Who
Did Jesus Think He Was Anyway?
There
are only four options for the identity of Jesus Christ. He was
a legend, a liar, a lunaticor Lord and God.
Legend?
Those
who support the legend hypothesis say that the claim to be God
was a result of the religious imagination of the early church,
and as such, was written back into the mouth of Jesus. The real
Jesus, they say, said no such thing.
First of all, this view fails to take into account the fact that
it takes more than two full generations for legendary traces to
wipe out the hard core of historical fact (A.N. Sherwin White,
Roman Society and Roman Law in the New Testament, Oxford U. Press,
1963, pp. 189-191). There is good evidence that Matthew, Mark,
Luke and Acts were written within one generation after Christ,
but even if all the Gospels were written after 70 AD, as proponents
of the legend theory suggest, this is still within the two generations
that are needed before mystical tendencies can prevail over the
historic core.
Second there is no question that the earliest Christians believed
in and worshipped one of their own countrymen as Lord and God.
How does one explain this worship by monotheistic Jews of one
of their own countrymen apart from some divine claims or behaviour?
If the real Jesus never made any such claims, this early belief
in a divine Christ is inexplicable.
C.S. Lewis, one of the great literary experts on ancient myths,
says of the Gospel accounts: "I have been reading poems,
romances, vision literature, legends, myths all my life. I know
what they are like. I know that not one of them is like this"
(C.S. Lewis, Christian Reflections, Walter Hooper, ed., Eerdmans,
1967, p. 155).
Claims to be God
Since, therefore, there is little likelihood that Jesus' claim
to deity is legend or myth, we should expect to find something
in His words and actions that suggest He thought of Himself as
divine. Jesus' self-perception as God is clearly seen in the various
Gospel accounts.
• He believed He had the power to perform miracles and
cast out demons (Matthew 11:2-5, Luke 11:20).
• Jesus claimed to determine people's eternal destiny
(Luke 12:8-9).
• Jesus placed His personal authority over the Law of
God (Matthew 5).
• In Mark 2:5-7, Jesus shows He believed He had the power
to forgive sins. The scribes reacted by saying, "Who can
forgive sins but God alone?"
• Jesus thought himself to be the Son of God in a unique
and absolute sense in his use of the term ‘ABBA’
(daddy) to refer to God (Matt 11:27; Luke 10:22; Luke 20:9-18).
• Jesus claimed to be “The Son of Man” –
a divine figure (Daniel 7:13-14)
• Jesus claimed to be the “I AM” of the Old
Testament (Matt 14:22-23; Mark 6:45-52; Exodus 3:14).
• Jesus formed the ‘Twelve’, but was distinct
from them.
• The most explicit claims to deity are found in John's
gospel where Jesus claims, "I and the Father are one"
(John 10:30); “He who has seen me has seen the Father”
(John 14:9); “Before Abraham was born, I AM” (John
8:58); and Jesus accepts worship as God (John 20:23). There
is no reason to hold that these passages are merely the result
of the over-developed imagination of John, since Jesus' self-conception
as God is already evident in the earlier three gospels.
Liar
or Lunatic?
Therefore, since Jesus claimed to be God, His claims are either
true or false. If false, He must have been a liar, deliberately
misleading the multitudes. Or, He was a lunatic, sincerely believing
Himself to be God, when in reality He was just a man.
Jesus' brilliant moral character and His willingness to die for
His claim to be God have convinced most people that He was not
lying. Jesus' humility, warmth and unselfish love, His quick and
skilful thinking in dealing with His opponents, His intelligent
communication with the multitudes, and His amazing self-control
and composure in the midst of the tremendous physical and emotional
stress of His betrayal and crucifixion, all point to His contact
with reality. Jesus was no lunatic.
Lord
If Jesus was not a legend and He claimed to be God, then, as we've
said, His claim is either true or false. If it is false, He must
have been a liar or a lunatic. Since the evidence shows He is
neither a liar nor a lunatic, then the only other alternative
left is that His claim is true. Jesus is Lord and God.
Revised
October 2003; © Campus Crusade for Christ, Canada
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