Sunday, May 20, 2012
My Church Lecture On The Nicene Creed (Notes)
Bosphorus Bridge that bridges Europe and Asia, Istanbul, Turkey (trek earth)
Introduction
Overall I think the lecture went quite well. Pastor Mark's only suggestion after was that an outline would have been helpful as those in the course (sitting in a small circle) were not following along reading from any source and so I could have provided a written or verbal outline. Very reasonable. Next time I shall do so if I am asked to lecture again.
My last church lecture was several years ago for small group leadership and since then my sleep apnea became worse but now with recent (2 years) treatment with pills my condition is better and should stay that way for good. This can be seen empirically with my leaner appearance as well. I did complete two lecturing internships, one with each of the first two Christian degrees and I think my more recent blog audio posts were of assistance to me as well as were, of course, the many lecture rehearsals. But the more lecturing I do the better they shall become.
I am reasonably pleased with the result and it was a stressful week with my Mom returning to the downstairs part of the condo from Ridge Meadows Hospital after five months on Friday and the demands being placed upon me with this move back home and the supplies needed to be picked up via the Red Cross and RMH while trying to get this technical lecture down. Also during the week MS Word 2002 went 'bonkers' while I was working on the lecture leaving some kind of marks that looked a little like musical notations at the end of not only my lecture paragraphs but within all my MS Word 2002 documents, including my Doctorate, my CV, all documents. To Microsoft's credit when I purchased MS Word 2010 from London Drugs it translated all the MS Word 2002 programs to MS Word 2010 with no problem. And I thank God for that as well.
My Church Lecture On The Nicene Creed (Notes)
Greetings, Welcome to week three of Who is God? Featuring the Nicene Creed.
(Not the entire creed is being taught by me this week)
My bio last week in the bulletin was correct my Doctorate was at the University of Wales. It was the University of Wales, Lampeter but through two mergers it is now the University of Wales, Trinity Saint David at Lampeter. It is still one of the largest Universities in the UK. It was earned in that department in the disciplines of both Philosophical Theology and Philosophy of Religion as both disciplines deal with the problem of evil and theodicy.
Now my section of the creed…
And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only-begotten Son of God,
begotten of his Father before all worlds,
God of God, Light of Light,
very God of very God,
begotten, not made, being of one substance with the Father;
by whom all things were made;
And in one Lord Jesus Christ,
The term ‘Lord’ is used in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament in the context of Moses as leader Numbers (32: 25) for example. Browning Page 231.
Also of Jesus as the Son of the Man (Mark 2: 28). Browning Page 231.
Jesus was a person with special authority as Lord. (Matt. 7: 21). Browning Page 231.
In the Old Testament, the term Lord was used to translate names for God. Browning Page 231.
In the New Testament, the terms ‘Lord’ and Christ are almost synonymous (I Cor. 8, I Thess. 4: 17. 5: 12). Browning Page 231.
The term ‘Adonai’ meant ‘lord and father’. McComiskey. ‘Adonai’ was substituted for the name of God. As is Lord in our English Bibles. Erickson Page 691
κύριος and related κυρίου, ὁ according to Greek scholar Walter Bauer on Page 459, has Lord as a designated title for God as its roots in the Orient.
Christ is referred to as Lord in the New Testament Gospels and Epistles.
By referring to Jesus as Lord, Erickson the Apostles and disciples meant to give Jesus Christ the highest possible title (Page 691) meaning an obvious reference to his deity although he was still fully human. For the Jewish observers of Christianity of the New Testament era, the term Lord for Christ was given in part so that they could observe that Christ was equal with the Father. Erickson Page 691.
The name Jesus Christ is a combination of ‘Jesus’ of Nazareth and the title ‘Christ’ (Greek) which is Messiah in Hebrew. R.H. Stein, Page 582. The term Christ means ‘anointed’. Jesus is the Latin form of the Greek translation of the Hebrew Joshua/Jehoshua and means ‘salvation is ‘Yahweh’. Browning, Page 199.
Arius and Arians reasoned as God the Father from the Old Testament was immutable/unchangeable the substance of God could not be shared with another being in any way. Therefore Arius and Arians contended that Jesus Christ had to be a created being. Walter. Page 75.
The Word of God, Logos was viewed as a creation to Arius and it was deduced there was a time when he was not. Walter. Page 75.
There was a time where Jesus Christ assuming he was finite, did not exist. Walter. Page 75.
He was a finite being and not the infinite God as was the Father.
The assertion of the Lordship of Christ within the creed definitively states the opposite.
Arius and the Arians made the mistake of placing far too much emphasis on Greek philosophy as they interpreted Scripture.
With my background with secular MPhil and PhD degrees having to study and earn degrees in philosophy of religion and theology simultaneously I should state that the type error in philosophical approach in broad terms is still rampant today.
I reason philosophy and philosophy of religion are important academic disciplines for understanding truth but God’s word was given by God to persons to be understood historically in context.
Similarly, when I started at the University of Wales Lampeter for my Doctorate, even after passing MPhil theses as part one of the program at Wales, I was heavily criticized by one of the students at a meeting because I favoured the historical-grammatical critical method of analyzing Scripture over what the entire class appeared to prefer which was to concentrate almost entirely on the methodology of a Biblical author as in trying to deduce what the author’s motives were in writing a Biblical book. As opposed to actually reviewing his or her writing for theological content primarily. I did eventually learn the importance of more methodology writing my Doctoral thesis in the end, but still reason historical, grammatical with emphasis on understanding the theology and philosophy of a writer in Scripture is key.
A danger I see with their over-emphasis on methodology is that similar to the Arians and their approach to Scripture is that they may very well not let the Biblical author speak his/her mind in context and we need to remember the historical understanding all Scripture is inspired by God (2 Timothy 3: 16).
This is a very serious spiritual error. And an intellectual one as well.
One should not want to read a philosophy into a text and also one should not want to dismiss a philosophy that is in the Biblical text.
In my opinion, a major error of the Arians was to bring too much Greek philosophical thought into a review of Scripture and in a sense not let Scripture and God speak.
I am not claiming complete objectivity in my own personal way of evaluating Scripture and philosophy and philosophy of religion are valid academic disciplines but they should not be allowed to tarnish what the Scriptures states either by negation or addition.
the only-begotten Son of God,
The New Testament Greek word ‘monogenes’ ‘only-begotten’ (μονογενὴς υἱός) occurs nine times in the New Testament. Harrison. Page 799. Monogenes could reasonably be rendered as and is interpreted by some as meaning ‘one of a kind’ as in an adjective form (describes a noun) derived from ‘genos’ ‘origin’ ‘race’ ‘stock’ etc. page 799. The adjective only begotten provides the idea of uniqueness and not of a subordinate being. Harrison. Page 799.
Therefore, the deity of Christ within the Trinity would stand.
Greek scholar Bauer states that in Johannine literature this term is used only of Christ. Page. 527. Unique may be quite adequate as a description.
Monogenes describes the absolute uniqueness of God the Son to God the Father in his divine nature. So, Christ is the unique Son of God with a specific intimate relationship with God the Father. James Orr, International Standard Bible Encylopedia.
There is a slightly different perspective than the one I quoted from some scholars, stating that Christ as God the Son is not ‘one of a kind’ but is the ‘second of a kind’. But it still agrees with the perspective from that Christ shares the genus of God the Father and therefore has the same divine nature as the Father.
The Son is of the same essence, substance and nature of the Father states Michael Marlowe.
The term ‘Son of God’ is a title Christ accepted for himself which meant that he had a very specific unique personhood and relationship with God the Father. He was not like any other human being. Erickson Page 687-688.
In Christian theology, the Son of God has the concept of the pre-existent divine being entering human life in the person of Jesus Christ. Browning Page 349.
Arius was incorrect that Christ was not God the Son, or that it was just a title of honour. Walter Page 75. The Scriptural context dictates the Son of God has a divine pre-existence which would equal that of God the Father, although yes in the incarnation as can be seen in the Gospels Christ does take on human form as in the resurrection.
It should be noted that Jesus Christ’s human nature is no way is an addition to his divine nature. He is no more or less God.
Granted there is an aspect of mystery in the incarnation but the Triune nature of God which is infinite and eternal is not altered by Christ taking on additional finite human nature. Hypostatic union.
From Erickson a Reformed Baptist Theologian: Biblical Christianity holds that Jesus had a human soul and divine one, yet he was not two persons. In my mind, this is a correct, yet difficult concept. Jesus on the cross gave his spirit to the Father (John 19:30), so he possessed a human spirit and was fully human. My take is that in a sense there is one spirit as in person that is a unity of both human and divine nature. It is one spirit that is a unity of two spirits, which do not mix yet work together as one place of personality. In the Incarnation, the divine nature of Christ was unified with a human spirit/nature. To say that Christ has two spirits or souls will perhaps lead some to the idea that Christ is two persons rather than one person with two natures. The human soul of Christ is unified with the divine soul of Christ, in such a way that the two natures do not mix, yet they work together as one spirit as in one person. Therefore when Christ died he did not give his spirits, but spirit. This one soul/spirit would allow Christ to be fully human but without an active sinful nature.
begotten of his Father before all worlds,
Christ and this unique nature existed before the Creation of any worlds and in fact, Christ as God was co-Creator…
Hebrews 1: 2 NASB
in these last days has spoken to us in His Son, whom He appointed heir of all things, through whom also He made the world.
God the Son is the only Son of God and therefore is the heir of the Father. The sole heir of all things. Christ had a ‘dynamic agency’ in the creation’ of all things. This naturally implies Christ, God Son’s pre-existence and also co-existence with the Father. Hughes Pages 38-40.
Christ is the author of creation. He is also the efficient cause of their creation as in all things. Gerald F. Hawthorne Page 1506
Colossians 1:15-17 NASB
15 [a]He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. 16 For [b] by Him all things were created, both in the heavens and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities— all things have been created through Him and for Him. 17 He [c] is before all things, and in Him all things [d]hold together.
It can be seen that Christ is not part of the created world but is the co-creator. Wright Page 71. Christ alone was the Father’s agent is what is indicated.
The world and universe are sustained by God and that would include Christ as God the Son. Wright Page 71.
A scholar by the name of E.G. Ashby points out the mistake made by the Arians that Christ is the first-born of creation was therefore created, instead of being co-eternal with God the Father. But the context does not allow that interpretation. Page 1454. First-born can be defined as having to do with priority and superiority of God the Son in pre-existence as God. This being a reference to his deity, not his humanity. Page 1454.
Firstborn has to do the priority and superiority of Christ over creation as he was the creator and not a mere creation. There is no sense of a literal son being born of a literal father.
However, Bauer from the Greek states the term is used in a figurative sense as in Christ is the first-born of a new humanity. Page 726. Christ would be the first-born of resurrected humanity
within the culminated KOG.
Romans 8: 29 firstborn of many brethren. Πρωτοτοκος, the root word is prototokos, defined as firstborn prwtotokon in Romans 8:29.
God of God, Light of Light, very God of very God,
Reaffirming the equality as deity of God the Son with God the Father.
Both are God, both are light, Jesus states he is the light of the world in John 8: 12.
NASB
12 Then Jesus again spoke to them, saying, “I am the Light of the world; he who follows Me will not walk in the darkness, but will have the Light of life.”
Also, the light is mentioned in John 1.
The Father is the source of light in Genesis 1.1.
Both the Father and Son are Light.
The Son is no less God than is the Father.
There is no secondary God concept in Scripture. Isaiah 43, 44 and 45 point out there is only one God and no other shall be no God formed after.
Back in the late 1980s before starting my long four-degree marathon, I had a friend that basically held to Arian belief. He was excommunicated from the Jehovah’s Witnesses the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society. But interestingly although he would keep stating that he as a genius and smart enough to join a high IQ organization even when I would keep quoting him the Scriptures from both the Old and New Testaments that clearly explains there is no secondary true God concept in Scripture, he appealed to reason and philosophy. By reason and philosophy, like Arius, he reasoned there can only be one Almighty God and one person that is God and therefore Jesus Christ even though accepted as the atoner of his sins. My friend even accepted the physical resurrection, unlike those in the Watchtower, but Jesus Christ is his mind must have somehow been a secondary 'god' and saviour.
Again the danger of not letting Scripture speak in context.
begotten, not made, being of one substance with the Father; by whom all things were made;
The Son is of the same essence, substance and nature of the Father.
The Nicene council came up with the word as noted previously in the class that God the Son is of the same ‘homoousia’ with the Father. Blaising Page 775. The concept is that they are of the exact same, substance and nature. A similar idea can be found in Hebrews 1:3.
Bauer defines it from the Greek as substantial nature, essence, actual being, reality. In the context of Hebrews 1: 3 the Son of God is the exact representation of God’s real being. page 847.
Hupostasis Original Word: ὑπόστασις, εως, ἡ
The divine substance is the same. Hughes Page 44. Therefore Jesus can rightly state without risking modalism or Sabellianism, ‘He who has seen me has seen the Father’ John 14: 9 even though they are different persons in Trinity because Almighty God, including the Holy Spirit, is of only one divine substance.
Turner explains sabellianism was an alternative example of modalism. Turner Page 514. These were three different modes revealing the same divine person. Blaising Page 727.
Today there are also Oneness Pentecostals. Theologian Gregory A. Boyd wrote a good book dealing with the subject entitled:
Oneness Pentecostals and the Trinity (1992).
He was a former member. Often tend to Baptize in Jesus’ name only, not in name of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Page 139. Some reason that speaking in tongues was a required sign of being baptized in the Holy Spirit, to not speak in tongues was to not have the Holy Spirit at all. Page 197.
This group can be known for mistaking descriptive history in ACTS for prescriptive doctrine in every case, now tongues are a sign, not the sign, but of course not all will speak in tongues as Paul implies in 1 Corinthians 13: 30.
There is only one divine substance of God, but this is represented in three persons within the Trinity and God the Son has taken upon himself a human nature in order to be the King of the Kingdom of God.
In closing
The Creeds of 325 and 381 appeal to Scripture in proper and reasonable context and the resulting Theology adequately serves as a counter to the Arian heresies on a point by point basis.
My deduction would be that Creeds such as this helped immensely to maintain Christian theology, however, the Roman Catholic Church and to a lesser extent Orthodox Churches over time did add practices to Christian faith leading to the need for a Christian Reformation in the 16th C. In the modern era there are pseudo-Christian movements such as the Latter-Day Saints and the Jehovah’s Witnesses that attempt to rewrite Christian history as if they are the true Christian church and that the Creeds are wrong.
Perhaps the Creeds need to be further emphasized within orthodox, Biblical Churches even as a type of evangelism tool.
Bibliography
AQUINAS, SAINT THOMAS (1225-1274) Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews, translated by Fabian R. Larcher, Html-formated Joseph Kenny, Dominican House.
ASHBY, E G. (1986) 'Colossians' in The International Bible Commentary, Grand Rapids, Zondervan.
BAUER, WALTER (1979) A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament, Translated by Eric H. Wahlstrom, Chicago, The University of Chicago Press.
BLAISING, C.A. (1996) ‘Constantinople (381)’ Council of, in Walter A. Elwell (ed.), Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Grand Rapids, Baker Books.
BLAISING, C.A. (1996) ‘Monarchianism' in Walter A. Elwell (ed.), Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Grand Rapids, Baker Books.
BLAISING, C.A. (1996) ‘Nicea, Council of (325)’ in Walter A. Elwell (ed.), Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Grand Rapids, Baker Books.
BOWMAN, ROBERT M. (1990) Why You Should Believe in the Trinity, Grand Rapids, Baker Book House.
BROM, ROBERT H. (1983) The Eternal Sonship of Christ, San Diego, CIC 827.
BROMILEY, G.W. (1996) ‘Trinity’ in Walter A. Elwell (ed.), Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Grand Rapids, Baker Books.
BROWNING, W.R.F. (1997) Dictionary of the Bible, Oxford, Oxford University Press.
BUCHSEL, HERMANN, MARTIN FRIEDRICH (1967) ‘BUCHSEL on μονογενης’ reproduced from Volume 4. of Theological Dictionary of The New Testament, Edited by Gerhard Kittel, Grand Rapids, Eerdmans.
BOYD, GREGORY A. (1992) Oneness Pentecostals and the Trinity, Grand Rapids, Baker Books.
CALVIN, JOHN (1549) ‘Hebrews’ in Calvin’s Commentaries, Volume 44, Translated by John King (1847-1850), Santa Cruz, Sacred texts.com.
ERICKSON, MILLARD (1994) Christian Theology, Grand Rapids, Baker Book House.
HARRISON, E.F. (1996) ‘Only-Begotten’ in Walter A. Elwell (ed.), Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Grand Rapids, Baker Books.
HAWTHORNE, GERALD F. (1986) 'Hebrews' in The International Bible Commentary, Grand Rapids, Zondervan.
HUGHES, PHILIP. (1990) A Commentary On The Epistle To The Hebrews, Grand Rapids, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
KNIGHT, KEVIN (2009) First Council of Constantinople, New York, New Advent.
MARLOWE, MICHAEL (2006) The Only Begotten Son, New Philadelphia, Ohio, Bible Researcher Website.
MCCOMISKEY, T. E. (1996) ‘God, Names of’ in Walter A. Elwell (ed.), Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Grand Rapids, Baker Books.
ORR, JAMES (1915) ‘Only-Begotten’, General Editor, Grand Rapids, International Standard Bible Encylopedia.
PACKER, J.I. (1993) ‘Incarnation God Sent His Son, To Save Us’ from Concise Theology: A Guide To Historic Christian Beliefs, New York, Tyndale House Publishers Inc.
STEIN, R.H. (1996) ‘Jesus Christ’ in Walter A. Elwell (ed.), Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Grand Rapids, Baker Books.
STRONG, J. (1890)(1986) Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible, Burlington, Welch Publishing Company.
TURNER, H. E. W. (1999) 'Sabellianism', in Alan Richardson and John Bowden (eds.), A New Dictionary of Christian Theology, Kent, SCM Press Limited.
WALTER, V.L. WALTER (1996) ‘Arianism’ in Walter A. Elwell (ed.), Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Grand Rapids, Baker Books.
WRIGHT, N.T. (1989) Colossians and Philemon, Grand Rapids, IVP.
Golcuk, Turkey (trekearth)
There will be more lecturing to follow in another post. Something is in the works at Grace Vancouver.
Maple Ridge, BC (June 1, 2012)
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