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Copyright © 2001, TruthQuest Publishers
All Rights Reserved. No reproduction of any kind permissible without the expressed written consent of the publisher.
"And they all said, ‘Are You the Son of God, then?’ And He said to them, ‘Yes, I am.’" (Luke 22:70)
Although
the Gospel writers portrayed Jesus as claiming to be the Son of God,
can we verify this historically and, if so, what did Jesus mean by "Son
of God?"
Two of the questions
contemporary New Testament scholars ask are, "Who did Jesus claim to be
and who did he think he was?" These are profound questions. Jesus said,
"For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that
whoever believes in Him should not perish, but have eternal life."(1)
What are we to believe about Him? This is no small matter. Jesus is the
central figure of the New Testament. So it may very well be that if you
have missed the boat on who Jesus is, you may very well have missed the
boat altogether.
Some state that when Jesus claimed
to be the "Son of God," He did not mean it in a divine sense as
Christians believe. They continue, "The term "son of God" was used to
designate kings(2) and angels.(3) It is even used of the nation of
Israel.(4) Emperors, pharaohs, great philosophers, and religious
figures were sometimes called "sons of God."(5) So Jesus did not
originally mean it in the sense that Christians today have come to
believe, that Jesus is the direct offspring of God and, therefore,
divine.
What did Jesus mean when He referred to Himself as the Son of God? Let us look at two references.
"No one knows about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father." (Mark 13:32)
Even
many skeptical scholars consider this to be an authentic saying of
Jesus, because of the principle of embarrassment. Jesus admits that He
is unaware of the time of His Second Coming. This is not a saying you
would fabricate about a man to whom you are ascribing divinity or
deity(6) in order to convince your audience to worship Him. The fact
that it was preserved strongly suggests that it is an authentic saying
of Jesus.
When one looks at this verse in the
original Greek, there appears to be a figure of speech employed called
anabasis. This is when a passage has a step by step ascension
increasing in stress. Notice what Jesus says: "No one knows about that
day or hour [referring to humans], not even the angels in heaven [who
are higher than humans], nor the Son [who is higher still], but only
the Father." This places Jesus as "Son of God" above humans and angels.
He is claiming to be the Son of God in a uniquely divine sense, above
what the skeptics claim.(7)
The second reference is found in the Gospel of Mark (12:1-12). In this
text, Jesus tells the parable of the owner of a vineyard who prepared
and rented it to some vinegrowers. At harvest time, he sent a slave to
receive some of the produce. But they refused to listen to the slave,
beat him, and sent him away. One by one as the owner sent additional
slaves, they refused to listen and either beat or killed them. He had
one left to send, a son. But the tenants killed him too and threw him
out of the vineyard. In this parable, the vineyard owner is God, the
vineyard is Israel, the slaves are the prophets who brought the word of
God to Israel and were mistreated and killed as a result, and the son
is Jesus. What is of interest to us at the moment is that the son is
here revered above the prophets (vss. 6-7). If prophets were sometimes
referred to as sons of God, Jesus is son in a higher sense.
In conclusion, our view of Jesus is important if He was who He claimed
to be. Who did He think He was? The Son of God. When He used this
designation of Himself, He used it in a divine sense. As Son of God,
Jesus is above all men, prophets, and divine angels. He is more than
the prophets who spoke the truth. He is more than kings who uphold the
truth. Jesus Himself is the truth. Prophets and kings asked others to
believe them. Jesus asked others to believe in Him. Jesus claimed that
as a result of God’s intense love for the world, He gave His "only
begotten Son."(8) "Only" sets Jesus above and apart from others of whom
sonship is claimed. "Begotten" is not here used in the sense of a birth
or beginning, but as "unique."(9) He follows this by claiming that
anyone who puts their faith in Him will be granted eternal life,
something neither priests, prophets, nor kings could deliver on.
Footnotes...
1. John 3:16 (NASB)
2. 2 Samuel 7:14; Psalm 2:7
3. Genesis 6:2; Job 38:7
4. Hosea 11:1
5. See the contribution by John Hick in More Than One Way? Dennis L.
Okholm & Timothy R. Phillips, eds. (Grand Rapids:
ZondervanPublishingHouse, 1995), p. 35.
6. Divinity or divine refers to something the proceeds directly from
God and can refer to an angel, a revelation, or the son of God. Such
can come from God without being God. Deity is a stronger term and
refers to one having the essential nature of God.
7. We will later investigate whether Jesus thought of Himself as deity.
8. John 3:16
9. Compare with Hebrews 11:17 where the same Greek word is used of
Abraham’s son, Isaac. Isaac was not Abraham’s only-begotten son in the
sense of only born, since Ishmael was also his son.
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