PART 5 OF THE SERIES OF MEDITATION ON 'FAITH TO LIVE BY'
Christology 'touchstone of all knowledge
of God'
How we understand
Jesus has
implications in ways
we conceive of God
WITHOUT doubt, both the
Nicene Creed and the Apostles' Creed gave careful attention to
the second article that deals with the second Person of the Trinity.
After all, the Council of Nicea was convened in AD 323 primarily
to respond to the heresies surrounding the Person and Nature of
Jesus Christ.
Christology - that is, the doctrine of Christ - is important for
the simple reason that how we understand Jesus of Nazareth has
profound implications in the way we conceive of God and the basis
of our salvation. Needless to say, Christology is of paramount
importance in a religiously plural world like ours. Karl Barth's
assertion, made in the first quarter of the last century, that
Christology is the touchstone of all knowledge of God takes on
a new relevance today.
"Tell me how it stands with your Christology, and I shall
tell you who you are," Barth used to say. The same "litmus
test" for theological orthodoxy applies today as well. We
have already alluded to the fact that it is impossible to think
of God without thinking first about Christ, for Christ is the
supreme revelation of God. Similarly, the first and the third
article of the Creed, which describe the Father and the Spirit
respectively, cannot be fully understood without constant reference
to the second article.
The Creed describes Jesus as God's Son, and it took the controversies
in the 3rd Century for the Church to clarify what this means and
what it entails. This does not mean that the Church did not understand
the relationship between God the Father and Jesus until the 3rd
Century. But the heresies with which the Church had to struggle
caused it to bring to clearer expression what it already knew
and understood by faith.
The heresies that plagued the Church show us how not to think
of the Son in relation to the Father. We have already alluded
to the first heresy, Arianism, in a previous essay on the fatherhood
of God. Arianism maintained that the Son was the greatest of God's
creation, and that it was through the Son (Demiurge) that the
Father created the world. Athanasius, the defender of orthodoxy,
argued that if there was a time when the Son was not, then it
follows that there was a time when God was not Father.
There is another heresy, called adoptionism, which was also mistaken
in its understanding of the Son. Adoptionism maintains that Jesus
was a man who was anointed by the Spirit in a measure that surpasses
all the prophets of the Old Testament. At His baptism by John
the Baptist, Jesus was "adopted" by the Father and became
God's Son. He was given a mission to preach the good news of the
Kingdom, and empowered to work miracles. According to this view,
Jesus belongs to the same lineage as all the prophets of the Old
Testament - He was different in degree but not in kind.
These ancient heresies have reared their ugly heads once again
in the modern discussion on the person and nature of Jesus Christ.
Of the two heresies discussed above, adoptionism has re-appeared
in various forms in modern theology. Friedrich Schleiermacher,
writing in the 19th Century, could argue that Jesus Christ was
a mere man, albeit one who was profoundly conscious of God. For
Schleiermacher, Jesus Christ was different from us in degree and
not in kind. Many theologians have followed in the footsteps of
Schleiermacher.
I have briefly discussed John Hick's religious pluralism, and
must now return to him again. In his 1993
book "The Metaphor of God Incarnate", he argued that
the traditional doctrine of the Person of Christ enshrined in
the Nicene and Chalcedonian creeds cannot be presented in a logically
coherent way and so must be subjected to revision. His revision
has to do with the way in which the incarnation is understood.
For Him the incarnation is "not a metaphysical claim about
Jesus having two natures, but a metaphorical statement of the
significance of a life through which God was acting on earth.
In Jesus we see a man living in a startling degree of awareness
of God and of response to God's presence". (p. 106).
Christ is Saviour
and He is
therefore also Lord
But such a view fails to do justice to the full testimony of scripture
regarding Jesus Christ. In a review published a year after the
appearance of Hick's book, I wrote:
"If Hick is right, then the Church throughout the centuries
has been wrong in her understanding of the person and work of
Christ. If Hick is right, the creeds, confessions and liturgies
of the Church must be re-written (and the Church must repent of
her idolatrous past). If Hick is right, those who believe that
Christ died for the sins of the world (Romans 3:21-26) have done
so in vain since the cross of Jesus, according to Hick, challenges
us in a way that 'does not involve the atonement theories developed
by the churches'. (p. 132-3). If Hick is right, then we who believe
in the traditional teachings of the apostles and the Church are,
in the words of St Paul, 'of all men most to be pitied'."
(1 Cor 15:19).
Against these erroneous ways of understanding the relationship
between the Father and the Son, the early theologians of the Church
insisted that Jesus Christ is the incarnation of the eternal Son
of God. The Son is not God's finest creature as the Arians claim,
but the second Person in the Godhead, co-eternal with the Father.
The Greek term homoousios was employed to clarify the relationship
between the Son and the Father. The Son is homoousios (of the
same substance) with the Father, and therefore is co-equal and
co-eternal with him. To describe Jesus Christ as the "only
Son of the Father" is therefore to refer to the Deity of
the Son. Against the Arians, the early theologians of orthodoxy
asserted that there was never a time when God was not Father.
Similarly, they must also maintain that there was never a time
when the Son was not. The early theologians were fully aware that
such an assertion might fly in the face of the Church's claim
to a monotheistic faith. If the Father is God, the Son is God
and the Holy Spirit is God, then are there not three Gods?
We will not discuss the doctrine of the Trinity at length here,
postponing it to a later essay in this series. What must be stressed
is that the early theologians insisted on the doctrine of the
Trinity because it is the way in which God has revealed Himself
in the Bible.
It is important to understand that the fathers of the early Church
were not indulging in pure metaphysics in their debate regarding
the nature of the Son. The assertion of the Creed, that Jesus
Christ is "God's only Son, our Lord" points to the relationship
between the two declarations.
The title "Lord" is used in the Old Testament for God
alone. God is Lord because He is the sovereign one. This title
is now used univocally for Jesus Christ, and thus points to His
Deity. Furthermore, the title "Lord" also refers to
the redemptive or saving activity of God. God is not only Lord
because He is Creator, He is Lord also because He is Saviour:
He is Lord of His people.
The nation of Israel knew, as did the theologians of the Creed,
that only God can save. No creature, no matter how great, can
do this. Thus, if Jesus Christ has brought salvation to humanity,
as the Creed declares that He has, then He must be God. If Jesus
Christ is something other than God - that is, a creature - then
the salvation that He brings, if it is efficacious at all, must
be defective and incomplete, as the work of any creature must
necessarily be. But if we cannot say this of the salvation that
is made available in Christ, then we must conclude that He is
God.
The motivation for defending the Deity of Christ is soteriological
- it has to do with the status of our salvation. The writers of
the Creed echo the teaching of the New Testament that Christ has
come to die for the sins of the world and to bring salvation to
those who believe. Christ is the Saviour of the world, and because
He is Saviour, He is also Lord.
Dr Roland Chia, a lecturer at Trinity Theological College, is also the Director of the Centre for the Development of Christian Ministry at TTC. He is a member of Fairfield Methodist Church.