The "Big Bang" in Jews Worshiping Jesus as God
One popular answer today among those who do not believe in Jesus as God
is that the belief evolved over a period of centuries. They suggest that the
earliest Christians, who were Jews, thought of Jesus as simply a rabbi or a
prophet, a holy and wise man. They theorize that as Christianity spread
outward and became more and more dominated by Gentile (that is, non-Jewish)
believers, those Gentiles, accustomed to assigning divine honors to their
heroes, did the same for Jesus.' Eventually, a form of Christianity emerged
that explained the divinity of Jesus as a unique incarnation of God and
dismissed all alternative views of Jesus as heresy. Some critics of the
doctrine that Jesus is God claim that this belief did not appear until well
after all of the apostles had died-perhaps, some say, as late as the fourth
century Council of Nicea.
The facts are very much otherwise. The
practice of giving Jesus divine honors—of religious, spiritual devotion to
Jesus—was an established, characteristic feature of the Christian movement
within the first two decades of its existence. Larry Hurtado, professor of
New Testament at the University of Edinburgh, described the emergence of
devotion to Jesus as "a veritable 'big bang: an explosively rapid and
impressively substantial development in the earliest stage of the Christian
movement'? According to Martin Hengel, a New Testament scholar at Tubingen
University in Germany, more happened in the development of Christian
beliefs about Jesus in the twenty years between his death and Paul's
earliest epistles "than in the whole subsequent seven hundred years of
church history:')
The apostles and other early Jewish Christians did not
just lavish high praises on Jesus. They accorded him honors that in Jewish
teaching, as authoritatively set forth in their Scriptures, were due to the
Lord God of Israel and no one else…
It was in this context of exclusive
religious devotion to one God, the Lord, that the early Jewish followers of
Jesus were expressing the same sort of devotion to Jesus. They worshiped
him, sang hymns to him, prayed to him, and revered him in a way that
believers in Judaism insisted was reserved for the Lord God alone. To make
matters worse, the Christians agreed that such honors were rightly given
only to God—and then proceeded to give them to Jesus anyway!
— Robert M. Bowman, Jr. and Ed Komoszewski. Putting Jesus in His Place: The Case for the Deity of Christ.
Grand Rapids: Kregel Books, 2007. 29-30.
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