"The Word Was
Made Flesh"
OUR
FINITE MINDS have difficulty in understanding
some of the deep things of Scripture because of
our insufficiency of knowledge and of experience.
All that we know of our Lord's pre-human
existence is revealed in the Word of God. The
Scriptures state that our Lord was rich and became
poor; not that He and seemed to become
poor, but that He actually became poor that we
might become rich. The Apostle says that He
divested Himself of those conditions that He had
before He became human, and that He took a
bondman's form. He was made flesh. The
explanation is given, "A body hast Thou
prepared Me," a human body, and thus He was
made "a little lower than the angels, for
the suffering of death."--Heb. 10:5; 2:9.
Putting
together the Scriptural statements on the subject
we have this: In His pre-human existence our Lord
was the Logos, "the beginning of the
creation of God," the Alpha of all God's
creation, and the Omega in that Jehovah created
only this One. Of the Logos it is written,
"All things were made by Him, and without
Him was not anything made that was made."
(John 1:3.) He was on the spirit plane, next to
the Father.
In the
Divine Plan of the Ages, formulated long before,
a proposition was made our Lord with a view to
the redemption of mankind; provision was made
that if obedient to the Father's will, the Logos
would receive still further exaltation, even to
the divine nature. For this joy set before Him,
our Lord took the various steps necessary to
complete the great work of redemption. The
contract into which He entered with the Father
was one which involved much humiliation. While
there was a sacrifice of power, of honor, of
glory, yet no sacrifice of life was involved in
the first step taken; namely, His acceptance of
the Father's arrangement that He should be made
flesh; that He should become a human being, that
He should give up His existence on the heavenly
plane.
Originally,
as the Logos, our Lord was a soul on the
spirit plane, in the sense that any intelligent
being is a soul; for the word "soul"
signifies being; and the transfer of the life
principle to a human body brought Him to the
earthly plane. The life principle was the same
that He had before, therefore the personality was
the same. It was important to have identity of
mind; and this He had by Divine arrangement.
A BODY GIVEN FOR THE
PURPOSE OF DEATH
The
Scriptures do not explain how the spark of life
belonging to the spirit being known as the Logos
became transferred to the human plane. When our
Lord was thus changed, He merely took the step of
getting ready to become the sacrifice for
sinners. In His pre-existent state He could not
have given the corresponding price for Adam; for
He had not the human life to offer. But when He
became a human being and had reached the age of
maturity, He was in condition to be the
Sin-offering.
We would
say that our Lord as a human being was the same
soul as in His pre-existent condition; for He
had the same life principle as before; and that
when He became human He did not die as a spirit
being. The Scriptures declare that our Lord was
"made flesh," a human being; and that
the difference between Him and mankind in general
was that He was perfect--"holy, harmless,
undefiled, separate from sinners"--separate
from the remainder of the human race. (Heb.
7:26.) The Scriptures also explain that this
difference resulted from the fact that He was
specially begotten. The life principle by which
He was conceived came directly from the Heavenly
Father.
This
explanation is altogether different from the
theory known as Incarnation. The thought of the
theory of incarnation is that a spirit being took
possession of an earthly being--became incarnate,
dwelt in the flesh, in the same way that some are
possessed of evil spirits which dwell within
them. This, we believe, is a wrong thought
respecting our Lord which has come down from the
"Dark Ages." There is nothing in the
Scriptures about incarnation. The
Scriptures do not say that our Lord's body
died, while the spirit being within it
remained alive. But the Bible says that our Lord
left the glory which He had with the Father and
was found in fashion as a man; that He humbled
Himself unto death, even unto the death of the
cross; that He was "put to death in the
flesh."--John 17:4,5; I Pet. 3:18; Phil.
2:8.
"MADE FLESH AND DWELT
AMONG US"
From what
we know of childhood we recognize it as the
period of development. And so we read of our
Lord: "And the child grew, and waxed strong,
filled with wisdom; and the grace of God was upon
Him...And Jesus increased in wisdom and stature,
and in favor with God and man." (Luke
2:40,52.) His was not a mind that had all the
experiences and intelligence of His pre-existent
state. We read that He in wisdom. His mind
grew. Of course, being perfect He would learn
much more rapidly and accurately than would
others; and this accounts for the fact that as a
child He was able to confound the Doctors of the
Law. With His natural qualities of mind He was
able to grasp the situation, to take in things
rapidly.
St. Luke
tells us that at the age of twelve years our Lord
accompanied His mother and Joseph to Jerusalem.
The Jewish children were accustomed to attending
religious services; and it was a custom that
Jewish boys should make a consecration at the age
at which Jesus did. Jesus knew that He was
different from other boys. Very likely He told
them the facts relating to His miraculous birth.
It is assumed by some that He was even charged
with having an illegitimate birth. But since we
do not know definitely about this, we must
confine ourselves to the Scriptures.
Our Lord
came into the world in a miraculous manner for
the purpose of fulfilling the prophecies, which
were all to attain fulfilment in Him. Naturally
He would avail Himself of the first opportunity
of ascertaining the requirements. When at twelve
years of age He learned from the Doctors of the
Law that He could not assume the priestly
function as a boy, He made no further attempt,
but was subject to His parents, or to Mary and
her husband, who properly enough were His
guardians until He reached thirty years of age,
when His first step was to make full
consecration of Himself.
"I COME TO DO THY
WILL"
Our Lord
at thirty years of age certainly had much
knowledge that Adam did not possess when he was
on trial. Our Lord had some knowledge of what
constitutes sin and its penalty. He had also
knowledge of the fact that God had arranged for
the redemption of mankind, through the great
Mediator of the New Covenant--a Savior, a
Redeemer, a Deliverer. He knew that the inability
of others to keep the Divine Law written in
the Decalogue and His ability to keep that
Law, constituted the difference between Himself
and others.
Doubtless
our Lord's mother had told Him of His miraculous
birth and of the message that had come through
Gabriel and of the prophecy of Anna and of
Simeon. And He had in mind the prophecy
respecting Himself and the future of the great
Messiah that was to come and deliver the world.
All this knowledge was very valuable.
But the
thing that our Lord evidently lacked was the
knowledge of the deeper things of the Scriptures.
He evidently found perplexities in the Bible; for
He had not received the Holy Spirit. Although He
might be better qualified to understand these
things than were the fallen race, yet, as the
Apostle says, "The natural man receiveth not
the things of the Spirit of God,...neither can he
know them, because they are spiritually
discerned." (I Cor. 2:14.) Jesus had not
been begotten of the Holy Spirit; therefore He
did not have the understanding of the prophecies
and symbols.
"THE HEAVENS WERE
OPENED"
All this
knowledge began to come upon Him when He was
begotten of the Holy Spirit. He began to
understand the higher things, the deep things of
God. He had understood in a measure about the
Lamb that was slain as the sin-offering and the
things about the putting away of sin, but nothing
to identify the One who was to be the great
Deliverer or to explain the wonderful pictures in
the Scriptures. Just as soon as He was begotten
of the Holy Spirit He began to see that if He
would reign, it would be by a manifestation of
loyalty to God and to righteousness. As soon as
He was illuminated He saw the things pertaining
to the suffering.
During
our Lord's earthly ministry He learned obedience
through the things which He suffered. (Heb. 5:8.)
And thus He received the great illumination which
was so powerful an addition to Him--just as it is
a great illumination to us to see the terms and
conditions of our calling--that we must walk in
the steps of our Lord if we would reign with Him.
Just in
what manner the higher things were revealed to
our Lord we may not know. St. Paul tells us of
wonderful revelations which were made to him.
Doubtless our Lord also had revelations, but just
what was revealed to Him thus, in order that He
might understand His pre-human conditions, etc.,
we may not know. Nor do we know how all the acts
and experiences during the previous period of His
existence before He became flesh could have been
impressed suddenly upon His mind. The same God
who is able to give us a spirit body which will
assimilate all the experiences of the present
life, could also impress upon Jesus all the
previous experiences which He had had.
The
impress of previous experiences did not come to
Him during His boyhood; for He was then growing
in knowledge and in stature, and in favor with
God and man. We believe that the impress came at
the time of His consecration at Jordan; and that
not only had He there given to Him the impress of
His previous experiences with the Father and of
the remote past, but also that He had light given
to Him upon the Scriptures so that He could grasp
the full purport of what He had done when He gave
Himself in consecration.
As the
"heavens" continued to open to our
Lord, He would see that the experiences of the
Messiah, which could not have been commanded
under the Law Covenant, were nevertheless to be
His privileges as He would see these to be the
Divine will, as He would see these to be the
Divine Law in the Prophecies. As a sheep would be
dumb before its shearers, so He would not rebel
as His rights were taken from Him. He would know
that He was to be put to death; and that He was
to be an innocent victim. He was to be the
crucified One, the antitype of the brazen
serpent.
Having
consecrated to fulfil all things written in the
Book Jesus was fully prepared for His every
experience. This we see also is the purport of
that beautiful picture in Revelation of the
scroll sealed with seven seals. The proclamation
was made, "Who is worthy to open the Book,
and to loose the seals thereof?" (Rev. 5:2.)
Up to that time no one had been found who could
open the Book. But at that time our Lord was
found worthy to open the Book, and to Him was
given all the knowledge in the Divine Plan, that
He might carry out these things in the
sacrificing of the flesh.
At His
consecration at Jordan our Lord gave up the human
life--He gave up all rights and privileges as a
human being. The ultimate purpose of this full
surrender of His life was that He might bring
everlasting life to mankind. The Father's
arrangement with Him, however, was such that He
might retain His personality, His identity. But
after He was begotten of the Holy Spirit, He was
a New Creature; and as a New Creature He had the
human body in which to develop character, in
which to have His experiences. This New Creature
was developed to perfection during the three and
one-half years of His ministry, and was ready for
the spirit body which had been promised to Him.
If our
Lord had not been found perfect, faithful, loyal,
in His pre-human condition, He never would have
had this privilege of becoming a man and the
Redeemer of men. Because of His obedience as a
man He received the greater glory, immortality.
He was perfect under all the favorable conditions
before He became a man; He was faithful as a man,
and being glorified, He is still faithful.
Therefore He maintains the same relationship to
God and to righteousness that He ever had.
Consequently He would not specially need any of
those things which assist in making character;
for He has never shown any defects to be
rectified. But we may suppose that the
experiences which He had in His pre-existent
state, and while He was a man, and since He was
glorified, all cooperate to make His character
intelligent and loyal in the very highest sense.
HE "MANIFESTED FORTH
HIS GLORY"
Let us
examine some Scriptures which might be understood
to imply that our Lord had a clear recollection
of His pre-human experiences with the Father.
(1)
"Then answered Jesus and said unto them,
Verily, verily I say unto you, the Son can do
nothing of Himself, but what He seeth the Father
do; for what things soever He doeth, these also
doeth the Son likewise." (John 5:19.) These
words were used in connection with the healing of
the sick. They do not, of course, mean that the
Lord had seen the Father healing the sick, but
that He had seen the Father's will, the Father's
Plan.
Our Lord
was simply carrying out the Father's will
concerning Him: "The eyes of the blind shall
be opened, and the ears of the deaf shall be
unstopped; then shall the lame man leap as an
hart"; etc. (Isa. 35:5,6.) These miracles of
healing were some of the things that He was to
do, as written in the Scriptures. He knew that He
was to do these miracles and that they were a
foreshadowing of the things to be done by and by.
As we read, "This beginning of miracles did
Jesus... and manifested forth His
glory."--John 2:11.
(2)
"I was set up from everlasting, from the
beginning, or ever the earth was. When there were
no depths, I was brought forth; when there were
no fountains abounding with water. Before the
mountains were settled, before the hills was I
brought forth." (Prov. 8:23-25.) This
passage may be viewed either as a prophecy of
what our Lord understood of His previous
condition, or as a figure of speech setting forth
the Wisdom of God all through the ages. But since
the Wisdom of God is specially revealed in our
Lord Jesus, so this was a foreshadowing of what
Jesus might know respecting His pre-human
condition.
(3) When
our Lord at twelve years of age asked, "Wist
ye not that I must be about My Father's
business?" (Luke 2:49) He would have in mind
the Heavenly Father, just as any consecrated
child of God might think of Him. From the
information which He had received from His
mother, Mary, He would know of His miraculous
birth and of His special mission in the world.
His mother knew that He could not be true to
Himself and His mission unless she told Him about
these things. Having been told that He was
specially holy and miraculously born for this
very purpose, He now turned to Mary and asked, Is
it possible that you should not know that I
should be about My Father's business? Did not you
tell me of this thing? He was surprised that Mary
and Joseph should not understand that this was
the very thing for Him to do.
MEMORY THE MEANS OF
IDENTIFICATION
(4) Our
Lord's statement, "Before Abraham was, I
am" (John 8:58), serves to identify the man
Jesus with His previous condition as the Logos
before He was made flesh and dwelt among us. He
is the same today, although He has been received
to the spirit plane. He says, "I am He that
liveth, and was dead; and behold I am alive
forevermore." (Rev. 1:18.) Originally He was
on the spirit plane. Later as a man, He lived; He
died. At His resurrection He was made alive on
the spirit plane, far above angels,
principalities and powers. But the identity, the
personality, is the same.
And we
can readily believe that the memory of things
past is still with our Lord. We also think that
He remembers the experiences which He had in the
flesh and also those which He had before He
became flesh. Otherwise, He could not identify
Himself. Memory seems to be the means of
identification of our personality. Nothing in
this Scripture would seem to imply that our Lord
was born into the world with the knowledge of all
His previous experiences. After His consecration
He received the knowledge by some means which we
are not great enough to understand--by some power
the Father used; for the Father has all power.
(5)
"Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, and
today, and forever." (Heb. 13:8.) This
statement would not identify our Lord with His
previous condition; for in His pre-existent
state, He was not Jesus. He was called
Jesus at His birth. He became Jesus Christ at His
baptism. "By His knowledge shall My
Righteous Servant justify many; for He shall bear
their iniquities." (Isa. 53:11.) Our Lord
began to bear the iniquities of the world at His
consecration, and finished so doing at His
crucifixion. Since then He has been reckoning
certain persons to be members of Himself. When
the Holy Spirit came upon Him and the heavens
were opened unto Him, He probably received the
knowledge which would enable Him to overcome.
Before
His consecration, when our Lord was a perfect man
just as Adam was, we know not what force Satan's
temptations would have had; but when His mind was
opened, then Satan came to tempt Him along the
very line of His work, along the line of the
consecration which He had already made. Satan
attempted to overthrow His consecration and to
thwart its completion. How much knowledge our
Lord had we do not know; but the Heavenly Father
gave Him sufficient to enable Him to come off
conqueror. And so with us. Our Lord gives us
knowledge of Himself and of the Father. He shows
us the relation between the sufferings of this
present time and the glories that are to follow.
Thus by knowledge all the members of the Body of
this Great Righteous Servant will be permitted to
come off "more than conquerors" by His
grace.
THE NATURAL MAN CANNOT
PERCEIVE SPIRITUAL THINGS
(6)
"Verily, verily, I say unto thee, We speak
that we do know, and testify that we have seen;
and ye receive not our witness." (John
3:11.) The intimation is that our Lord could tell
heavenly things, but that He was not disposed to
do so, because Nicodemus and others found it
difficult to receive even the earthly things. How
could Jesus tell of the heavenly things? By that
time He may have had the impress of memory in
respect to His pre-existent condition.
We are to
tell the heavenly things, but not to the natural
man. "Cast not your pearls before swine,
lest they trample them under their feet, and turn
again and rend you." (Matt. 7:6.) Our Lord
said that He had many things to tell His
disciples, but that they could not receive them
until the Holy Spirit came. (John 16:12,13.) And,
"The Holy Spirit was not yet given; because
that Jesus was not yet glorified." (John
7:39.) "The natural man receiveth not the
things of the Spirit of God, for they are
foolishness unto him, neither can he know them,
because they are spiritually discerned";
"but God hath revealed them unto us by His
Spirit, for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea,
the deep things of God." (I Cor. 2:14,10.)
Now if the Holy Spirit reveals some of the deep
things to us, how much more could
the perfect mind of our Lord enter into the holy
things?
"THE GLORY WHICH I HAD
WITH THEE"
(7) Our
Lord's words, "Father, glorify Thou Me with
Thine Own self, with the glory which I had with
Thee, before the world was" (John 17:5),
would not signify that He had no knowledge of His
prospective share in the divine nature. He had
the assurance of the Scriptures, one of which was
that He should be very high; another that the
Lord would give unto Him the Kingdom; another
says that Jehovah God would "divide Him a
portion with the great, and He shall divide the
spoil with the strong; because He hath poured out
His soul unto death" (Isa. 53:12); still
another says, "The Lord hath sworn and will
not repent, Thou art a Priest forever, after the
order of Melchizedek." (Psa. 110:4.) He was
to be both a Priest and a King of very high state
and honor.
Probably
our Lord knew these things fully after He was
begotten of the Holy Spirit, even as St. Paul was
caught away to the third heaven and received
knowledge of wonderful things "which it is
not lawful for a man to utter." (2 Cor.
12:4.) And so it is most probable that our Lord
Jesus had some special revelation; for we read
that He said that "as the Father hath life
in Himself, so hath He given to the Son to have
life in Himself" (John 5:26); thus
indicating His knowledge of the fact that both He
and the Church would share in the divine nature
and inherency of life.
Our
Lord's words show that He was not wishing to
aspire to these glorious things. Very humbly He
said, "Father, I have come to do Thy will.
Father, I shall perform the work Thou hast given
Me to do and I shall be glad to be returned to
the glory I had with Thee-- to ask nothing as a
favor. I am glad that I have had this privilege,
and I think that I shall not suffer by reason of
My obedience to Thy will. I shall be glad,
therefore, to be with Thee in the glory that I
shared with Thee before the world was."
He did
not say to the Father, "Do not forget to pay
Me; do not forget what Thou didst promise."
No. He did the Father's will without any thought
of compensation connected with it. So with us.
Anyone who looks for the divine nature merely as
a reward and feels that it is due him, is
taking an improper view. We should feel that to
be on the side of righteousness and to be
identified with our Lord Jesus is a great
privilege, if there be no reward of the divine
nature at all; but the thought of the reward is a
great incentive to run patiently for something
super-abundant, exceedingly beyond what we could
have asked or thought.
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