In his excellent new book,
God Among Sages, Kenneth Samples has done a wonderful job in combining an
apologetic showing the Gospel accounts reflect the historic person of Jesus of
Nazareth and how the Jesus of the Gospels is markedly different from the
founders of Eastern religions, such as Krishna, who was also thought to be a god
taking on human form.
The comparison is interesting, especially considering
the charge made by many modern skeptics that the Christian belief of Jesus as
God incarnate was foreign to Jesus's first followers and only grew as a later
addition to the new religion. Bart Ehrman's book
How Jesus Became God is one
such challenge. Samples answers it well when he writes:
But just what
did the earliest Christians believe about the nature and person of Jesus Christ?
A major textual breakthrough over the last couple of decades has al1owed
scholars to see more dearly what the earliest Christians believed about Jesus
Christ, particularly as expressed in their church services.
Biblical
scholarship (in this case, a type of form criticism) has discovered primitive
Jewish-Christian creeds, confessions, and hymns woven into Scripture. The early
Christians in their worship services used these compact confessions of faith
long before the New Testament was written. As New Testament scholar Ralph Martin
explains, "The church of the New Testament is already a believing, preaching,
and confessing community of men and women. This implies the existence and
influence of a body of authoritative doctrine ... which was the given and shared
possession of those who formed the nascent Christian communities in the world of
the Roman Empire."1
I've written before on the
creed found in 1 Corinthians 15:3-7 and how it shows the resurrection
account existed as a foundational belief from the earliest moments of
Christianity. Here, Samples is arguing that there are other early creeds
recorded within the pages of the New Testament showing a very early belief in
the divinity of Jesus. Some of these passages are actually central to the case
of understanding Jesus as the God-man.
Philippians 2:6-11, a key passage
discussing how Jesus existed in the form of God, but humbled himself and became
man, is the first example. Because of differences in its language and its
poetic approach separate it from the rest of the epistle lead scholars to
believe this was an early Christian hymn.
2 Paul wrote the
epistle to the Philippians around AD 62, which means a hymn exalting the
incarnation of God in the man of Jesus was well established within thirty years
of Jesus's crucifixion.
Jesus Seen As God Very Early
Pointing to Craig Blomberg's work, Samples highlights
two other passages (Colossians 1:15-20 and 1 Peter 3:18-22), also written around
AD 62. He then notes "the hymnal and creedal portions of those letters date much
earlier, possibly back to the Jewish expressions of Christianity in the 40s or
even earlier in the 30s."
3 These early dates make it
impossible for the deity of Christ to be ascribed to either later legend or
Gentile influence. It places the central theology of the Trinity at the very
beginning of Christianity itself! This is all the more remarkable given that as
Jesus first followers were Jews, they would've strongly resisted any claims to
divinity that would impeach Yahweh as the one and only God. Remember, this is
exactly why Paul sought to kill Christians to begin with.
The early creedal
statements within the epistles written by both Peter and Paul—two key founders
of the Christian church—show that the incarnation, like the resurrection, was a
formative doctrine of Christianity. Jesus didn't "become God" as Ehrman puts it,
but was always seen as God. What could have made such a scandalous claim seem
palatable to the first Jewish Christians?
Nothing other than a resurrection, I believe.
I highly recommend you grab
a copy of
God Among Sages for yourself. There are so many good things here Samples has
given us, this being just one nugget. It's a fresh approach to the question of
the historical Jesus and how he compares to other religions' founders.
References
1. Samples, Kenneth Richard.
God Among Sages: Why
Jesus Is Not Just Another Religious Leader. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 2017. 71.
Print.
2. Samples, 2017. 72.
3. Samples, 2017. 73.
Image courtesy Lawrence OP and licensed via the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic (
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