Unsettled Christianity

One blog to rule them all, One blog to find them, One blog to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.
October 21st, 2010

Arianism’s picture of The Gentile Trinity and the Jewish Modalism

Click to Order

Intervarsity Press has done a great service to the Church by resurrecting for Protestant audiences the ancient writings of those passed on. One of these is the Incomplete Commentary on Matthew, written by an Arian, but filled with some substantial points about Christianity theology. Admittedly, the word ‘Arian’ may be off-putting to some, but the fact is, is that this commentary remained while so many of the other heretical works associated with Arius vanished. Why? Possible due to some of the deeper theological points found there.

While reading through this weighty book adored by Thomas Aquinas, I found the author’s view of the Trinity and Modalism, a theological war raging then and simmering now.

He writes in the forty-fifth homily, regarding Matthew 23.32, he assigns the Trinity to the Gentiles and Modalism to the Jews:

For whenever you see heretics saying that the three are equal in all respects, that they are of the same substance and the same authority, that all are without beginning but distinguishing the other two from themselves in some fashion, do not be astonished, for they are filling up the measure of their Gentile ancestors, because also they worshiped many gods in a similar fashion. When you see them saying that the three are one person and that God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit are the same person, do not be astonished, for they are filling up the measure of their ancestors, the Jews. So also they worship one God the Father and do not confess God the Son after the Father. (p358)

I find it interesting that during a time in which Chrysostom was preaching against the Jewish influence still found in the Church, and that Gregory of Nyssa was using a Jewish version of the afterlife in his writings, that this unknown author saw Modalism, or Oneness, beliefs as Jewish.

While I thank IVP for sending these books for review, I think them more for their great service in all of the Ancient Christian series which I believe is serving the Church in a return to the sources.

November 12th, 2009

4th Century Christianity: Marcellus’ Fight

Continuing our look at the 4th Century and doctrinal development.

Read the rest of this entry »

October 30th, 2009

On the Question of My Doctrine

Friends, recently I’ve had a few emails stating that

And by the way, some bloggers think you are way off on your doctrine of God besides me.

Read the rest of this entry »

October 2nd, 2009

David Bernard Elected UPCI General Superintendent

Reports coming from the United Pentecostal Church International, the largest Oneness Pentecostal organziation, indicate that author David Bernard has been elected the General Superintendent, succeeding Kenneth Haney who has fellowshiped with Trinitarian Pentecostals and Charismatics. Bernard was not challenging Haney.

I have to wonder if the UPCI will now move to a more militarant modalist position under Bernard’s leadership.

March 17th, 2009

Creeds: Second Century

We are continuing our week of examining early Church creeds with two creedal statements from the 2nd Century. The below creed is from Justin Martyr (Ante-Nicene Fathers, ed. by Alexander Roberts and James Donaldon, New York: The Christian Literature Company). We know that Justin generally referred to Christ as ‘another God’ (Trypho, 56).

We worship the God of the Christians, whom we consider One from the beginning, the creator and maker of all creation, visible and invisible.

And the Lord Jesus Christ, the Servant of God, who had also been proclaimed beforehand by the prophets as about to be present with race of men, the herald of salvation and teacher of good instructions.

Justin forcefully distinguishes the Servant of God from the God of the Christians.

During Hippolytus’ schism with the Church at Rome, during the trouble Modalism, he enlisted the aid of past Elders who seemingly issued a creedal statement against Noetus

We also know in truth one God, we know Christ, we know the Son, suffering as he suffered, dying as he died, and risen on the third day, and abiding at the right hand of the Father, and coming to judge the living and the dead. And in saying this we say what has been handed down to us.

According to Hippolytus, Noetus had stated,

“When indeed, then, the Father had not been born, He yet was justly styled Father; and when it pleased Him to undergo generation, having been begotten, He Himself became His own Son, not another’s.” (Book IX Refutation of All Heresies)

It should be remembered that while Justin had proclaimed Heraclitus as a ‘Christian’ although he lived some 600 years before Christ, Hippolytus accused the same deceased as being the progenitor of the heresy of Noetus. The heresy of Noetus is that the Father produced the Son and declared the Son the Father, creating a paradox and troublesome thought of patripassianism.

Unlike Justin in Europe, the Asians carried from God to Christ to the Son without removing Christ from God, but assigning the suffering to the Son.

February 23rd, 2009

God the Father and Jesus Christ: Ignatius of Antioch and the Economy of God, Part 3

Completing our series on Igantius’ letters (Part 1; Part 2), we find a smaller content in his three remaining letters:

Philadelphians

In the Bishop’s greeting to the brothers and sisters at Philadelphia, we find Ignatius using a Pauline greeting similar to the one used in Galatians 1.3: ‘God the Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ’ (θεο πατρς κα κυρου ησο Χριστο) Much like the rest of Paul’s introductions, there is no ‘the’, reading in some translations, God our Father and Lord, Jesus Christ. Farther, in the greeting Ignatius writes that the holy Spirit is Jesus Christ’s. In contrast to this, the Bishop in chapter 7 writes, ‘yet the Spirit, as being from God.’ (See Romans 8.9) For Ignatius, the Spirit that comes from the Christ, is the same Spirit that comes from God.

In chapter 3, as we have seen so many times in Ignatius’ writings, he compares the relationship between the congregation and the Bishop (overseer) to that of the unity between God and Jesus Christ. In chapter 7, he urges that the congregation ‘be the followers of Jesus Christ, even as He is of His Father. This calls to mind the prayer of Christ in which He sought for unity among the brethren that mimicked the united between the Father and the Son. If we understand the unity in the light of the Incarnation of God, we see that Ignatius understands a physical separation exists between the congregation and the Bishop, but there must be one will that united the two. It is difficult to believe, especially with Ignatius’ use of the phrase ‘our God, Jesus Christ’ that the sees a post-Incarnation distinction between the two. If he does, they he further sees that Christ is a ‘follower’ of God, and can never be a part of God.

Smyrnaeans

In the letter to the congregation of Polycarp, Ignatius boldly states in chapter 1 that he glorifies ‘Jesus Christ, the God who has given you such wisdom.’ (James 1.5). This statement that Jesus Christ is God, with the exclusion of the Father and the Spirit, as would later be deemed heretical is followed by Ignatius’ expansion of Romans 1.3, which seems to take the form of an early creed. He returns to this confession of Faith in chapter 7 when he is speaking about the heretics that abstain from the Eucharist. It all of Ignatius’ writings, never once does it consider the Son a God beside the Father, never referring to Christ as God the Son, but always, simply, God. If there is a distinction to be made between the Father and the Son, as is in chapter 1 and chapter 7, it always revolves around the Incarnation.

To Polycarp

The letter to Polycarp is filled with touches of friendship, last words, and thoughts for the congregation that Ignatius is leaving behind. In his last words to his friend on this side of heaven, the Bishop of Antioch writes to the Bishop of Smyrna, that he will pray for your (Polycarp) happiness forever in Jesus Christ our God.’ There is no mention of God the Father or God the Son, or even the Spirit, but simply, as Ignatius as shown throughout his letters, to the one God, Jesus Christ.

February 10th, 2009

The Godhead: Dyohypostatic Theology vs. Miahypostatic Theology

who being the brightness of His glory and the express image of His person, and upholding all things by the word of His power, when He had by Himself purged our sins, sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high, (Hebrews 1:3 NKJV)

I am currently reading Contra Marcellum, and the author is discussing three distinct theological words important to the Church in the fourth century – hypostasis, ousia, and hyparxis. Only two words really survived the theological battles of the fourth century – hypostasis and ousia. I will not go into the theology behind each word or the eventual settlement, but I will say that in the New Testament, there is one use of hypostatis in reference to God, while there is none of ousia.

In Hebrews 1.3, the writer (traditionally assume to be Paul) writes that Christ is the image of God’s hypostasis. The Apologists, up until Tertullian, generally wrote about the ‘one Hypostasis‘ of God. Irenaeus cites a predecessor,

“Through the extension of the hands of a divine person, gathering together the two peoples to one God.” For these were two hands, because there were two peoples scattered to the ends of the earth; but there was one head in the middle, as there is but one God, who is above all, and through all, and in us all.

The writer of Contra Marcellum gives the following points concerning Dyohypostatic Theology (Multi-Person Theology):

  • Eusebius of Caesarea came closest to advocating the fullness of the theology
  • One God, who is the beginning, or first principle – the cause of everything else that exists
  • God is eternal and unbegotten, unknowable, and best described by negatives, such as without source
  • This God is the Father, the only He
  • Along with this hypostasis (Person) there exists another hypostasis, the Son (Word, Image, Wisdom, Power)
  • The Father is the source of the Son’s being, but not be division or effluence

This last point seems to stand in opposition to Hebrews 1.3 which declares that the Son is the emanation (απαυγασμα) from the Father.

  • The Son’s relationship of dependence excludes predicating “eternity” of him
  • The son is subordinate to the Father and acts as Mediator
  • This Tradition attributes the Old Testament Theophanies to the Son.
  • The Incarnation was nothing new, but a continuation of the work as revealer, teacher, and model
  • Salvation becomes an order of will due to an impartation of knowledge
  • There is no assumption of the human race by the Godhead
  • The Incarnation, the cross, and the resurrection no metaphysical change

We see in this, in that the Son of God is made a creature, eternally subordinated. It is an Arianist position, but pre-Nicaean. There is an insistence, against the history of the Church, and at times the Scriptures themselves, that there are three hypostasis. Before 325, Eusebius of Caesaea and Narcissus of Neronias spoke of two ousiai (essences) in the Godhead. Suddenly, after 325 the usage disappears. His new phrase for the plural in the Godhead is ‘two hypostaseis.’ It was not until the end of the century that the holy Spirit gained a hypostasis.

Athanasius, Marcellus and the Westerners, the author points out, vigorously demanded that the reality of God be a singular hypostasis. They just as vigorously defended themselves against the charges of Sabellianism. The first Creed of Nicaea cursed those that had declared more than one hypostasis. The creed derived at the Council of Sardica (343) stated:

“We have received and been taught, and we hold this catholic and apostolic tradition and faith and confession: there is one hypostasis (which the heretics themselves call ousia) of the Father, Son, and the holy Spirit.”

It was not until 362 that the bishop of Alexandria, Athanasius, admitted a view of multiple ‘hypostaseis‘ might be used of God. By then, Athanasius had almost divided himself from his former friend, Marcellus and the traditional Miahypostatic Theology. Marcellus, and his followers, rejected this immediately suspecting Arianism, or at the very least a compromise with the ancient heresy.

This brings us to the Miahypostatic Theology of the Western Church during this time. The author makes the following points:

  • It starts from the strict monotheism of Christianity. There is one God, who is one substance: one hypostasis, one ousia, or for some, one prosopon
  • God speaks the Word, His Son, and sends forth His spirit
  • ‘One’ is safe; ‘two’ is dangerous – plurality is located in the Incarnation.
  • The Son is God as the Father is God
  • The Incarnation is decisive, marking a new stage in the existence of the Logos in which God is united with a human nature
  • It is the Incarnation that is subordinate; all scripture denoting a subordination is assigned to the Flesh of the Incarnation
  • Salvation is a divine act, by which humanity can become partakers of the divine nature. (Athanasius’ axiom of ‘God became man so that man might become divine’ is representative of his early loyalty to this theology)
  • Distinction occurs between the Uncreated and the created – the uncreated is eternal while the created is temporal
  • Both the Word and the creatures proceed from God, but in different ways. The Son is begotten; creatures are from God’s will.

It not until long after the First Council of Nicaea that this issue was settled when the Godhead was said to consist of three hypostasis in one ousia. It was under the influence of the Cappadocian Fathers that the terminology was clarified and standardized, so that the formula  came to be everywhere accepted as an epitome of the orthodox doctrine of the Godhead, finalized in 381 at the Second Ecumenical Council.

January 30th, 2009

God the Father and Jesus Christ: Ignatius of Antioch and the Economy of God, Part 2

This is part two of a series began here.

Romans

The Bishop’s letter to the Roman church is one of exasperation – they must have implored him to save himself, or perhaps allow a rescue attempt (divine or otherwise). He implores them to let him die, willingly for God. We must read this letter in light of Ignatius’s service for God, in his attempt to suffer the same passion as Christ (Chapter 6). We have seen Ignatius already attempt a separation based on the Incarnation – never once does he refer to the Incarnation as God – although Jesus Christ is God, the only God – nor does he refer to Jesus Christ as the Father. It is in this letter that the Johannine Theology[1] that surrounded Antioch, and indeed Asia Minor, is the best pronounced.

Ignatius greets the Roman Christians by stating that he has obtained mercy through the ‘majesty of the Moth High Father, and Jesus Christ, His only begotten Son.’ This is a common Johannine greeting as the Apostle used it in 1st John 1.3 and 2nd John 3 (“and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ and from God the Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of the Father,” respectively). This does not imply an eternal distinction but one of doctrine, as in the same section, the Bishop goes as far as Paul, but in a indisputable fashion, when he writes, ‘in Jesus Christ, our God,’ a familiar refrain.

In chapter 2, the friend of Polycarp writes that the congregation should be joyous at his impending martyrdom and that they should ‘sing praise to the Father, through Christ Jesus’. We find parallels to this in John 14.6 (no mans comes to the Father except by Me) and Colossians 3.17 (And whatever you do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through Him.) Further, we understand that the Incarnation is the mediation of the New Covenant, in that through the sacrifice of Christ on the Cross, we can now come to God (Galatians 3.20-26; 1st Timothy 2.5; Hebrews 8.6, 9.15). Ignatius points the way to God, even in sorrow, is through (the man) Christ Jesus.

The Bishop of Antioch tells the Romans to pray that he may attain martyrdom in chapter 3. There is a reason – ‘Nothing visible is eternal’ he writes. It is his goal to prove himself a Christian, not in name only, but in deed, and once found faithful, that he should ‘no longer appear to the world’. This underscores, indoctrinates rather, his statement, ‘For our God, Jesus Christ, now that He is with the Father, is all the more revealed.’ This line is not about separation or distinction, but about the glory revealed through the Eternal. Immediately, we must refer to the prayer from Christ to the Father as found in John 17.

The reason for the prayers from the Son becomes clear when we understand that the Incarnation is not a mere indwelling of God in a human shell, but God coming to be a genuine man. The Incarnation does not imply a transmutation of God into a man, but allows that God remained who He was both in and after the manifestation. If God had changed into a man He would cease being God, or at least cease being the same God He was prior to the Incarnation. As God came to exist in flesh, complete in the limitations of humanity, Christ had the capacity of and the need for relationships. Because of the reality His humanity He even had need of a relationship with God. As man (servant) Christ experienced the same limitations all humans experience along with a dependence upon God. These prayers are not an example as some Modalists try to say as a cover, but a real act; real, because Christ, as a man, needed to pray because of his dependence on God. His prayers are rooted in His humanity, not in His divinity.

This prayer is important as well, in that we find Christ prays for the unity that the Logos had with the Father before the Incarnation. The phrase ‘with the glory which I had with you before the world was’ is recalled here in the words of Ignatius. God told Israel by Isaiah (42.8) that He would not give His glory to another. The glory of God is God’s alone. Again, we turn to Hebrews 1.3 whose author calls Christ the emanation of His glory. We should rightly understand that if a distinction in God existed, then glory would have to be shared and given to another; yet, if the Son is understood as an emanation, then it is easy to see that the Son emanated from the Father’s glory, without distinction, and only in the flesh does the Son existed without the Glory of God.

Ignatius is reminding the Romans that the glory of Christ – in that His Faithfulness and Righteousness – was revealed not on earth, but when He ascended. Ignatius is demanding no glory on earth, but waiting to be revealed in heaven. Again, this calls us to John’s writings,

Beloved, now we are children of God; and it has not yet been revealed what we shall be, but we know that when He is revealed, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is. And everyone who has this hope in Him purifies himself, just as He is pure. (1 John 3:2-3 NKJV)

It is not a stretch of the mind to place both ourselves and Christ into the place of ‘children,’ and understand what Ignatius is rightly saying.

In chapter 6, Ignatius writes, “Permit me to be the imitator of the passion of my God.” This is easily connected to the passion of Christ. It is the next phrase that draws our attention. He writes, ‘If anyone has Him within himself,’ indicating not the Father or the Spirit as the agent of the Indwelling, but Christ. Ignatius, although he readily points to a separation during the Incarnation, never has a cause of distinction after the ascension.

We see this point solidified as he writes, “I desire the bread of God, the heavenly bread, the bread of life, which is the flesh of Jesus Christ, the Son of God’. (See John 6.35) The flesh is the crucifixion – His body broken for the world. This again turns the congregation back to the impending death of Ignatius and the connection with the passion of Christ. It was only in the flesh that Christ suffered. These are more than code words from the Bishop, but words of comfort and consolation to the suffering congregation who no doubt would be the ones to witness the last minutes of Antioch’s overseer.

Conclusion to Romans

Ignatius’ use of words and phrases are Johannine, and rightly so. It is in this gospel that we have the intense application of the deity of Christ and the humanity Christ so heavily, and theologically, enforced. Ignatius, unlike the Apologists of later generations, is not writing to correct or promote doctrine, but he is writing in the common dialect to urge people to keep the faith, and in this case, to not plead for him, but to let him find the glory of being a Christian. He nowhere, like the Apostles before him, calls Jesus Christ the Father, implying the Father’s distinction only during the Incarnation. He uses biblical phrases – as any good preacher does – to extort his audience to the right way; however, there is not dogmatic in his approach. For him, Jesus Christ alone is God.


[1] I do not mean to separate the theology of the Church into apostolic divisions, but to say that Ignatius used John’s mode of thinking and writing when expressing the deity of Christ as unique.

January 20th, 2009

God the Father and Jesus Christ: Ignatius of Antioch and the Economy of God, Part 1

I. Introduction

I believe in the fully deity of Christ, recognizing the temporal distinction created between the Father and Son during the Incarnation. I reject anti-biblical words in branding my theology, preferring rather ‘economist‘. I attempt to govern my doctrine by two simple principles – is it Scriptural and is it verified by the generation(s) after the Apostles. The historical ‘modalist’ and modern ‘oneness’ view fails this test, as neither makes room for the temporal distinction between Father and Son during the brief moment of the Incarnation. I will attempt to define a more sure doctrine of the Economy by using the works of Ignatius, contemporary of Polycarp, and one who had touched the Apostles.

Now after six days Jesus took Peter, James, and John his brother, led them up on a high mountain by themselves; and He was transfigured before them. His face shone like the sun, and His clothes became as white as the light. And behold, Moses and Elijah appeared to them, talking with Him. Then Peter answered and said to Jesus, “Lord, it is good for us to be here; if You wish, let us make here three tabernacles: one for You, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.” While he was still speaking, behold, a bright cloud overshadowed them; and suddenly a voice came out of the cloud, saying, “This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. Hear Him!” And when the disciples heard it, they fell on their faces and were greatly afraid. But Jesus came and touched them and said, “Arise, and do not be afraid.” When they had lifted up their eyes, they saw no one but Jesus only. (Matthew 17:1-8 NKJV)

The proper exegesis of this passage must first begin in Hebrews 1.1-2,

God, who at various times and in various ways spoke in time past to the fathers by the prophets, has in these last days spoken to us by His Son, whom He has appointed heir of all things, through whom also He made the worlds; (Hebrews 1:1-2 NKJV)

It was not that the Father disappeared, but that instead of the Law and the Prophets, it was now the position of the Incarnation (the Word) which was the Father’s voice.

Many Oneness Pentecostals consider themselves ‘Jesus-Only,’ with the phrase in use taken (erroneously) from this passage in Matthew. The issue with that, is that they create a fatherhood for Jesus where none is intended. We must first acknowledge that the modern application of ‘father’ to God (or Jesus in this case) is one removed from the Apostles and the earliest Christian writers. Dr. Kelly, in Early Christian Doctrines, exposes us to some of the early writers who readily defined God as one, as Creator and as Father only in the aspect of His creator ship. He states (pg83) that “‘Father’ (in this period) referred primarily to His role as creator and author of all things. This comes at the end of a series of statements where Hermas writes (88-97) that the first commandment is to ‘believe that God is one, Who created and established all things, bringing them into existence out of non-existence’. Moving to Clement of Rome (88-99), we read that Clement saw God as ‘the Father and creator of the entire cosmos’ while for Barnabas (c100), He is ‘our maker’. Kelly acknowledges that this ideas derived directly from the Bible and from latter-day Judaism, and rarely from the philosophy of the day.

Kelly then goes on to mention Theophilus and Athenagoras in describing creation ex nihilo. It is interesting to here Theophilus’ description of God, which Kelly relates,

‘Without beginning because uncreated, immutable because immortal, Lord because He is Lord over all things, Father because He is prior to all things, most high because He is above all things, almighty because he holds all things; for the heights of the heavens, the depths of the abysses and the ends of the world are in His hands’.

It is noteworthy because of what is lacking: any notion of a ‘Son’ and thus a traditional understanding of the Father-Son relationship in the Trinity. We also see that the notion of ‘Father’ and ‘Almighty’ is in line with Clement of Alexandria and Barnabas. Even here, in the philosophers, we fail to find any mention of the Father as described in the Trinity.

The biblical understanding of Father was not as used in the Father-Son relationship, but used to describe, much like Judaism, the Creator or sole principle. Trinitarians and Oneness believers alike, however, understand ‘Father’ in parental contexts.

Ignatius of Antioch (c.30-50 to c.98-117) was the third Bishop of Antioch (with Peter being the first, Evodius the second) as well as a student to at least two Apostles – Peter and John. On his way to his martyrdom for the name of Christ, he wrote a series of letters which has survived more or less intact, although there is at the moment two recensions – short and long. (For this study, I will use only the short, preferring what is undoubtedly the closest to the original).  It is important to read Ignatius as he is the closest, besides Polycarp, to the Apostles – having set in tutelage from those that had walked with Christ. Further, it is important that any doctrine that one so holds be found at some other point in history – and the closer that history is the the Apostles, the more firm the doctrine.

Ephesians

Nowhere in the Gospels do we see the application of the term ‘Father’ to Christ – the same is said with the Apostolic Fathers. In Ignatius’ letter to the church at Ephesus, we see several instances in which term ‘God’ is applied to Christ, but when it comes to ‘Father’ it is applied directly to God – which Jesus remaining separate. In the introduction, we read ‘being united through the true passion by the will of the Father, and Jesus Christ, our God.’ God is not distinctly applied to the Father, but to Christ. In chapter 7, Ignatius says refers to God/Christ as the ‘one Physician who is possessed of both flesh and spirit; both made and not made; God existing in the flesh…even Jesus Christ out Lord.’ In chapter 18, he refers to Christ again as God, ‘For our God, Jesus Christ, was, according to the economy of God, conceived in the womb by Mary, of the seed of David, but also by the holy Spirit.’

Ignatius connects the name of God to the name of Christ several times in his letter to the Ephesians. In chapter one, we read of the ‘name of God’, while in chapter 3 we note that he considers himself bound (perhaps his current state of imprisonment) because of the name of Christ. In chapter 7, the Bishop is critical of those who carry the name of Christ in ‘wicked guile,’ practicing things unworthy of God. This is not mere folly or invention on Ignatius’ part, as it is based on the fact that he considered Christ as God in the flesh. Further, we read in John 17.6 that Christ manifested the name of the God on earth.

Ignatius’ Incarnational motif is a central theme underpinning his letter of hope and steadfastness to his fellow Christians. We start in chapter 4 were we find the bishop urging the congregation to sin with one voice ‘to the Father through Jesus Christ.’ This is parallel to John’s Gospel which quotes Christ as saying Jesus said to him, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.” In the previous chapter, Ignatius writes, ‘For even Jesus Christ, our inseparable life, is the manifested will of the Father’, harkening back to the entire passage in John 14 concerning the relationship of the Father and Son. In chapter 19, we see the bishop of Antioch applied the birth of Christ to the manifestation of God on earth (the Incarnation), as he wrote, ‘How, then, was He (God – speaking about the mysteries of renown) manifested to the world?’ and ‘God Himself being manifested in human form for the renewal of eternal life.’ For the mediator of the abolition of death is applied to God as well.

In chapter 5 we see a much deeper Incarnational and Ecclesiology ideal applied to Christ and His Church. The Bishop writes, ‘joined to him (bishop) as the Church is to Jesus Christ, and as Jesus Christ is to the Father.’ The Church is the Body of Christ carrying His name (chapter 7) just as Christ is the Incarnation of God, carrying His name (see above). (1st Corinthians 12.27; Ephesians 4.12 and Romans 16.26; Colossians 1.26; 1st Timothy 3.16; Hebrews 10.5) We see at once that Ignatius had no disputation with Paul who wrote, ‘He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation, (Colossians 1.15).’

Magnesians

The letter to the Magnesians centers on unity, ‘fleshly and spiritual’, and in doing so, Ignatius calls attention to the distinction of the Father and Son and yet the supreme unity as enjoyed by the Father and Image, Harmony, and Inseparable Spirit, Jesus Christ. It would be wrong to take these writings of Ignatius as a step by step outline of doctrine; instead, we should look at it as his thoughts broken and defined in the same letter. He no doubt wrote these letters in a relatively short time, perhaps hours, days, or weeks – as personal encouragement, like the Pastorals, and not as theological treatises, such as Romans or Galatians. It was his attempt, the last attempt, that he could do express the call for a unity among the congregations, uniting each the lay and clergy into one solid body.

The idea of a unity between the Father and Jesus Christ starts in chapter 6 but is defined in chapters 7 and 8 with the distinction highlighted in chapter 13. In chapter 6 Ignatius writes that the ministers are ‘entrusted with the ministry of Jesus Christ, who was with the Father before the beginning of time, and in the end was revealed’. He defines this in chapter 7 with the thoughts ‘As therefore the Lord did nothing with the Father, being united to Him,’ and ‘Therefore run together as into one temple of God, as to one altar, as to one Jesus Christ, who came forth from one Father, and is with and has one to One.’ Finally, in chapter 8, we read ‘being inspired by His grace to fully convince the unbelieving that there is one God, who has manifested Himself in Jesus Christ His Son, who is His eternal Word, not proceeding forth in silence, and how in all things pleased Him that sent Him.’ Thus, what was begun in chapter 6 with Christ (qualified in chapter 8 as the Word eternal) with the Father we understand now as a manifestation of the one God.

In a chapter devoted to prosperity in unity, Ignatius writes ‘be subject…as Jesus Christ to the Father, according to the flesh, and the apostles to Christ, and to the Father, and to the spirit; that so there may be a union both fleshly and spiritual.’ In this thought we find that subordination existed between Father and Son during the Incarnation – and by that we know that a distinction must have existed.

Ignatius ends his letter with ‘Fare well in the harmony of God, you who have obtained the inseparable Spirit, who is Jesus Christ.’ Thus, we see no distinction in the unity of the one God.

Trallians

Ignatius’ letter to the congregation in the city of Tralles is one of little theological value, as he himself said that he considered the congregation as ‘babes in Christ.’ He does, however, have three phrases that are worth mentioning. In chapter 1, he notes of only one ‘will of God and Jesus Christ’ while in chapter 3, he again sets up the Church government with an eye to Christ, with the phrase ‘let all reverence…the bishop as Jesus Christ, who is the Son of the Father.’ This must be misunderstood to reflect later Roman doctrine to mean that the bishop (Pope) acts in the stead of Christ, but that the minister answers to Christ in the manner that Christ answered to the Father in John 17. Finally, in chapter 7, he again stresses unity with the overseer of the congregation as he writes, ‘and continue in intimate union with Jesus Christ our God.’ Ignatius was a product of the persecution that was descending upon the Church, and he knew that only with a strong unity around the ministry (doctrine) could the Church survive.

November 19th, 2008

The Mystery of Monotheism – Tom Roberts

This is an interesting magazine from an ‘Eastern’ point of view. I am posting this for discussion, perhaps, as we have a wide range of views concerning the Godhead which visit this blog. The first few centuries of doctrinal discussion centered around the Godhead – fighting attempts against Arians and Gnostics, as well as Trinitarians and Modalists. The great theologians made their mark not by evangelism, which was being done, but by lining the doctrines of the Church up. Recently, ancient heresy’s have returned – with Mormons bringing the Gnosticism back to life, and the Jehovah’s Witnesses resurrecting Arius in all his ill-glory -  so again, the doctrine of the Godhead is being examined. Some Trinitarians examine it and find that for those that are steeped in sola scriptura, using extra-biblical words and Councils might not be exactly sola scriptura. Modalists examine them to figure out why everyone else is wrong. I examine the Godhead to establish myself. I found this article recently and thought that I would share:

via The Mystery of Monotheism – Tom Roberts – Theandros – An Online journal of Orthodox Christian Theology and Philosophy

Dr. Tom Roberts is the Ministry Coordinator of the General Council of Churches of God 7th Day. Below is an except from a doctrinal FAQ on Christ,

The return of power

There are those who say Christ is God (El Elyon) in the flesh, they say when the plan of salvation is complete, he (Christ) will return to being God (El Elyon) again. The scripture tells another story; “And when all things shall be subdued unto him, then shall the Son also himself be subject unto him that put all things under him, that God may be all in all.” 1Co 15:28. Let’s break it down, when all things shall be subdued unto him (Christ), then shall the son (Christ) also himself be subject unto Him (YHWH) that put all things under him (Christ), that God (YHWH) may be all in all. There is no trinity, the bible says, “Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD:” Deu 6:4. 1 Corinthian 15:24 may enlighten us in this matter. “Then cometh the end, when he shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father; when he shall have put down all rule and all authority and power.” This couldn’t have been made any clearer. At the end of the thousand year reign of Christ, after all the wicked have been destroyed, Christ is going to put down all power and authority, and he himself shall become subjected to YHWH. There will be no longer a son acting in the seat of his father, only YHWH (El Elyon) the pre-eminence of all life.

Of course, it could be this Church of God, Seventh Day but for sure here.

At any rate, here are the excerpts.

For centuries, the people of God had fought an uphill battle attempting to defend the one God concept. Monotheism is defined as the belief in one deity. Amenhotep of Egypt believed the Great Monad was the sun god Ra. The mountain god El, in Hebrew traditions, was known as Elohim. Until our time, much of the Middle Eastern understanding was unavailable to us to evaluate some of the statements contained in Scripture about these other gods besides Yahweh that supposedly existed in other nations, Ashtoreth (1 Kings 11:33); Dagon (Judges 16:23-24; 1 Samuel 5:7); Chemosh (Judges 11:24; 1 Kings 11:33); Milchom (1 Kings 11:33); and Nisroch (2 Kings 19:37). Isaiah shows that there is no consort beside this God contrary to pagan documents from Elephantine, which asserted the existence of a “Mrs. Yahweh,” violating the First Commandment (Deuteronomy 5:7; Exodus 20:3). The Hebraic equivalent of the Elephantine concept is Sophia, or Lady Wisdom, who was to convey God’s wisdom to the prophets via the Holy Spirit, Racah Kadesh, who was also feminine in Hebraic terms.

The BAR had an article a few months ago about the royal consort of Yahweh, which was interesting to read. One thing we must remember is that all though Judaism is a monotheistic religion, people fell away from time to time, and introduced other gods which are not gods to Israel.

Many scholars are now united with the view that the plurality contained in the title Elohim is YHWH addressing His mighty counsel (See Genesis 3:22). The superlative use included the royal “we” has been mistakenly used by theologians to refer to the rest of God’s nature contained in a compound unity. This is based on Deuteronomy 6:4, which was the national credo of Israel—“Hear O Israel, Our Lord is one.” The terms echad and yahed are two ways of saying “one” in Hebrew. It is said that these two terms for a single designation include more than one part of a unit. However, close grammatical scrutiny will show that where evening and morning become the first day, yom, (Genesis 1:5) is part of a single designation. Rabbis have pointed out that the term yahed may refer to a thistle of grapes. The imagery still shows many grapes but one thistle as singular, and both terms come from a Hebraic root system that shows one unit as a common root in both terms. In Genesis 2:24, the concept of man and wife who share part of the total image of God are glued back together through marriage as one flesh to form a single entity, thus restoring the total image of God.

Let me just add the when Christ quoted the Shema in Mark, He used the Greek word for numerical one. It is also helpful to read the writings of the generation immediately following the Apostles – Ignatius and Polycarp – the generation before the philosophers, to determine the understand of Christology that they learned directly from the Apostles, by oral tradition.

As late as 1870, critical commentators such as Keil & Delitzsch (Vol 1, article, Genesis) and other Semitic scholars freely admitted that the term Elohim cannot be used to advance a Trinitarian formula. (See also Torah, A Modern Commentary by W. Gunther Plaut, article on Genesis, note on Elohim.) During this address, the Hebrew grammar changes from singular when Yahweh speaks to plural or superlative when the counsel answers Yahweh. Notice the phrase, “man has become as one of us.” With Yahweh’s divine command, all subjects are summoned. These mighty ones appear before the Mighty One who has complete authority over their activities. This explains how Elohim can refer to the Great God Himself or refer to His subjects who range from judges found in Psalm 82:6 who will die like men or the Bene Elohim, “sons of God,” found in Genesis 6:2 who were the descendents of Seth called the “mighty men of renown.” (See the Jamison Fawcett and Brown One Volume Old Testament Commentary, 1930 edition, article on Genesis 6.)

The Hebraic concept of messiahship is the annointed one who is lifted up. The Messiah even said, “If I be lifted up, I will draw all men unto Myself” (Luke 3). The concept of one God who works through a Divine Messiah is found in both Testaments. Even the Apostle James declares, “If you believe in One God, you do well” (James 2:19; See 1 Timothy 2:5). “Though there are so-called gods, in the heavens or one earth – and there are plenty of gods and plenty of lords – yet for us there is only on God.” (1 Corinthians 8:5-6). In John 17:13, Jesus referred to the Father as the only true God and that He came in concert to represent all that the Father as a personification to His people (See Luke 1:30-36). No wonder Thomas exclaimed, “My Lord and my God”, or kurios mou theos mou in Greek. (See Psalm 45:7; Hebrews 1:7-8). Dr. Scott Hahn explains the motif in John’s Gospel to be the Father teaching His Son His trade with phrases like “I work and my Father works” amplifying this fact, for the time was coming when no man could work. The Father in Psalm 118 is progressively revealing the High Priest in John 14-16 to the people. So God and Christ are in complete union.

Dr. James E. Talmage explains: “The revised version gives for John 10:30: ‘I and the Father are one’ instead of ‘I and my Father are one.’ By “the Father.” the Jews rightly understood the Eternal Father, God. In the original Greek “one” appears in the neuter gender, and therefore expresses oneness in attributes, power, or purpose, and not a oneness of personality which would have required the masculine form” (Jesus the Christ, p. 465). In the high priestly prayer of Jesus, John uses the word “comforter,” that one; parakletos (J. Green, A Greek-English Lexicon to the New Testament), which is expressed in English in a masculine form even though the Greek text uses masculine verbal trains as a grammatical tool to establish neuter activity from a masculine being who is, in this case, God. The same dynamic occurs when the word “spirit” (pneuma), which is neuter and used with masculine pronouns to illustrate the Spirit of the Father (Romans 8:16). The masculine use of these terms is not a reference to the Spirit’s personality (See Greek Grammar Beyond the Basics, Daniel B. Wallace, p. 332, note on relative pronouns). Jesus was sired by the Holy Spirit through the Virgin Mary. Thus, the nature of Christ was that of the New Adam for He would rewrite history and not fall as the first Adam did, but He was completely sinless in all He did and all He was (Romans 5:12-21). “It was by one’s man offense that death came to reign over all, but how much greater the reign in life of those who received the fullness of grace and the gift of saving justice, through the one man, Jesus Christ” (Romans 5:17). He represented the perfect will of the Father.

How can the Logos be any different from the Speaker?

This Divine-Man concept was constantly debated among the rabbis who wondered if the Messiah would be Daniel’s Man of Daniel 7:6-7 or whether the Greek concepts of the savior gods, theioiandres (divine men), would describe deity’s activity in His Messiah (Esther 4:17 Septuagint). According to many New Testament scholars, the concept of divine men as saviors did influence the writers of the Gospels about this Messianic figure of Daniel. The vertical apocalyptic parallelism of Daniel 6:6-7 is believed by many commentators to show that there are at least two persons of deity mentioned. However, with close examination, these timeless poetic prophecies do not tell us when the appearing of the Great Messiah will become evident. The Hebraic concept of deity was God, Savior and Lord. This theme is amplified in Hebrews 1:8 and Titus 2:13. Notice at the appearing of Jesus, it is accompanied with the Father’s glory, doxa. Some commentators use 1 Timothy 3:16 to prove an incarnation but that term in not in the majority of manuscripts. This passage is a hymn or liturgical profession of faith (New Jerusalem Bible, p. 1961, note 3e), which shows that Christ “appeared in a body, was vindicated by the Spirit, was seen by angels, was preached among the nations, was believed in the world, was taken up in glory (NIV). So this verse is a summary of the Gospel message.

1st Timothy 3.16 is plainly Incarnational, with or without the textual variant…it’s a matter of grammar. The He in 1st Timothy 3.16 (Critical Text) can refer to God from the previous few verses.

Logos Theology and the Understanding of Christian Expositors

From the post-exilic period (586 BCE) to the writing of the New Testament, many theological shifts took place during the dispersion of Judah into Babylon as well as the exiles who found their way to Egypt during Jeremiah’s ministry. And with the cultures overlapping one another, terms like wisdom and logos had international repercussions. The ancients had numerous definitions of this term. The Christian church debates three of them.

I am not sure as to the theological shifts, as any shifts from the Law would create a different religion. Christianity was not a theological shift. Logos and Sophia, the two hands of God, came by the Greek as the Hebrew died. Of course, they carry with the philosophical baggage of a few centuries of Greek use.

The first is that John 1:1, a Stoic hymn where Jesus replaces the god Zeus, in the Johannine prologue (See Interpreter’s One Volume Bible Commentary on the Gospel of John, p. 710).

Also, check out the Anchor Bible Dictionary which draws some comparisons between Sirach, Wisdom, and Proverbs and John’s prologue (Logos replaces Sophia).

Second, due to the Greek concept of the pre-existence of all things, the logos would have pre-existed eternally in the bosom of God’s internal image. Then, after His birth, He would have been the express image of God (The One Volume Bible Commentary, J. R. Dummelow, p. civ).

Yeah, I can buy that.

And finally, the teaching of Athanasius would advocate the personal pre-existent Logos as fully God in whom heaven and earth could not be contained. This tradition would prevail in the West and overcome the position of Origen, whom the Eastern Fathers would base their logos concept. The Son and the Spirit are not independent centers of divine being but unfoldings of the eternal spirit in an emerging purpose. Tertullian would expand this Stoic philosophy by calling the Great Triad a trinitos. The Capadocian Fathers of the East would follow this tradition with their interpretations of John’s Gospel (pp. 258-300, Essays on the Trinity and the Incarnation, A.E.J. Rawlinson, ed.).

He skips a great deal from Zeus to Athanasius, especially Justin and his fleshing out of the Logos not to mention Irenaeus and Athenagoras with their seemingly emantaionist, or economic, approach to the Godhead. I am not totally convinced that Logos had any real (or deep) theological meaning for the Apostle John, but if it did, it would have been the same use as found in Wisdom 18.

But how do we as modern-day Christians evaluate this data when so many of these concepts have been so theologized? It is difficult to decipher the original meaning. Nineteenth-century expositor Adam Clarke and modern expositors F. F. Bruce and Raymond Brown maintain that the pre-existent Son logos was of a later Christological development (Jesus, God and Man, pp. 15-18, see also, The Birth of the Messiah, p. 432) and Professor James D. G. Dunn, (Christology in the Making, p. 150, 163-176). Dr. R. E. Rubenstein in his famous work, When Jesus Became God, asserts that the logos became fully God after the theological wars took place between the Arians with their Low Christology and the Trinitarians, with their High Christology and, caught in the middle, where the Binitarians, who were considered Semi-Arians. The Binitarians tried to compromise between both extremes and argued for two persons in the one God concept and the Holy Spirit remained a neuter force, though it was seen as a feminine force in Eastern Church traditions (See The Holy Spirit in Eastern Christian Traditions by Dr. Stanley Burgess, Odes of Solomon, pp. 172-182).

Read this article.

The Gospel of John tends to follow the tradition that Jesus’ origin was from heaven above to show His Sonship (John 3:13). Therefore, as critical commentators have pointed out, the pre-existence of the Son of God may have been in the Father’s bosom or mind as J. R. Dummelow contends. But one might ask, “Weren’t all things created by Jesus?” The instrumental case used here has been problematic for scholars for some time. Bart Ehrman has show evidence to suggest a Christological tampering with the text in the early Latin period may have taken place and as an alternate reading, this may be rendered, “all things were created because of Jesus” due to the fact that some of our translations use the term “by and for” Him creating an awkward tense structure that is very difficult to reconcile. It is due to this problem that some scholars feel that the term “by Christ” was a later redaction (The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture by Bart Ehrman, note on Colossians 1:16). Some might exclaim, “Didn’t Jesus say that He was returning to the Father and does that prove that He was there in eternity past?” The Greek grammar in John’s Gospel doesn’t literally translate “return” as often as it should be rendered “go to the Father” (See John 16:28; Zondervan Greek Interlinear, pp. 324-336). These verses, according to Alford, show us that the origin of Jesus in the form of logos was with His Father (Alford’s Greek Testament, An Exegetical and Critical Commentary, Henry Alford, note on John 16:28).

I would not quote Bart Ehrman as a textual critic…

In later Johanine Christology, specially in 1 John 4:2, the New Jerusalem Bible correctly renders the verse, “This is the proof of the spirit of God: any spirit which acknowledges Jesus Christ, come in human nature, is from God . . . “ (See Goodspeed). Notice “come in human nature” rather than “to come into eis”; this would have been the term used in the Greek text had Christ pre-existed and His previous nature been brought into His bodily existence.

The issue is solved when you realize that the Logos pre-existed, but the Son of God did not. Only in the human nature did the Logos become the Son of God.

The prologue of the Gospel starts with en arche, or “in the beginning,” when the Great Architect uttered His divine speech and this logos was God. Adam Clarke asks, How can a person be separated from his own speech? Others try to maintain John’s use of the nomitive predicate ho theos, “God” and the word pros for “with God”, pros ton theon, “with the God” as a separate entity, therefore, the logos is an eternal entity and not just a speech or thought. Dr. Gene Scott and Wescott and Hort have argued that the term pros should be rendered “face to face with God” and should be used here to prove two personages, but many modern exegetes have not landed on this side of the issue. Some commentators espouse the concept of the direct object used in conjunction with the definite article proves the logos was a separate and equal personification of the God and was with God. However, one still has the use of God expressing Himself through His divine speech as one person with or without the use of the definite article. Each side uses the passages in other texts to back up their theological position.

We should all love and accept our Christian brethren regardless of what their Godhead theology dictates as long as they believe that deity was truly in Jesus in some form. Our theology in human terms cannot begin to capsulate or define the fullness of God’s revelation. Let us praise and thank God for He is to magnificent to put into human terms, but may the Church of God continue to struggle to worship our biblical God by using biblical theology to obtain biblical results. And by the name of His dear Son, may we all grow in the Grace and Knowledge of His Great Salvation.

I can picture a whole bunch of people, on each and every side of the issue, rolling in their graves. The nature of the Godhead was the central focus of the doctrinal controversies in the first few centuries after Christ.

October 30th, 2008

A Common Dialog: Is God a substance?

The ‘divine riddle’ of classic Trinitarians is ‘three substances; one essence’ to which many Modalists (many not knowing exactly what that particular name implies) rebut that God is not a substance, as substance is an element, and God is a Spirit.

God is a substance, but not the human-minded elemental substance of material. Is this blasphemy for an Economist to state such things? Let us briefly examine the issue with reason.

Who being the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person, and upholding all things by the word of his power, when he had by himself purged our sins, sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high; (Hebrews 1:3 KJV)

Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. (Hebrews 11:1 KJVA)

In the Greek, both of these words read υποστασις, hupostasis. In the Latin, it is translated as substantiae from which we derive our English word, substance. In no meaning of this word can we derive something ‘elemental’ as many would have us believe that the Trinitarians intend.

First, it would be erroneous for us to say that God is not a substance – as we would argue with the writer of Hebrews. What first must be learned is what is mean by ’substance’.

From TDNT (Kittel) -

The noun occurs some 20 times in the LXX (Septuagint) for 12 Hebrew terms, and the verb hyphístēmi occurs somewhat more often in the sense “to endure.” The meaning of hypóstasis seems to be “movable property” in Dt. 11:6, “immovable property” in Job 22:20, “basis of power” in Ezek. 26:11, “reality” that gives a firm guarantee in Ruth 1:12; Ps. 39:7, “life plan” in Ps. 139:15, “plan” in Jer. 23:22, and “counsel” in Ezek. 19:5; Dt. 1:12. LXX usage thus conforms to Greek. hypóstasis is the underlying reality behind things, often as a plan or purpose, or as that which, enclosed in God, endures.

It is primarily a word which means ‘foundation’, and it is this sense what we must understand the substance of God – not in that it can be divided to create ‘one-third’ Gods, but in that the substance of God is the very being of God. (Can you really divide faith?)

It is a matter of historical fact that the translators of the King James Version of the Scriptures were, to the last man, Trinitarian. This theological presence permeated every inch of their translation abilities. The use of ‘person’ in Hebrews 1.3 is not a statement of pure translation, but a theological statement aimed at directing readers, at least in subconscious thought, to the Trinity in which all members are ascribed Personhood. Note, however, that the only ‘Person’ in the ‘Godhead’ that is given a substance (hupostasis) is indeed God, and just as Paul told us in Colossians 1.15, Christ is the image of God.

At no time in Scripture is the Substance of God divided, or made distinct within itself, except during the Incarnation, when Christ entered Time, leaving Eternity behind. The issue with the Trinitarians is that they, a general concept, see this as ontological instead of economic. It was not until Tertullian in the 3rd century that the idea of the Son being ‘begotten from eternity’ arose in the Church – and it was not until the fourth century that they idea of hypostaseis (multiple persons) was applied to the Godhead by the Arians (This view was fought to the dying breath by Marcellus of Ancrya who considered it a heresy to have a ‘plural number’ in the Godhead.). Before Tertullian, as a whole, men such as Ignatius and Theophilus, both of Antioch, and Irenaeus (It is thought that Tertullian’s unnamed opponent in his theological works was Irenaeus) consistently referred to God as the One Person, and saw no lasting distinction in the ‘Godhead.’ For them, as Ignatius the Bishop of Antioch, disciple of Peter and John, and friend of Polycarp the Bishop of Smyrna, there was only ‘our God, Jesus Christ.’ (Ignatius, Ephesians 18.2)

But God is a spirit

In the King James Version, we read that God is a spirit (John 4.24), but in the Greek, it is πνευμα ο θεος, which literally reads, ‘God is spirit.’ Compare this with 1st John 1.5 and 4.8 in which God is light (ο θεος φως εστιν) and God is love (ο θεος αγαπη εστιν). The grammar is the same – God is (subject). Indeed, God is spirit, the pneuma, which denotes His non-corporeality, and in itself, spirit is the substance of God.