Rom. 8:30; Phil. 1:6). (9* See my Two ‘Natural’ Necessities .)

Incorruption

Assuming the truth of all this, the importance of translating aphtharsia as ‘incorruption’ in 2 Timothy 1:10 is plain for all to see (cf. 1 Cor. 15:53). While death is the result of the will of man and is abolished by the will of man, that is, by Jesus (1 Cor. 15:21f.), corruption or subjection to decay is the result of the will of God by whom it is also finally abolished when its purpose is achieved (Rom. 8:24f.; Heb. 12:25-29; 2 Pet. 3:7,10-12; Rev. 21:1-5). The NRSV translation of Romans 8:20 is helpful here. It reads: “for the creation (and/or creature) was subjected to futility, not of its own will but by the will of the one who subjected it.” Clearly the one who did the subjecting was God himself. In other words, since the physical creation is temporal (Gen. 1:1; 2 Cor. 4:18, etc.) its futility is natural; it is in accordance with the divine will for God created it that way. It is integral to his overall plan and purpose. And since sin is not mentioned, man is in no way responsible (pace those who claim that he is!).

The Generic Nature of God

By referring to ‘incorruption’ here as opposed to ‘immortality’, Paul avoids both repetition and redundancy, for if the abolition of death spells life, it obviously spells immortality. (10* Cf. Stott who in his Guard the Gospel thinks, wrongly in my view, that ‘life’ and ‘immortality’ may be synonymous, p.38. Hendriksen suggests a hendiadys, p.233.) On the other hand, if Paul is deliberately focusing on incorruption as opposed to immortality, his expression is full of significance. It means that we who receive salvation become possessed of the very nature of God as his spiritual children (1 Pet. 4:6; 2 Pet. 1:4; John 1:13; 3:6). Like God himself of whom we are born again (John 1:13) we become both immortal and incorruptible (cf. 1 Cor. 15:53). And so, like Father like son (John 3:6a, cf. 1:13). Through the grace of Christ we are made (generically) perfect in him (cf. Heb. 2:10-13). The image/likeness of God in which we were potentially created is finally consummated (2 Cor. 3:18, cf. Rom. 8:29; Heb. 1:3).

Consequences

If my argument holds, what about tradition which teaches in the words of Mounce’s Dictionary (p.138) that “Corruption is first of all an element of the natural world ever since the sin of Adam and Eve (Rom. 8:21)” What about original sin, the fall of Adam, cosmic curse and the redemption of creation? The answer is that these are misunderstandings inherent in and arising out of the Augustinian worldview. The creation/fall/ restoration scheme of things beloved by so many Christians is fundamentally false. (11* It is little wonder that modern science has its problems with church dogma. By contrast, the Bible presents a different view. Regrettably, atheistic scientists believe the church and so subject both it rightly and the Bible wrongly to ridicule!) The fact is that the physical creation, epitomized by the flesh which derives from it, is regarded pejoratively throughout the Bible. It always comes a distant second best to the Creator himself (e.g. Ps. 102:25-27; Isa. 45:11f.; 51:6,8; Mt. 24:35, cf. Heb. 3:3). In brief, perhaps the most powerful arguments against the corruption of creation by sin are: first, that it is inherently temporal as opposed to eternal. Since it had a beginning (Gen. 1:1), it will certainly have an end (Mt. 24:35; Heb. 12:27; 2 Pet. 3:7,10-12). Second, since it is physically visible, it is inherently impermanent (2 Cor. 4:18). Third, it was ‘made by hand’, a depreciatory OT expression (Job 10:8f.; Isa. 48:13; 64:8) which stands in strong contrast with what is ‘not made by hand’ in the NT (Heb. 9:11,24). Fourth, the sinless Jesus in contrast with his Father (Heb. 1:11) grew older (Luke 3:23; John 8:57, cf. Mt. 5:36) and was about to disappear (Heb. 8:13, cf. Acts 1:9). (12* See my tabulation of the differences at the end of my Creation Corruptible By Nature .) Fifth, the entire argument of the letter to the Hebrews assumes creation’s corruption by nature or, more specifically, by the will of God (Heb. 11:3, cf. Rom. 1:20; 4:17; 2 Cor. 4:18). (13* In this regard, David deSilva’s commentary on Hebrews is the best I have read.)

Conclusion

I conclude then that while death is penal as wages paid to sinful man, decay is ultimately a beneficent  work of God which has eternal life (salvation) or an invisible (Rom. 8:20,24f.), or sure (Heb. 6:19) or living (1 Pet. 1:3) hope and a better resurrection in view (Heb. 11:35, cf. Luke 20:34-36). Whereas the warped will of man deceived by the devil brings in death as penalty (Rom. 5:12) and requires atonement, the perfect will of God brings decay into this present age with a view to transformation and eternal life in the age to come (cf. Rom. 8:21). In other words, man must gain life by regeneration before he can gain imperishability or incorruption by transformation (cf. John 3:16; Rom. 5:8-10). After Jesus had been raised from the dead and was still corruptible flesh (Luke 24:39; John 20:17, etc.), he was necessarily transformed at his ascension and exalted to God’s right hand never again to return to corruption (Acts 13:34). And since it is his will that we be with him (John 6:37,39; 10:28; 12:26; 14:3; 17:24; 1 Thes. 4:17), we follow in his steps (Heb. 2:10-13; 10:19f., etc.).

Summary

To sum up, death as wages depends on the will of man who freely breaks the law; corruption or decay depends on the will of God who gives those who believe justification and eternal life. (This is not to deny, of course, that spiritual or moral corruption impacts on natural physical corruption and becomes an exacerbating factor.)

Final Comment

So, finally, it remains to add that while we are constantly told that we are sinful by birth (14* E.g. Josh & Sean McDowell, pp.149,156, etc.), the unshakable truth is that we cannot earn wages and be sinful till we break the commandment(s), John 8:34; Rom. 3:23; 5:12; 6:23, contrast 1 Pet. 2:22). On the other hand, as flesh, we are, like Jesus, certainly born corruptible, the offspring of the earth and of a creation divinely subjected to decay and aging (Heb. 1:11). That is why innocent babies sometimes die like innocent animals. (Infant mortality was significantly high in the ancient world.) For the rest of us the need to escape from the trap purposely set by God (cf. Luke 21:34-36) and attain to our invisible hope of glory is paramount (Rom. 8:24f., cf. 1 Pet. 1:3f.), and this is achieved through faith in Jesus (Col. 1:27). (15* See my Escape .) Once he had been perfected (Heb. 2:10; 12:2; Acts 5:31), Jesus himself escaped by ascension, transformation, exaltation and heavenly session. He was thus enabled to lead the way of all his brethren into heaven and the presence of the living Father (2 Cor. 4:14; Gal. 1:4; Heb. 2:3,10-13; John 3:16). This had been his goal from the beginning (John 13:3; 16:28). It was the plan of salvation.

A Final Question

If we ask if Jesus would have died if he had remained on the earth, the unequivocal answer must be positive. He would have continued to age or experience decay until he disappeared (Heb. 8:13).* In this case his death would have been natural not penal. However, his ascension transformation was basic to the divine will and purpose (John 3:13; 6:62). As man he achieved perfection in heaven as his Father always intended. Furthermore, by being transformed at his ascension he provided the paradigm of the transformation of the saints at the end of history who neither die nor undergo resurrection. (See further my  When Was Jesus Transformed?Did Jesus Rise Physically From The Grave?)

All this seems to prove conclusively that the idea of the redemption of the physical creation from a putative curse is fallacious.

* In light of classical mythology the failure of theologians to distinguish between immortality and corruption is surprising. According to Bullfinch in The Age of Fable, when the goddess Aurora prevailed on Jupiter to grant Tithonus immortality, she forgot to ask for eternal youth too. As a consequence Tithonus gradually succumbed to age and was shut up in his chamber. Finally, Aurora turned him into a grasshopper.

The moral of this story is that immortality without incorruptibility is futile. 2 Timothy 1:10 along with 1 Timothy 1:17 and Romans 2:7 are usually mistranslated and hence misleading.

_______________________________________________________________________

References

F.F.Bruce, 1 & 2 Thessalonians, Waco, 1982.

D.DeSilva, Perseverance in Gratitude, Grand Rapids, 2000.

W.Hendriksen, The Epistles to Timothy and Titus, London, 1959.

Josh & Sean McDowell, The Unshakable Truth, Milton Keynes, 2010.

W.D.Mounce, WBC Pastoral Epistles, Nashville, 2000.

Complete Expository Dictionary of Old & New Testament Words, Grand Rapids, 2006.

J.R.W.Stott,  Guard the Gospel, London, 1973.

The Contemporary Christian, Leicester, 1992.

Vine’s Complete Expository Dictionary, Nashville, 1985.

The Resurrection Glorification of Jesus

The Resurrection Glorification of Jesus
Introduction
It seems to be almost taken for granted nowadays (July, 2010) that when Jesus rose again from the dead, he was transformed and glorified. The evidence for this in the face of texts like 24:39, John 20:26-29, Acts 1:3 and 1 John 1:1-3 hardly seems strong. Perhaps Jesus’ sudden appearances and disappearances, especially the former, provide the most powerful support for the idea, and it may be freely conceded that on the face of it they are somewhat perplexing. So what can be said in response?
Non-Recognition
Regarding our Lord’s general manifestations of himself to his disciples, we are told in Luke 24:16 that the disciples’ eyes were kept from recognizing him (cf. John 20:14). Even if we grant that God was active in this, the mere fact that Jesus had undergone an appallingly traumatic experience, which included both scourging and crucifixion, failure to recognize him was hardly surprising. When we add to this their assumption that he was dead and buried, they would have been psychologically predisposed not to accept his re-appearance.
In Acts 10:40-41, however, we read that “God raised him on the third day and made him to appear, not to all the people but to us who had been chosen by God as witnesses, who ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead” (ESV).
First, if the disciples were to be witnesses to his resurrection, it would seem that it was necessary for Jesus to appear to them. How could they proclaim a resurrection without visible evidence (cf. Acts 1:22; 2:32)? At a later date Paul also became a witness (Acts 9,22,26), but in his case it was clearly the glorified Lord whom he claimed to have seen  (1 Cor. 9:1). At this point we need to note that the intense light which temporarily blinded him presumably served to protect him from the death that was normally the result of seeing God (Gen. 16:13 NRSV, cf. 32:30; Ex. 33:17-23).
Second, in light of Jesus’ comment to Doubting Thomas in John 20:29 that those who had not seen him were blessed, the suggestion is that all later disciples would be justified by faith (cf. 1 Cor. 5:7; 1 Pet. 1:8). This is important for another reason. Jesus’ disciples who constituted his chosen witnesses (Luke 24:48; Acts 1:2) were obviously justified by faith before his death but had their faith confirmed and broadened by his resurrection. If he had shown himself to all the people, that is, including those who were not his disciples, they would have been compelled by sheer weight of evidence to acknowledge him. For them seeing would have been believing, but this is against Scriptural principles. God has never left this option open either then or since. Throughout Scripture, as Hebrews 11 in particular shows, faith in God’s promises, even when they remain to be completely fulfilled at a much later date (Heb. 6:15; 11:13,39), is imperative if justification by faith is to operate. We either accept Jesus on the basis of credible evidence by faith or we do not accept him at all. Jesus himself virtually said this in his dialogue with the Jews who claimed to be the disciples of Moses: “If you believed Moses, you would believe me; for he wrote of me. But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe my words?” (John 5:46f., cf. 12:48). And again with specific regard to his resurrection he said on another occasion when he put words into the mouth of Abraham, “If they do not hear Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be convinced if someone should rise from the dead” (Luke 16:31, cf. Rom. 10:17).
Paul
In support of this point, it is well worth bearing in mind that though Paul actually persecuted Jesus through his disciples (Acts 9:4; 22:8), he was nonetheless a true OT believer as references like the following make clear: Acts 22:3, 24:14-16, 26:4-7. Many who claimed to be the children of Abraham (cf. John 8) and the disciples of Moses (John 5) were in the same mold as their forefathers who we are told perished through unbelief and consequent disobedience in the wilderness. They did not really believe at all (Heb. 3:7-11). Paul’s problem was, as he said in his letter to Timothy, ignorance and unbelief in Jesus (1 Tim. 1:13f.). Until the exalted Christ revealed himself to him, he genuinely thought that Jesus was undermining Moses. And it was precisely Paul who was later to write significantly that faith (in Christ), far from being contrary to the law of Moses, in fact upheld it (Rom. 3:31).
No Salvation Outside the Church
It is worth taking this point a little further. While many Christians (used to) go around telling people that anything short of specific faith in Christ or failure to be born again signifies damnation, it is quite obvious that those like Abraham who lived long before the coming of Christ could not have had such a specific faith despite what might be falsely deduced from what Jesus says in John 8:56. If it is true that only faith exercised specifically in Christ brings eternal life (cf. John 3:16; 1 John 5:12), then the OT saints were clearly not born again. In that sense they were not saved, and in that sense only may we hold that outside the church there is no salvation (extra ecclesiam non salus). But many of them believed unequivocally in the promises of God to Abraham and David (Luke 2:69-75, etc.) and endeavoured to keep the law (Ps. 119; Luke 1:6, etc.). They thus earnestly believed in their Messiah’s coming and lived lives which demonstrated that faith. Normally, when he eventually did come, those waiting for him accepted him. Good examples of these were Simeon and Anna who were looking for the consolation of Israel and the redemption of Jerusalem (Luke 2:22-38).
(An ex-missionary acquaintance of mine tells me that frequently, despite apparent total ignorance of the gospel, some “heathen” men and women will respond to the preaching of the word when they hear it almost as if they have been waiting for it.)
Recapitulation
All this points to the fact that the presently and sadly neglected doctrine of recapitulation is pivotal for understanding the plan of salvation that pictures world if not universal salvation (cf. John 3:16; 1 John 2:2).
Eating
The physical reality of Jesus’ presence after his resurrection is supported by his eating with his disciples. This is mentioned twice as if to emphasize the fact (John 21:13; Acts 10:41). But what does it signify? In light of Jesus’ teaching in John 6:22-59, it underlines his continued physical corruptibility, for those who eat perishable food are themselves perishable. If this is denied, then we are getting close to arguing that Jesus was in the business of deception! But there is another point worth making. It can hardly be without significance that when Jesus raised the ruler’s daughter he (Jesus) directs her guardians to feed her (Luke 8:55). If this does nothing else, it proves her fleshly physicality. If so, surely the same holds true with regard to Jesus himself. He was still flesh (Luke 24:39) and had not yet ascended (John 20:17) and been transformed (glorified, 1 Cor. 15:50ff.).
Visibility
The more deeply we probe the evidence the more unlikely the resurrection glorification of Jesus becomes. The mere fact that he was visible implies his physicality as Paul’s statement in 2 Corinthians 4:18 suggests. (See further my Faith and Invisibility at www.kenstothard.com /.) Some writers attempt to argue that Jesus was glorified at his transfiguration but his visibility puts this out of the reckoning. Again others might appeal to 1 John 1:1-3, but this move is undermined by Hebrews 12:18-21 where visibility, tangibility and audibility (cf. the physical, visible and ritual terms alluded to by James Dunn, Romans, p.124) are all clearly connected with the old covenant which relates to creation and the flesh. As Professor Dunn has so decisively demonstrated in his commentary on Romans 2:28-29 (pp.123f.) and in his essay in Covenant Theology, the law written by hand on stone and symbolized by surgical circumcision was visible and hence temporary (see my essay on faith referred to above.)
Problems
Over the years attention has been drawn to the grave clothes left neatly arranged in the tomb after the resurrection. It has been seen by some as evidence of Jesus’ transformation which enabled him to pass through physical objects including the boulder guarding the entrance to the tomb. If one insists as I do that the Jesus that was raised was one and the same as the one that was buried (cf. Geisler, pp.49f.,65), questions are doubtless prompted. For example, we may ask where he got his clothes from and where he stayed for most of the time when he was not revealing himself to his disciples (see further below). Of course, since we not specifically told, we can only speculate on these issues. But they should not cause us undue heart-searching. After all Jesus knew full well that he was going to rise again and would doubtless have prepared for future eventualities as the evidence suggests he had before he died. For a start, since he had raised Lazarus, he would have been well aware of the difficulty arising from (lack of) clothes (cf. John 9:44) and could easily have taken steps to circumvent his own problem. Though it might not convince those whose docetic views virtually reduce miracles to magic, the evidence suggests that his triumphal entry into Jerusalem (Mt. 21:1-5) and the place he used for celebrating the Last Supper (Luke 22:7-13) were the result of preparations made ahead of these events. This explanation is not only plausible but becomes all the more convincing when we recognize that Jesus was always reluctant to resort to miracles without adequate reason. He was not a wonder worker but one who did what he saw the Father doing. Furthermore, we must never forget that he was truly human and in the ordinary run of events he would have acted as a normal human being would.
Persecution and Salvation
I noted above the persecution of Jesus by Paul (Acts 9:4). The same sort of thing occurs to day. The fact that Jesus himself is spatially (and in a sense chronologically) removed from us is beside the point. Such persecution as Paul indulged in still occurs today. I wonder sometimes about certain Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, etc., who begin as persecutors but end up as converts when light dawns on their minds. On the other side of the ledger we need to recognize that Jesus may still be received by those who exercise faith in him in less than specific or mature form or, as the Bible puts it, by those who are far off (cf. John 8:56; Acts 2:39; Heb. 11:13). In the OT faithful Jews continued to faithfully re-enact the exodus in the Passover (Ex. 13:8) as they may do today. While it may well be true that some simply accept the ritual of their culture apart from faith (cf. Isa. 1), others may be completely sincere and have a veil over their hearts (2 Cor. 3). Now in the same way we Christians remember the death of the Lord Jesus in the Supper long after it has actually occurred. In other words, the gospel is always contemporary. We are in effect no worse off or better off than actual eyewitnesses. We all see him by faith and actually experience death and resurrection (cf. Rom. 6:1-4) every bit as much as Paul’s readers experienced it while he was still alive. The golden chain of salvation (Rom. 8:30) may not be complete in many cases but this was so in OT times (cf. Heb. 11:39f.).
The Physical Reality of the Resurrection
Some argue on the basis of the Greek in Acts 10:40f. that Jesus having been glorified at his resurrection made his appearances from heaven and remained hidden or invisible the rest of the time. If that is so, his ascension was rendered redundant or at best reduced to mere drama. This is intolerable for it also reeks of deception and docetism. However, if it was true and Jesus really had achieved his permanent glorified state when he rose again from the dead, he would have been invisible (2 Cor. 4:18) and eyewitnesses along with their necessary evidence would have been lacking. At least two basic facts testify against this idea. First, in Acts 2 and 13 great stress is laid on the fact that Jesus did not experience corruption. This can only be because he was still corruptible flesh who though he had really died had nonetheless avoided decomposition in accordance with prophecy (Ps. 16). Furthermore, if he was not flesh but had been transformed, this stress on his non-corruption is pointless. It would be stating the obvious. Second, Jesus explicitly declares that he is still flesh (Luke 24:39) in almost the same words as he had used when he walked on water (Mt. 14:26). In the latter instance, transformation was as much out of the question as it was in Peter’s case, so by parity of reasoning it is in the former.
The Hidden Jesus
If we assume then that Jesus underwent a genuine physical resurrection and was still corruptible flesh as he claimed (Luke 24:39), there is a much better explanation for his being kept hidden apart from the need to maintain justification by faith as mentioned above. First, however, we do well to remember Judas’ question in John 14:22. Jesus was hidden from the world even before his crucifixion (cf. 14:9). Physically, he was just one man among many and his appearance was unremarkable to the extent that we are given no description of him.
Next, despite the fact that according to Romans 6:9 (cf. Rev. 1:18) Jesus will (1* The tense is actually present suggesting that Paul is talking about the now glorified Jesus.) never die again and that death no longer has dominion over him, if he was still flesh, he was still both mortal and corruptible. After all, having kept the law he became personally immune to death at his baptism before his crucifixion, but he was not immortal or he could not have freely given his life as a ransom for his sheep. This being the case, having already been done to death by his enemies once, they would have had a vested interest in making a concerted attempt to kill him again if they could find him. (Failure to find the presumed dead body by the authorities was a major factor in establishing the truth of the resurrection.) As still mortal flesh he would have remained vulnerable. Even from birth, though God’s natural Son but a true human being, Jesus had been involved in evasion, for example, from Herod. (See also John 7:1, 8:59, 11:54 and 12:36.) So after his resurrection in the flesh, apart from the reasons advanced above, what better way did God have of keeping him safe from attack until his ascension than by continued evasion or by deliberately keeping him incognito and/or out of sight from potential assailants.
If it is replied that God keeps his people safe despite their vulnerability in a hostile world today (John 10:28), we need to be aware that our situation is different from that of Jesus. He, having kept the law, had life (Lev. 18:5). So, once he had freely died as a vicarious sacrifice for the sins of his people, he was no longer susceptible to death (Rom. 6:9, cf. Heb. 9:28). By contrast, we as sinners are still subject to it (Rom. 8:10, cf. John 11:25).
All in all, I believe that the hiddenness or apparent disappearances of Jesus after his resurrection were a necessary feature of the gospel and do not require his glorification till his ascension. After all, to all intents and purposes he finished the work his Father had given him to do (John 17:4) on the cross (John 19:30). As I have argued elsewhere (e.g. Did Jesus Rise Physically From the Grave? At www.kenstothard.com /), his ascension glorification as opposed to his resurrection glorification was fundamentally important for three reasons: first, it established the reality of his ascension and avoided reducing it to mere drama, second, it eliminated the charge of deception, and third, it served as the paradigm of the transformation and glorification of the saints at the end of history when Jesus returns in glory (1 Cor. 15:51f.).
REFERENCES
J.D.G.Dunn in Covenant Theology, ed. M.Cartledge and D.Mills, Carlisle, 2001.
WBC Romans, Dallas, 1988.
N.Geisler, The Battle for the Resurrection, Nashville, 1992.
Note: Faith brings into the present the reality of that which is past and future, presently unseen and heavenly. Cf. Lane, p.99.

Introduction

It seems to be almost taken for granted nowadays (July, 2010) that when Jesus rose again from the dead, he was transformed and glorified. The evidence for this in the face of texts like 24:39, John 20:26-29, Acts 1:3 and 1 John 1:1-3 hardly seems strong. Perhaps Jesus’ sudden appearances and disappearances, especially the former, provide the most powerful support for the idea, and it may be freely conceded that on the face of it they are somewhat perplexing. So what can be said in response?

Non-Recognition

Regarding our Lord’s general manifestations of himself to his disciples, we are told in Luke 24:16 that the disciples’ eyes were kept from recognizing him (cf. John 20:14). Even if we grant that God was active in this, the mere fact that Jesus had undergone an appallingly traumatic experience, which included both scourging and crucifixion, failure to recognize him was hardly surprising. When we add to this their assumption that he was dead and buried, they would have been psychologically predisposed not to accept his re-appearance.

In Acts 10:40-41, however, we read that “God raised him on the third day and made him to appear, not to all the people but to us who had been chosen by God as witnesses, who ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead” (ESV).

First, if the disciples were to be witnesses to his resurrection, it would seem that it was necessary for Jesus to appear to them. How could they proclaim a resurrection without visible evidence (cf. Acts 1:22; 2:32)? At a later date Paul also became a witness (Acts 9,22,26), but in his case it was clearly the glorified Lord whom he claimed to have seen  (1 Cor. 9:1). At this point we need to note that the intense light which temporarily blinded him presumably served to protect him from the death that was normally the result of seeing God (Gen. 16:13 NRSV, cf. 32:30; Ex. 33:17-23).

Second, in light of Jesus’ comment to Doubting Thomas in John 20:29 that those who had not seen him were blessed, the suggestion is that all later disciples would be justified by faith (cf. 1 Cor. 5:7; 1 Pet. 1:8). This is important for another reason. Jesus’ disciples who constituted his chosen witnesses (Luke 24:48; Acts 1:2) were obviously justified by faith before his death but had their faith confirmed and broadened by his resurrection. If he had shown himself to all the people, that is, including those who were not his disciples, they would have been compelled by sheer weight of evidence to acknowledge him. For them seeing would have been believing, but this is against Scriptural principles. God has never left this option open either then or since. Throughout Scripture, as Hebrews 11 in particular shows, faith in God’s promises, even when they remain to be completely fulfilled at a much later date (Heb. 6:15; 11:13,39), is imperative if justification by faith is to operate. We either accept Jesus on the basis of credible evidence by faith or we do not accept him at all. Jesus himself virtually said this in his dialogue with the Jews who claimed to be the disciples of Moses: “If you believed Moses, you would believe me; for he wrote of me. But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe my words?” (John 5:46f., cf. 12:48). And again with specific regard to his resurrection he said on another occasion when he put words into the mouth of Abraham, “If they do not hear Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be convinced if someone should rise from the dead” (Luke 16:31, cf. Rom. 10:17).

Paul

In support of this point, it is well worth bearing in mind that though Paul actually persecuted Jesus through his disciples (Acts 9:4; 22:8), he was nonetheless a true OT believer as references like the following make clear: Acts 22:3, 24:14-16, 26:4-7. Many who claimed to be the children of Abraham (cf. John 8.) and the disciples of Moses (John 5) were in the same mold as their forefathers who we are told perished through unbelief and consequent disobedience in the wilderness. They did not really believe at all (Heb. 3:7-11). Paul’s problem was, as he said in his letter to Timothy, ignorance and unbelief in Jesus (1 Tim. 1:13f.). Until the exalted Christ revealed himself to him, he genuinely thought that Jesus was undermining Moses. And it was precisely Paul who was later to write significantly that faith (in Christ), far from being contrary to the law of Moses, in fact upheld it (Rom. 3:31).

No Salvation Outside the Church

It is worth taking this point a little further. While many Christians (used to) go around telling people that anything short of specific faith in Christ or failure to be born again signifies damnation, it is quite obvious that those like Abraham who lived long before the coming of Christ could not have had such a specific faith despite what might be falsely deduced from what Jesus says in John 8:56. If it is true that only faith exercised specifically in Christ brings eternal life (cf. John 3:16; 1 John 5:12), then the OT saints were clearly not born again. In that sense they were not saved, and in that sense only may we hold that outside the church there is no salvation (extra ecclesiam non salus). But many of them believed unequivocally in the promises of God to Abraham and David (Luke 2:69-75, etc.) and endeavoured to keep the law (Ps. 119; Luke 1:6, etc.). They thus earnestly believed in their Messiah’s coming and lived lives which demonstrated that faith. Normally, when he eventually did come, those waiting for him accepted him. Good examples of these were Simeon and Anna who were looking for the consolation of Israel and the redemption of Jerusalem (Luke 2:22-38).

(An ex-missionary acquaintance of mine tells me that frequently, despite apparent total ignorance of the gospel, some “heathen” men and women will respond to the preaching of the word when they hear it almost as if they have been waiting for it.)

Recapitulation

All this points to the fact that the presently and sadly neglected doctrine of recapitulation is pivotal for understanding the plan of salvation that pictures world if not universal salvation (cf. John 3:16; 1 John 2:2).

Eating

The physical reality of Jesus’ presence after his resurrection is supported by his eating with his disciples. This is mentioned twice as if to emphasize the fact (John 21:13; Acts 10:41). But what does it signify? In light of Jesus’ teaching in John 6:22-59, it underlines his continued physical corruptibility, for those who eat perishable food are themselves perishable. If this is denied, then we are getting close to arguing that Jesus was in the business of deception! But there is another point worth making. It can hardly be without significance that when Jesus raised the ruler’s daughter he (Jesus) directs her guardians to feed her (Luke 8:55). If this does nothing else, it proves her fleshly physicality. If so, surely the same holds true with regard to Jesus himself. He was still flesh (Luke 24:39) and had not yet ascended (John 20:17) and been transformed (glorified, 1 Cor. 15:50ff.).

Visibility

The more deeply we probe the evidence the more unlikely the resurrection glorification of Jesus becomes. The mere fact that he was visible implies his physicality as Paul’s statement in 2 Corinthians 4:18 suggests. (See further my  Faith and Invisibility – Seeing the Invisible.) Some writers attempt to argue that Jesus was glorified at his transfiguration but his visibility puts this out of the reckoning. Again others might appeal to 1 John 1:1-3, but this move is undermined by Hebrews 12:18-21 where visibility, tangibility and audibility (cf. the physical, visible and ritual terms alluded to by James Dunn, Romans, p.124) are all clearly connected with the old covenant which relates to creation and the flesh. As Professor Dunn has so decisively demonstrated in his commentary on Romans 2:28-29 (pp.123f.) and in his essay in Covenant Theology, the law written by hand on stone and symbolized by surgical circumcision was visible and hence temporary (see my essay on faith referred to above.)

Problems

Over the years attention has been drawn to the grave clothes left neatly arranged in the tomb after the resurrection. It has been seen by some as evidence of Jesus’ transformation which enabled him to pass through physical objects including the boulder guarding the entrance to the tomb. If one insists as I do that the Jesus that was raised was one and the same as the one that was buried (cf. Geisler, pp.49f.,65), questions are doubtless prompted. For example, we may ask where he got his clothes from and where he stayed for most of the time when he was not revealing himself to his disciples (see further below). Of course, since we not specifically told, we can only speculate on these issues. But they should not cause us undue heart-searching. After all Jesus knew full well that he was going to rise again and would doubtless have prepared for future eventualities as the evidence suggests he had before he died. For a start, since he had raised Lazarus, he would have been well aware of the difficulty arising from (lack of) clothes (cf. John 9:44) and could easily have taken steps to circumvent his own problem. Though it might not convince those whose docetic views virtually reduce miracles to magic, the evidence suggests that his triumphal entry into Jerusalem (Mt. 21:1-5) and the place he used for celebrating the Last Supper (Luke 22:7-13) were the result of preparations made ahead of these events. This explanation is not only plausible but becomes all the more convincing when we recognize that Jesus was always reluctant to resort to miracles without adequate reason. He was not a wonder worker but one who did what he saw the Father doing. Furthermore, we must never forget that he was truly human and in the ordinary run of events he would have acted as a normal human being would.

Persecution and Salvation

I noted above the persecution of Jesus by Paul (Acts 9:4). The same sort of thing occurs to day. The fact that Jesus himself is spatially (and in a sense chronologically) removed from us is beside the point. Such persecution as Paul indulged in still occurs today. I wonder sometimes about certain Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, etc., who begin as persecutors but end up as converts when light dawns on their minds. On the other side of the ledger we need to recognize that Jesus may still be received by those who exercise faith in him in less than specific or mature form or, as the Bible puts it, by those who are far off (cf. John 8:56; Acts 2:39; Heb. 11:13). In the OT faithful Jews continued to faithfully re-enact the exodus in the Passover (Ex. 13:8) as they may do today. While it may well be true that some simply accept the ritual of their culture apart from faith (cf. Isa. 1), others may be completely sincere and have a veil over their hearts (2 Cor. 3). Now in the same way we Christians remember the death of the Lord Jesus in the Supper long after it has actually occurred. In other words, the gospel is always contemporary. We are in effect no worse off or better off than actual eyewitnesses. We all see him by faith and actually experience death and resurrection (cf. Rom. 6:1-4) every bit as much as Paul’s readers experienced it while he was still alive. The golden chain of salvation (Rom. 8:30) may not be complete in many cases but this was so in OT times (cf. Heb. 11:39f.).

The Physical Reality of the Resurrection

Some argue on the basis of the Greek in Acts 10:40f. that Jesus having been glorified at his resurrection made his appearances from heaven and remained hidden or invisible the rest of the time. If that is so, his ascension was rendered redundant or at best reduced to mere drama. This is intolerable for it also reeks of deception and docetism. However, if it was true and Jesus really had achieved his permanent glorified state when he rose again from the dead, he would have been invisible (2 Cor. 4:18) and eyewitnesses along with their necessary evidence would have been lacking. At least two basic facts testify against this idea. First, in Acts 2 and 13 great stress is laid on the fact that Jesus did not experience corruption. This can only be because he was still corruptible flesh who though he had really died had nonetheless avoided decomposition in accordance with prophecy (Ps. 16). Furthermore, if he was not flesh but had been transformed, this stress on his non-corruption is pointless. It would be stating the obvious. Second, Jesus explicitly declares that he is still flesh (Luke 24:39) in almost the same words as he had used when he walked on water (Mt. 14:26). In the latter instance, transformation was as much out of the question as it was in Peter’s case, so by parity of reasoning it is in the former.

The Hidden Jesus

If we assume then that Jesus underwent a genuine physical resurrection and was still corruptible flesh as he claimed (Luke 24:39), there is a much better explanation for his being kept hidden apart from the need to maintain justification by faith as mentioned above. First, however, we do well to remember Judas’ question in John 14:22. Jesus was hidden from the world even before his crucifixion (cf. 14:9). Physically, he was just one man among many and his appearance was unremarkable to the extent that we are given no description of him.

Next, despite the fact that according to Romans 6:9 (cf. Rev. 1:18) Jesus will (1* The tense is actually present suggesting that Paul is talking about the now glorified Jesus.) never die again and that death no longer has dominion over him, if he was still flesh, he was still both mortal and corruptible. After all, having kept the law he became personally immune to death at his baptism before his crucifixion, but he was not immortal or he could not have freely given his life as a ransom for his sheep. This being the case, having already been done to death by his enemies once, they would have had a vested interest in making a concerted attempt to kill him again if they could find him. (Failure to find the presumed dead body by the authorities was a major factor in establishing the truth of the resurrection.) As still mortal flesh he would have remained vulnerable. Even from birth, though God’s natural Son but a true human being, Jesus had been involved in evasion, for example, from Herod. (See also John 7:1, 8:59, 11:54 and 12:36.) So after his resurrection in the flesh, apart from the reasons advanced above, what better way did God have of keeping him safe from attack until his ascension than by continued evasion or by deliberately keeping him incognito and/or out of sight from potential assailants.

If it is replied that God keeps his people safe despite their vulnerability in a hostile world today (John 10:28), we need to be aware that our situation is different from that of Jesus. He, having kept the law, had life (Lev. 18:5). So, once he had freely died as a vicarious sacrifice for the sins of his people, he was no longer susceptible to death (Rom. 6:9, cf. Heb. 9:28). By contrast, we as sinners are still subject to it (Rom. 8:10, cf. John 11:25).

All in all, I believe that the hiddenness or apparent disappearances of Jesus after his resurrection were a necessary feature of the gospel and do not require his glorification till his ascension. After all, to all intents and purposes he finished the work his Father had given him to do (John 17:4) on the cross (John 19:30). As I have argued elsewhere (e.g. Did Jesus Rise Physically From the Grave? At www.kenstothard.com /), his ascension glorification as opposed to his resurrection glorification was fundamentally important for three reasons: first, it established the reality of his ascension and avoided reducing it to mere drama, second, it eliminated the charge of deception, and third, it served as the paradigm of the transformation and glorification of the saints at the end of history when Jesus returns in glory (1 Cor. 15:51f.).

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References

J.D.G.Dunn in Covenant Theology, ed. M.Cartledge and D.Mills, Carlisle, 2001.

J.D.G.Dunn, WBC Romans, Dallas, 1988.

N.Geisler, The Battle for the Resurrection, Nashville, 1992.

Note: Faith brings into the present the reality of that which is past and future, presently unseen and heavenly. Cf. Lane, p.99.