WHO DO YOU SAY I AM?
By Timothy Oliver
But I fear, lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve through his
subtilty, so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is
in Christ. For if he that cometh preacheth another Jesus, whom we have
not preached, or if ye receive another spirit, which ye have not received,
or another gospel, which ye have not accepted, ye might well bear with
him." 2 Corinthians 11:3-4
The apostle Paul was deeply concerned about the Corinthian Christians
being led astray from the true faith. In their day, just as in the last
quarter of the twentieth-century, rampant religious pluralism not only
called the exclusive claims of Christianity into question,1
but also presented serious challenges to the maintenance of pure and sound
doctrine within the household of faith.2 Various
voices clamored to be heard, no doubt demanding in the name of "tolerance"
to be recognized as legitimately Christian. Paul could see in the Corinthians
a tendency to be so tolerant that they were in danger of accepting a false
Jesus, a false (demonic) spirit, and a false gospel.
Modern culture has fared no better. A great diversity of religious organizations
and doctrines vie for acceptance as legitimate Christianity. From the standpoint
of logic alone these different views are sufficiently contrary to each
other that they cannot possibly all be correct. More importantly, their
divergence from the teaching of the Bible concerning Jesus is so great
that most must be described as "another Jesus" who differs from the biblical
Jesus. This article will examine some of these different Christs, and then
present the biblical picture of Christ. Obviously, nothing like a full-blown
Christology may be attempted here. That is not necessary, however, to understand
the subject sufficiently to recognize the false Christs of alternative
religions.
THE MORMON JESUS
The Mormon Church, calling itself The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, points to its use of Christ's name
as proof that they are a Christian church. Critics do not contest the devotion
of Mormons to a being they know under the name of Jesus Christ, and can
understand the Mormons' consternation at being labeled as a non-Christian,
even anti-Christian, church. Christians nevertheless continue to regard
Mormonism as such, largely due to its extra-biblical teaching about Christ.
Mormons want this teaching to be accepted as "additional information."
Christians, who recognize that the additional information also contradicts
the biblical witness, cannot accept such extra-biblical teaching.
Some essential aspect of Christ's being is acknowledged by Mormonism
to be eternal (on the same basis all humanity is said to be eternal3).
Christ is nevertheless a created (read, organized) being according to Mormonism.
His existence as a self-conscious, organized being having a spirit body
entails that he had a beginning, and thus owes his existence as such a
being to previously existing beings-his celestial parents. He was their
first-born spirit-child,4 to be followed by
the spirits of all the rest of humanity to live on this earth (and other
worlds without number).5
While Mormonism says Jesus Christ is divine, it recognizes nothing in
his ontological nature that would distinguish him from the rest of humanity.
That is, Mormonism has so redefined divinity as to grant the divine nature
to every human being. Humans and God are of the same species; humans are
"Gods in embryo" with the potential of maturing into Gods themselves.6
Jesus is simply one more of these beings whose performance established
a purity deemed worthy to exercise divine power even before acquiring a
physical body like that of God the Father.7
To provide that physical body, God the Father came to earth and had sexual
relations with Mary.8
Mormonism acknowledges the historical events of Jesus' life as recorded
in the Bible, and most of his teachings. They even acknowledge Christ as
Jehovah (Yahweh), the God of the Old Testament, and so again, they believe
they are following the Jesus of the Bible. However, they fail to adequately
apply to Christ the divine attributes portrayed in the Old Testament. The
Mormon Jesus is not unique as the one and only God in all eternity,9
nor truly and fully God from all eternity past.10
The Mormon Jesus provides only resurrection and immortality (living
forever in a physical body) as a free gift of grace to all humanity, apart
from any human effort, works, or virtue. While Mormons believe Jesus made
an atonement for sin, they don't believe that atonement by itself saves
anyone from sin. But neither do they believe that they can save themselves
through their own efforts alone. Final and permanent forgiveness of sins
and eternal life with God require God's grace (provided in Christ's atonement),
plus ordinances, human repentance of all sin, and doing good works.11
All these elements are essential; no one of them, without the others, is
sufficient for full salvation. Salvation by the Mormon Jesus therefore
requires not only faith in Christ, but faith in ordinances, faith in a
priesthood, faith in priesthood holders, and reliance on one's own works
as sufficiently righteous to induce God to apply all the benefits of the
atonement to oneself.12
THE WATCHTOWER JESUS
While Mormonism subverts Jesus' divinity by redefining divinity itself,
the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society
(whose members are commonly known as Jehovah's Witnesses) simply denies
that Jesus is truly divine in the same sense as God the Father.13
This does not stop them from acknowledging that Jesus is in a limited sense
divine, and a mighty god. They deny, however, that He is Almighty God,
eternal, uncreated, and sharing the nature and substance of the Father
as God.14 The Watchtower instead says that
Christ was the first creation made by Jehovah God. Notably, he was not
known at that time as Christ but as "the Word" (logos) and as Michael the
archangel. Then, using Michael (pre-incarnate Christ) as His agent, Jehovah
God created all other things.15
It was not God, then, but Michael the archangel who took on human flesh
in Bethlehem.16 Aside from his conception
in a virgin, Michael's existence as the man Jesus was not particularly
different from other men until his baptism at age thirty when he was anointed
with holy spirit to be the Christ (Messiah).17
And it was not God, but the created being Michael who was in Christ reconciling
the world to God by his ransom sacrifice on the cross18
(which the Watchtower says was not a cross, but a "torture stake"19).
After Jesus died and was buried, his resurrection consisted in Michael
the archangel returning to his former position in the spiritual realm,
while the physical body of Jesus "was disposed of by Jehovah God, dissolved
into its constituent elements or atoms."20
Michael/Christ now stands as judge and executioner, ready to inflict Jehovah's
wrath on the wicked at the appointed time.21
Like the Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses profess belief in an atonement,
usually referred to as "the ransom sacrifice." Jesus is also referred to
as the Mediator. Unfortunately, the covenant of which he is mediator includes
only 144,000 "spirit anointed" Christians out of all humanity.22
These are the only people who will ever go to heaven to be with God. But
Christ is not the only mediator. In the Watchtower system these 144,000
become mediators themselves, administering to other humans not in the covenant
(but who nevertheless are sufficiently obedient and put faith in the merit
of the ransom sacrifice of Christ) almost all the blessings of the covenant
secured by Christ.23 The one blessing not
received by the humans not included in the covenant is life in heaven with
God.
The rest of humanity who put faith in the ransom sacrifice and survive
Armageddon will receive forgiveness of sins and life everlasting on a paradise
earth. Survival of Armageddon, however, is no certainty even for those
putting faith in the ransom sacrifice.24 As
in Mormonism, more than God's grace is required. Repentance (cessation)
of sin, submission to the Watchtower, and wholehearted devotion and service
to God are all essential. Instead of being Savior, the Watchtower Jesus
will be executioner even to Watchtower members who fail to serve Jehovah
and His organization properly.25
THE NEW AGE JESUS AND CHRIST
The New Age Movement itself is so diverse
that nothing can be written here which will satisfy every self-consciously
New Age person as representative of their beliefs about Jesus Christ. There
are a number of points, however, which are generally true of most New Age
believers.
Perhaps the first and most important point to note is the usual distinction
made by New Agers between Jesus and Christ.26
Jesus, in himself, is almost invariably regarded as merely a man like any
other man, except that He may also be acknowledged as a great or even supreme
teacher and example for, and of, humanity.27
Christ, on the other hand, is usually identified more as a divine essence
or power, which came upon Jesus, or to which Jesus somehow attuned himself.
As such, this same Christ is believed to be accessible by all persons,
something like "the Force" (or perhaps the "light side" of the Force) in
the Star Wars movies. Anyone can be "a Christ" or tap into "the Christ,"
given sufficient dedication, knowledge, "technology," and practice.28
Another distinguishing element of most New Age belief systems is pantheism.29
This is the idea that all is God and God is all. Frequently, then, the
New Age Christ is identified as the Divine Consciousness in its essence.
Attaining a Christ Consciousness is to experience one's fundamental unity
with the Universe and everything in it. It is to become lost in the Divine
Consciousness, or better put, to experience oneself as the Divine Consciousness,
at one with the Universe as a manifestation of one's self. The New Age
Christ is all: he creates, sustains, permeates all - and oneself is Christ.
The New Age Jesus makes no claim to save man from sin or the wrath of
a Holy God against sin, for the simple reason that there really is no sin,
in a moral or culpable sense. He was not so much a savior as a revealer.30
What Christ revealed through Jesus, and through many other adepts today,
is simply what works and what does not work - true knowledge vs. ignorance,
what promotes and what prevents experiencing oneself as the Divine Consciousness.
Faith in Christ, fully realized, will ultimately be seen and understood
as faith in Oneself.31 It is to know by experience
that I am the I Am.32
The Christian Science Jesus and Christ
Christian Science was perhaps the first
modern attempt to blend Christianity and what is referred to today as New
Age philosophy or beliefs. True to form, it distinguishes between the man
Jesus and the Christ. For example, the man Jesus suffered on the cross;
the Christ did not suffer anything.33
God, as the only author of man, has a perfect idea of man. Mary, according
to Christian Science, was able to give birth to Jesus while a virgin because
she was able to conceive of this perfect idea, this divine Principle dwelling
in the bosom of God. Fully recognizing that "being is Spirit," Mary understood
that the manifestation of God's perfect idea did not require a flesh and
blood father. Born out of Mary's "self-conscious communion with God," Jesus
was "endowed with the Christ," and was "the offspring of soul" rather than
"of material sense."34
The Christian Science Christ is the Spirit, the Divine Truth, Life,
and Love which animated the man Jesus. The Christ is the Way, while Jesus
was the "way-shower."35
Neither the Jesus nor the Christ of Christian Science offers humankind
salvation from sin by means of a substitute suffering the penalty of sin
in their place.36 Instead, the only hope of
pardon and salvation for any person lies in that person eliminating all
sin (false beliefs and the behavior they spawn) from his/her life.37
The Jesus and Christ of the "Jesus Seminar"
Within "Liberal Christianity" it has
become chic to "search for" (read define) the "historical Jesus." That
is, scholars in this tradition seek to separate the man Jesus from all
the religious "myth" that has grown up around Him. The Jesus of history
was a man. The Jesus of the gospels, the "Christ of faith," is a theological
construct - the myths built around and upon the man Jesus by the early
Church and its leaders. The scholars mean to deconstruct these myths so
that the "real" Jesus may be seen.38
Whether or not it is the object of such studies, their effect is to
justify any number of other "Christs" or theological constructs that may
have been extant in the first centuries after the death of the man Jesus,
which were later "suppressed" by the Church fathers.39
Naturally this process denies any ultimate authority or legitimacy to the
Christ as understood in historic, biblically orthodox Christianity.40
Moreover, in the pluralistic worldview so common today, it has the added
appeal of validating any other "Christ" moderns may choose to believe in,
particularly those for whom some first century roots may be found.
Christ, then, does not exist in actual historical fact or even as a
metaphysical or spiritual reality,41 but only
as various sets of belief about Jesus the man. And the man Jesus appears
to be a very ordinary man indeed, in the hands of the Jesus Seminar's scholars,
who hold to an entirely "naturalistic" worldview that denies out-of-hand
any possibility of the miraculous.42 Thus,
any account of the miraculous in connection with Jesus must be stripped
away to find Jesus, the real man. Likewise, all statements indicating His
divinity or warning of impending judgment fall to the Seminar's shears.
All that is left is a vapid and boring little man who never could have
gotten himself crucified, much less inspired anyone to start a movement
or create "myths" about himself.43
The Jesus of the Bible
The Jesus of the Bible was, and is, fully God, and fully human. Put another
way, there is no separation between Jesus and Christ in the Bible. Jesus
was, and is, the one and only God-Man. Even the gospel of our salvation
depends upon this truth. Had Jesus not been both God and man He could not
have atoned for the sins of all His people. No righteous being in the universe
accepts worship of himself, but always directs worship to God as the only
Being worthy of worship.44 Jesus, however,
did accept worship of himself on different occasions,45
and taught that this was proper.46 Either
He was unrighteous, in doing so, or He really was God in human flesh. Though
they refused to believe it, the Jewish leaders rightly understood Jesus'
claim to be God and the revelation of God.47
The deity of Christ is also taught in Acts and various epistles of the
New Testament.48 Paul and the author of the
Epistle to the Hebrews apply to Christ Old Testament scriptures that were
explicit references to God.49 And John, who
so clearly teaches the divine nature of Jesus,50
nevertheless also makes acknowledgment of His humanity an essential article
of the faith.51
None of the above, however, means that Jesus is the Father. While Jesus
claimed a union with the Father indicative of His own divine nature, He
also distinguished between Himself and the Father.52
In other words, while They are one Being, one God, together with the Holy
Spirit, They are also distinct Persons. Being God Himself, Jesus is co-equal
to the Father; He cannot be less and still be God. Nevertheless, Jesus
could still say that the Father was "greater" than He.53
This probably has particular reference to His state while on earth, having
humbled Himself to become a human being.54
But it may also refer to the manner in which the First and Second Persons
of the Godhead relate to one another, both in eternity and while Christ
was incarnate on earth. The Bible makes it clear that men and women are
equal in Christ,55 yet the husband is head
of the wife,56 and not the reverse. Likewise
the First and Second Persons of the Godhead, though equally God in their
nature, relate to one another as a loving Father and Son, the Son always
submitting to, and doing, the will of the Father.57
The Jesus of the Bible is also not merely the "way-shower" illuminating
the path to God, which all men must likewise tread for themselves. Rather,
according to His own claim, He is the way itself.58
He did not simply make salvation a possibility; He accomplished the salvation
of His people.59 Of all that the Father has
given Him, He loses not one.60 His atoning
death cancels forever their debt of sin.61
His perfect righteousness, demonstrated in His sinless life on earth, is
credited to the believer as an entirely free gift.62
That righteousness, the righteousness of God, lacks nothing; it is sufficient,
alone, without any addition or supplement by man, to put its recipient
in a completely right relationship with God. In Him the believer is complete.63
1 Jack Finegan, Myth & Mystery: An
Introduction to the Pagan Religions of the Biblical World. (Grand Rapids:
Baker Books, 1989).
2 D.A. Carson, The Gagging of God: Christianity
Confronts Pluralism. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1996): 270-72 and notes.
Gerald Bray, Creeds, Councils and Christ (Downers Grove: InterVarsity
Press, 1984).
3 Doctrine & Covenants 93:29.
4 Bruce R. McConkie, Conference Reports,
October 1948: 23. Lowell L. Bennion, An Introduction to the Gospel.
(Salt Lake City: The Utah Printing Co., 1959): 129-30. Robert L. Millet,
"Jesus Christ: Overview," and Jerry C. Giles, "Jesus Christ: Firstborn
In the Spirit," in Encyclopedia of Mormonism. (New York: Macmillan
Publishing Company, 1992).
5 Moses 1:33; D&C 76:24.
6 Ezra Taft Benson, The Teachings of
Ezra Taft Benson. (Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft, 1988): 21. Discourses
delivered by Elder Abraham H. Cannon, in the Tabernacle, Salt Lake City,
Sunday Afternoon, July 1st, 1894, and Orson F. Whitney, at the Y.M.M.I.A.
Annual Conference, June 9, 1895, both in Brian H. Stuy, ed. Collected
Discourses. 5 vols. (Burbank, California, and Woodland Hills, Utah:
B.H.S. Publishing, 1987-1992) Vol. 4.
7 Bruce R. McConkie, Doctrinal New Testament
Commentary. 3 vols. (Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft, 1965-1973): 190.
8 Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses,
4:218; 8:115. Bruce R. McConkie, The Promised Messiah, (Salt Lake
City, Utah: Deseret Book Company, 1978-82): 468. Idem., Mormon Doctrine,
(Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1966): 546-47, 742. Larry E Dahl, "The Morning
Breaks, the Shadows Flee," Ensign, (Salt Lake City: The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, April, 1997): 15.
9 Deuteronomy 4:35, 39; Isaiah 44:6, 8,
24; Psalm 147:5.
10 Psalm 41:13; 90:2; 93:2; Habakkuk 1:12.
11 Bruce R. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine.
2d ed. (Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft, 1966): 669, 671. Moroni 10:32,
33.
12 Doctrine & Covenants 14:7; 76:52.
Joseph Smith Jr., Lectures on Faith. Compiled by Nels B. Lundwall.
(Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, n.d.): 33, 37, 57-59.
13 Insight on the Scriptures, Vol.
2. (Brooklyn: Watchtower Bible & Tract Society, 1988): 52.
14 Ibid., 54.
15 Ibid., 52, 393-4.
16 Micah 5:2. The Watchtower applies Micah
5:2 to Christ, but identifies Christ as Michael the archangel.
17 Insight, 56, 59, 60. Neither
is holy spirit God, according to the Watchtower, but it is the power of
God put forth by God for various purposes, as in creation and to empower
people for God's service (Insight, 1019-24).
18 2 Corinthians 5:19.
19 Insight, 61, 1116-17.
20 Watchtower, September 1, 1953,
p. 518.
21 Survival, (Brooklyn: Watchtower
Bible and Tract Society, 1984): 28, 60. Reasoning from the Scriptures,
(Brooklyn: Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, 1989): 341. Watchtower,
November 15, 1995, p. 15.
22 Insight, 362.
23 Ibid., 363. Survival, 65.
24 Survival, 80.
25 Ibid., 60, 64, 67, 92.
26 See, e.g., George Trevelyan, Operation
Redemption: A Vision of Hope in an Age of Turmoil, (Walpole, NH: Stillpoint,
1985): 37. Mark L. and Elizabeth Clare Prophet, The Lost Teachings of
Jesus 1: Missing Texts, Karma and Reincarnation, (Livingston, MT: Summit
University Press, 1986): 115-16.
27 See, e.g., Levi Dowling, The Aquarian
Gospel of Jesus Christ, (London: L. N. Fowler & Co., 1947): 54,
97.
28 David Spangler, Reflections on the
Christ, (Forres, Scotland: Findhorn Publications, 1981): 73.
29 Dowling, 56.
30 Elaine Pagels, The Gnostic Gospels,
(New York: Random House, 1979): xx.
31 David Spangler, Relationship and
Identity, (Forres, Scotland: Findhorn Publications, 1978): 44.
32 Mark L. and Elizabeth Clare Prophet,
The
Lost Teachings of Jesus 2: Mysteries of the Higher Self, (Livingston,
MT: Summit University Press, 1988): 62. David Spangler, The Laws
of Manifestation, (Forres, Scotland: Findhorn Publications, 1983):
23-24.
33 Mary Baker Eddy, Science and Health
with Key to the Scriptures, (Boston: First Church of Christ, Scientist,
1971): 38:21-24.
34 Ibid., 29:14-30:25 passim.
35 Ibid., 26:10-33; 30:10.
36 Ibid., 11:12-20; 22:27-23:7; 25:3-9;
35:30-36:9.
37 Ibid., 40:8-16.
38 Robert W. Funk, Roy W. Hoover, and the
Jesus Seminar, The Five Gospels: The Search for the Authentic Words
of Jesus, (New York: Polebridge Press, 1993): 1-7.
39 Gregory Riley, One Jesus, Many Christs:
How Jesus Inspired Not One true Christianity, But Many, (San Francisco:
HarperSanFrancisco, 1997).
40 Funk, et al., 5-7, 24-26.
41 A possible exception to this general
view is: Marcus Borg, Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time, (San
Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1994). Though Borg, a Jesus Seminar member,
dismisses the New Testament records, he seems to advocate a spiritual view
of Jesus along New Age lines.
42 Douglas Groothuis, Searching for
the Real Jesus In An Age of Controversy, (Eugene: Harvest House Publishers,
1996): 28-32.
43 Ibid., 35-36.
44 See, e.g., Matthew 4:10; Acts 10:25-26;
14:11-18; Revelation 19:10; 22:8-9; cf. Acts 12:21-23.
45 Matthew 14:33; Luke 24:51-52; John 9:38;
20:28-29.
46 John 5:22-23.
47 John 5:18; 8:58-59; 9:40-41; 10:33;
19:7.
48 E.g., Acts 20:28; Romans 9:5; 2 Corinthians
5:19-20; Colossians 1:16-19; 2:9; Titus 3:4-6.
49 Cf. 1 Corinthians 1:30 with Isaiah 45:24
and Jeremiah 23:6; 33:16. Cf. 1 Corinthians 1:31 with Jeremiah 9:23-24.
Cf. Philippians 2:9-10 with Isaiah 42:8; 45:22-23. Cf. Hebrews 1:6 with
Psalm 97:7; Hebrews 1:8-9 with Psalm 45:6-7; Hebrews 1:10-12 with Psalm
102:25-27.
50 John1:1-4, 14; 2:19-21; 8:24, 28, {43,
47}, 58; 10:38; 13:19.
51 1 John 4:1-3.
52 John 10:28-30, 38; 12:44-45; 14:9-11;
17:5, 10, 24.
53 John 10:29; 14:28.
54 Philippians 2:6-8.
55 Galatians 3:28.
56 Ephesians 5:23.
57 Luke 22:42; John 4:34; 5:19, 30; 6:38;
7:16; 8:28-29; 10:37-38; 12:49-50; 14:10, 24, 31; 17:4.
58 John 14:6.
59 Matthew 1:21.
60 John 6:37-40; 10:28-30; Romans 8:29-30.
61 Colossians 2:13-14; Romans 8:31-39.
62 Romans 4:4-8, 11, 22-24; 5:17, 19; Philippians
3:8-9; Colossians 1:12:14.
63 Colossians 2:10; 2 Peter 1:2-4.
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