Skip to main content

Jesus was NOT a good man (?)

Met another Chinese lady on Valentine's Day. She (S) is a high school pupil with excellent English doing year 11. She has a Christian mother.

I asked S about the Christian faith and she said openly that she wasn't a Christian. It seemed then I got a prompt to ask her about Jesus and she told me she believed he was a good man.

A good man? Just a good man? I missed a golden opportunity to follow up here (but the shop was busy and S was there to help for the day).



Jesus Was NOT a good man

Of course, all Christians believe he was good but Jesus was far more than just a good man. He was the Christ that the righteous in Jewry were looking for and that the unrighteous shamefully rejected. Moreover, he was the Son of God (Jn 3.16f).

Later, I thought about C. S. Lewis' comment that you can call Jesus many things but you can't say he was a 'good man' because this 'good man' accepted the title of the Son of God on various occasions (e.g., Jn 10.36-38). But good men tell the truth and if this man accepted the title of the Son of God (e.g., Matt 26.63-64) then he cannot be good. He was either deluded or a liar.

With his disciples he asked, 'Who do people say that the Son of Man is?' (Matt 16.15-17). After getting the answers of 'John the Baptist', 'Elijah', 'Jeremiah', 'one of the prophets', he then asked the most important question for that age and this: 'But who do you say that I am?' 

Peter replied, 'You are the Christ, the Son of the Living God' (Matt 16.16). In his response, Jesus not only accepted that Peter was correct but said that Peter's answer had been revealed to him by 'My Father who is in heaven' (Matt 16.17).

Interestingly, Jesus didn't go around saying He was the Son of God very often. (But then neither does the Prime Minister of a country do so either because everyone knows it to be so and acts on the basis that it is so.) But the New Testament is pervaded with the understanding that in Jesus, God's Unique Son has come to earth and been called the Son of God by God at his birth, baptism and transfiguration. (See here.)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Reigning With Christ by F J Huegel

Reigning With Christ by F J Huegel (1963) is a book of only 88 pages yet it is filled with crucial truths of the Christian faith organised around the theme of the enthroned believer . It's fair to say that the theme he concisely addresses in this small book is much neglected today. For the press of technological life with its bustle and speed is such that we can forget that present life, so ' real' to us, is temporary (2 Cor 4.18) and as in the first century, 'the form [Greek, "schema"] of the world is passing away' (1Cor 7.31). It's easy to read this work and though it has 20 chapters, they are short and pithy. However, reading it requires a meditative attitude so as to allow the Spirit to work on our hearts.

God's Proof of His Love-While We Were Still Enemies

I've just come across an excerpt from a wonderful book I have, The Divine Forbearance or The Dynamics of Forgiveness (2001) by Paul T. Harrison 1 . I want to focus on some points he makes from Rom 5.1-11 concerning the love of God. In Romans ch 4, the subject is faith: 'the means by which we are rightwised 2 to God' (Harrison, p. 52). But what, Harrison asks, arouses faith; what 'has Christ revealed about God that makes us able to trust Him?' Fire of God Ministries International Church-see http://fireofgodservants.blogspot.com.au And to that question he answers, God's forgiving love . God's love is so faithful and true that we may depend on it absolutely. Why is that so? That is explored in Rom 5.6-11. Our status before God as ungodly sinners (Rom 5.6, 8) in the past meant that we were the 'enemies of God' (Rom 5.10). Think of that! Being an enemy of God means to be subject to his wrath (Rom 5.9) and displeasure. People don't give their live

Christian Atheism!

" The great lesson that our blessed Lord inculcates here...is that God is in all things, and that we are to see the Creator in the glass [mirror] of every creature; that we should use and look upon nothing as separate from God, which indeed is a kind of practical atheism; but with a true magnificence of thought survey heaven and earth and all that is therein as contained by God in the hollow of his hand, who by his intimate presence holds them all in being, who pervades and activates the whole created frame, and is in a true sense the soul of the universe." These pungent words were given to me by an overseas correspondent and come from a sermon by John Wesley (1748) on the 'Sermon on the Mount'. Part of the context for his words apparently were that Wesley originally baulked at the idea of preaching in the open air until he realised that the Lord Jesus had preached outside! But, more especially for our edification is that Wesley fixed on the truth that nothing