J
Johann
Guest
Then I went on to say--Your explanation contains an inadvertent contradiction and actually makes my point. You defeat your argument when you rightly point out that the "word of a person co-exists with himself . . . " which you rightly clarify as a product of the mind. Since the word of God is the product of God's mind, then it is NOT an appellation for a person.
Given your definition, John is saying "In the Beginning was a product of God's mind . . . and I would agree with you. Even so, the specific product of God's mind John has in view is a promise God made, specifically, the promise of life and enlightenment and it was a light that couldn't be extinguished.
Moreover that "The Word" or "Logos" denotes a person, and not merely an attribute/"It/Plan/product of the mind—as Wisdom or Reason—is evident from this passage, as well as all the places where mentioned in the references here given. For evidence that by "The Voice" or "Word of Jehovah," the Jews at and before the coming of Christ had been accustomed to designate the Messiah, see Townsend’s Dissertation on the Logos, N.T. Chronology, pp. 7 and seq. (William De Burgh, New Marginal Readings and References to the Gospels, p. 222). FS101, +Deu_32:42, Jhn_1:14, Isa_49:1-2, Heb_4:12-13; Heb_6:1, 1Pe_1:25, 1Jn_1:1-2; 1Jn_5:7, *Rev_19:13.
John 1:1-14: The Logos (Word) is fully divine and was with God in the beginning, distinct yet united in essence with the Father. The Logos became flesh (incarnation), not a mere plan, but a person.
John 10:30: Jesus affirms His unity with the Father. “I and the Father are one.” This cannot be understood as a mere plan of salvation but a relational truth about the person of Jesus.
Colossians 2:9: “For in Him the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily.” This passage asserts that the fullness of God’s nature resides in Jesus, underlining that He is divine, not an impersonal plan or concept.
Matthew 1:23: “Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Immanuel” (which means, God with us). The incarnation is about God Himself coming to dwell with humanity, not just a plan or abstract idea of redemption.
3. Historical Theological Argument: The Nature of Christ in Early Christian Thought
The Doctrine of the Trinity: The foundational Christian belief is that God exists as One Being in Three Persons—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. In this doctrine, Jesus (the Son) is fully divine, not an abstract concept or “plan.”
The early Church affirmed that Jesus is consubstantial (of the same essence) with the Father, eternally begotten, not created, and distinct in personhood.
Key Texts: Nicene Creed (325 A.D.), Athanasian Creed.
The Incarnation: The act of God becoming human in the person of Jesus Christ is central to Christian salvation. Jesus is not a mechanical plan for salvation, but the embodiment of God's redemptive will.
Council of Chalcedon (451 A.D.): This council established the two natures of Christ—fully God and fully man. The idea that Jesus is not an impersonal plan but a person with two natures is crucial to orthodox Christology.
4. Christ as a Divine Person in the Economy of Salvation
Jesus' Role in Redemption: Jesus’ role in salvation cannot be separated from His personhood. His death and resurrection were not merely the fulfillment of a plan but the actual act of the divine Son of God offering Himself for the redemption of humanity.
Hebrews 9:14: “How much more will the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered Himself without blemish to God, purify our conscience from dead works to serve the living God.” This emphasizes that Jesus, as a person, enacted salvation, not just an abstract plan.
The Relationship Between Father and Son: The relationship between God the Father and Jesus the Son is relational and personal, as evidenced by passages like John 17:24 (Jesus speaks of the love the Father has for Him before the foundation of the world).
5. Theological Critique: Views of Jesus as an Impersonal “It” or “Plan”
Unitarian and Non-Trinitarian Views: Some theological positions, such as Unitarianism or certain forms of deism, might regard Jesus as a created agent or a plan of God’s will, without recognizing His eternal deity and personhood. These views reduce the significance of Jesus' divine nature and His personal role in God’s salvation plan.
Christian Response: Orthodox Christian theology holds that Jesus is the eternal Son of God, not an impersonal plan or abstract concept. Any notion that reduces Jesus to an "it" or "plan" fails to recognize His divinity and His role as the Savior of the world. Jesus' humanity and divinity are both necessary for the atonement, and His work is not a mere fulfillment of a plan but the living action of the God-man.
6. Conclusion: The Person of Jesus in Christian Doctrine
Jesus is not an "it" or a "plan", but the eternal Son of God, fully divine and fully human. His role in salvation is not that of a mere instrument but the central figure in God's redemptive plan.
Summary of Key Points: The theological and biblical evidence consistently affirms that Jesus is a person with a distinct role in the Trinity and in salvation history. His divinity, expressed in the incarnation, life, death, and resurrection, cannot be reduced to an impersonal "plan" or "idea."
So you prove my point, which is the biblical one.
J.