IS JESUS GOD AN ARGUMENT ?Dr Warfield

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IS JESUS GOD 
AN ARGUMENT 

BY GRADUATES OF 

PRINCETON SEMINARY 



With 
Introductory Note by 

PROF. B. B. WARFIELD, D.D. 



AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY 
150 NASSAU ST., NEW YORK 






M« 



/ 



A 



. 



COPYRIGHT, 1912, BY 
AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY 



This book is published in 
commemoration of the cen- 
tennial of the founding of 
Princeton Theological Sem- 
inary, CELEBRATED ON MAY 5, 

6, 7, 1912. 



CONTENTS. 

PAGE 

Does the Christian Church Teach the Deity 

of Christ? 9 

By Ricnk Bouke Kuiper. 

Has the Christian Church Always Taught 

the Deity of Christ? 23 

By Daniel Stephanus Burger Joubert. 

Do the New Testament Writers Teach the 

Deity of Christ? 43 

By Harm Henry Mecter. 

Do the Evangelists Represent Christ as Him- 
self Teaching His Deity? 

First Essay 61 

By Johannes Daniel Roos. 

Second Essay 74 

By Frank Mackey Richardson. 

Did Jesus Teach His Own Deity? 

First Essay 82 

By William Arthur M otter. 

Second Essay 96 

By William Nicol. 

Is Christ God? 

First Essay 114 

By Gerrit Hoeksema. 

Second Essay 136 

By Luther Moore Bicknell. 



INTRODUCTORY NOTE. 

This little volume offers a constructive ar- 
gument for the Deity of Christ. It owes its 
origin to an attempt by the members of a 
class in Princeton Theological Seminary, dur- 
ing the session of 1911-1912 — the Centennial 
Session of the Seminary — to give a reasoned 
answer to a series of inquiries. These, taken 
in sequence, raised the salient questions which 
every one must face who undertakes to in- 
vestigate historically the evidence for the 
Deity of Christ. These inquiries, in their or- 
der, were : — 

1. Does the Christian Church teach the 

Deity of Christ? 

2. Has the Christian Church always taught 

the Deity of Christ? 

3. Do the New Testament writers teach 

the Deity of Christ? 

4. Do the Evangelists represent Christ as 

Himself teaching His Deity? 

5. Did Jesus teach His own Deity? 

6. Is Christ God? 



Introductory Note. 

A considerable number of essays were pre- 
sented on each of these topics. Those here 
printed were selected because they seemed to 
fit well into one another, and together to pre- 
sent a solid argument for the ultimate con- 
clusion. Naturally, the essays should be read 
consecutively and with regard to their relation 
to one another, that their force may be felt. 
As the importance of the topics increases pro- 
gressively, it has been thought well, while but 
one essay is printed on each of the earlier, to 
print two on each of the later of them. This 
entails some slight repetition, but it is hoped 
will be found to add strength to the general 
presentation of the argument. 

It is with great confidence that I place these 
essays by a company of earnest young men, 
seeking (and finding) the truth, before a 
larger public than that for which they were 
prepared, asking for them a candid — I scarce- 
ly need ask an indulgent — reading. 

Benjamin B. Warfield. 

Princeton Theological Seminary, 



DOES THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH 

TEACH THE DEITY 

OF CHRIST? 

By Rienk Bouke Kuiper. 

Before a satisfactory answer can be given 
to this question it is necessary to define some 
of its terms. What is meant by "the Chris- 
tian Church" ? Not the "holy catholic church" 
of the Apostles' Creed which includes the 
whole body of Christ of all times and lands as 
one spiritual organism; our question is con- 
cerned only with the present. Again, we have 
to do with the Church in its visible aspect; be- 
cause of our inability to say who are and who 
are not members of the invisible Church, we 
can successfully investigate the teaching only 
of the visible Church. We must also here 
face the question which very naturally presents 
itself, Can a Church that denies the deity of 
Christ be called Christian ? It is evident that 
a negative answer to this question at this stage 



io Is Jesus God? 

of the discussion would at once destroy the 
whole problem. For if only that Church 
which teaches the deity of Christ is truly Chris- 
tian, then of course the Christian Church 
teaches the deity of Christ, or else there is no 
Christian Church. We are constrained there- 
fore to take the term Christian Church simply 
in its conventional sense. It includes the whole 
body of those who are members of any insti- 
tution called a Church which professes to be, 
not Jewish, Mohammedan, or pagan, but 
Christian. 

The term "deity of Christ" must next be 
defined. There is little or no question as to 
what the earliest followers of Christ, the early 
Church, and in fact orthodox Christianity 
of succeeding times, have meant when the 
dogma has been confessed. What has been 
meant is clearly and unambiguously stated 
in the ecumenical creeds. It is confessed 
that Christ is the only begotten Son of 
God, his Son therefore in a sense in 
which no other being can possibly be called 
.God's Son, perfect God, of the substance of 
the Father. To put the case briefly, the term 
deity of Christ in its historical meaning im- 



Is Jesus Godf ii 

plies nothing less than the unity of substance 
of the Father and his Son Jesus Christ. He 
who accepts the deity of Christ in this sense 
confesses that Christ is God in that sense in 
which there is but one God. This meaning we 
shall attach to the term in the attempt to an- 
swer our question. We need not defend our- 
selves for so doing. On the contrary, any- 
body who wishes to attach any other sense 
whatsoever to the term needs to defend his 
course of action. The phrase, the deity of 
Christ, has a historical meaning, and if any- 
body desires to deny the dogma in this sense 
and yet wishes to maintain it in a modified 
sense, he should, we believe, for the sake of 
veracity, invent another formula to give ex- 
pression to his view of the person of Christ. 

From what has just been said the transition 
to the problem proper is easy. There are 
theologians at the present time, not a few of 
them within the pale of the Church, who hold 
modified views concerning Christ's deity or 
divinity, or possibly deny the doctrine alto- 
gether. In the Appendix to Hastings' Dic- 
tionary of Christ and the Gospels A. S. Mar- 
tin treats of "Christ in Modern Thought" 



12 Is Jesus God? 

and distinguishes between the Christ of specu- 
lation, the Christ of experience, and the Christ 
of history. The Christ of speculation is de- 
nied pre-existence, sinless birth, resurrection, 
divine authority and sole mediation. Yet he is 
called the Son of God, but in the same sense 
in which men are sons of God. The Christ of 
experience, to a large extent a product of the 
Ritschlian school, is admitted to be divine, but 
not in the old dogmatic sense. His divinity is 
said to consist in the fact that his will was in 
perfect harmony with God's and that in the 
moral sphere he displayed the highest divine 
attributes. The Christ of history is much 
more openly denied all divinity. He is stripped 
of supernaturalism and all the emphasis is 
placed on his true humanity. The secret of 
his success is said to lie in his psychological 
uniqueness, i. e.> in his unequalled goodness 
and greatness. But he is not divine. We 
cannot forbear calling attention here to some 
of the fine phrases which William Adams 
Brown uses in his Essence of Christianity, 
when he speaks of Jesus Christ as the central 
figure of Christianity. He calls God the 
Father of Christ, but only after he has called 



Is Jesus Godf 13 

him the Father of us all in seemingly the same 
sense in the immediately preceding sentence 
(p. 313). Again he says: "Sonship takes on 
a larger meaning. . . . We still recognize 
man's littleness, . . . but the recognition loses 
its terrors as in Christ we perceive what man 
may become." These words may be inter- 
preted, no doubt, in an orthodox sense; but do 
they not tend greatly to obscure the uniqueness 
of Christ's Sonship? 

Finally we must call attention to the Uni- 
tarian movement. The phrase "the pure 
humanity of Jesus" covers a variety of con- 
victions. Some Unitarians are almost Trin- 
itarians, approaching Christ on the divine 
side and affirming, though in an unorthodox 
sense, his pre-existence, uniqueness, sinless- 
ness, etc. Others contemplate the human 
side, and believe that he was naturally born 
and endowed with qualities and gifts differing 
in degree and not in kind from those which all 
men enjoy. All this makes it clear that there 
are men today who deny the deity of Christ 
or accept the doctrine only in an unorthodox 
sense; and it is an undisputed fact that some 
of them are in the Church. 



14 Is Jesus God? 

The question now arises whether the teach- 
ing of these individuals or even groups can be 
said to be that of the Christian Church. We 
believe that the answer must be an emphatic 
negative. To substantiate our conviction we 
shall dwell first of all on the attitude of the 
Church toward deniers and modifiers of the 
doctrine of the deity of Christ, and thereupon 
call attention to the positive confession of 
Christ's deity by the Church. 

First, attention must be called to the reac- 
tion among the theologians themselves against 
the denial of Christ's deity. We may refer 
here to such men as Kunze, Steinbeck, Braig, 
Hoberg, Weber, and Esser, A. M. Fairbairn, 
and Forsyth. After all, however, the teach- 
ing of the Church is not determined by a few 
theologians, but we must give heed to the ex- 
pression of its faith by the Church as a whole, 
which includes comparatively unlearned men 
as well as theologians, laymen no less than the 
clergy. Now is the Church being influenced to 
any considerable extent by denials and modi- 
fications of the doctrine of Christ's deity? We 
believe not. Take for example the attempt to 
get at "the historical Christ." This example 



Is Jesus God? 15 

is a fair one for there are no truths which more 
readily gain assent or are more firmly retained 
than those of an historical order. Therefore 
also they are most within the grasp of the 
popular mind and can be expected to touch the 
instincts of popular faith. Has, then, the so- 
called historical Christ succeeded in displacing 
the so-called dogmatic Christ? Evidently not. 
The average church member of today, just 
as his father and grandfather, still derives his 
view of the person of Christ from the writings 
of the Evangelists and the Apostles. Now it 
is precisely the integrity of the Gospels and 
Epistles as a reliable source of information 
and the validity of the claims which Christ 
made for himself which have been attacked by 
those who wish to present to us the real Christ 
of history. It is evident therefore that they 
have not persuaded the Church to take as 
much as the first step away from the super- 
natural Christ. 

But neither has the Church lent its ear to 
those clever theologians who have tried and 
are trying to give a new meaning to the term, 
the deity of Christ. The very fact that they 
are using old, well-established terms to intro- 



1 6 Is Jesus God? 

duce their new ideas may be called an admis- 
sion on their part that they have not yet gained 
their point. It is a perilous undertaking to 
judge motives, but does it not seem that some 
present-day theologians are trying to gain ac- 
ceptance for their views of Christ's person un- 
der cover of the term "divinity of Christ," 
just because they know only too well that in no 
other way will they ever succeed in introduc- 
ing their ideas into a Church which still clings 
tenaciously to the true deity of Christ? And 
what, it may be asked, does the average 
church member know of a deity of Christ 
which is no deity but perhaps only a very high 
kind of humanity? Men are still too straight- 
forward, too unsophisticated, to mean any- 
thing by the deity of Christ except that Christ 
is God. 

And what is the Church's attitude toward 
Unitarianism? On more than one occasion 
when a gathering has been held of representa- 
tives of different Christian denominations, 
the Unitarians have been excluded because 
they deny the deity of Christ. In these cases 
the Church, at any rate some Churches, af- 
firmed that denial of Christ's deity excludes 



Is Jesus God? 17 

from the Christian Church. In Hastings' Dic- 
tionary of Christ and the Gospels under the 
article "Divinity of Christ" the Unitarians 
are spoken of as deniers of the doctrine. The 
article concludes with these words: "Unita- 
rianism has at all times failed to lead. The 
Church has never become a prey to the nar- 
rower reason and limited emotions of the 
Unitarian schools." 

When we deny that the Church has been led 
to abandon the doctrine of the deity of Christ, 
we do not say that it does in every case reject 
false teachings on this point as vigorously as 
it should. If it did, there would not be a sin- 
gle individual in the Church who openly de- 
nies Christ's deity. It is indeed a deplorable 
fact that it is possible for men who do not 
believe in Christ's deity to retain their places 
in Christ's Church. We may not adopt the 
well-known device of the ostrich with refer- 
ence to this fact, nor may we make light of it 
under cover of a superficial optimism. Still, 
though it may be, and is, true, that the Church 
should more eagerly oppose errors in this re- 
spect, it would be difficult to say how the 
Church could more clearly in a positive way 



1 8 Is Jesus God? 

affirm its belief in Christ's deity than it does. 
To this we now call attention. 

The Christian Church, Roman Catholic and 
Protestant, professes in the Apostles' Creed to 
believe in Jesus Christ, the only Son of God 
the Father. In many parts of the Christian 
Church this creed is accustomed to be sol- 
emnly repeated on every Sabbath. Two things 
are here emphasized: that Christ is the Son 
of God, and that his Sonship is unique; viz., 
that he is the Son of God in a sense in which 
no one else can be called a son of God. That 
he is the Son of God means that he is God. 
We cannot dwell at length on the supernatural 
character of Christ which is strongly affirmed 
in the immediately following articles of this 
creed. Suffice it to say that it cannot be pre- 
dicated of any being who is anything less than 
divine. Just think, for example, of the judg- 
ment of quick and dead ascribed to him, which 
is the work of God alone. And what clear 
expressions of Christ's deity are to be found 
in the Nicene and so-called Athanasian creeds, 
which though not so well known as the Apos- 
tles', are yet recognized by many Churches as 
authoritative. Again how clearly Christ's 

authoritative. Again how clearly Christ's 



Is Jesus God? 19 

deity is affirmed in the separate creeds of the 
Churches, Reformed, Lutheran, and others. 
Nobody doubts this. In view of the confes- 
sion of Christ's deity in these creeds of parts 
of the Church and the clear confession of it 
by the whole Church in the Apostles' Creed, 
it cannot be doubted that the Church teaches 
Christ's deity. 

But not only in its creeds does the Church 
confess Christ's deity. It does so in its songs. 
It speaks thus: 

"Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast 
Save in the death of Christ, my God." 

And here especially does the unity of spirit of 
the whole Church of Christ appear. To quote 
Principal Fairbairn: "The high Anglican 
praises his Saviour in the strains of Luther and 
Isaac Watts, Gerhardt and Doddridge; the 
severe Puritan and Independent rejoices in the 
sweet and gracious songs of Keble and Faber, 
Newman and Lyte; the keen and rigid Pres- 
byterian feels his soul uplifted as well by the 
hymns of Bernard and Xavier, Wordsworth 
and Mason Neale, as by the Psalms of David. 
And this unity in praise and worship which so 



20 Is Jesus God? 

transcends and cancels the distinctions of com- 
munity and sect, but expresses the unity of 
faith and fellowship of heart in the Son of 
God." 

Then think of the divine honor which the 
Church assigns to Christ. We shall mention 
but a few of the most apparent ways in which 
the Church honors Christ as God. It prays 
to him just as it does to the Father, and in 
doing so it assumes that he is omniscient, omni- 
present, and omnipotent; in fine it ascribes at- 
tributes to him which manifestly belong only 
to God. Every time the benediction is pro- 
nounced upon the congregation the Church 
makes Christ equal to God. He is mentioned 
alongside of the Father without a hint at sub- 
ordination. Yes, "the grace of our Lord 
Jesus Christ" is spoken of even before "the 
love of God the Father," not, to be sure, be- 
cause Christ is placed above the Father, but 
because he is not inferior to him. And when- 
ever the sacrament of baptism is administered, 
the doctrine of the Trinity, which makes 
Christ the Son of God and therefore himself 
God, is pronounced over him who through 
baptism is declared a member of the Christian 



Is Jesus God? 21 

Church. Whenever therefore the Church re- 
ceives a new member it confesses its belief in 
Christ's deity. 

And does not the Church finally confess that 
Christ is God when it teaches men to flee to 
him and in its prayers itself goes to him for 
the forgiveness of sins? To be sure we are 
accustomed, and rightly so, to ask God to par- 
don our sins for Christ's sake, and even when 
we do this we confess that man cannot free 
himself from the guilt of sin, but that he needs 
the sacrifice of God's own Son. But how much 
more emphatically does the Church confess its 
faith in Christ as God when it instinctively 
flees to him personally with its burden of guilt 
and urges others to do the same! For the 
doctrine that only God can forgive sins is not 
peculiarly Rabbinical or Jewish, it is rooted in 
the universal consciousness of man. Every- 
body who feels the burden of his sins weigh- 
ing upon him instinctively flees to his God or 
his gods for deliverance. This applies to the 
pagan as well as to the Christian. And he 
cannot rest until he feels in the depth of his 
heart that God has declared him free from 
all guilt. The principle underlying the ques- 



22 Is Jesus God? 

tion of the Jews: "Who can forgive sins but 
God only?" is correct, and everybody who 
knows what sin is, knows this also. Every- 
body therefore who asks Christ to forgive his 
sins thereby expresses faith in his deity. It 
is said that the Christian Church is tending to 
relegate dogmas to the background in favor 
of ethics and morality. This is true; and it 
is quite possible, and even likely, that this 
tendency will cause many to lose sight of the 
importance of Christ's deity. We can safely 
even go so far as to say that it is already hav- 
ing this deplorable effect. This fact is indeed 
a sad one. Yet we need not be disheartened, 
for so long as the Holy Ghost truly convicts 
men of sin, they will feel the need of a divine 
Saviour. 

When Peter had confessed: "Thou art the 
Christ, the Son of the living God," Jesus re- 
plied: "Thou art Peter; and upon this rock 
will I build my church, and the gates of hell 
shall not prevail against it." These words of 
the Saviour have to the present time not failed 
of fulfillment. The Church today believes and 
teaches the deity of Christ. The gates of hell 
have not prevailed against it. 



HAS THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH 

ALWAYS TAUGHT THE 

DEITY OF CHRIST? 

By Daniel Stephanus Burger Joubert. 

The question, What think ye of Christ? has 
been variously answered through the ages. 
Humanitarians say that Christ is a man and 
nothing more. Arians say that though he was 
a creature, he is more than man. The Chris- 
tian Church has through the ages given but 
one answer, namely, that he is both God and 
man. It is to the former element in this an- 
swer that we have to give our attention, to 
show that at all times the Christian Church 
has consistently taught the deity of Christ. 
That this has been the firm belief of the 
Church all along may be shown in two ways. 
For a belief may be professed either by stat- 
ing it in terms or by acting in a manner that 
necessarily implies it. And there is after all 
no essential difference between the expression 

23 



24 Is Jesus God? 

of a conviction in language and its consistent 
reflection in life. 

We shall first consider the last of these state- 
ments. How then was this belief reflected in 
the life of the early Christians? In other 
words, did the Ante-Nicene Church as a whole, 
its congregations of worshippers, its poor, its 
young, its unlettered, as well as its saints and 
martyrs, so act and speak as to imply a belief 
that Jesus Christ is actually God? To this the 
history of the Christian Church has but one 
reply: That she believed in the divinity of 
Christ is manifested by the universal practice 
of adoring and worshipping him. 

The existence of sects which refused to 
acknowledge the divinity of Christ and the 
uncertainties of some of those who did ac- 
knowledge him, are alleged by some as a 
ground for denying to that age any assured 
belief in Christ's divinity. But the existing 
material does not warrant the conclusion. 
Christ is everywhere adored as God. The 
early Church not only admired Christ but she 
worshipped him. As one has said, u She ap- 
proached his majestic person in that way of 
tribute, of prayer, of self-prostration, of self- 



Is Jesus God? 2 5 

surrender, by which all serious theists, whether 
Christian or non-Christian, are accustomed to 
express their relationship as creatures to the 
Almighty Creator." Moreover this worship 
of Jesus was never protested against in the 
churches as something new, something un- 
heard of, something detracting from the 
honor due to God. Neither was there ever a 
time when he was invoked simply as a saint. 

This adoration of Jesus began in his earthly 
life, continued after his ascension, and has be- 
come the inheritance of succeeding ages. As 
an infant he was worshipped by the wise men. 
The leper worshipped him, saying, "Lord, if 
thou wilt, thou canst make me clean." The 
man who was born blind confessed his faith in 
the Son of God and accompanied it by an act 
of worship: "And he said, Lord, I believe, 
and he worshipped him." Thus also at Jesus's 
ascension the disciples worshipped him. No 
sooner had Christ ascended on high than he 
began to draw all men unto him. This attrac- 
tion was not only assent to his teaching but 
adoration of his person. As Liddon says: 
"No sooner had he ascended to his throne than 
there burst upward from the heart of his 



26 Is Jesus God? 

Church a tide of adoration which has only 
become wider and deeper with the lapse of 
time." 

In the first days of the Christian Church 
the Christians were known as "those who 
called upon the name of Jesus Christ." Prayer 
to Jesus was the devotional act which espe- 
cially characterized the Christian. Stephen's 
last cry was a prayer to Jesus. The words 
which Jesus addresses to the Father are by 
Stephen addressed to Jesus. At his conversion 
Saul of Tarsus surrendered himself to Christ 
as the only and lawful Lord of his being. 
"Lord, what wilt thou have me do?" he cried. 
Thus we see that the worship paid to Jesus 
in apostolic times was that worship which is 
due to God alone. This worship of Jesus was 
handed down to succeeding ages and has be- 
come an integral part of the spiritual life of 
the Church. 

Coming now to the early fathers, we find 
that they refer to the worship of our Lord as 
a matter beyond dispute. Ignatius asks the 
Roman Christians to put up litanies to Christ 
that he might attain to the distinction of mar- 
tyr. Justin protests to the emperor that the 



Is Jesus God? 27 

Christians worshipped God alone, yet he adds 
significantly that the Son and the Spirit share 
in the same reverence which is offered to the 
Father. In the so-called second letter of 
Clement we also find the words: "Brethren, 
we ought so to think of Christ as the Son of 
the living God, as of the judge of the quick and 
the dead." Clement of Alexandria in one of his 
treatises says: "Believe, O man, in Him who 
is both man and God; believe, O man, in Him, 
the living God, who suffered and is adored.'' 
Origen reports Celsus who wrote against the 
Christians as saying: "The worship of Christ 
is fatal to the Christian doctrine of the unity 
of God, while they offer an excessive adoration 
to this person who has lately appeared in the 
world. How can they think that they commit 
no offence against God, by giving these divine 
honors to his Son?" Christ was not only be- 
lieved to be divine and adored as divine, but 
it was clearly taught that he was divine. The 
Ante-Nicene "rules of faith" as they are found 
in the writings of Irenasus, Origen, Tertullian, 
Cyprian, are in essential agreement with the 
Apostles' Creed as it appears in the fourth 
century. They all confess the divine-human 



28 Is Jesus God? 

character of Christ as the chief object of the 
Christian faith, but this is done in ordinary 
popular style, not in the form of doctrinal, 
logical statement. The baptismal formula of 
that period also maintains strictly the New 
Testament practice of combining the Son with 
the Father and the Spirit. 

Hymns have always been a popular instru- 
ment for the expression of religious feeling 
and worship; and from the earliest years of 
Christianity they were consecrated to the 
honor and worship of Christ. Eusebius quotes 
the following: "The psalms and hymns of 
the brethren, which from the earliest days of 
Christianity have been written by the faithful, 
all celebrate Christ, the Word of God, pro- 
claiming his divinity." Of these early hymns 
of the Church some remain to this day as a 
witness to Christ's divinity. Such are the 
Gloria in Excelsis which was the daily morn- 
ing hymn of the Eastern Church, the Tersanc- 
tus, the hymn of Clement of Alexandria to 
the Divine Logos. Pliny writing to the em- 
peror says: "It appeared that on a stated day 
the Christians met before daybreak and sang 
a hymn to Christ as God." This is not a mere 



Is Jesus God? 29 

vague report but a definite answer elicited from 
several persons in cross-examination. The 
value of these hymns, teaching the deity of 
Christ, is clearly shown by the conduct of Paul 
of Samosata. He banished them from his 
churches because he did not wish to confess 
with the Church that the Son of God had de- 
scended from heaven. He held Christ was a 
mere man; that he was from below and raised 
to divine rank. 

Next we come to the witness of the martyrs 
who preferred death to replacing Christ by 
the emperor in their worship. The death-cry 
of many a martyr shows us the divine honor 
paid by the Christians to Christ. Here we 
have part of the prayers of two. Felix an 
African bishop cries: u O Lord, God of heaven 
and earth, Jesus Christ, to Thee do I bend my 
neck by way of sacrifice, O Thou who abidest 
forever." Polycarp exclaims at his martyr- 
dom : "For all things, O God, do I praise and 
bless and glorify Thee, together with the 
eternal and heavenly Jesus Christ, Thy well- 
beloved Son, with whom to Thee and the 
Holy Ghost be glory both now and forever." 
Someone has said, "Thus it was that the mar- 



30 Is Jesus God? 

tyrs prayed and died; their voices reach us 
across the intervening centuries, but time can- 
not impair their moral majesty or weaken the 
accents of their strong and simple conviction." 
This worship of Jesus by the martyrs is full 
of the deepest elements of worship; nothing 
short of a belief in the absolute divinity of 
Jesus could justify such worship. 

In the second place, we wish to show how 
this belief in the deity of Christ was expressed 
in living terms by the early Church either 
through its prominent leaders or in the coun- 
cils of the whole Church, when attacked by 
adverse criticism and heresies. Such a doc- 
trine as the deity of Christ could not at first 
bring peace to the earth; it could not help 
bringing division. "It could not help dividing 
families, cities, nations, continents, and it 
would have utterly collapsed when confronted 
with the heat of opposition it provoked had it 
not descended from the Source of all truth." 
We may say that the ecclesiastical development 
of this fundamental dogma started from 
Peter's confession (Mat. xvi., 16), "Thou art 
the Christ, the Son of the living God," and 
John's doctrine of the incarnate Logos (John 



Is Jesus God? 31 

L, 14), "And the Word became flesh and 
dwelt among us." This central truth of 
Christ's divine person and work is set forth in 
the New Testament writings, however, not so 
much in the form of a logically formulated 
dogma, as of a living fact, an object of faith 
and a source of strength. And the mind of 
the Church required for a season to meditate 
upon and try to grasp what this implied. 

Theological speculation on the Person of 
Christ began with Justin Martyr and was car- 
ried on by Clement of Alexandria and Origen 
in the East, and Irenaeus, Hippolytus and Ter- 
tullian in the West. It would have been im- 
possible for these fathers and the Christian 
world to have drawn from the teachings of 
the evangelists and the apostles any other con- 
clusion than that Christ was more than man, — 
God manifest in the flesh. The Gospels spoke 
of his incarnation, his sinlessness, his miracu- 
lous power; they testified to his eternal pre-ex- 
istence, and his ascension to his former glory. 
With this the earliest teachers of the Church 
were content. When they asserted that Christ 
was u both human and divine, born and unborn, 
God in the flesh, life in death, born of Mary 



32 Is Jesus God? 

and born of God," they entered into no further 
speculation on the point. This could not, how- 
ever, always remain so. The doctrine of 
Christ's deity was openly attacked. The first 
to deny it were the Ebionites, the Nazarenes, 
the followers of Artemon, and the Alogi. 
The earliest of these were the Jewish-Chris- 
tian Ebionites. To them Jesus was simply a 
man on whom for his piety the Spirit of God 
descended at his baptism, qualifying him for 
the Messiahship. But they remained merely 
a sect and disappeared about the fifth century. 
To their denials the orthodox fathers, the lead- 
ers of the Christian Church, among other 
things opposed the declaration of John that 
the Logos became flesh. But as was natural, 
their opinions were as yet somewhat vague and 
even in some instances erroneous. Moreover, 
we have to remember that the course of his- 
toric development in Theology is from popu- 
lar statement to scientific statement. Their 
individual insight was not sufficient to enable 
them to arrive at those careful scholastic defin- 
itions to which the Church was guided by the 
collective wisdom of ecumenical councils after 
periods of long and painful conflict. Jerome 



Is Jesus God? 33 

says: "It may be that they erred in simplicity 
and that they wrote in another sense or that 
their writings were gradually corrupted by un- 
skillful transcribers, and certainly before 
Arius was born they made statements incau- 
tiously which are open to the misrepresenta- 
tions of the perverse." 

The doctrine of the Church has, in all its 
stages of development, been accompanied by 
rationalistic hesitation and in the third century 
the Church was once more called upon to up- 
hold the eternal deity of Christ. This move- 
ment was the rationalistic Monarchianism 
which found its full development in Paul of 
Samosata. He held that Christ was a mere 
man, was from below, and from man became 
God. This view the Church decidedly reject- 
ed and Paul's views were condemned at a 
Synod held in 269 A.D. But the Monarchian 
controversies in the third century were but 
preludes to the great struggle of the Arian 
controversy in the fourth century. The Ante- 
Nicene Christology although passing through 
many abstractions, loose statements, uncertain 
conjectures and speculations, nevertheless in 
its main current flowed steadily towards the 



34 Is Jesus God? 

Nicene statements, and this the Arian struggle 
fully brought out. The doctrine that the 
Church contended for in this great strife, al- 
though not theologically formulated, lay in 
the faith of the Church from the very begin- 
ning as involved in its confession. The aim 
of those who defended the Church doctrines 
was the defence of the vital points of the faith 
and not a mere strife about words, as some of 
her opponents would contend. Their appeal 
was always to Scripture and to continuous tra- 
dition. "The Little Labyrinth," for example, 
written at the commencement of the third cen- 
tury, in refuting the Unitarians of its day — 
the Artemonites — makes its appeal to Scrip- 
ture, to the teaching of earlier writings, to 
Christian psalms and hymns. "Perchance," 
it says, "what they allege might be credible 
were it not that the divine Scriptures contradict 
them. * * * For who knows not the works of 
Irenaeus and Melito and the rest in which 
Christ is announced as God and man? What- 
ever psalms and hymns were written by the 
faithful brethren, from the beginning cele- 
brate Christ as the Word of God, asserting 
his divinity." The opinions of Arius were 



Is Jesus God? 35 

condemned by a council held at Alexandria, but 
this only brought about a greater controversy 
and soon the whole Christian Church was in- 
volved in the strife. Constantine tried by his 
individual efforts to settle the dispute, but 
when this failed he summoned a council of the 
whole Christian world to decide the matter. 
The struggle brought clearly out certain ten- 
dencies working in the Church and compelled 
the Church formally to reject them and de- 
clare in living form its belief in the eternal 
Godhead of Christ. 

The Arian heresy denied the strict deity of 
Christ, that is his co-equality with the Father, 
and taught that he is a subordinate divinity, 
different in essence from God (heteroousios), 
pre-existing before the world yet not eternal, 
for there was a time when he was not. He 
was himself a creature of the will of God, 
made out of nothing, who created the present 
world and became incarnate for our salvation. 
In other words, the Arians were creature-wor- 
shippers, no less than the heathen. Another 
party, the semi-Arians, held a middle ground 
between the orthodox and Arian views and 
asserted the "homoiousia" or similarity of es- 



36 Is Jesus God? 

sence of the Son with the Father. This was a 
very elastic term and might be contracted into 
an Arian or stretched into an orthodox sense 
according to the tendency of the man who held 
it. Athanasius the father of orthodoxy and 
the three Cappadocian fathers, Basil, Gregory 
of Nazianzus, and Gregory of Nyssa, de- 
fended the homoousia — the essential oneness 
of the Son with the Father, or in short his 
eternal divinity, as the cornerstone of the 
whole Christian religion. The question which 
Athanasius and his party contended for was in 
the words of Harnack, "Is the divine being 
who has appeared on the earth and has united 
man with God, identical with the highest being 
who rules heaven and earth, or is he a half 
divine being?" That was the decisive ques- 
tion in the Arian controversy. 

We should remember that what the Church 
asserted here as its belief was not something 
new, but what had always been the faith of the 
Church. Athanasius always appealed to the 
collective testimony of the Church in support 
of the doctrine he was defending. Bishop 
Alexander too says that he was "conscious 
that he was contending for nothing less than 



Is Jesus God? 37 

the divinity of Christ, the universal faith of 
the Church." This doctrine triumphed in the 
councils of Nice in 325 and Constantinople 
in 381, and since then it has stood the test of 
the ages and has in essence been incorporated 
into all the great creeds of the Christian 
Church. It is thus expressed in the Nicene 
Creed: "We believe in one Lord, Jesus 
Christ, the only begotten Son of God, begotten 
of the Father before all worlds, God of God, 
Light of Light, very God of very God, begot- 
ten, not made, being of one substance with 
the Father, by whom all things were made, 
who for us men and for our salvation came 
down from heaven and was incarnate by the 
Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary," etc. 

Looking back at the result, we see that the 
relation of Nice to the teaching of the apos- 
tles and evangelists is that of an exact equiva- 
lent translation of the language of one intel- 
lectual period into that of another. The New 
Testament writings had taught that Jesus 
Christ is Lord of nature, of men, of heaven, 
of the spiritual world and the like. When 
therefore the question was raised whether 
Jesus Christ was or was not of one substance 



38 Is Jesus God? 

with the Father, it became evident that of two 
courses one must be chosen. Either an affirm- 
ative answer had to be given or the New 
Testament teachings had in some way to be 
explained away. The Nicene fathers only af- 
firmed in the philosophical language of the 
fourth century what Jesus and the apostles had 
taught in the popular dialects of the first cen- 
tury. They by no means enlarged it. The 
Nicene council did not vote a new honor to 
Christ which he had not before possessed. 
They objected to Arianism, that it was some- 
thing entirely new. Thus the Church defined 
the limits of Catholic orthodoxy; and later 
ecumenical councils confirmed these decisions 
and for a long time no controversies arose on 
this subject. During a period of fifteen cen- 
turies no large number of real believers in 
Christ's divinity have objected to the Nicene 
statement. The Church of the middle ages 
confined itself to a defence of the Nicene doc- 
trine and the strict emphasis laid on his divin- 
ity throughout the middle ages has been con- 
tinued in the churches of the Reformation. 

In conclusion, we note two movements 
which have strongly denied the deity of Christ 



Is Jesus God? 39 

in more recent times. They have affected the 
Church as a whole very little. When the 
doctrine of the Church has been attacked in 
this respect there have always been men who 
have ably defended the eternal Godhead 
of Christ as laid down at the Council of 

Nice. 

The first of these movements is Unitarian- 
ism, and here the words of Shedd will suf- 
fice: "It was a less profound form of error 
than Sabellianism and Arianism which in the 
first centuries had compelled the theologian 
to employ his most extensive learning and his 
subtlest thinking. As a consequence it has 
been and is still confined to but a very small 
portion of the Protestant world. Had Uni- 
tarianism adopted into its conception of Christ 
those more elevated views of his nature and 
person which clung to Sabellianism and even 
to Arianism, it would have been a more influ- 
ential system. But merely reproducing the 
low humanitarian view of Christ which we 
found in the third class of Anti-Trinitarians 
of the second and third centuries, the Unitar- 
ian Christ possessed nothing that could lift the 
mind above the sphere of the merely human 



40 Is Jesus God? 

and nothing that could inspire the religious af- 
fections of veneration and worship." 

The second movement is the somewhat indi- 
rect attack on the divinity of Jesus made in 
several Lives of Christ. We mention only 
two, — Renan and Strauss. Strauss in his 
Leben Jesu regarded Jesus as merely "the 
idea of the identity of God and man and the 
mission of humanity built upon Messianic 
promise." Renan entirely abandoned Christ's 
divinity and while speaking of him as one 
whom his death had made divine, treated him 
from the viewpoint of an amiable Rabbi. 
These denials provoked strong reaction. Men 
like Neander, Ebrard, Lange, ably defended 
the truth of the Christian confession on this 
point. But the great masses of people in the 
Christian Church were left untouched by these 
attacks; they only made men who had found 
in Christ a Saviour indeed love the old faith 
better, and with increased fervor respect 
Peter's great confession, "Thou art the Christ, 
the Son of the living God." 

The times demand of us a vigorous reasser- 
tion of those fundamental truths of the Church 
which are likewise the very foundation of the 



Is Jesus God? 41 

gospel system. We close with the words of 
John Stock: "The mythical account of Strauss 1 
Leben Jesu, the unreal and unromantic Christ 
of Renan's Vie de Jesus, and even the merely 
human Christ of Ecce Homo can never work 
any deliverance in the earth. Such a Messiah 
does not meet the yearnings of fallen human 
nature. It does not answer the pressing query, 
'How can man be just with God?' It sup- 
plies no effective or sufficient agency for the 
regeneration of man's moral powers. It does 
not bring God down to us in our nature. Such 
a Christ we may criticise and admire as we 
would Socrates, or Plato, or Milton, or Shake- 
speare, but we cannot trust him with our salva- 
tion, we cannot love him with all our hearts, 
we cannot pour forth at his feet the homage 
of our whole being, for to do so would be 
idolatry. A so-called savior whose only power 
to save lies in the excellent moral precepts 
which he gave and the pure life which he 
lived, who is no longer the God-man hut a 
mere-man, whose blood had no sacrificial aton- 
ing or propitiatory power in the moral govern- 
ment of Jehovah, but was simply a martyr's 
witness to a superior system of ethics, is not 



42 Is Jesus God? 

the Saviour of the four Gospels or of Paul or 
Peter or John. It is not under the banners 
of such a Messiah that the Church of God has 
achieved its triumphs. The Christ of the New 
Testament, of the early Church, of universal 
Christendom, the Christ the power of whose 
name has revolutionized the world and raised 
it to its present level and under whose guidance 
the sacramental hosts of God's redeemed are 
advancing and shall advance to yet greater 
victories over superstition and sin, is Im- 
manuel, God-with-us, in our nature, whose 
blood cleanseth from all sin, and who is able 
to save even to the uttermost all who come 
unto God through Him." 



DO THE NEW TESTAMENT WRIT- 
ERS TEACH THE DEITY 
OF CHRIST? 

By Harm Henry Meeter. 

In order to prove that the New Testament 
writers teach the deity, or in other words, the 
Godhead of Christ, it is not absolutely neces- 
sary to quote from each New Testament 
book. For, certain writers being authors of 
two or more books, testimony taken from the 
fourth Gospel, for example, will prove that the 
writer of John's Epistles taught Christ's 
deity; testimony taken from the third Gospel 
will prove that the author of Acts taught it, 
etc. 

There may be some question as to what is 
meant by "teaching" the deity of Christ. If 
that be understood to mean that the New 
Testament writers purposed to make clear to 
their readers in so many words that Christ is 
God, then it may seriously be questioned 
whether any New Testament writer, with the 

43 



44 Is Jesus God? 

possible exception of John, — who mentions it 
as part of his purpose, — taught the deity of 
Christ. For in the very few passages that can 
at all be said to approach the form of a defin- 
ition of Christ's divine nature, for example, 
Romans ix., 5 and certain passages in the 
first chapter of Hebrews, the author plainly 
aims, not at a definition of Christ's deity, but 
at something ulterior to that. On the other 
hand, the term "teach" can be understood to 
mean that the writings of the New Testament 
embody certain statements, from which by 
logical conclusion it follows that the writers 
themselves held Christ to be God. In this 
latter sense, I assume the term to be meant 
here. If it is taken in this sense, then there 
is an abundance of evidence to prove that they 
all held Christ to be God, that they could not 
have said what they did say had they not held 
the deity of Christ, that the deity of Christ as 
a tenet was interwoven with the very warp 
and woof of their religious teachings, funda- 
mental to them, in fact a presupposition from 
which all started out. 

To begin with, there are passages in the 
New Testament that in one way or another 



Is Jesus God? 45 

directly ascribe deity to Christ. Thus it is 
plain that the Synoptists — which we treat to- 
gether because it is generally conceded that 
they are in general harmony as to the portrait 
they give of Jesus — hold the deity of Christ, 
from the fact that they record God the Father 
as saying at Christ's baptism : "Thou art my 
Son in whom I am well pleased" (Matt, iii., 
17 ; Mark i., 11; Luke iii., 22) ; and again on 
the Mount of Transfiguration: "This is my 
beloved Son, hear him" (Mark ix., 7; Luke 
ix., 35). That it is the metaphysical Sonship 
which is here witnessed to is plain from the 
statements made in the same connection. The 
Holy Spirit and the Father are associated with 
Christ at baptism. Of Christ it is said : "This 
is my Son," obviously in contradistinction to 
all others, God's "beloved One," the One "in 
whom God is well pleased," and men are ad- 
monished to "hear him." Again, a belief in 
Christ's deity is evident from the numerous 
passages recorded by the Synoptists, where 
Jesus speaks of God, not as our Father, but 
specifically as "my Father," indicating a 
unique relation in which he stood to God. Es- 
pecially is this plain from the passage in 



46 Is Jesus God? 

Matthew xi., 27, and the parallel one in Luke 
x., 22, which places Christ on an equality with 
God the Father: "All things are delivered 
unto me of my Father, and no man knoweth 
the Son but the Father; neither knoweth any 
man the Father save the Son, and he to whom- 
soever the Son will reveal Him." It is need- 
less to say that, when the Evangelists speak 
of God the Father's testimony, or of Christ's 
testimony to his own deity, they silently sub- 
scribe to that testimony as embodying their 
own opinion. 

John opens his Gospel with a direct testi- 
mony to the deity of Christ, for he begins by 
saying: "In the beginning was the Word, and 
the Word was with God, and the Word was 
God." In fact, if we may take John at his 
word, his whole Gospel (chap, xx., 21), and 
his First Epistle as well ( I. John v., 13), were 
written with the purpose that his readers 
might believe "that Jesus is the Christ, the 
(metaphysical) Son of God." And this state- 
ment regarding his purpose is borne out in the 
whole of the Gospel and of the First Epistle, 
by the titles given to Christ. Such are, for ex- 
ample, "Son," "the Only Begotten," "the Son 



Is Jesus God? 47 

of God," the One "who is in the bosom of the 
Father." John's belief in Christ's deity is 
further plain from passages where Christ's 
oneness with the Father is emphasized. Sig- 
nificant here is the criticism of the Jews (x., 
33) in regard to Jesus' calling God his 
Father. When Jesus asserted that he and the 
Father are one, the Jews sought to stone 
him, and they gave as a reason that they 
stoned him not for any good work, but be- 
cause of blasphemy, whereas he, being a man, 
made himself God. This statement is a plain 
proof of how the Jews, how the men of 
Christ's time, and of how the Evangelists 
conceived of it, when Jesus spoke of God as 
specifically his Father. No other interpreta- 
tion can be given than that they conceived of 
him as divine, as God. 

This direct testimony to the deity of Christ, 
taken from the Gospels, is strengthened by 
statements found in Paul's writings. Of these 
we can mention but a few. 

In Romans viii., 32, we read that "God 
spared not His own Son, but delivered him 
up for us all." Obviously here the Son, as 
well as God, stands outside the category of 



48 Is Jesus God? 

human beings, for the Son was delivered up 
for them. And the word "own Son," which is 
here used for the sake of emphasis, shows 
Christ's unique and close relation to God, 
which, considering Paul's strict monotheistic 
conception of God, cannot mean anything 
else than that Jesus Christ is identical with 
God. 

So also Romans ix., 5, seems decisive evi- 
dence that Paul teaches Christ's deity. It is 
just because this passage seemed to contain 
such decisive proof of Christ's deity, that 
some recent critics have gratuitously attacked 
the authenticity of the text. And all attempt 
to explain the relative clause u who is God 
over all" in any other way than by referring 
it to Christ must prove futile. The context 
demands its reference to Christ, since Christ 
is spoken of in the immediate connection, and 
it is only natural that, in reading this clause, 
we should think of him; moreover, the words 
"according to the flesh," which immediately 
precede, lead us to expect some description of 
the other side of Christ's person; and besides 
there would be no sense in inserting a dox- 
ology in praise of God the Father at this 



Is Jesus God? 49 

point. Therefore these words must refer to 
Christ. 

Philippians ii., 6, is no less conclusive proof 
of how Paul conceived of Christ. We read 
there: "Who, being in the form of God, 
thought it not robbery to be equal with God. 
. . . " And "form" here can imply nothing 
less than that he possessed the whole of the 
qualities which constitute God. Only so ex- 
plained can it have meaning that because 
Christ was in the form of God, he did not 
need to think it robbery to be equal with God. 
And so conceived this passage leaves no room 
to doubt that Paul thought Christ divine. 

Of the many proof-texts in Hebrews I will 
cite merely one. In i., 8, the writer, quot- 
ing an Old Testament passage, ascribes deity 
to the Son by saying: "Unto the Son he 
saith: 'Thy throne, O God, is forever and 



ever. 1 " 



Peter likewise ascribes deity to Christ, 
when, in his great speech in Acts ii., 34, he 
says: "For David is not ascended into the 
heavens, but he saith himself: 'The Lord said 
unto my Lord: Sit thou on my right hand 
until I make thy foes thy footstool.' " Here 



50 Is Jesus God? 

Peter quotes the same Old Testament passage 
to which Christ had reference when he 
proved to the Jews the deity of the Messiah. 
It admits of no doubt, therefore, it seems to 
me, that Peter, in appropriating that text as 
embodying his own opinion, meant to ascribe 
deity to Christ. So also in the tenth chapter 
of Acts, verse 36, Peter calls Christ "Lord of 
all." This he could not say if he did not think 
Christ divine. 

In James and Jude, epistles themselves 
short, the passages which point to the deity of 
Christ are necessarily few. But even there it 
seems to allow of no doubt that Christ was 
conceived of as divine. In the opening verses 
of his epistle James, in styling himself "a 
servant of God and the Lord Jesus Christ," by 
coordinating these two, places Christ on an 
equality with God. And, speaking in chapter 
ii. of the Lord Jesus Christ, he calls him u the 
Lord of glory." The idea of the term glory is 
not merely to attribute glory to Christ, for 
glory, placed in apposition to Christ, signifies 
rather Christ, whose being consists in glory. 
Now such can with difficulty be said of Christ 
without accounting him to be God himself. 



Is Jesus God? 51 

In like manner the epistle of Jude contains a 
passage which, although it does not directly 
call Jesus God, yet presupposes it. We read 
in the fourth verse: "Our only Master and 
Lord Jesus Christ." The word only is sig- 
nificant. If Jesus Christ is our only Master 
(Despot), then to the Jewish mind of Jude, 
Christ must be God, for in the end God was 
the only Master whom a Jew could recognize. 

From this review of the New Testament 
writings it appears that each of the New 
Testament writers, in some form or other, 
directly ascribes deity to Christ. Numerous 
other texts might have been cited as corrob- 
orative testimony. But this evidence, gained 
from passages in which deity is directly as- 
cribed to Christ, can only be subsidiary. For 
there is far stronger evidence in other facts 
recorded in the New Testament; besides the 
interpretation of even the strongest passages 
directly ascribing deity to Christ is always 
subject to debate, the critics who are not will- 
ing to concede Godhead to Christ interpreting 
them in their own way. 

Further proof of Christ's deity I find then, 
first, in the divine attributes ascribed to him. 



52 Is Jesus God? 

We have an epitome in Colossians ii., 9. Paul 
says: "In him dwelleth all the fulness of the 
Godhead bodily." Christ is said to be eternal 
as God. John says: "In the beginning was 
the Word and the Word was with God, and 
the Word was God." Christ to him was "the 
Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the 
End." "Before Abraham was, Christ is." 
To Paul Christ, who had lived and died at 
Jerusalem, is "the first-born of every creature." 
To the author of Hebrews, "Jesus Christ is 
the same yesterday, today, and forever." So 
too Christ is omnipresent. To John, though 
he is walking on the earth, yet he is "in the 
bosom of the Father." He is the "Son of 
Man, which is in heaven." To Matthew, 
though he has ascended up to heaven, Christ 
is with his Church "even unto the end of the 
world." To Paul (in Ephesians i., 23,) 
Christ "filleth all in all." Christ is unchange- 
able. The author of Hebrews tells us that, 
though heaven and earth shall wax old as a 
garment, Christ will remain the same. Christ 
is represented as omniscient. The Synoptists 
represent him as knowing what is in the heart 
of man, as knowing what Peter had answered 



Is Jesus God? 53 

the taxgatherers, as knowing step by step what 
his life's course would be. Christ is all-power- 
ful. To Paul he is "the Power of God and 
the Wisdom of God." The Evangelists por- 
tray him as having command over the powers 
of nature ; the sea and the winds are under his 
control. 

Another proof of his deity is the part he 
is said to take in the divine works. He takes 
part in the work of creation. According to 
John, "all things were created by him." Paul 
calls him "the beginning of the creation of 
God." He participates in the work of Prov- 
idence. For, according to Colossians i., 17, 
"by him all things consist." According to 
Hebrews i., 3, "he upholds all things by the 
word of his power." His wonders even are 
expressive of his deity; for, unlike the proph- 
ets, who also performed wonders, Christ per- 
formed them in imitation of the Father (John 
v., 21), "For as the Father raiseth up from 
the dead and quickeneth, even so the Son 
quickeneth whom he will." Christ, while on 
earth, forgave sins. And "who can forgive 
sins but God alone?" He shall come, accord- 
ing to the Evangelists and II. Peter, to judge 



54 Is Jesus God? 

the world as its Lord, which he could not do 
if he stood not to it in the relation of Creator 
to creature. 

The Evangelists, Paul, and the author of 
the Hebrews make him the direct object of 
the Christian's prayer. This they could not 
do if they thought him not God, for only in 
his Godhead can we find ground of prayer 
unto him. Divine honor is also given him in 
making him the object of the Christian's faith. 
In John xiv., I, Jesus tells his disciples that, 
as they believe in God, so also they shall make 
him the object of their faith, or, as some 
would have it, Jesus tells them he is the ob- 
ject of their faith just as God is. And of this 
faith in Jesus Christ almost all the New 
Testament writers speak. In so doing they 
give testimony to the deity of Christ. Christ 
it is on whom Christians, according to Peter 
and Paul, are told to build their hope for 
time and eternity. From him, according to 
Peter, Paul, John, and Jude, Christians ex- 
pect grace. Now how were this possible if 
Christ were mere man, exalted to heaven 
though he be? What grace can be had from 
the saints in heaven, from Abraham or moth- 



Is Jesus God? 55 

er Mary, for whom connection with those on 
this earth is practically severed? 

Again, a proof of Christ's deity is the active 
part he now is said to take in the work of 
salvation. The mystical union of believers 
with Christ, symbolized by the figure of the 
vine and the branches in John xv., and so 
often spoken of in Paul's epistles, implies as a 
necessary presupposition that Christ is divine, 
and would be robbed of its meaning if we, 
in a rationalistic way, understood it to signify 
union merely with Christ's teachings. John 
records Jesus as saying (John xiv., 23,) that, 
if any man love Christ, the Father and he 
will dwell in their hearts. Christ, who has 
died and departed from this earth, is repre- 
sented in Corinthians (I. i., 4-9, 30, 31, xv., 
45), as the source of Spiritual Life, as a life- 
giving Spirit. He is said in Galatians ii., 20, 
to dwell in us, as God is said to dwell in his 
people. By him (Ephesians ii., 1-6) we are 
quickened from the dead to spiritual life; and 
at the sound of his voice, as Paul has it, at 
the last day all men will be called forth from 
the grave. Such statements cannot be made 
without an implication of Christ's deity. 



$6 Is Jesus God? 

Finally, Christ's deity is reflected in the life 
he is said to have led. Already we see the 
deity revealed in the birth-narrative. The 
story of Christ's birth is not that of a natural, 
but of a supernatural person, the supernatural 
being not merely implied in the general run 
of the narrative, but explicitly stated. When 
Luke mentions the fact of the angel's foretell- 
ing to Mary that she was to be with child of 
the Holy Ghost, he records the angel as say- 
ing: "For this reason (*. e., just because of 
the parentage of God) , that Holy Thing 
which shall be born of thee shall be called Son 
of God." The passage loses all its force, the 
reason ceases to be a reason, if we ascribe 
anything less than deity to Christ. 

Matthew records the angel as saying that 
the child should be called Immanuel, God- 
with-us. As Matthew speaks of this in con- 
nection with the wonderful birth of Christ, it 
can scarcely be doubted that he meant to as- 
cribe deity to Christ. For how could that 
child in itself be "God-with-us" and not be 
divine? This statement of Matthew has the 
more force if we bear in mind that Matthew 
was not educated in the doctrine of modern 



Is Jesus God? 57 

theology, which teaches that there is some- 
thing divine in each of us. Again, in verse 
2 1 of the same chapter, the angel says : "Thou 
shalt call his name Jesus, for he shall save his 
people from their sins." The angel there al- 
ludes to a statement in Psalm cxxx., where it 
is said that God should redeem Israel from 
their iniquities. In the New Testament Jesus 
is substituted for God, which fact shows that 
Jesus was conceived of here as God. 

Now the record of Christ's birth as proof 
of his deity, though more or less debatable in 
so far as the Synoptic record is concerned, is 
fully substantiated by the testimony given 
thereto by John. In the opening words of his 
Gospel he says that the Word which is God 
was made flesh and dwelt among us. Paul, in 
a similar passage in Galatians iv., 4, says: 
"But when the fulness of time was come, God 
sent forth his Son, made of a woman," there- 
by testifying to the metaphysical Sonship of 
the son of Mary. 

So also the account of Christ's life, as given 
by the four Evangelists in common, can lead 
to no other conclusion than that they con- 
ceived of Christ as God. "No man ever lived 


58 Is Jesus God? 

as he lived; no man ever spoke as this man 
spoke." His whole life's conduct, from the 
cradle to the grave, was one grand reflection, 
not merely of a spotless human character, but 
of the divine in him. The life he led, the 
words he spoke, the wonders he did in imita- 
tion of the Father, the command he exercised 
over the forces of nature — all show we are 
here dealing with some one divine. Christ 
cannot be a creature of the Evangelists' fancy. 
He cannot be a product of their imagination. 
It lies entirely beyond the reach of possibility 
for a human being to picture from imagina- 
tion the life of a divine being. The Evangel- 
ists could only record "the things which they 
had seen and heard." That the writers not 
merely unconsciously taught Christ's deity in 
the portrait they drew of his life, but that 
they themselves were impressed by the fact 
that Christ's life was that of one divine, I 
think is evident from their acquiescing in the 
opinion of Peter, when he said, concluding 
from the life of Christ: "Thou art the Christ, 
the Son of the living God" ; and from John's 
statement, that "these things were written, 



Is Jesus God? 59 

that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, 
the Son of the living God." 

In like manner Christ's death, which is but 
the culmination of his godlike life, is expres- 
sive of his deity. Not as regards that death 
in itself, for in so far as Christ could die he 
was not God; but as to the manner in which 
he died. This already is plain from the fact 
that the Evangelists record Jesus as saying 
that he had power to lay down his life and 
power to take it up again, a power not given 
to man, but a prerogative only of him, who is 
Lord of Life. And Christ laid down his life. 
It was not torn from him. The manner in 
which he died, and the circumstances attend- 
ing, impressed bystanders so with a feeling of 
his deity that the Roman centurion exclaimed: 
"Truly, this was a Son of God." This state- 
ment has worth for us here, not so much as 
embodying the centurion's belief, for he could 
only conceive of this Son of God after his 
heathen fashion, but for what Matthew and 
Mark wish to bring out by it. For the state- 
ment clearly implies that what to the writers 
was a fact impressed itself as such even upon 
the mind of the Roman centurion. 



60 Is Jesus God? 

Christ's resurrection is another proof of 
his deity. In so far as it was a resurrection 
from the dead, it was a token of his human- 
ity. But especially as to the fact that God, by 
raising Christ from the dead, set His seal to 
all the claims Christ during life had made to 
deity, does the resurrection testify to the deity 
of Christ. In this manner Paul finds in the 
resurrection a proof of Christ's deity, when 
he says in Romans i., 4: "And declared to 
be the Son of God with power, according to 
the Spirit of Holiness, by the resurrection 
from the dead." 

From these facts I think it is clear that the 
New Testament writers — all of them — teach 
the deity of Christ, that they could not have 
said what they did say without holding the 
deity of Christ, that the deity of Christ was 
not merely an object of belief along with 
many others, but formed part of the sub- 
stratum upon which their religious teachings 
were based, was a presupposition from which 
they all started out. 



DO THE EVANGELISTS REPRESENT 
CHRIST AS HIMSELF TEACH- 
ING HIS DEITY? 

First Essay. 

By Johannes Daniel Roos. 

Our question at once clearly marks out the 
field of our investigation. The immediately 
preceding paper has proved that the mass of 
the New Testament writers not only believed 
in Christ as a Divine Person, but also held his 
divinity as a fundamental truth which pervad- 
ed their minds and their writings — both ex- 
plicitly and implicitly — in the portraits they 
have severally drawn of him. At this stage, 
however, we come in contact with modern 
criticism, throwing up this difficulty, — that we 
cannot receive the testimony of the apostles as 
an unbiased account, and indeed not even that 
of the earlier tradition, on which their ac- 
counts seem partially to rest. They are preju- 
diced in all they have to say about Jesus, inas- 

€1 



62 Is Jesus God? 

much as he is acknowledged by them as their 
Lord and Master, and is believed in by them 
as divine. 

We are therefore called upon to distinguish 
between what these apostles teach concerning 
Jesus, and what he himself has taught about 
his own Person; that is, in the Gospels to sift 
out the self-testimony of Jesus from the repre- 
sentations given of him by his followers and 
devotees. We shall, therefore, in the Gospel 
narratives turn exclusively to the words of 
Jesus himself, and hope on that foundation to 
prove adequately that our Lord is represented 
not only as having thought, but as having actu- 
ally taught, that he was the Messiah, the 
Christ, the Son of God, yea, himself God, in 
the most striking and clearest terms. The 
further question, whether what we find in 
these words laid on the lips of Christ is actu- 
ally his own, or merely the subjective convic- 
tions of the evangelists attributed to him, falls 
beyond our range, and will be treated subse- 
quently. 

Investigating then the self-testimony of 
Jesus, as recorded by the evangelists, we find, 
as a first step, that in his very earliest youth 



Is Jesus God? 63 

(Luke ii., 49), — the only reference to that 
period of his life, enveloped in the mists of 
the mysteriously unknown and silent, we have 
recorded in the Gospels — he is clearly con- 
scious of his unique relation to God as his 
Father. "Wist ye not," says he, "that I must 
be about my Father's business ?" It is hardly 
possible that at such an early age he could 
have believed himself to be the heaven-sent 
Son, had he not been that in reality. Accord- 
ingly we find him opening his ministerial activ- 
ities by boldly applying to himself in the syna- 
gogue at Nazareth the Messianic prophecy of 
Isaiah lxi., 1 ; for in Luke iv., 17 sq. we read 
that after having read from this prophet the 
passage : "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, 
because he hath anointed me to preach the gos- 
pel to the poor; he hath sent me to heal the 
broken-hearted, to preach deliverance to the 
captives, . . . and the acceptable year of the 
Lord," he sat down and uttered these solemn 
words: "This day is this scripture fulfilled in 
your ears." Moreover, not long after this 
public declaration we find Jesus at the well of 
Sychar, on his way to Galilee, definitely de- 
claring to the Samaritan woman that he is the 



64 Is Jesus God? 

Messiah, the Christ, when to the inquiring 
woman who said: "I know that the Messiah 
cometh, which is called Christ," Jesus an- 
swered: "I that speak unto thee am he." 

But by way of a stepping-stone to our final 
resolution, if not part of the very foundation 
of the argument itself, let us try to ascertain 
whether our Lord made any claim to a pre- 
existent state, whether he was conscious of a 
life beyond the soil of Palestine; thus working 
up our way to a clear conception of his per- 
sonal oneness with the Father. Such a pre- 
existence of Christ is not only latent in most 
of the New Testament passages having refer- 
ence to him, but is also explicitly and clearly 
taught by the Saviour himself. In the first 
place we find Jesus, in John viii., teaching be- 
fore his countrymen in the temple, where the 
indictment of the Jews, that he made himself 
greater than Abraham and the prophets, drew 
from his lips this solemn phrase: "Verily, ver- 
ily, I say unto you, before Abraham was (lit. 
became) I am." What does this mean? 
Christ professes here simple existence, without 
beginning or end. Abraham came into being 
at some definite time (he became) ; our Lord 



Is Jesus God? 6$ 

not so, he is from eternity: "I am" This then 
claims not only pre-existence, but also dis- 
plays a consciousness of eternal Being. The 
"I am" of verse 24 seems to point back to the 
Jehovah of the Covenant of ancient Israel: 
"I am that I am" (Ex. iii., 14). He knows 
no past or future, he is the eternal now. That 
this is the plain sense of the words is perhaps 
further evident from the immediate hostile 
attitude of the Jews, who resolved to stone him 
for blasphemy. 

In the second place we have the strongest 
of testimonies for this consciousness of a prior 
state of glory from which our Lord had come, 
and to which he was then about to return, in 
his own words (John xvii., 5) : "And now, 
O Father, glorify thou me with thine own 
self, with the glory which I had with thee 
before the world was." So clear and full of 
solemn import is this reference in the great in- 
tercessory prayer of our Saviour, offered up 
on the eve of his crucifixion, that we may pass 
on without further comment. In a similar 
way, had space permitted, we might have ad- 
duced numerous other texts, e. g., John iii., 
13; vi., 62; viii., 23, etc., all bearing on this 



66 Is Jesus God? 

subject, and adding weight to our argument. 
But these few concrete instances may suffice. 
It is evident that this is a truth of the greatest 
moment, for if it be denied, "we have in Jesus 
Christ at most the deification of the human, 
not the incarnation of the divine ; man become 
God, not God become man." In these and 
similar sayings of Jesus, then, adequate evi- 
dence is supplied for his pre-existence. In 
the words of King we say: "Indeed the evi- 
dence of this truth is not confined to them 
alone, it is forthcoming in the general tenor 
of his teaching respecting himself. Even 
when we do not hear his direct testimony to 
his pre-existent glory, we overhear it. He 
who claims an absolute and exclusive knowl- 
edge of the Father, who speaks on all matters 
of highest moment with an authority which 
no one is permitted to question, who makes 
the acceptance or rejection of himself the 
hinge on which the destiny of men turns, and 
who presents himself as the final judge of 
mankind, cannot, we instinctively feel, have 
an existence which reaches no further back 
than Bethlehem. In him there must be, there 
is, the appearance of the eternal in time." It 



Is Jesus God? 67 

is to be admitted, of course, that pre-existence 
is not necessarily deity. On the contrary, some 
acknowledge Christ's pre-existence, and yet 
deny his true and proper Godhead. But this 
raises such grave difficulties that the position 
is today generally abandoned; and modern 
theologians are aware that, to vindicate their 
naturalistic view of his Person, they are 
obliged to make his existence begin with the 
nativity in Bethlehem. 

We go a step further, then, trying to prove 
that Christ also considered himself essentially 
one with the Father. For this we think we 
find ample ground in our Lord's words record- 
ed in John viii., 42 : "I proceeded forth and 
came from (lit. out of) God." This expres- 
sion, presupposing the pre-existence, seems, 
almost beyond doubt, to express his rela- 
tionship to the Father in such a manner as 
to be explicable only in terms of his true 
and proper Godhead. For on closer exami- 
nation it will be seen that the preposition 
used in the original, "with God" is not that 
meaning "from the side of," nor yet "away 
from," but that meaning "out of," which 
can only mean out of God as the origin. The 



68 Is Jesus God? 

relation is therefore a highly metaphysical 
one. The explanation placed on these words 
by Bishop Westcott is this: they "can only be 
interpreted of the true divinity of the Son, of 
which the Father is the source and fountain." 
Again in John x., 30, Christ declares: "I and 
the Father are one" where, in view of his pre- 
ceding argument, this can only mean "one" 
in the guarantee of the safety of the sheep be- 
longing to his fold, thus a oneness not only in 
the ethical sense, but a oneness of power, of 
nature. Godet says: "Here the thought of 
Jesus rises still higher, even to the notion of a 
unity of nature, whence arises unity of will, 
power, and property." 

The data thus secured seem to justify us in 
saying that Christ is both a distinct pre-exist- 
ent Personality, and substantially one with 
Deity. As such, therefore, being himself God, 
we find him claiming to be without sin. This 
claim radiates forth from the whole tenor of 
his teaching. Compare him, for example, with 
his predecessors : they all, from Moses to the 
latest of the prophets, confess weakness, short- 
comings, and even sins. Or with his successors, 
amongst whom we find Paul, whom so many 



Is Jesus God? 69 

wish to exalt even above Christ himself, ex- 
claiming: "O wretched man that I am! who 
shall deliver me from this body of death?" Of 
all this there is not a word, not even the slight- 
est trace, in the teachings of Christ. He never 
even so much as hints at a distinction between 
his official and his personal self. Nay, further, 
he makes morality not something relative, but 
absolute, placing before his hearers the highest 
possible, the perfect standard: "Be ye there- 
fore perfect, even as your Father which is in 
heaven is perfect" (Matt, v., 48). Not only, 
however, is our Lord's perfect sinlessness im- 
plicit in his words, but he even makes a direct 
and explicit claim to it, when in John viii., 46, 
he positively challenges the Jews: "Which of 
you convinceth me of sin?" 

A second characteristic is not less strik- 
ing than the one just examined, and can 
perhaps be explained only from his sin- 
less nature, to wit, the attitude of superi- 
ority he assumes towards the Pharisees, 
the Scribes, the Prophets, the hallowed Jew- 
ish tradition, and even the inviolable law of 
Moses itself. The Scribes and Rabbis always 
appealed to prior and higher authorities; the 



70 Is Jesus God? 

prophetic language runs: "Thus saith the 
Lord." But Jesus assumes all authority to him- 
self, and we hear him speak in such language 
as this: "Verily, verily, / say unto you"; an 
attitude to be compared not with that of 
Moses or any of the prophets, but only with 
that of God himself. Accordingly we find 
Christ already early in his ministry claiming 
the power of forgiving sins. When the sick 
of the palsy was brought into his presence, he 
said unto him: "Son, be of good cheer, thy 
sins are forgiven thee." Nor did he rest con- 
tent with the mere uttering of these words, to 
which the Scribes took objection, accusing him 
in their hearts of blasphemy. In the most em- 
phatic manner he asserts this power of forgiv- 
ing sins and cleansing men's hearts. For to 
their unspoken censure he answers: "Whether 
is easier, to say, Thy sins are forgiven; or 
to say, Arise, and walk? But that ye may 
know that the Son of Man hath power on 
earth to forgive sins (then saith he to the sick 
of the palsy), Arise, take up thy bed and go 
unto thy house. And he arose and departed 
to his house" (Matt, ix., 2-7). 

But the culminating declarations of Christ 



Is Jesus God? 71 

as to his divine sonship perhaps yet remain to 
be adduced. This title, the Son of God, be- 
comes, especially in John, Jesus' own designa- 
tion, constantly on his lips. In the 25th verse 
of chapter v. he says : "The dead shall hear the 
voice of the Son of God, and shall live." In 
ix., 35-7, he makes the most direct statement 
as to this. Meeting the man whose sight he 
had restored, and whom the Jews had then 
cast out, he asked him: "Dost thou believe on 
the Son of God ?" The man answered : "Who 
is he, Lord?" Whereupon Jesus replied: 
"Thou hast both seen him, and it is he that 
talketh with thee." There are many more 
passages, not to mention those in which our 
Lord speaks of God peculiarly as "the" or 
"my" Father, never "our" Father, thus never 
placing himself alongside of the disciples. 

But this designation is not limited to John's 
Gospel, as some critics would have it. The 
Synoptics indeed seem to strike the keynote 
here. It is perhaps met with in its fullest sig- 
nificance in Matt, xi., 27 — also Luke x., 22, 
which contains the same pregnant statement, 
only slightly changed in form — where the very 
germ of the Incarnation-mystery seems to be 



72 Is Jesus God? 

imbedded: "All things are delivered unto me 
of my Father, and no man knoweth the Son, 
but the Father; neither knoweth any man the 
Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever 
the Son will reveal Him." What this on the 
face of it teaches is a complete knowledge of 
the Son by the Father, and of the Father by 
the Son. The Son should thus be infinite in 
his attributes to compass the boundless depths 
of the Father. The mutual knowledge of 
Father and Son seems to be of the same abso- 
lute kind; and what is more, others shall know 
the Father only in so far as the Son may 
think fit to reveal Him. 

It is impossible to believe that we have 
here in the one the ever-living God, and in 
the other a mere human being, however ex- 
alted he may be. It is therefore not surpris- 
ing to find that Christ in the closing verses of 
this Gospel claims to be a sharer in the Trinity 
of the Godhead. "Having declared his inter- 
communion with the Father, who is the Lord 
of heaven and earth, Jesus here asserts that all 
authority has been given him in heaven and 
earth, and asserts a place for himself in the 
precincts of the ineffable Name. Here is a 



Is Jesus God? 73 

claim not merely to a deity in some sense equiv- 
alent to, and as it were alongside of, the deity 
of the Father, but to a deity in some high 
sense one with the deity of the Father." 

Finally, in this capacity Christ claims for 
himself the divine prerogative of judgment. 
In John v., 22, he declares that "the Father 
judgeth no man, but hath committed all judg- 
ment unto the Son." The climax, however, is 
reached in the judgment scene in Matt, xxv., 
where Christ announces himself as the sole 
judge of all men at his second coming. This 
clearly is a distinct claim to divinity, for no 
work can be more exclusively divine in its very 
essence: "When the Son of Man shall come 
in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, 
then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory : 
and before him shall be gathered all the na- 
tions, and he shall separate them one from 
another, as a shepherd divideth the sheep 
from the goats." To the former the King 
shall say: "Come, ye blessed of my Father, 
inherit the kingdom prepared for you from 
the foundation of the world." But the latter 
he shall turn from his presence with the 
words: "Depart from me, ye cursed, into 



74 Is Jesus God? 

everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his 
angels. . . . These shall go away into eter- 
nal punishment, but the righteous into life 
eternal." 



Second Essay. 

By Frank Mackey Richardson. 

Each one of the Evangelists presents to us 
a Divine Christ. Matthew, while he does not 
devote as much space to his Divinity as does 
John, gives us a Christ who could only be 
God, if he taught and acted as he presents 
him ; so also with Luke and Mark. The style 
and strain in which he perpetually spoke is as 
weighty as any of his declarations. 

Christ openly claimed to be the Son of 
God according to the Synoptics (Matt, xxvi., 
64, and Luke xxii., 69-7 1 ) . In the instance nar- 
rated here Christ is being questioned by Caia- 
phas, and, being asked if he is the Son of God, 
replies, "Thou hast said. Nevertheless I say 
unto you, Henceforth ye shall see the Son of 
man sitting at the right hand of power and 



Is Jesus God? 75 

coming on the clouds of heaven." In Matt. 
xxvii., 43, we read, "He trusted in God, let 
Him deliver him now, if He desireth him, for 
he said, I am the Son of God." The 44th 
verse testifies that even the robber called him 
the Son of God, and Christ, as in the above 
passage, accepted the title and in this instance 
sealed it with his own blood. 

Christ is also represented as claiming su- 
premacy in both worlds (Matt, xiii., 4 I "42). 
"The Son of man shall send forth his angels 
and they shall gather out of his kingdom all 
things that cause stumbling and them that do 
iniquity, and shall cast them into a furnace of 
fire : there shall be the weeping and the gnash- 
ing of teeth." Here he has a kingdom and is 
attended by a retinue of angels. He is to pre- 
side at the judgment and cast the causers of 
stumbling and the doers of iniquity into the 
furnace (Matt, xxv., 31-32). "But when the 
Son of man shall come in his glory and all the 
angels with him, then shall he sit on the throne 
of his glory: and before him shall be gathered 
all the nations : and he shall separate them one 
from another, as the shepherd separateth the 
sheep from the goats; and he shall set the 



76 Is Jesus God? 

sheep on his right hand but the goats on his 
left." And (Matt, xxv., 34), "then shall the 
King say unto them on his right hand, Come 
ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom 
prepared for you from the foundation of the 
world." And in the 41st verse, "Then shall 
he say also unto them on the left hand, De- 
part from me ye cursed into the eternal fire 
which is prepared for the devil and his an- 
gels." "And these shall go away into eternal 
punishment, but the righteous into eternal 
life" (Matt, xxv., 46). Here he is the su- 
preme Judge, sending the righteous to heaven 
and the unrighteous to eternal punishment. 
His power is supreme, he is conscious of it at 
all times, in fact he states it without equivoca- 
tion in Matt, xxviii., 18, "And Jesus came to 
them and spake unto them saying, All author- 
ity hath been given unto me in heaven and on 
earth." He is the absolute Judge. In his 
hands is all authority. Can we think of God 
being any more powerful? He is the final 
and absolute court of all decisions. 

In his great sermon on the mount Christ 
claimed to be the great teacher come with a 
message. Seven times in one chapter does he 



Is Jesus God? 77 

use the form, "But I say unto you" (Matt, v., 
20, 22, 28, 32, 34, 39, 44). In Matt, vii., 24, 
he says that it is the wise man who hears these 
sayings and does them. Also Matthew de- 
scribes him as teaching with authority (Matt, 
vii., 29). "For he taught them as one hav- 
ing authority and not as their scribes." In 
Matt, xii., 8, Mark ii., 28, and Luke vi., 5, 
he puts aside the Jewish Sabbath and tells men 
unhesitatingly that he is Lord of the Sabbath. 
Possibly at no time is he more emphatic than 
here, and this is recorded by all the Synoptics. 
Further in Matt, xxviii., 19-20, "Go ye there- 
fore and make disciples of all the nations, 
baptizing them into the name of the Father, 
and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, 
teaching them to observe all things what- 
soever I commanded you, and lo, I am 
with you always." Here all the world is 
to learn of his teachings; all the converted are 
to be baptized not only in the name of the 
Father and the Holy Spirit, but also in his 
name ; and he is going to be present with them 
even unto the end of the world. Could God 
have promised more ? Is it not an evidence of 
his own inner consciousness? 



78 Is Jesus God? 

Christ heals men of their sins, as in Mark 
ii., 5-7, where he says to the one sick of the 
palsy, on seeing their faith, "Son, thy sins be 
forgiven thee," and in verse 10, "that ye may 
know that the Son of man hath power on earth 
to forgive sins, he saith to the sick of the palsy, 
I say unto thee, Arise, and take up thy bed, 
and go into thine house. And immediately 
he arose, took up the bed, and went forth be- 
fore them all; insomuch that they were all 
amazed, and glorified God, saying, We never 
saw it on this fashion." The Jews said that 
no one save God can forgive sins. Christ not 
only claimed power on earth to forgive sins, 
but in order to establish his claims he went so 
far as to seal his claim to supernatural power 
by performing this physical cure. Further 
claims are made in Matthew, in that he can 
heal all our soul's diseases. "Come unto me, 
all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I 
will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you 
and learn of me, for my yoke is easy and my 
burden is light" (Matt, xi., 28-30). And 
again, "All things have been delivered unto 
me of my Father, and no one knoweth the Son 
save the Father, neither doth any one know 



Is Jesus God? 79 

the Father save the Son and he to whomso- 
ever the Son willeth to reveal Him." Luke 
x., 22, also records this remarkable claim as 
presented by Christ. He is on a par with 
his Father which is just as deep a mystery. 
Our eternal destiny depends upon whether we 
accept or reject him. "Every one therefore 
who shall confess me before men, him will I 
also confess before my Father who is in 
heaven, but whosoever shall deny me before 
men, him will I also deny before my Father 
who is in heaven." Who but one that is in 
touch with God and holds the keys to his opin- 
ions can make any such claims? 

So far we have occupied ourselves with the 
Christ that Matthew, Mark and Luke give us. 
We find in him a Judge of both worlds of om- 
nipotent power, and a teacher come from God. 
He offers peace and comfort to the human soul 
and presents himself as our burden-bearer. 
His mystery of Sonship is as great as that of 
his Father. He is the mediator between God 
and man and all nations must be taught of him 
and baptized in his name. Could the Synoptics 
have presented a more divine Christ? Could 
they have invented such complex claims ? 



80 Is Jesus God? 

It is admitted by all that John presents a 
Christ that is God. It is our purpose now to 
show that it is the same Christ that the Synop- 
tics portray. In his interview with Nicode- 
mus, Jesus expressly declares his divinity. "He 
that believeth on him is not judged, but he 
that believeth not hath been judged already 
because he hath not believed on the name of 
the only begotten Son of God" (John iii., 1 8 ) . 
Also (verse 16), "For God so loved the 
world that He gave his only begotten Son that 
whosoever believeth on him should not perish 
but have eternal life." In Matthew he is pre- 
sented as the final and absolute Judge and in 
John he is the one to give away the mansions 
on high (John xiv., 1-3), "Let not your heart 
be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also 
in me. In my Father's house are many man- 
sions: if it were not so, I would have told you. 
I go to prepare a place for you." He also 
claimed to have absolute power over his own 
life. "No one taketh it away from me, but I 
lay it down of myself. I have power to lay it 
down and I have power to take it again. 
This commandment received I from my Fath- 
er" (John x., 18). Also he claimed that 



Is Jesus God? 8 1 

those even then that should hear his voice 
should live (John v., 25), " Verily, verily, I 
say unto you, the hour is coming and now is, 
when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son 
of God: and they that hear shall live." Also 
as in the Synoptics he is made the eternal 
Judge. "For neither doth the Father judge 
any man, but he hath given all judgment unto 
the Son" (John v., 22). "Marvel not at this : 
for the hour cometh in which all that are 
in the tombs shall hear his voice" (John v., 
28) . Again in John he claims to have power 
to bestow eternal life (John iv., 14). "But 
whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall 
give him shall never thirst; but the water that 
I shall give him shall become in him a well of 
water springing up unto eternal life." 



DID JESUS TEACH HIS OWN DEITY? 

First Essay. 
By William Arthur Motter. 

The question, whether Jesus taught his 
deity, is a purely historical one and must be 
approached in the attitude of historical investi- 
gation. We must examine the evidence, and 
on the basis of an honest investigation draw 
our conclusions. We must approach the ques- 
tion with an open mind. To have our minds 
made up at the outset that Jesus was not God 
is to approach the question with a bias which 
is bound to affect our conclusions. On the 
other hand, our conclusions must not be col- 
ored by the fact that the records with which 
we deal profess to be inspired and therefore 
infallible. We approach such evidence as we 
approach any other historical evidence, and 
accept it for what it is worth. 

The question with which we are concerned 
is a very important one. We have already 
seen that from the very beginning the Chris- 

82 



Is Jesus God? 83 

tian Church has believed in the deity of Jesus 
Christ. We have also seen that the Church 
has represented Jesus as teaching his own 
deity. Apart, then, from the question whether 
Jesus is divine, if we can show that Jesus did 
teach his deity we have an explanation for the 
belief and teaching of the early Church; but 
if Christ did not teach his deity, then the Jesus 
of the Christian Church is not the real Jesus, 
and the Church of Christ has been laboring 
for nineteen centuries under a great delusion. 

An answer to the question, Did Jesus teach 
his deity? must carry us back to the Christ 
who walked and talked upon the earth. We 
shall therefore be concerned with two ques- 
tions : the evidence, and its trustworthiness. 

An examination of the evidence reveals, in 
the first place, that our only source of informa- 
tion for the life and teaching of Christ is the 
literature of the early Christian Church, name- 
ly, the accounts of Jesus as found in the four 
canonical Gospels. 

We learn, in the second place, that these 
four Gospels were written by men who were 
in a position to know whereof they wrote. 
Two of these documents, the Gospel according 



84 Is Jesus God? 

to Matthew, and the Gospel according to 
John, come from men who were known to 
have been companions of Christ during the 
greater part of his public ministry; men who 
were in a position to portray accurately the 
scenes in the life of Christ which they had 
witnessed with their own eyes, and to record 
the words which they had heard with their 
own ears. Mark, the writer of the second 
Gospel, is known to have been a companion 
of Peter who himself was an eye-witness and 
played a leading role among the followers of 
Christ. Concerning Luke, the author of the 
third Gospel, we know that he was an edu- 
cated Greek physician, a companion of Paul. 
A study of his Gospel has convinced scholars 
that he is a careful and accurate historian, and 
we have little reason to doubt his procedure 
as set forth in the prologue of his Gospel, in 
which he tells us that he gathered his ma- 
terials for his Gospel from those "who from 
the beginning were eye-witnesses and minis- 
ters of the Word." "Having traced the 
course of all things accurately from the first," 
he says, "I write unto you, most excellent The- 
ophilus, that thou mightest know the certainty 



Is Jesus God? 85 

concerning the things wherein thou wast in- 
structed." Such, then, were the qualifications 
of the men who profess to record for us the 
life and teachings of Jesus Christ. From the 
previous papers we have already learned that 
these records represent Jesus as teaching his 
deity, not only by implied statements, but out 
and out, in so many words ; not in a few iso- 
lated passages, but over and over again in 
unmistakable terms. 

We find, in the third place, that these rec- 
ords carry us back close to the events they 
profess to record. In our search for the prim- 
itive Jesus w T e may for the time being disre- 
gard the Gospel of John, which comes from 
toward the close of the first century, and con- 
fine our attention to the Synoptists who present 
our earliest extant witness to the teachings of 
Christ. It is generally agreed that the Synop- 
tic Gospels were written before 80 A.D., and 
there seems little reason to doubt that they 
were written before the fall of Jerusalem in 
70 A.D. But even taking the later of the 
two dates, the evidence carries us back to 
within fifty years of the death of Christ, and 
comes from men who were either eye-wit- 



86 Is Jesus God? 

nesses or contemporaneous with the events 
they record. This means that the Gospels 
were written at a time when the life and teach- 
ing of Christ were still fresh in the world, 
when we have every reason to believe that had 
the facts recorded not been true, they would 
have been refuted by the Jewish world, which 
was very bitter towards the claims of Christ. 
For example, taking an instance that bears 
directly upon our question, the Gospel records 
tell us that Jesus was condemned before the 
Sanhedrin because he taught that he was the 
Son of God. Here is the record of a fact 
that could easily have been refuted, and we 
have every reason to believe would have been 
refuted, were it not true. 

These, then, are the documents which pro- 
vide the data for the student of history, docu- 
ments which clearly represent Jesus as teaching 
his own deity. In the face of their representa- 
tions of Jesus we ask the question, Can we 
believe that Jesus taught his deity ? Our ques- 
tion emerges as a small part of a greater ques- 
tion, the trustworthiness of the Gospel record. 
The teaching of Christ is inseparable from his 
life. His words form an integral part of the 



Is Jesus God? 87 

Gospel narrative. So close is this relation that 
the record of his words and the record of his 
deeds stand or fall together. Can we trust 
the portrait of Christ which we find in the 
Gospel record? Does it represent the real 
Jesus? Did Jesus claim for himself the high 
place he holds in the minds of his first fol- 
lowers? Did he do as they say, claim that he 
was God? 

Liberal theology tells us today that Chris- 
tianity was founded by Paul, that Paul trans- 
formed the message of the Kingdom which 
Christ brought, namely, the "Fatherhood of 
God and the Brotherhood of Man," into a 
message which centered in the person of a 
Christ who was regarded as divine. Exam- 
ine the Epistles of Paul, which for the most 
part are earlier than the Gospels, and you 
have a Christianity centering in the death, the 
resurrection, and the atonement of Christ the 
Son of God. Search for the teaching of Jesus, 
and it is surprisingly lacking. We find the 
early Church emerging with a strong belief in 
the deity of Christ. Perhaps this "relief, 
which antedates the Gospel record, was read 
back into the life of Christ, and colored the 



88 Is Jesus God? 

portrait which his first followers have given 
us in the Gospels. If this is true, then we 
want to get back to the real Jesus. 

Liberal theology tells us that the primi- 
tive Jesus was a human Jesus: that the divine 
Jesus was the product of the Church. If this 
is true, then is the Jesus who teaches his deity 
also a product of the Church? Jiilicher says, 
"Even the earliest tradition cannot be assumed 
to be free from the bias of the first inter- 
preters." "The sources as we have them 
now," says Wernle, "are not free from the 
possibility of modification and adulteration. 
They represent the belief of the Christians as 
it developed through four decades." Johannes 
Weiss tells us that a study of the Gospel of 
Mark reveals two pictures of Jesus: one rep- 
resenting him as purely human, the other as 
a God to whom all things are possible; and 
with the peculiar bias of the liberal school, he 
tells us that the human Jesus is the earlier, 
the true Jesus : the divine Jesus is the product 
of the Church. Wrede tells us that Jesus was 
not Messiah and did not wish to be, but after 
the resurrection the disciples began to believe 
that he was divine, and hence they came to the 



Is Jesus God? 89 

conclusion that he must have taught his Mes- 
siahship, though at first only in a hidden way. 
Hence in the Gospel of Mark, which is re- 
garded as the earliest Gospel, he finds 
the beginning of the tendency to represent 
Jesus as teaching his deity. Accordingly 
we meet with such statements as these: 
"and he suffered not the demons to speak" 
(i., 34) ; "and he charged them that no 
man should know this" (v., 43). And, after 
the great confession at Caesarea Philippi, 
"he charged them that they should tell no 
man of him" (viii., 30) . This is only the be- 
ginning of the tendency which we find culmi- 
nating in the fouth Gospel, where Jesus is 
represented as openly teaching his Messiah- 
ship. 

If the theory of the liberal theologians is 
true, then our task as historians, seeking for 
the words of Christ in regard to himself, is 
the task of separating the late element, the 
mythical element, the element which the 
Church has read backward into the life of 
Christ, from the primitive Jesus, the human 
Jesus. We may search for the primitive Jesus 
along two different lines. We may, by a liter- 



90 Is Jesus Got 

ary study of the documents, seek to get back 
of the present documents, and thus find a more 
primitive Jesus; or we may, by some subjec- 
tive test, seek to eliminate the true from the 
false and thus arrive at a true Jesus. 

Taking up a literary study of the Gospels, 
we find that the three Synoptists stand inti- 
mately related, and back of them there seem 
to be even more primitive sources. Critical 
schools today are generally agreed upon two 
primitive sources. The first, commonly called 
Ur-Markus, lying back of our present Mark, 
(or according to some identical with our pres- 
ent Mark), and taken over almost bodily by 
Matthew and Luke. Besides this there is a 
second source, commonly called the Logia 
source, to which are traced passages common 
to Matthew and Luke not found in Mark. 
This is sometimes believed to have been the 
original Gospel of Matthew in Aramaic. 
Granting that these sources actually existed, 
and that the Synoptists used them, we would 
naturally expect them to represent the sources 
from which they were borrowed. If such is 
the case, then we have fragments embedded 
in our present Gospels which carry us back 



Is Jesus God? 91 

"one literary generation" nearer the life of 
Christ. Confining our attention then to the 
fragments of these primitive sources em- 
bedded in the Gospels, namely, those portions 
common to Matthew and Luke which are 
found in Mark, as representative of Ur- 
Markus, and those portions common to both, 
but not found in Mark, as representative of 
the Logia source, what do we find? We find 
a portrait of a Jesus whose life and teachings 
correspond exactly to the portrait of the 
whole Gospels. We find no evidence in these 
fragments of a Jesus who is regarded as less 
divine, or who does not teach his deity. As 
far back then as literary criticism can carry 
us, we find only one Jesus, a Jesus who both 
regards himself as divine, and teaches his own 
deity. 

Literary criticism fails to reveal a Jesus 
who does not teach his deity. We have yet 
to follow out the results of historical criticism 
in its attempt to separate the mythical and 
ideal elements in the Gospels from the true. 
The great problem which confronts the his- 
torical student now, is that of finding some 
adequate test by which he can eliminate all but 



92 Is Jesus God? 

the true. What is to be this standard? Har- 
nack says: "Whoever has a good eye, and a 
true sense of the really great, must be able 
to see it and distinguish between the kernel 
and the transitory husk." Pfleiderer mentions, 
"Healthy eyes." Bousset asks, "Is it psycho- 
logically comprehensible?" Some one else 
says, "What could not have been invented." 
It is just here that so much of our so-called 
historical criticism has failed. Liberal theo- 
logians have approached the question with 
minds already made up that the true Jesus was 
a human Jesus. To find the true Jesus they 
only need some standard by which the divine 
element can be eliminated. Convinced at the 
outset that Jesus was not divine, they tell us 
that Jesus was deified by his followers. If 
you would find the true Jesus, says Schmiedel, 
reject everything in the Gospels that is not 
contradictory to the idea of worship — and 
what do you have left? In the first instance, 
five, or possibly nine passages, holding before 
us a Jesus who could not possibly account for 
the Gospel portrait: a Jesus who says nothing 
about his deity. 

To approach our question squarely and 



Is Jesus God? 93 

without prejudice, we must at least be 
willing to admit the possibility that Jesus 
was divine and taught his deity. Suppose 
we begin by admitting such a possibility, 
and at once Schmiedel's standard must be 
ruled out, for it involves the very point at 
issue. He tells us that the followers of Christ 
worshipped him; but suppose Christ was 
really divine, then would it be wrong to wor- 
ship him, or would the Gospel record be any 
the less true because Christ, who was God, 
was worshipped as God? Johannes Weiss 
finds two distinct portraits of Christ in the 
Gospel of Mark: a human Christ, and a di- 
vine Christ; and because he does not believe 
that Christ was divine he holds on to the 
human Christ and discards the deified Christ. 
But suppose Jesus was what the Church has 
always believed him to be, both God and man, 
then his criterion must be discarded. Start 
with your mind made up that there never was 
a divine Jesus, and historical criticism can 
yield but one result : a Jesus who did not teach 
his deity. The man whose mind is made up 
at the outset, in the words of Kalthoff, 
"leaves of the words of Christ only what he 



94 Is Jesus God? 

can make use of according to his preconceived 
notions of what is historically possible. Lack- 
ing every historical definiteness, the name of 
Jesus becomes an empty vessel into which 
every theologian pours his own thoughts and 
ideas." 

Liberal theology starts with a Jesus who 
is human, but the human Jesus of liberal 
theology leaves all the facts unexplained. 
Granted that Jesus was mere man, how ac- 
count for the Gospel? If Jesus were mere 
man, then our Gospel is a myth and we have 
no way of getting back to the real Jesus. If 
the Gospel is a myth, if the Church invented 
the divine Christ, it must have invented his 
words in which he teaches his deity. If this 
be true, how explain the belief of the early 
Church? Apart now from the fact as to 
whether Jesus were divine or not, we cannot 
explain the belief of the Church in his deity, 
or in the fact that he teaches his deity, if he 
did not teach it. The conclusions of liberal criti- 
cism do not do justice to the facts. After lib- 
eral criticism has said its last word, we have 
a Gospel in which Jesus teaches his own deity, 
and that Gospel must be explained. If Christ 



Is Jesus God? 95 

did not teach his deity, then the Gospel which 
represents him both as divine and as teaching 
his deity is more wonderful and more difficult 
to explain than the life it records. 

The facts of the Gospel need an explana- 
tion. We must do one of two things : regard 
the Gospel as historical, or give up the whole 
record. But the latter alternative is not neces- 
sary. "It might be reassuring to us as his- 
torians," says Dr. Denney, "to find that there 
are passages in the Gospels which no worship- 
per of Jesus could have invented, which were 
data to the Evangelists and which we are safe 
in counting historical." This is the problem 
to which he devotes himself in the greater part 
of his Jesus and the Gospel. Going back to 
the documents, which critics find embedded in 
the Gospels, and which they designate as the 
earliest representations of Jesus, he searches 
out those passages which could not possibly 
have been invented by the followers of Christ, 
in which Jesus is represented either as con- 
scious of, or as teaching his deity. He re- 
minds us at the outset that, "The force of the 
argument does not depend on any single pass- 
age, but on the cumulative effect of the 


g6 Is Jesus God? 

whole." For the student of history who ap- 
proaches the question with open mind the 
numerous passages which he cites are conclu- 
sive proof that, regardless of whether or not 
Jesus was divine, he regarded himself as di- 
vine and taught his own deity. 

In conclusion, we remark in the words of 
Professor Gwatkin: "If we know anything 
for certain about Jesus of Nazareth, it is that 
he steadily claimed to be the Son of God, Re- 
deemer of Mankind, and the Ruler of the 
world to come; and by that claim the Gospel 
stands or falls." 



Second Essay. 

By William Nicol. 

This question now leads us a step further 
back in our discussion. The first pair of 
papers have shown that the Christian Church 
does now teach, and always has taught, the 
deity of Christ, upon the strength of the pre- 
supposed fact that such was also the teaching 
of the New Testament. The second pair of 



Is Jesus God? 97 

papers then proceeded to investigate this pre- 
viously presupposed teaching, and showed 
that all the New Testament writers do really 
teach the deity of Christ, in their turn making 
the supposition that Jesus really did utter this 
teaching. Our question now takes up this sup- 
position, and asks whether the teaching of 
the New Testament writers is established on 
such a historical fact, as that of Jesus him- 
self teaching his deity, or whether their teach- 
ing may not have arisen later from other 
causes. If we may anticipate somewhat to 
show the connection, we might say that the 
next and final paper will again have to go be- 
hind this, and, taking it for granted that Jesus 
did teach his deity, ask whether he was right 
in doing so, and whether there was no decep- 
tion or self-delusion in the case. 

What amount of evidence do you suppose 
a historian would require to establish on 
sound historical principles the fact that nine- 
teen hundred years ago a certain man lived 
who, whether he was right or wrong, taught 
his own deity? Some people seem to want to 
go to work with nothing but their five senses, 
and require of us that we shall present facts, 



98 Is Jesus God? 

or rather objects, which will appeal to those 
senses in such a way as to demonstrate con- 
clusively what we have to prove. If that is 
your demand the task is hopeless, for you are 
asking something which it is beyond the 
power of any system of historical investiga- 
tion to reach. 

In making this concession I would, however, 
remark that on your basis of demonstration 
every past fact of history would be disproved, 
or to say the very least, it would become im- 
possible to establish securely any such fact. 
If you refuse to make use of recorded testi- 
mony after your best efforts to prove that it 
is not authentic have failed, well then there 
simply is no more history existing for you. 
Then it is no use granting that a man must 
have lived because you see a monument erect- 
ed to his memory, because there is almost as. 
much chance of the erection of a false monu- 
ment as of the publication of a false book. 
Why, at that rate you cannot even prove that 
Napoleon ever lived, and some people would 
be thrown into serious doubt about those of 
their ancestors who died before their birth. It 
seems that even the extremely up-to-date 



Is Jesus God? 99 

sworn testimony of a photograph would not 
be worth much. You noticed in the papers a 
short while ago, that a certain Mr. Gompers 
of Chicago was accused of standing on the 
Stars and Stripes while addressing a social- 
istic meeting in that city. To substantiate 
this accusation, a photograph was produced 
of Mr. Gompers holding forth to his men 
with his feet upon the flag. This looks very 
serious, but no, Mr. Gompers' attorney finds 
an expert photographer who proves that the 
photograph was faked, and Mr. Gompers is 
saved. 

It would appear, then, that it is neither fair 
nor possible to conduct a historical investiga- 
tion upon such a basis, and with these de- 
mands. We have a right, and it is our duty, 
to examine our data before we formulate our 
historical scheme ; but if we ever wish to ac- 
complish anything, we will have to put a cer- 
tain amount of faith in others, and make use 
of the facts which they had a better opportun- 
ity of ascertaining, and have recorded for us. 
The difficulty seems to have arisen because 
certain people who turn their attention to the 
person of Christ have previously made up 



ioo Is Jesus God? 

their minds as to what can possibly happen 
and what cannot possibly happen. When such 
a student is confronted by the fact of a widely 
distributed community, the Christian Church, 
which universally believes in the deity of her 
Christ, he at first decides that this bit of 
superstition must be a late importation. On 
further investigation, however, he finds that 
this has been prevalent in the Church for 
these many centuries, and that it is still sup- 
posed to be established on the teaching of the 
New Testament. He thereupon turns his at- 
tention to those writings in the hope of being 
able to find that they do not really commit 
themselves to any such doctrine. This, then, 
also proves a failure, and he simply brushes 
it aside, and finds himself driven to the con- 
clusion that the mistake is not in the interpre- 
tation of the representation, but somewhere 
in the underlying facts. He is now confronted 
by his last choice, and has either to decide that 
the records are at variance with what Jesus 
taught, — and then it follows that he never 
taught his deity, — or Jesus was at variance 
with the facts of the case, in which event he 
did teach his deity, and was correctly repre- 



Is Jesus God? 101 

sented by the Evangelists, but must himself 
have been a deceiver of the highest ability; 
for remember that whatever happens, it is the 
foregone conclusion of our student that God 
cannot at the same time be man. To save the 
character, the veracity of Jesus, he has there- 
fore to assume that he has been misrepre- 
sented; and having now fixed this, he sets 
about explaining everything in the light of 
such a misrepresentation. 

So, for instance, P. W. Schmiedel follows 
the trail of the investigation up to the spot 
where he has to admit that it was generally 
held in the early Church of the eighth decade 
that Christ was God, and that this belief is 
recorded by the Evangelists — men who were 
thoroughly acquainted with the whole current 
of contemporary opinion concerning Jesus. We 
would now think that Schmiedel has gone so 
far in admitting this that he will have to go all 
the way with us, and admit also that Jesus did 
teach his deity. But not so, for in the very fact 
that the Evangelists and those on whom they 
depended were under the spell of the fascinat- 
ing personality of Jesus, and had learned to 
make much of him, Schmiedel finds the reason 



102 Is Jesus God? 

why they are not to be trusted. Accordingly his 
revision of the life of Jesus and of his sayings 
tries to make use of only that which could not 
be ascribed to the adoration of the writers. 
In this case, then, the link between truth and 
later falsehood is not in Jesus himself, for 
he was faithful in that he did not teach his 
deity, nor is it in the false interpretation we 
are putting on the writings of the Evangelists, 
for it is admitted that our exegesis is on the 
whole correct, but it is just in the connection 
between Jesus and his immediate followers, 
who magnified a good man into a God. 

Not unlike this is the standpoint of Jo- 
hannes Weiss, who would also save the char- 
acter of Jesus at the expense of his deity. He 
finds the center of the mistaken doctrine in the 
conversion of Paul, who had himself never 
seen our Lord, or at least had not been under 
the influence of his teaching. The conversion 
of Paul may then have been a purely natural 
occurrence, resulting from his hostile attitude 
of mind toward the Christians, which went 
over into its direct opposite when he fell a 
victim to sun-stroke on his way to persecute 
those at Damascus. Immediately turning be- 



Is Jesus God? 103 

liever in the resurrection of Christ, who, he 
thought, had here appeared to him, he be- 
comes the introducer into Christianity of the 
Logos christology, which was later fully de- 
veloped in the Christian community to mean 
that Christ is simply God himself. With this 
rich meaning Weiss admits that John speaks of 
the deity of Christ, but Paul himself still meant 
something lower, while the Synoptists had a 
Christ in mind who was not much more than, if 
not purely, human, and only added divine ele- 
ments to their representation, under the influ- 
ence of the christology prevalent at the time 
that they were writing. Here in the case of 
Weiss it is again clear that the honesty and 
sanity of Christ, on the one hand, are not 
doubted; and on the other hand, the ordinary 
exegesis of the New Testament which finds 
there a representation of Christ as divine is 
admitted to be correct; but in between the 
mistake is supposed to lie, viz., in the way in 
which the followers of Jesus immediately be- 
gan to think of him after his death, and in 
which they consequently represented him as 
speaking. 

With these we may, roughly speaking, class 



104 ? s Jesus God? 

that group of writers who deny that Jesus 
ever lived, and attribute the growth of New 
Testament christology to pure myth, for from 
that assertion it must necessarily follow that 
he did not teach his deity either. In this 
Strauss has been fairly outdone by men 
like Drews, who are satisfied by the ideal truth 
represented by Christ, of the approach of man 
to God, and do not require the historical truth 
of his life and work. Not totally unlike this 
speaks Anderson of Dundee in the Hibbert 
Journal when he wishes to show that, though 
there may have been, and very likely was, 
a human Jesus to whom the historical part 
of the narrative relates, other more im- 
portant parts were derived from the mythol- 
ogizing faculty of one of those clubs that were 
prevalent in the Roman Empire at the time, 
and which wreathed a garland of glory con- 
taining "elements of Jewish materialism, 
Greek philosophy, Oriental cults of dying and 
rising savior-gods, and the prevalent Roman 
emperor-worship, around the dim and meagre 
outlines of a slain Jesus. " 

All these different views we cannot here 
consider in the conclusions at which they ar- 



Is Jesus God? 105 

rive, but we note that they all have to make 
the same point to begin with, that, namely, 
the Evangelists are all radically misrepresent- 
ing Jesus. 

Let us look at the historical position to see 
if this could be possible. It is at once clear, 
and admitted, that as early as the seventies 
there is a universal and very strong conviction 
among the Christians of the deity of Christ. 
This tendency is so strong that the three 
Synoptists, writing accounts of Jesus about that 
time, just allow those narratives to overflow 
with that doctrine. The Ur-Markus, the Lo- 
gia, or whatever else may lie at the foundation 
of these Gospels in the form of writings or 
stereotyped tradition, make it clear that even 
in the fifties this doctrine must already have 
been general. Because, whether with Jo- 
hannes Weiss and others, you think that 
these Gospels only reflect the then prevalent 
christology, or with the orthodox party, you 
think that these Gospels were the memorabilia 
of some of the disciples about Jesus, in any 
case they make such vital statements that for 
them to have passed unchallenged by the 
Christians is proof enough of their having 



106 Is Jesus God? 

been according to the popular mind. Now 
whatever it was that Jesus did, and for what- 
ever reason he suffered, we cannot make any- 
thing of his character if we do not allow that 
there was some purpose — some one great pur- 
pose we would like to say — in his life. Let 
him have been but human, and let that purpose 
be but the practice of a simple ethical princi- 
ple. This, surely, is the least that we can 
claim as a starting point for all that attached 
itself to him later. 

Now let Paul or the Evangelists come 
along, and change the person of this human 
Jesus into that of God, and his purpose from 
a simple ethical principle to that of the high- 
est religious significance — the salvation of the 
world. I say change it from man to God, be- 
cause when Weiss speaks of Paul's intermedi- 
ate stage, he is simply toning the real question 
down to make it appear less abrupt. Paul's 
Jesus is simply God like that of John and the 
Synoptists, as previous papers have already 
shown. And this immense change has to be 
made in forty years ! And it has to be made 
so completely that the Gospels may incor- 
porate it at the end of that time without being 



Is Jesus God? 107 

in any way contradicted. Further note, this 
change has to be effected in the very country, 
in the first place, where Jesus had lived his sim- 
ple life, and in the second place, in the lifetime 
of whole communities that had known him 
personally. You have to admit this cannot be 
done; however your feeling against the super- 
natural objects to an incarnation, your sense 
of the historically possible rejects this radical 
change still more. We answer Baur in his 
own words: "What cannot happen, simply did 
not happen," and here we hope it is said more 
correctly than he said it, for here there is no 
question of the supernatural. It would even 
seem more logical to deny, with Drews, that 
Jesus ever lived, than to let him live and be 
deified thirty years after his death, if he did 
not claim deity for himself. I leave it to you 
whether that claim was true or false, but you 
must at least grant that the subsequent course 
of events requires that it was made. 

Coming to the literary argument, we have 
to admit at once, as Denney and Anderson, 
quoted above, have done with vastly different 
purposes, that we simply cannot come into 
touch with Jesus as he lived and spoke, through 



108 Is Jesus God? 

the Gospels, and yet independently of the 
writers. If you take the whole matter out of 
the historical environment, you have to con- 
fess that the historical Jesus, if he ever lived, 
is at the mercy of the writers who can let him 
act and speak as they like, and create for him 
a character and self-consciousness just as suits 
their ulterior purposes. Unless we have writ- 
ings which we can prove to have come directly 
from the hand of our Lord, we cannot find 
him speaking to us more directly than he does 
in the Gospels. Now this may make investi- 
gation difficult for us if we try to come into 
closer contact with the primitive Jesus, but 
it makes it impossible for the liberal theolo- 
gian to separate the primitive Jesus from the 
picture of him given in the Gospels. 

We have already seen that the Evangelists 
would have been prevented by the surround- 
ings in which they labored from representing 
Jesus differently from what he appeared to 
all men to be. When we look at the writers 
themselves we feel convinced of their ability, 
and desire, to give a true representation of 
Christ as he appeared to them. Two of them 
are supposed to have followed him as dis- 



Is Jesus God? 109 

ciples, catching up every word eagerly; three 
of them are connected with the apostolic cir- 
cle in which the Christian religion was carried 
on; Luke, a man with the highest historical 
sense, had every opportunity of ascertaining 
the facts from the beginning, and he too is 
actively employed in the work of the propaga- 
tion of the new faith. All these claims to 
qualifications to give a true account the lib- 
erals may deny, but they will have to admit 
that here are four leaders of the early Church 
who give these mutually corroborative ac- 
counts of the life and teaching of Jesus. These 
accounts show very marked differences from 
each other, which are clearly due in part to 
the differences in the natures of the four writ- 
ers to whom different points appeal, and in 
part to the fact that the object in writing their 
Gospels was not always the same. Yet among 
all this variety there is this essential agree- 
ment running through the whole, in regard, 
namely, to the person of Christ, that he is 
represented as teaching his own deity, and 
showing it forth even more clearly in his 
actions than in his words. 

If I may revert to the instance of the faked 



no Is Jesus God? 

photograph mentioned above, I would sug- 
gest that if the said Mr. Gompers had been 
photographed from the four quarters by dif- 
ferent parties as he stood on the flag, and if 
these photographs, falling into the hands of 
the liberal police, showed the very same scene 
from such different angles, it would have gone 
hard with the socialist. He would never have 
been able to prove that they were all faked. 
So with the portraits given us by the Evangel- 
ists. We agree with the liberals that they give 
us the same complete man in the same sur- 
roundings. But now each of the four adds to 
this the attribute of complete deity, and that 
not as an external flag — a badge of office or 
what you like — but as a second nature, com- 
pletely present in his person, and so perfectly 
united in the manifestation of that person 
with his human nature, that, although a child 
can distinguish the two, the most severe criti- 
cism cannot separate them. Can these por- 
traits be faked? If the police had put this 
question to different experts, and shown them 
the four photographs mentioned, and if these 
experts had then unanimously agreed that they 
were indeed faked, but one had told us that 



Is Jesus God? 1 1 1 

the faked part was from the knees downward, 
while another held that only the ankles had 
been added with the flag, why, there would 
have been no case at all! 

And so the liberals have gone up and down 
the Gospel portrait to find the junction be- 
tween the true and the false. And they claim 
persistently that they have found it, and that 
all over the place, but exactly where they can- 
not decide. And they never will be able to 
tell, for the simple reason that there is a super- 
natural unity here. To us it appears clear 
that the Evangelists are but giving the beauti- 
ful portrait as truly as they can, just as it ap- 
peared to them, and usually without even ask- 
ing the question whether Christ really was 
God. 

I have admitted that it is well-nigh impossi- 
ble from a purely literary standpoint to prove 
either the agreement or the difference between 
the historical Jesus and the Christ of the Gos- 
pels. But there are a few points which en- 
courage us to decide from the Gospels them- 
selves that their writers intended to report ac- 
curately the historical facts which they recall. 
So the writers in their desire for accuracy give 


112 Is Jesus God? 

us some of the words of Jesus which they ad- 
mit they did not understand, but which they 
evidently wish to recall as exactly as possible. 
For example, Luke ix., 44, 45 : "He said unto 
them, the Son of Man shall be delivered up 
into the hands of men. But they understood 
not this saying, and it was concealed from 
them that they should not perceive it, and 
they were afraid to ask him about this say- 
ing." This and the half-dozen parallel pass- 
ages serve to show the desire of the Gospel 
writers not to alter any part of the truth, even 
if it is to their own detriment to state it. They 
record facts that were evidence of their own 
weakness and faults. This they do without 
excuse or apology. As artlessly as children 
these men, so engrossed in their message, give 
details which place them in a bad light. Their 
own reputations are not considered, as they 
forget themselves in the work of witnessing 
to such events. They record reproofs of Jesus 
to themselves because of ignorance, as: "Are 
ye so without understanding?" (Mark vii., 
18; Matt, xv., 16). They record how they 
misunderstood him, and how he reproved 
them for forgetting the miracle of the loaves 



Is Jesus God? 113 

and the fishes. They tell us freely of the dis- 
graceful scene of James and John and their 
mother seeking ambitiously the chief place in 
Christ's kingdom. They tell of the rebuke 
of Christ to them. They show how they had 
in their cowardice fled at the arrest of Jesus. 
Peter was one of the most prominent apostles ; 
yet his failures and faults are fully exposed. 
All record his great denial. They tell how 
they were slow to understand, even after the 
resurrection, and so in every way they give the 
simple truth as it appeared to them even if 
it does harm their reputation. It seems to 
us impossible that these men, who were so 
careful about such details, could mislead us 
in a matter so fundamental as the question 
under discussion. 

If you grant us that the Gospels represent 
Jesus as teaching his deity, we must conclude 
that Jesus really did do so. 



IS CHRIST GOD? 

First Essay. 

By Gerrit Hoeksema. 

The question now before us is, Is Christ 
God? It will of course be impossible to give 
this subject anything like a complete treatment 
in the space at disposal. We must leave un- 
touched much material that might be mar- 
shalled in defence of the Christian faith in 
the deity of Christ. We shall seek only to 
develop to a certain extent a few points. 

It will be necessary at the outset to say a 
few words as to the data that can serve as the 
basis of our argument. Our question must be 
considered not from the standpoint of faith 
but of pure reason. We can therefore use 
only such data as ought, in fairness, to be ad- 
mitted by all candid historical students. The 
papers on the previous questions give us val- 
uable results upon which any consideration of 
the present question must be based. It has 
been proved that the Christian Church has al- 

114 



Is Jesus God? 115 

ways taught the deity of Christ, that the New 
Testament writers uniformly speak of him as 
God, and that Christ himself claimed to be 
God. And now the question before us is, Is 
Christ actually what he claimed to be and was 
believed to be by his followers? 

It will be of importance first of all to ascer- 
tain just how much we have a right to assume 
has been proved by the papers on the immedi- 
ately preceding question. A positive answer 
to the question, Did Christ teach his own 
deity? implies, of course, the historicity of the 
Jesus of the Gospels. Jesus' claims to deity 
are not the fabrication of his followers, but he 
actually made these claims. This does not, 
however, imply that everything said of him in 
the Gospels is true. Jesus might have made 
these claims and yet in many other respects not 
have been what the Gospels represent him to 
be. We have no right to assume for instance, 
without further argument, that Jesus actually 
worked miracles or that he rose from the 
grave, and then upon these as yet unproved 
facts base our argument that he must have 
been God. There has not even been proved 
to us a divine or Messianic consciousness in 



n6 Is Jesus God? 

Jesus, for this would imply that Christ made 
these claims sincerely, and of course this has 
not been proved. The only thing proved is 
that Christ claimed to be God. 

A very important question to consider in 
connection with this subject, a question that 
must be settled before we can proceed further, 
is this: Is that side of the Gospel representa- 
tion of Jesus which pictures him as a man, the 
human side of that picture, historically trust- 
worthy? If we can establish this it will be 
much easier to argue plausibly that Christ 
must have been divine. This historical trust- 
worthiness is, however, not necessarily proved 
by a positive answer to the previous question. 
Christ might easily have claimed to be God 
and yet in many other respects, even as regards 
his human nature, not have been what the Gos- 
pel writers picture him to be. In this paper 
we propose to assume, however, that the man 
Jesus actually spoke and acted as he is repre- 
sented to us in the Gospels. We do this for 
the following reasons : 

First, the papers on the previous question 
have proved the general trustworthiness of 
the Gospel writers as historians. And there 



Is Jesus God? 117 

can be no doubt whatever that everybody, crit- 
ics included, would accept the Gospels as re- 
liable historical documents if they had pic- 
tured to us a merely human Jesus. 

Secondly, the previous papers have conclu- 
sively proved that it is impossible to get back 
of the Gospels to a still more primitive Jesus. 
Many critics now openly admit this. Even 
those who believe in a merely human Jesus will 
have to choose between the man Jesus of the 
Gospels or no Jesus at all. And since the 
proposition that Christ claimed to be God 
necessarily implies his historical existence, we 
must accept the Gospel picture in so far as this 
represents Jesus as a man among men. 

Finally, from the critics' own standpoint, 
the human side of the Gospel portrait ought 
to be absolutely reliable. For they tell us that 
the early Christians made a divine Jesus out 
of a human Jesus. And the remarkable thing 
is that in these documents whose avowed pur- 
pose it is to exhibit a divine Jesus, we find a 
large mass of historical material that points 
not to a divine but to a human Jesus. Of 
course it is impossible to attribute this incor- 
poration of seemingly contradictory material 



n8 Is Jesus Godf 

to carelessness or naivete on the part of the 
authors. The Gospel portrait of Christ is too 
great a masterpiece. No, the critics will have 
to admit that nothing but absolute honesty, ab- 
solute regard for the historical facts, could 
have made the Gospel writers incorporate into 
their picture a mass of material which seems 
to contradict their avowed purpose. 

Now it may seem as if it will avail us very 
little in attempting to prove the deity of Christ 
to prove the trustworthiness of the Gospel pic- 
ture of his human nature. And yet it is of 
the greatest importance, for the simple reason 
that the human Jesus given us by the Gos- 
pels is such a man as could not possibly have 
falsely claimed divine honor. In other words, 
Jesus is such a man that if he claimed to be 
God, we must allow that he was God. For if 
Jesus were a mere man, — or anything we may 
believe him to be, not God, — then one of two 
things must be said of him. Either he be- 
lieved his own claims or he did not believe 
them. Either his mind was clouded by the 
most absurd and most irrational illusion that 
ever darkened mortal mind, or he was the 
greatest religious impostor in history. Both 



Is Jesus God? 119 

of these suppositions are impossible, are in 
flagrant contradiction to all the historical evi- 
dence. 

The latter supposition, that Christ made 
these high claims in spite of his clear con- 
sciousness that he was not God, needs very 
little refutation. Christ's whole life refutes 
this view, and this theory finds very few, if 
any, defenders in our day. It is too self-evi- 
dent to friend and foe alike that the Jesus of 
the Gospels, whatever he may have been, was 
not a coarse impostor. All his words and 
works breathe uprightness, frankness, a sin- 
cere love of truth, and a burning hatred of all 
sham and hypocrisy. He who so fiercely cen- 
sured the hypocrisy of the Pharisee, who was 
forever demanding of men that their outer 
manifestation be in accord with the inner life 
of their hearts, — are we to believe that he 
himself was continually making claims which 
he knew were false ? Supposing for a moment 
that this theory were true, then surely Christ 
must have had some purpose in making these 
claims. Do the Gospels give us any clue to 
this supposed purpose? Do they not rather 
picture to us a humble man, who peacefully 



120 Is Jesus God? 

and unconcernedly goes his way, avoiding the 
popular favor and never profiting by the pas- 
sions of the multitude? We never see Christ 
trying forcibly to impress upon men's minds 
that they must recognize him as God as we 
would expect of an impostor. On the con- 
trary, when Peter in the name of all the dis- 
ciples utters his great confession of faith in 
Christ as the Son of the living God, Jesus 
sternly commands them not to speak of it to 
the masses. And if more proof were needed, 
would Christ have died for this self-evident 
lie? Do not his passion, his crucifixion, his 
death, prove beyond all doubt that Jesus, 
whatever he may have been, was certainly sin- 
cere in his claims? 

Driven to this admission, and of course un- 
willing to confess that Christ was God, recent 
critics now picture to us a Jesus who was the 
victim of religious illusions. His was a very 
religious nature, they tell us ; he lived in closer 
communion with God than any other mortal 
ever did; and gradually the illusion grew on 
him that he was in some way God himself. 
Now the word, illusion, is a very nice word 
and is purposely selected by the critics. But if 



Is Jesus God? 121 

their theory were true, a harsher and more 
terrible word would be needed to describe 
Jesus' psychological condition. He would 
then be no longer a normal-minded man whose 
harmless illusions about his divinity leave his 
mental soundness intact. No, he would be an 
insane fanatic. And it is between these two, — 
a divine Jesus or an insane Jesus, — that we 
have to choose. 

The critics of course protest loudly against 
the description of their so-called historical 
Jesus as an insane person. But if we look the 
facts honestly and squarely in the face, we can 
come to no other conclusion. In order to 
bring the question directly home to us, let us 
suppose that a young man from the humbler 
ranks of society were to appear among us and 
in calm but decisive language claim that he 
was God. Let us suppose, moreover, that this 
idea was not a transient, temporary fancy, but, 
as was the case with Christ, a firm, unshaken 
belief that seemed to reach down to the inner- 
most roots of his life and controlled all his 
words and actions. Let us add a few more of 
the historical touches seen in Christ's life. This 
young man would then say that whoever had 



122 Is Jesus God? 

seen him had seen the Father, that is, God 
himself. He would claim that at the end of 
the world he would come upon the clouds of 
heaven, escorted by heaven's angels, and in all 
the splendor of divine majesty judge the quick 
and the dead. Would any doubt that such a 
young man was insane, always, of course, on 
the supposition that he was a mere man? 
Would the critics themselves doubt it? Would 
not everybody, critics included, laugh in deri- 
sion at any one who prophesied that this young 
man was to become the founder of a literally 
world-conquering movement, and that within 
fifty years of his death thousands would rather 
shed their life's blood than renounce their 
faith in his deity? 

We have no right to apply two standards 
of insanity, one for our age and one for the 
age in which Christ lived. If such a young 
man appearing among us is to be declared in- 
sane, we must be ready to say the same thing 
of Jesus. The fact that Jesus lived nineteen 
hundred years ago must not be allowed to ob- 
scure the issue. We must not permit the crit- 
ics with their literary and rhetorical subtleties 
to soften down the altogether extraordinary 



Is Jesus God? 123 

and stupendous character of Christ's claims. 
We have here no mere mental exaltation, no 
partial illusion, no temporary enthusiasm; no, 
the firmly rooted belief of a mere man that he 
was God would imply a complete subversion 
of his whole normal consciousness. It would 
be a crass contradiction of the deepest intui- 
tions of our nature. To a normal man, noth- 
ing is more certain than that he is a mere man, 
and nothing is further from his mind than the 
illusion that he is a God. 

And yet the critics would have us believe 
that a mere man could firmly believe this and 
still not be insane. If a poor man were to be- 
lieve himself very rich, and if this were an 
unshaken belief for which he were willing to 
die if necessary, men would unanimously pro- 
nounce him insane. Why? For the simple 
reason that he believed himself to be the very 
opposite of what he actually was. But surely 
the difference between God and man is in- 
finitely greater than the difference between 
rich and poor. And we must remember that 
Jesus himself, — this even the critics will ad- 
mit, — had a very exalted idea of God. He 
must have realized very clearly what an im- 



124 Is Jesus God? 

passable gulf separated God and man. And 
therefore the illusion on his part that he was 
God would be a much greater illusion than 
that of a poor man imagining himself rich. 
And if the latter is to be pronounced insane, 
then surely Christ's unshaken but mistaken 
belief in his Godhead would have carried with 
it an even greater degree of insanity. 

And in point of fact the critics themselves 
practically admit this. Renan, for instance, in 
his Life of Jesus, protests against the terms 
insanity and madness as descriptive of Jesus' 
psychological state. But all his protests are 
in vain. Lepin in his criticism of Renan's de- 
scription of Jesus' psychological condition 
says: "The word insanity naturally very often 
occurs to his mind and very often slips from 
his pen. The words madness and insanity he 
disclaims, but still somewhat insists upon the 
fact itself.'* 

But when this fact has been once estab- 
lished, that Christ if he were not God must 
have been insane, it is fraught with tremen- 
dous consequences. For nothing can be more 
certain to an unprejudiced mind than that the 
Jesus of the Gospels was not insane, was in- 



Is Jesus God? 125 

deed the sanest and soberest of men. We 
quote here merely the opinions of two of the 
critics, who can certainly not be suspected of 
being biased in favor of Jesus or the belief in 
his divinity. Wernle says, "Jesus is always 
modest, humble, sane, and sober." Harnack 
recognizes that Jesus "is possessed of a quiet, 
uniform, collected demeanor, with everything 
directed toward one goal. He never uses any 
ecstatic language and the tone of stirring 
prophecy is rare. Entrusted with the greatest 
of all missions, his eye and ear are open to 
every impression of the life around him, a 
proof of intense calm and absolute certainty." 
Nothing is more striking in Christ than his 
calmness, his serenity, his absolute mastery of 
himself and all the circumstances of his life. 

Of course the objection could be made here 
that Jesus may have been insane on this one 
point only, namely, his deity, and that this did 
not affect the rest of his inner soul-life or its 
outward manifestation in any way. But this 
view, aside from its intrinsic improbability, 
finds no support whatever in the Gospels. We 
do not find that the Jesus who speaks about his 
deity is an altogether different man from what 



126 Is Jesus God? 

he is at other times when this idea is not 
brought into the foreground. There is always 
the same prudent reserve, the same balanced 
temperament, the same deep calm. It is sim- 
ply an impossibility to see in the Jesus of the 
Gospels the hallucination or soul-frenzy that 
the critics ascribe to him. Moreover, the 
whole theory of a more or less insane Jesus 
becomes ridiculous when we look at the results 
of Christ's work. His philosophy of religion 
has eclipsed all ancient systems and he is ad- 
mittedly the greatest moral teacher of man- 
kind. Among his disciples through all the 
ages are to be found many of the world's 
keenest, sanest, and deepest minds. Renan 
himself admits that the madman never suc- 
ceeds. "It has not yet been given," he says, 
"to mental aberration to act seriously upon 
the progress of mankind." But Jesus Christ 
did succeed. The spirit of Jesus Christ is the 
genius of the civilization of the Occident. 
Christianity is interwoven into the very woof 
and fibre of our institutions and it is impossi- 
ble to believe that back of our splendid civil- 
ization stands nothing better than the soul- 
frenzy of an insane religious enthusiast. 



Is Jesus God? 127 

There is still another insurmountable objec- 
tion, aside from the insanity which such claims 
would involve, to the view that Jesus was a 
mere man who labored under the delusion that 
he was God. No one can read the Gospels 
and fail to be impressed with the deep humil- 
ity toward God which Jesus always manifest- 
ed. He may justly be called the most humble 
of men. But, we ask, how is this to be recon- 
ciled with his firm conviction that he himself 
was God? Of course the Christian Church 
offers a solution of the problem with its doc- 
trine of the Two Natures. But the critics in- 
sist on the view that Christ was a mere man, 
a single personality existing within the confines 
of a single nature. They mean to tell us that 
a mere man firmly believed that he was God, 
and at the same time felt the deepest humility 
towards God. Can a better example be found 
of a contradiction in terms? Would not that 
insane trait in Christ's psychological make-up 
that made possible his self-deifying illusion, at 
the same time have swept away the last vestige 
of creaturely humility? Surely it is the merest 
truism to say that a being existing in but one 
nature cannot fancy himself God and never- 



128 Is Jesus God? 

theless feel humble as a creature before the 
very Being he imagines himself to be. This 
view of a delusionist Jesus contradicts not 
only history, but also sound psychology. A 
being who feels that he is the eternal God, 
and yet humbles himself before that God, — 
either such a being never existed or he existed 
in two natures, human and divine. No single 
nature can contain within itself such contra- 
dictions. 

Indeed, this contradiction between Christ's 
humility and his claims to deity finds numer- 
ous parallels in the contrast that runs through 
the whole Gospel representation of Christ, a 
contrast that amounts to absurdity and impos- 
sibility on the supposition that he was a mere 
man. 

As an acute critic of the critics says, the Jesus 
of the critics is at the same time humble and 
proud, acute-minded and weak-minded, sober 
and fanatical. And it is safe to say that such 
a man never existed, never could exist, and 
happily for himself and society, never will ex- 
ist. A humble man is not proud, an acute- 
minded man never weak-minded, and a sober- 
minded man never fanatical. Such a psycho- 



Is Jesus God? 129 

logical monstrosity is, we think, a psychologi- 
cal impossibility. 

Of course, the critics feel that these seem- 
ing contradictions point strongly in the direc- 
tion of the Church's doctrine of the two na- 
tures of Christ. But one more heroic attempt 
must be made to save Jesus from becoming 
divine. And the latest discoveries or inven- 
tions of psychology are now pointed to as 
more or less explaining the mystery of these 
supposed contradictions. First of all, the phe- 
nomena of "multiple personality" are to explain 
Jesus' duplex consciousness. History seems 
to give us cases where two radically different 
personalities are united in one person. We 
must remember, however, that no substance 
can be less than any or all of its component 
elements, that no integral unity can be split 
up into parts, any or all of which are to be 
greater than this unity itself. If we keep this 
in mind, it will immediately be seen that when 
we are pointed to the above-mentioned phe- 
nomena to explain the seeming contradictions 
of Christ's nature, we have before us a very 
good example of what is called "begging the 
question." Suppose that these phenomena do 



130 Is Jesus God? 

offer parallels. The question still remains, 
How must we explain one of these personali- 
ties in Christ, that which is represented by his 
divine consciousness? Christ's claims to deity 
cannot be explained as fraud or hallucination. 
This, as we have seen, contradicts the Gospel 
picture. If it cannot be this, we are of course 
driven to the conclusion that we have here a 
real essentially divine consciousness. Now since 
part cannot be greater than the whole, we 
must conclude that the unity that unites these 
two personalities in Christ, his human and 
divine personality, cannot be less than God 
either. We therefore still face the same 
problem. 

Two other phenomena are pointed to as 
explaining Jesus' psychological state, the sub- 
liminal self and the alternating personality. 
Neither of these, however, is applicable to the 
historical Jesus. According to the latter, Jesus 
would have been entirely unconscious of his 
divinity and the "subliminal self" theory 
would relegate his divinity, if not to the un- 
conscious, then at least to the sub-conscious. 
Both of which views have nothing whatever 
to do with the historical Jesus, who is clearly 



Is Jesus God? 131 

and continuously conscious of his divine na- 
ture. They cannot possibly explain Christ, 
because they contradict or disregard the plain 
facts concerning him. 

In a word, then, the critics have failed to 
explain on their view the only Jesus known 
to history. We have devoted much time to 
the question of the explanation of the histori- 
cal Jesus, because we believe that, if anything, 
the historical facts ought to wring from the 
critics the perhaps unwilling admission that 
Christ must have been God. We have here 
before us a truly remarkable fact. Here is 
Jesus of Nazareth, of whom the critics are 
certain that he was not God. And yet, on 
this hypothesis, namely, that he was not God, 
he cannot be explained. He baffles the keenest 
psychological and historical analysis of those 
who are most anxious to explain him as a mere 
man. We think it a fairly safe proposition, to 
which the critics ought to be willing to agree, 
that if there is but one possible explanation of 
any phenomenon, that must be the correct ex- 
planation. If every theory of Christ's person 
on the hypothesis that he was not God proves 
to be a flagrant contradiction of history, then 



132 Is Jesus God? 

it is safe to say that this hypothesis contradicts 
history. And if we cannot believe that he 
was not God, we must believe that he was 
God. The critics may try to explain away 
many things, his sinlessness, his miracles, his 
resurrection. But they cannot explain away 
their own failure to explain him. Their own 
failure is the strongest proof that Christ's 
deity is the only key that can unlock the mys- 
teries of Christ's personality. 

In conclusion, we may also ask, How are 
the critics to explain the results of Christ's 
work, especially the truly remarkable fact that 
many who had known Christ in the flesh, who 
had seen him as a man among men, after- 
wards believed in his Godhead? It must not 
be supposed for a moment that this singular 
phenomenon can be explained by pointing to 
the fact that history gives us other instances 
of men being honored as gods. There are a 
few considerations that lift the faith of the 
early Christian community in the deity of 
Christ to an absolutely unique position, to 
which not even a distant parallel can be found. 

First of all, we must remember the strong 
monotheism of the Jewish nation. The Jews 



1 Is Jesus God? 133 

were the only nation in the world at that time 
who believed in one Almighty God of heaven 
and earth. And they had the most exalted 
idea of his greatness and majesty. It is com- 
paratively easy to explain how the Romans, 
with their polytheism, could deify some of 
their emperors and give them divine honor. 
But this is in no way an analogy to the faith 
of the early Christians in the deity of their 
Lord. For the Jew, the mere suggestion of 
claiming divine honor was blasphemy. We 
see the high priest rending his clothes when 
Christ claims that he is the Son of God. Hon- 
oring a mere man as God was the very last 
thing a Jew would think of doing; indeed, we 
might almost say, a real Jew, in the full pos- 
session of his senses, could not do so. And 
we may add, Jesus was the very last man of 
whom they would think of believing such a 
thing. We must never forget that Christ dis- 
appointed the deepest longing of the whole 
Jewish nation, the longing for an earthly Mes- 
siah. Not the crown of divine honor, but the 
cross of shame, was what the Jew presented 
to Christ. And so far from seeing in him a 
god, they cried: "Crucify him, crucify him." 



134 I s Jesus God? 

Of course, the early disciples did not take part 
in this crowning injustice to Jesus of Naz- 
areth, but we know that they too had hopes of 
earthly glory, that they too were perplexed 
and filled with doubts and fears, when they 
saw their Master, of whom they had expected 
so much, nailed to the cross as a malefactor. 

And yet within a short time of his death 
they are preaching a divine Christ. Paul, who 
as a Pharisee deeply hated and persecuted 
Jesus of Nazareth, — Paul, too, is preaching a 
divine Christ. And Jerusalem itself contains 
within its walls a congregation of Jews who 
bow in adoration before their new-found Lord 
of Glory. 

Of course, attempts have been made to as- 
cribe the whole thing to fanatical or insane 
enthusiasm on the part of the early Christians. 
But in our wonderful New Testament the first 
disciples of Jesus Christ have left us a me- 
morial that is simply the embodiment of san- 
ity and soberness. And the depth and clear- 
ness and keen logic of Paul's mind are ad- 
mitted by all men. Neither secular history 
nor the sacred writings offer even the slight- 
est support to the above-mentioned theories. 



Is Jesus God? 135 

Here again the issue is clear. The critic 
will have to take the position that the strongly 
monotheistic Jew who believed in the one God 
of heaven and earth, whose high priest rent 
his clothes at what he considered Christ's blas- 
phemy, — that this Jew believed that Jesus, the 
carpenter's son of Nazareth, a man who dis- 
appointed all the messianic hopes of his peo- 
ple, who was nailed to the cross as a male- 
factor, — that this Jew in the full possession of 
his senses, believed that this peasant was the 
Almighty God of heaven and earth, the God 
of his fathers, of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, 
and that he believed this in spite of the fact 
that there was not the slightest evidence of 
the divinity of Christ, and in spite of the fact 
that his faith would arouse the deepest hatred 
and scorn of his brethren according to the 
flesh, and that at any moment he might have 
to seal his folly with his life's blood. 

We, on our part, cannot lay claim to 
such credulity. We believe that when sane, 
sober-minded men believe the very last thing 
they would think of believing, and believe this 
of the very last man of whom they would think 
of believing it, there must be some reason 



136 Is Jesus Godf 

for this singular phenomenon. And we hold 
that the faith of the early Christians in the 
deity of Jesus Christ can be explained only by 
a still greater miracle — the mystery of mys- 
teries, — that the man Jesus of Nazareth, the 
lowly, humble man of sorrows, leaning on 
men's bosoms and weeping at their graves, 
was, at the same time, the eternal God of 
heaven and of earth. 



Second Essay. 

By Luther Moore Bicknell. 

In broaching this question subsequently to 
the five questions that have already occupied 
our attention, it might seem that a very small 
field is left for our investigation. On histori- 
cal and critical grounds we have been shown 
quite clearly that the Church has always 
taught the deity of Christ; that the New Tes- 
tament writers, and especially the Evangelists,, 
were so impressed with his deity that they 
have revealed on almost every page of their 
record their deep conviction of it; and finally, 



Is Jesus God? 137 

that Jesus himself, walking up and down 
among men, taught by declaration and para- 
ble, by life and act, that he was from above, 
sent from God' the Father, and that when he 
was lifted up he would draw all men unto him. 
All we have to do apparently is to conclude 
from this evidence that Jesus is divine and 
our end is reached. 

Our field, however, though narrow, is as 
deep as the mind of God himself. Christ was 
more concerned with what men thought of 
him than almost anything else. He came to 
his disciples and he comes to each of us with 
the question, What think ye of Christ? Who 
am I ? Is Christ God ? and men's whole Chris- 
tian experience depends upon and is governed 
by their conception of Jesus, whether he is 
divine or not. Thus our field of investigation 
becomes metaphysical and personal, rather 
than the already trodden fields of critical and 
historical investigation. By metaphysical we 
do not mean that these evidences are above 
human reason or beyond our consciousness, 
but rather that they come from the inner con- 
sciousness of men and from the mass of the 
world's thought as revealed in the conscious- 



138 Is Jesus God? 

ness and hearts of men in all ages. It may be 
held that conclusions from such data neces- 
sarily cannot be accurate or final, but in the 
same measure that all abstract philosophical 
thinking is judged final by the reason prompt- 
ed by faith, so the final court of appeals in 
our investigation must be the faith in every 
heart. 

It is a tremendously overwhelming observa- 
tion as we look over our field that faith in 
God and faith in Christ must stand or fall to- 
gether. There is no halfway ground, — either 
the throne or the gibbet. The two extremes 
of human thinking are Theism on the one 
hand, with a necessary Trinity; or Atheism 
on the other hand, with an empty throne in 
heaven and the uncertainties of materialism 
on earth. Either we must find a supreme 
place for the divine Saviour or no place at all 
for the greatest of impostors. 

From whatever viewpoint we look at the 
evidence for our Lord's deity we are im- 
pressed, first of all, by the supernatural ele- 
ment in his life. This is the element that is 
most difficult for the enemies of the Saviour 
to accept, while they can neither deny the 



Is Jesus God? 139 

fact nor explain it. The supernatural is man- 
ifest in his position relatively to man and 
God. God made the universe with all its man- 
ifestations and developments for man. He 
controls it by laws of His own making. He 
made man superior to nature and placed him 
in nature to subdue and conquer it. Thus at 
the appearance of man a new order was in- 
augurated. This creature endowed with per- 
sonal freedom is the starting-point of a new 
administration ; the moral order superimposes 
itself upon the physical. Nature ceases in her 
development, she changelessly follows the 
cycle of her seasons and becomes the soil upon 
which the tree of history must grow and de- 
velop. But man is endowed with ambition 
and zeal for higher ideals — a more complete 
development — a more complete manhood. 
Thus we have two spiritual elements in the 
universe, God and man. So God has made 
man for a great development which man feels 
inherent in his inner consciousness; and God 
must come in touch with man to reveal his 
plan of development and to reveal himself to 
him. God only can reveal himself to man: 
the finite cannot comprehend the infinite save 



140 Is Jesus God? 

as the infinite chooses to reveal himself. This 
was God's plan. 

But when this plan of revelation and 
the plan of the development of man were 
interrupted by the criminal act of man 
which separated man from God, and would 
have plunged him, had he been left to himself, 
into inevitable ruin, the work of initiation be- 
gun by God transforms itself into a work of 
redemption. God no longer merely reveals 
himself; he works at saving; and the starting 
point of this great plan of redemption is the 
promise of victory to man over Satan on the 
threshold of Paradise ; and the advent of Jesus 
Christ is the goal. He is the great Ideal 
Man in the mind of God, the apex of man's 
development, and in him was the great goal 
to which God was leading man in his devel- 
opment; a man made holy by freedom and all- 
powerful by free obedience. So this Jesus be- 
comes the center of all human thinking, the 
unique man, and it is worthy of observation 
here that the eyes of all men are upon the 
wonderful character, personality and life of 
this supernatural man, who unites us as broth- 
ers with himself to God the Father. As he is 



Is Jesus God? 141 

the perfect man, the ideal of man realized, so 
it is true that God purposes that men shall be 
like him, he wants the world to become like 
him. 

So this great Ideal Man, this culmina- 
tion of all man's hopes and desires, comes to 
man and reveals to his yearning heart some- 
thing of the Infinite God himself. We said 
that God alone can reveal himself to man. 
Jesus Christ comes and satisfies man's con- 
sciousness with a conception of the depth, the 
breadth, and the height of God's love, his 
infinite mercy, his sovereign wisdom, in fact, 
he reveals the very God; hence, this Christ 
must be God. 

Then another element of the supernatural 
is the time and manner of his appearance. 
There was nothing in his antecedents and sur- 
roundings to explain his appearance and radi- 
ance. There was nothing in the soil of the 
sordid and narrow Jewish race to produce 
such an embodiment of pure and universal 
love. There was nothing in the atmosphere 
of that sensual, narrow, bigoted age to beget 
or foster such a character of stainless and 
complete virtue. It is true that it was an age 



142 Ts Jesus God? 

of high enlightenment, the age of Augustus 
and Tiberius; an age when emancipated rea- 
son and philosophy were beating down the 
ancient pagan superstitions. But we are forced 
to believe that that system of truth which of 
all others was most repugnant to the way of 
thinking of men of that age, lifted up its head 
in it and conquered the world. Was not it 
reasonable that his friends and disciples 
should doubt him? Could he have chosen a 
more inauspicious time in which to reveal 
himself? Had his friends not been with him 
for years, known his brothers and sisters, 
walked with him as traveling companions, 
eaten at the same table with him, seen him 
suffering, hungry, weary, asking questions, 
w r eeping, groaning, dying? Can we estimate 
the amount of evidence required to convince 
those simple, narrow-minded, monotheistic 
Jews of his divinity, — that he was very God 
himself? Yet we have been clearly convinced 
that they did so hold him divine, and some 
died for that conviction. Can we reasonably 
assume that, "after four hundred years of 
waiting the germ that was committed to the 
soil by the prophets at last breaks forth into 



Is Jesus God? 143 

life and a Being makes his appearance, who in 
an exceptional life attained the ideals of the 
prophets in a more radiant conception than 
they had dreamed; that he was rejected and 
murdered by his own people, was buried, 
arose as he said, and goes forth to conquer the 
world at the head of his army of redeemed, 
and is still working a greater work among a 
greater people" — can we dare assume, I say, 
that such an one is other than the Priestly 
King, the revealer of God, the very God 
himself? 

Now in the second place, let us consider 
briefly the divine elements of his character. 
Horace Bushnell says that "the character of 
Jesus forbids classification with men." Jesus 
did not arrive at his excellency of character, 
he was born perfect in holiness. Men become 
pure by repentance and penance. The higher 
types of human purity, the excellency of a 
beautiful soul, has never been reached among 
men without repentance and self-abasement. 
Jesus never abased himself, never repented 
before his Father, never asked for pardon 
and mercy. He stands alone among the kneel- 
ing and penitent world and lifts a cloudless 



144 I s J esus God? 

face to heaven in the inexplicable glory of pur- 
ity without penitence or remorse. Moral pur- 
ity of this kind, says Godet, is not only with- 
out parallel, it is without approach. All men 
can do, all we can do, is to look up to that 
face, — strong, serene, silent, — and see in that 
wonderful personality something of the divine 
Person himself, the glory of an Eternal Spirit 
embodied in a person. The divinity of his 
character is most resplendent in his perfect 
holiness. 

In Jesus alone man can see something of 
the holiness of God. In him man can see 
how God asserts himself in man and man 
can assert something of the powers of God. 
"In Christ, man by the voluntary annihila- 
tion of and consecration of himself became 
a medium so transparent that the glory of 
God could shine forth in him to perfection. " 
The friends and contemporaries of Jesus tes- 
tify in an overwhelming way to the fact that 
he was a "Lamb without spot and without 
blemish." Even Strauss, the greatest adver- 
sary of Christianity in our time, says of him : 
"Among the personages to whom humanity 
owes the perfection of its moral consciousness 



Is Jesus God? 145 

and holiness, Jesus occupies, at any rate, the 
first rank. In regard to everything which 
concerns the love of God and of our neighbor, 
to purity of heart and purity of life in the 
inner man, nothing can be added to that moral 
intuition which has been bequeathed to us by 
the character of Jesus Christ." 

The purer a man is the more easily he de- 
tects sin in his own soul, — so Christ surely by 
this principle would have detected the smallest 
sin in his life. But does such a confession at all 
spring from his lips ? He was deeply conscious 
of his own perfect sinlessness, and was deeply 
conscious in his heart that he had not been 
guilty of the smallest omission in the fulfill- 
ment of his imposed task. "I have glorified 
thee on the earth and have finished the work 
thou gavest me to do," is the simple though 
profound confession of his soul as he poured 
it out before his Father. Let us close this 
section of our investigation with this quotation 
from Keim, the author of a most learned book 
on The Life of Christ. "Any one who has 
given himself to the contemplation of the 
works and acts of the Saviour, receives from 
it an irresistible impression that we have be- 



146 Is Jesus God? 

fore us a conscience which has never felt the 
sting of the sense of guilt. And this is not a 
case of a moralist of a low and easy standard 
of morality. Oh no ! it is he who branded 
with the character of sin a bare look, an idle 
word, and behind the veil of outward act, all 
impurities of the heart and motives." Paul 
bemoans the things he would not do, yet does. 
Socrates finds all the germs of all the evil in- 
clinations in his heart. But does he, the 
Christ, experience anything analogous to this? 
He never prays for pardon for himself, either 
at Gethsemane or at Golgotha. He compels 
men to believe in his perfect holiness, he for- 
gives men their sins, he dies for them and as- 
cends into heaven to take his place upon the 
judgment throne of the All-Holy God. 
"Christianity, both as a creed and as a life, 
depends absolutely upon the personal char- 
acter of Jesus Christ, who is its foundation 
and its Founder." This is not philosophy, 
this is not religion, — this is a fact. 

Did space permit we might continue our 
study along this line in a most profitable way; 
considering how through his sovereign obe- 
dience he rediscovered for man the path to 



Is Jesus God? 147 

God which man had lost through disobedi- 
ence, his wonderful humility, his perfect man- 
hood and love. We could see something of 
the influence of his character upon men who 
have come in touch with his wonderful life. 
But we will not stay further here except to re- 
mark that we can clearly see how God be- 
comes man in the one holy, perfect Man, in 
order that by faith in him we all might be 
raised into the closest and most direct union 
with the Father himself. And this is com- 
patible with our original assumption, that 
God wants man to reach him in his develop- 
ment, and that the Christ is the Way, the 
Truth, and the very Life, the divine Ideal 
Man. 

Not only does the supernatural and the per- 
fect character of Jesus afford us convincing 
evidence of his deity, but so also do his works. 
One of his divinely appointed works was the 
unveiling of the Father, which prepares the 
way for his greatest work of redemption. 
Undoubtedly his friends and disciples did not 
realize at first the divinity of their Master, 
but as they saw deeper into his life every day 
they began to realize that he was something 



148 Is Jesus God? 

more than man, that his deep conception of 
sin, his freedom from all effort and restraint 
in his goodness such as no man had shown, all 
bespoke his sinless purity and sovereign vir- 
tue. They realized that he was on the most 
intimate terms with the Father and prayed 
with a freedom and friendship which was ut- 
terly void of misgivings and regret. He put 
himself beside God in his activity, — "My 
Father worketh hitherto and I work." He 
claimed divine origin and mission, divine 
knowledge and fellowship. He claimed to 
unveil the Father. "He that hath seen me 
hath seen the Father." "I am in the Father 
and the Father is in me." Such a life with 
such confessions from the deep conviction of 
his heart could do no less than establish a pro- 
found belief in his deity. And such a belief 
he would have guarded against had he been 
merely a holy man. Such was the belief, — 
though perhaps not fully formulated, yet lying 
at the heart of his followers, — that Jesus was 
unveiling the Father, who had been to them 
in their ancient and narrow theology a great 
Unknowable whose name they dared not 
utter. 



Is Jesus God? 149 

Then his consummating work, his death and 
resurrection, clarified and confirmed their con- 
viction, and with this confirmation the truth 
took definite shape and substance as an active 
and enduring power in human faith and wor- 
ship. Said Madame de Stael : "If Christ had 
simply taught men to say, 'Our Father/ he 
would have been the greatest benefactor of the 
race." He did much more than that. He 
came to unveil the Father, declaring that "no 
man knoweth the Father save the Son and 
him to whomsoever the Son willeth to reveal 
him." And he has willed to reveal him by 
his life and death among men. The window 
through which men have sought a vision of 
God's love, his mercy and his saving power, 
was, and could have been, nothing else than 
faith in a real and complete incarnation of 
God in Christ. "God's love and personality 
were made distinct and radiant, not only by 
the recognition of an eternal Fatherhood in 
his nature, but by the light of the knowledge 
of his glory shining in the face of a person, 
and men saw in that person the fullness of 
the Godhead bodily." And it has been for this 
great faith and belief in this eternal truth that 



150 Is Jesus God? 

the Church through the ages has fought to 
keep that window open and to maintain against 
"direct assault and secret dissolution the real 
and personal deity of Christ. " 

Space forbids to tell how the great doctrine 
of the Trinity was the outgrowth and logical 
development of this faith and conviction of 
the Church, and how this doctrine moulded 
and influenced the whole conception of the 
Christ in the history of the Church. We could 
profitably follow further his great work in re- 
deeming men in all ages and how his wonder- 
ful power is still rescuing and reclaiming the 
wrecks of humanity upon life's sea and send- 
ing them out to do a man's work. How his 
glory and love are still shedding a light lumi- 
nous and radiant of a new truth, a new phil- 
osophy of life, into the hearts of men and 
nations. How he as the center and soul of 
the Church has moulded the destiny of gov- 
ernments and subdued kingdoms that forgot 
his name. How the spirit of brotherhood and 
fraternal love is pervading the hearts of men 
in all climes and how his truth is reaching the 
darkest corners of the world and the whole 
earth is being filled with the knowledge and 



Is Jesus God? 151 

love of God and his Son as the waters cover 
the sea. But let it suffice merely to say that 
the evidence from every phase of the investi- 
gation overwhelms our imagination and sub- 
dues our reason. We must conclude that he is 
the logical culmination of all philosophical 
and evolutionary thinking, and that his whole 
life and personality as associated with his 
great work is historically consistent and he 
alone satisfies the human conscience. He must 
be the very God of our souls. 

In closing, let me suggest three convictions 
from the pen of Professor Godet, that have 
impressed me very deeply. ( 1 ) That it is im- 
possible to detract anything from the doctrine 
of the essential and personal divinity of Christ, 
without at the same time infringing equally 
upon the belief in the intimacy of the relation 
between man and God. (2) That whatever 
detracts from the essential and personal di- 
vinity of Christ, detracts equally from the 
horror which we feel at that which separates 
us from God, i. e., sin. (3) That whatever 
we detract from the essential and personal 
divinity of our Lord, detracts ipso facto 



152 Is Jesus God? 

equally from the glorious reality of Christian 
holiness. 

And now after this hasty review of the evi- 
dence, and from the faith in our hearts, we 
can conclude from the array of facts and from 
the great burden of proof this paper has mere- 
ly suggested, that he is no other than the 
Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the 
End, the very Son of God and necessarily 
divine. 



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