Friday, September 16, 2016

Augustine on Did God Create Evil



 auggi
Greg Koulk
Is God the author of evil or its helpless victim? St. Augustine’s answer has been the most intellectually credible and emotionally satisfying solution to this vexing problem. One doesn’t need a Ph.D. in theology to look around the world and realize something is desperately wrong. The existence of evil is one of the most vexing challenges a Christian–or any person, for that matter– must grapple with. It’s occupied the minds of great Christian thinkers since the beginning, including St. Augustine (354-430). For much of his life he worked hard at a solution.Augustine’s approach was not just brilliant; it was practical. His insight is intellectually credible and emotionally satisfying in that it gives hope and offers meaning to the Christian trying to make sense out of life in a fallen world.
Two Aspects of the Problem
The problem of evil can be phrased in several ways. One approach addresses the origin of evil, prompting the syllogism (a series of statements that form a reasoned argument):1) God created all things;2) evil is a thing;3) therefore, God created evil. If the first two premises are true, the conclusion is inescapable.This formulation, if sustained, is devastating for Christianity. God would not be good if He knowingly created evil.Augustine realized that the solution was tied to the question: What is evil? The argument above depends on the idea that evil is a thing (note the second premise). But what if evil is not a “thing” in that sense? Then evil did not need creating. If so, our search for the source of evil will take us in a another direction.Augustine approached the problem from a different angle. He asked: Do we have any convincing evidence that a good God exists? If independent evidence leads us to conclude that God exists and is good, then He would be incapable of creating evil. Something else, then, must be its source.If Augustine’s approach is fair, it prompts a pair of syllogisms that lead to a different conclusion.
First:
1) All things that God created are good;
2) evil is not good;
3) therefore, evil was not created by God.
Second:
1) God created every thing;
2) God did not create evil;
3) therefore, evil is not a thing.
The key to success here, is the truthfulness of two premises. If Augustine can offer evidence through natural theology that God exists as Creator and also that God is good, making everything He created also good, then the conclusion–evil is not a thing–automatically follows.This is Augustine’s strategy. If evil is not a thing, then the case against Christianity stated in the original syllogism is unsound because one of its premises is false.
The critical question is: What is evil?


Digging a Hole in Goodness
Central to Augustine’s idea of goodness (and, consequently, evil) was the notion of being. To Augustine, anything that had being was good. God as the ground of being was perfectly good, along with everything he brought into being. This goodness was a property that came in varying degrees.With this foundation Augustine was now prepared to answer the key issue: “Where is evil then, and whence, and how crept it in hither? What is its root, and what its seed? Or hath it no being?”[1] To this Augustine answered: “Evil has no positive nature; but the loss of good has received the name ‘evil.'”[2]

Augustine observed that evil always injures, and such injury is a deprivation of good. If there were no deprivation, there would be no injury. Since all things were made with goodness, evil must be the privation of goodness: “All which is corrupted is deprived of good.”[3]The diminution of the property of goodness is what’s called evil. Good has substantial being; evil does not. It is like a moral hole, a nothingness that results when goodness is removed. Just as a shadow is no more than a “hole” in light, evil is a hole in goodness.To say that something is evil, then, is a shorthand way of saying it either lacks goodness, or is a lower order of goodness than what ought to have been. But the question remains: “Whence and how crept it in hither?”Augustine observed that evil could not be chosen because there is no evil thing to choose. One can only turn away from the good, that is from a greater good to a lesser good (in Augustine’s hierarchy) since all things are good. “For when the will abandons what is above itself, and turns to what is lower, it becomes evil–not because that is evil to which it turns, but because the turning itself is wicked.”[4]Evil, then, is the act itself of choosing the lesser good. To Augustine the source of evil is in the free will of persons: “And I strained to perceive what I now heard, that free-will was the cause of our doing ill.”[5] Evil was a “perversion of the will, turned aside from…God” to lesser things.[6]
Flawed Perfection
Augustine’s solution has not been satisfying to some. Friedrich Schleiermacher snorted at the concept that God gave good creatures the freedom to do bad. If a being is perfect in its goodness, he held, it would never sin even if it were free to. Evil would then have to create itself ex nihilo, which is ridiculous.[7]However, it doesn’t follow that moral perfection necessarily entails immutability. That’s a different type of perfection, a perfection in being. Schleiermacher’s objection confuses the two. The fact that a perfectly beautiful vase is capable of being broken doesn’t take away from its aesthetic perfections. In the same way, it makes sense to say that man was created morally perfect (morally whole or complete, at his proper level of goodness), even though he wasn’t immutable in this perfection.The objections raised by atheist philosophers J.L. Mackie and Antony Flew are more substantial.[8] Isn’t it possible that God could have created man immutable in his goodness, yet still have the opportunity to freely choose in other areas? Won’t man have immutable goodness in heaven? And will he not also have freedom to choose among certain options? Why not here on earth? Couldn’t God construct man’s nature such that evil simply was not an option?


Mackie and Flew are right in one regard. God could have created such a world. Freedom in the larger sense (the ability to make choices) does not require freedom in the narrow sense (the ability to make moral choices).They miss the big picture, though: God would not have accomplished a second purpose. He not only wanted free creatures; He also wanted plenitude, that is, the greatest good possible. Plenitude–the highest good, the best of all possible worlds–requires more than just general freedom; it requires moral freedom, and that necessarily entails the possibility of evil.Since all that God made is good, even those things which appear evil only appear that way because of a limited context or perspective. When viewed as a whole, that which appears to be evil ultimately contributes to the greater good.For example, certain virtues couldn’t exist without evil: courage, mercy, forgiveness, patience, the giving of comfort, heroism, perseverance, faithfulness, self-control, long-suffering, submission and obedience, to name a few. These are not virtues in the abstract, but elements of character that can only be had by moral souls. Just as evil is a result of acts of will, so is virtue. Acts of moral choice accomplish both.
The Best of All Worlds
A world that had never been touched by evil would be a good place, but it wouldn’t be the best place possible. The best of all worlds would be a place where evil facilitated the development of virtues that are only able to exist where evil flourishes for a time. This would produce a world populated by souls that were refined by overcoming evil with good. The evil is momentary. The good that results is eternal.What good comes out of a drive-by killing, someone might ask, or the death of a teenager through overdose, or a daughter’s rape, or child abuse? The answer is that a commensurate good doesn’t always come out of those individual situations, though God is certainly capable of redeeming any tragedy. Rather, the greater good results from having a world in which there is moral freedom, and moral freedom makes moral tragedies like these possible.

A Heavenly Twist
This observation reveals an interesting twist in this problem. If morality freely chosen can only happen in a world where evil is possible, then heaven will be a place where there will be no moral growth, where moral choices will not be possible because all the inhabitants of heaven will be immutably good. There is a type of soulish growth only available to inhabitants of a fallen world.Two Scriptural observations lend credibility to this view. First, in recounting the great heroes of faith, the writer of Hebrews mentions that some were rescued by faith, but others endured by faith “…in order that they might obtain a better resurrection.”[9] (Heb. 11:35) Second, Paul tells Timothy that “…godliness is profitable for all things, since it holds promise for the present life and also for the life to come.” (1 Tim. 4:8)Both of these verses indicate that conditions in this life affect conditions in the next. Bearing up under evil in this life improves our resurrection in the next. Godliness in this life brings profit in the next. These benefits are not available after this life or there would be little urgency to grow now; all eternity would be left in which to catch up.It appears that a deeper, more profound good results when virtue is won by free, moral souls struggling with evil, rather than simply granted to them as an element of their constitution.

Spoiled Goodness
Augustine knew that evil was real. Independent evidence (natural theology) was enough to convince him that God existed and that everything He created would be good. Evil, then, must be something real, but not a “thing” in the conventional sense. Evil is not a created thing, but spoiled goodness made possible by the free moral agency of rational creatures. Evil is not something present, but something missing, a privation.The challenge that God could have created a world of free-will creatures immutable in their goodness is answered by the notion of plenitude, the greatest good. The possibility of evil also makes a greater good possible. God made a world in which true moral decision-making and development of virtues is possible in humans, manifest by persons whose character is formed through growth and struggle.There’s a sound reason why God has allowed evil. It doesn’t conflict with His goodness. God is neither the author of evil, nor its helpless victim. Rather, precisely because of His goodness He chooses to co-exist with evil for a time.


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[1] Augustine, Confessions, VII: [V] 7.

[2] Augustine, The City of God, XI, CHAP. 9.
[3] Augustine, Confessions, VII: [XII] 18.
[4] Augustine, City of God, XII, CHAP. 6.
[5] Augustine, Confessions VII: [III] 5.
[6] Ibid., [XVI] 22.
[7] Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol. 3, 138.
[8] See J.L. Mackie, “God and Omnipotence,” Mind, April 1955, and Antony Flew, “Divine Omnipotence and Human Freedom,” New Essays in Philosophical Theology, 1955 (referenced in Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol. 3, 138).
[9] Scripture quotations are from the New American Standard Bible..

This is a transcript of a commentary from the radio show “Stand to Reason,” with Gregory Koukl. It is made available to you at no charge through the faithful giving of those who support Stand to Reason. Reproduction permitted for non-commercial use only. ©2002 Gregory Koukl

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Monday, September 12, 2016

The Hypocrisy Of The Black Lives Matter Movement & The Southern Poverty Law Center



By Mr. J. Kenneth Blackwell Senior Fellow for Human Rights and Constitutional Governance 


Ken Blackwell is Senior Fellow for Human Rights and Constitutional Governance at Family Research Council. This article appeared in Townhall.com on August 23, 2016.

The Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement has many allies within the Progressive movement. Funded largely by the most liberal elements of the Left, especially those within the George Soros network, like his Center for American Progress, BLM has been a major motivator for the attacks on police officers all over the country. With chants like “Pigs in a blanket, fry-em like bacon” and “What do we want? Dead Cops!,” the simple fact is that BLM has created an atmosphere of anger and hatred, and has incited violence against law enforcement officers across the country. In no way has the killing and wounding of law enforcement officers dampened the enthusiasm of the BLM. It would seem that no reasonable person or group, regardless of how liberal, would want to be associated with any organization that advocates the killing of anyone, especially police.

None of the BLM supporters are more dangerous and hypocritical than the Alabama-based Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). SPLC is a self-appointed “hate group” watchdog that produces a libelous and deceptive list of people and organizations who are deemed to be “hateful”. While there are no clearly stated criteria for groups being on this “hate” list, the SPLC’s specialty is the targeting and slandering of conservatives and conservative groups. As Laird Wilcox, an expert on extremist groups, has pointed out, “What they [the SPLC] do is a kind of bullying and stalking. They pick people who are vulnerable in terms of public opinion and simply destroy them. Their victims are usually ordinary people expressing their values, opinions, and beliefs – and they’re up against a very talented and articulate defamation machine.”

The hypocrisy of their support of BLM is that the SPLC conducts training for law enforcement groups in various parts of the United Sates. The SPLC also maintains a “law enforcement resources” page that – not surprisingly – claims the most credible threats to law enforcement are those arising from right-wing actors. While the SPLC is advocating violence against police by supporting BLM and its associates, they are simultaneously instructing police on how to identify “hate groups.” And the story gets worse.

Now it has been exposed through BLM’s own documents that they are unashamedly anti-Semitic. The recent release of the BLM “” accuses Israel of “genocide” and “apartheid.” Despite this, SPLC continues to support BLM while BLM calls for the cessation of all foreign aid to Israel and blames this U.S. ally for atrocities against the Palestinians. How can SPLC continue to support BLM when it is now abundantly clear that BLM is both anti-police and anti-Israel?
Part of the answer can be found in the fact that SPLC was connected in federal court in 2013 to domestic terrorism during the trial of Floyd Lee Corkins II who was convicted of attempted murder. On August 15, 2012, Corkins entered the offices of the Family Research Council (FRC) in Washington, D.C. and shot the building manager, Leo Johnson. Corkins admitted that he targeted FRC because they were listed as an anti-LGBT “hate group” on SPLC’s website. Corkins admitted that he was motivated to try and kill as many FRC employees there as possible because they did not support same sex marriage. Corkins’ conviction was the first ever under the Domestic Terrorism Statute in the nation’s capital. SPLC’s influence on Corkins through its reckless labeling was established in the court proceedings. Now the SPLC is once again inciting – violence, this time against police, while portraying themselves as police supporters.

By endorsing BLM, the Southern Poverty Law Center has demonstrated that it has no concerns about the consequences of its actions. Now they are complicit in the targeting of police and the condemnation of Israel, yet there seems to be no “hate” label anywhere in this. In fact, the SPLC has cheered BLM, stating it is not only not a hate group, the “perception that it is…illustrates the problem. Our society…does not accept that racial injustice remains pervasive.”

What hypocrisy.


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Come Meet Jesus Christ as Pre-Incarnate God


Come Meet Jesus Christ as Pre-Incarnate God
By Louis Rushmore


The pre-existence of Jesus Christ, as it is usually described, has to do with the one we know as Jesus Christ before his incarnation (i.e., when he took fleshly, bodily form through the Virgin Birth). Technically, though, the Second Person of the Godhead had not adopted the roles of Jesus Christ yet in his pre-incarnate state.


jesus sits.jpgThere was no Jesus, no Messiah, no Christ, no Son of God, no Only Begotten, before the reign of Augustus Caesar. The relation that was before the Christian era, was not that of a son and a father, terms which always imply disparity; but it was that expressed by John in the sentence under consideration [John 1:1]. The relation was that of God and the "word of God." This phraseology unfolds a relation quite different from that of a father and son-a relation perfectly intimate, equal, and glorious. (Alexander Campbell qtd. in Mosher 313)


The pre-existence of Jesus Christ is axiomatic given his participation with the Father and the Holy Spirit in the creation of the universe and all that is in it (Genesis 1:26-27; Colossians 1:15-17). The pre-existence or the pre-incarnate nature of Jesus Christ is also definitively taught in Scripture. "Any proper study of Jesus Christ must include not only His earthly span of some 33 years, but His eternal existence as well. The Bible plainly teaches that the Savior had an eternal existence prior to His earthly incarnation" (Jackson 1). Herein, you are cordially invited to "Come Meet Jesus as Pre-Incarnate God."


Old Testament Scripture teaches the pre-existence or pre-incarnate nature of the member of the Godhead we best know as Jesus Christ. The very creation in which the second member of the Godhead participated along with the Father and the Holy Spirit bespeaks of our Lord's pre-existence. The Godhead created the world (Genesis 1:26-27; Romans 1:20). Jesus Christ had an instrumental part within the Godhead in the creation of the world (1 Corinthians 8:6; Ephesians 3:9; Colossians 1:15-17; John 1:1-3).


Old Testament prophecy intimates the pre-existence of Jesus Christ. One of the most obvious prophecies that implies the pre-incarnate state of Jesus Christ is Micah 5:2--the virgin birth of eternal God into fleshly form.


When Micah prophesied concerning the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem, he was careful to stress that Christ's goings forth are from of old, from everlasting. (Mic. 5:2). It is evident from the context that the Lord's eternal goings forth are put in contrast to His coming forth as a child in Bethlehem of Judea. It would be difficult to imagine the prophet's intention in using such terminology if they mean anything less than the eternal pre-existence of Christ. (Vestal 129)


One learns by comparison of Old and New Testament passages that Daniel 7:13-14 pertains to the Virgin Birth, the means by which God came to dwell on earth (cf. Isaiah 7:14; John 1:1-3, 14; Galatians 4:4); therefore, Daniel 7:13-14 implies the pre-existence of Jesus Christ.
Adam-and-Eve.jpgThe apostle Peter cites the prophets respecting the pre-existence or pre-incarnate nature of Jesus Christ (1 Peter 1:10-11). "The Spirit of Christ having been in the prophets, it follows that Christ existed during the times of the prophets, and this verse thus becomes an important text in support of the deity and pre-existence of the Lord Jesus" (Woods).


New Testament Scripture teaches the pre-existence or pre-incarnate nature of the member of the Godhead we best know as Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ himself affirmed his own pre-existence or pre-incarnate nature. An article in the ISBE quickly amasses biblical evidence from several passages in which Jesus Christ claims to have had a pre-existent or pre-incarnate state.


That He was of higher than earthly origin and nature, He repeatedly asserts. "Ye are from beneath," he says to the Jews (8:23), "I am from above: ye are of this world; I am not of this world" (compare 17:16). Therefore, He taught that He, the Son of Man, had "descended out of heaven" (3:13), where was His true abode. This carried with it, of course, an assertion of pre-existence; and this pre-existence is explicitly affirmed: "What then," He asks, "if ye should behold the Son of man ascending where he was before?" (6:62). It is not merely pre-existence, however, but eternal pre-existence which He claims for Himself: "And now, Father," He prays (17:5), "glorify thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was" (compare verse 24); and again, as the most impressive language possible, He declares (8:58 the King James Version): "Verily, verily, I say unto you, Before Abraham was, I am," where He claims for Himself the timeless present of eternity as His mode of existence. In the former of these two last cited passages, the character of His pre-existent life is intimated; in it He shared the Father's glory from all eternity ("before the world was"); He stood by the Father's side as a companion in His glory. ("Person of Christ" emphasis added)


Wayne Jackson emphasizes some occasions on which Jesus claimed for himself a pre-existent (i.e. pre-fleshly) state. "The Master asserted His heavenly origin when in debate with the Jews He said, 'Ye are from beneath; I am from above: ye are of this world; I am not of this world.' (John 8:23). And shortly before His death, He could pray, 'Father, glorify thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was.' (John 17:5)" (Jackson 2).


mislabeling-the-word-of-god.jpgRoy H. Lanier, Sr. in his book, The Timeless Trinity for the Ceaseless Centuries, comments on John 16:28; compare Galatians 4:4. "Just as surely as his leaving the world and going to the Father means that he was first in the world before going back to the Father, so his coming from the Father to come into the world means that he existed with the Father in heaven before he came to the world by birth of Mary in Bethlehem" (Lanier qtd. in  Mosher 311).


The apostle John distinctly taught the pre-existence or pre-incarnate nature of Jesus Christ. Most Bible students suppose that the Gospel According to John is the lone historian of the Gospel records that treats the pre-existence of Jesus Christ: "John is the only one of the gospels that gives us insight into Jesus' pre-existence" (Winkler 32); "John's Gospel teaches the pre-existence of Christ" ("Christology").


John's special use of the Greek word, "Logos," teaches the pre-incarnate nature of Jesus Christ (John 1:1-3, 14).
In the description of the incarnation given by the evangelist John there appears the term "Logos" in a sense new to the Scriptures, and among New-Testament writers peculiar to him. Some have maintained that it supplies an indubitable [unquestionable] ascription of personal existence to the Word, in some sense distinct from the personal existence of the supreme Father; that this Word is the Logos of the New Testament; and, consequently, that the phrase is a proof of a belief among the ancient Jews in the pre-existence, the personal operations, and the deity of the Messiah, "the Word who became flesh, and fixed his tabernacle among us" ("Incarnation")


…the repeated "with God" (verses 1, 2) compels us to distinguish the Logos from God; the words "became flesh" (verse 14) cannot be said of an attribute of God; and the Baptist's testimony, verse 15, in direct connection with this introduction (compare also such sayings of Christ as in chapters 8:58; 17:5), show clearly that John attributes personal pre-existence to the Logos. Similarly, every attempt to explain away this profound sense of Logos is inadequate, and most are ungrammatical. ("Logos")


Wayne Jackson forcefully makes the point respecting the relationship between John's use of "Logos" and the pre-existence of Jesus Christ.


There is an interesting contrast between the eternal existence of the LOGOS and the incarnate sojourn of the Son of God. "In the beginning was (a verb of continual timeless existence) the Word." Yet, "the Word became (a verb denoting the commencement of His human existence in time) flesh." In similar fashion, Christ Himself said, "Before Abraham was born (definite origin), I am (always existing)." (John 8:58). Thus, the LOGOS had a prehuman, timeless existence. (Jackson 1)


The apostle John recorded the words of John the Baptist at the baptism of Jesus, which affirmation implies the pre-existence of our Lord (John 1:15). "After me cometh a man which is preferred before me: for he was before me. [As a man John was six months older than Jesus, but Jesus was the eternal Word. The Baptist therefore asserts here the pre-existence of our Lord.]" (McGarvey).


In 1 John 1:2, the apostle avowed both the pre-incarnation and the incarnation of Jesus Christ. "This life had been with the Father prior to the incarnation and is thus eternal. Here is the first of four stages indicated in the sacred writings regarding the second person of the Godhead and points irresistibly to his deity: (1) his pre-existence in eternity as the Word prior to creation" (Woods).
Each passage where Jesus Christ is called God equates to him the same eternality as the other two members of the Godhead. Therefore, since Jesus Christ took a bodily form, these passages refer to his pre-existence or pre-incarnate nature (John 20:28; Acts 20:28)
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The apostle Paul repeatedly taught the pre-existence or pre-incarnate state of Jesus Christ. The apostle Paul taught that Jesus Christ, prior to his incarnation, had an earthly role (1 Corinthians 10:4, 9).


1 Cor 10:9 I have already supposed, in the note at 1 Cor 10:4, that Christ is intended by the spiritual rock that followed them: and that it was he, not the rock, that did follow or accompany the Israelites in the wilderness. This was the angel of God's presence who was with the church in the wilderness, to whom our fathers would not obey, as Stephen says, Acts 7:38 and 39. (Clarke)


1 Cor 10:4 The literal sense of that Rock was Christ is no more to be pressed than is the literal sense of "I am the true vine" (John 15:1). The was, rather than is, may, however, point to Christ's pre-existence (cf. 2 Cor 8:9; Gal 4:4). (Wycliffe)
The rock to which Paul referred here was clearly stated: "The rock was Christ." The miracle of Moses' bringing forth water from the rock in the wilderness (Exo. 17:5ff) provided literal water for Israel; but much more than that is in evidence here. As Marsh said, "The rock was Christ, not 'is' or 'is a type of'...and this is a clear statement of the pre-existence of Christ." (Paul W. Marsh qtd. in Coffman  on 1 Corinthians 10:4)


The view preferred here is that Paul meant "Christ," the same being another reference to his pre-existence, and indicating that our Lord's pre-incarnation activity included that of shepherding the chosen people in the wilderness. (Coffman on 1 Corinthians 10:9)


Consider the significance of what Paul penned in 2 Corinthians 8:9.
By the Spirit, Paul was led to write concerning Christ, "though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor..." (II Cor. 8:9). If Jesus did not preexist in grandeur and glory before His birth, when was He rich? Certainly not while on earth! He was born in a borrowed stable, rowed the Sea of Galilee in a borrowed boat, fed the multitudes with borrowed food, rode into Jerusalem on a borrowed beast, ate His last meal in a borrowed room and finally was buried in a borrowed tomb. He once announced, "The foxes have holes, and the birds of the heaven have nests; but the Son of man hath not where to lay his head" (Luke 9:58). (Jackson 2)


paul.jpgNo passage more directly or more dramatically attests to the pre-existence or pre-incarnate state of Jesus Christ than Philippians 2:5-11.


In this context, with one majestic sweep of his pen, Paul embraces Christ's 1. Preexistence (equality with God), 2.Incarnation (made in the likeness of men), 3. Coronation (God highly exalted Him). … Similarly, the Hebrew writer notes: 1. He made the worlds-indicating His pre-existence. 2. He made purification of sins having been sent in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin (Rom 8:3)-this involves the incarnation. 3. He sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high. (Heb. 1:2,3). (Jackson 2 emphasis added)


How does the pre-incarnate role of Jesus Christ relate to other roles correctly ascribed to Jesus Christ? What was the pre-incarnate role of the member of the Godhead we best know as Jesus Christ? Jesus Christ participated in the creation (Genesis 1:26-27; John 1:1-3; Hebrews 1:2-3). Jesus Christ interacted with the Israelites in the wilderness wandering (1 Corinthians 10:4, 9). "Christ is represented in the passages by Paul and John as pre-existent before coming to the earth, and presiding over the Israelites in their journey through the wilderness. …Here he designates him as the one who accompanied Israel in the cloud through the wilderness, and gave them deliverances when they needed" (Lipscomb and Shepherd). "It is possible that Paul is saying that Christ was present with His people all along the wilderness journey and that He was sustaining them spiritually by every word that proceeded out of His mouth for their direction, protection, and encouragement" (Applebury 183).


What was the role of Jesus Christ after his incarnation? Jesus came "to seek and save" the "lost" (Luke 19:10). This was accomplished through his ministry, death on the cross, resurrection and Ascension (1 Corinthians 15:3-4; Mark 16:19). Jesus Christ became the world's Savior (1 John 4:14).


burning.jpgWhat is the role of Jesus Christ since his Ascension back to heaven? Jesus Christ is Mediator and Intercessor (1 Timothy 2:5; Hebrews 7:25). Jesus Christ will come again to retrieve the saved (John 14:3). Jesus will come again to punish disobedient souls (Hebrews 10:29-30; 2 Thessalonians 1:7-9). Jesus will judge all humanity of all time (John 5:28-29).


Flavil Nichols concisely summarizes the pre-existence of Jesus Christ: "From all eternity in the direction of the past, Jesus Himself, in His pre-fleshly state, not only was 'in the form of' Deity (Phil 2:6), was 'with' Deity [the Father and the Holy Spirit], but He also (Himself) 'was' Deity (John 1:1-3). He had 'glory' with the Father 'before the world was' (John 17:5)-which He surrendered to be our Savior!" (25). More extensively stated, it is reasonable to deduce from Scripture the pre-existence or pre-incarnate nature of Jesus Christ (though we do not subscribe to a human spirit of Christ in addition to his divine spirit per the context of the citation).


1. Christ is represented as his Father's messenger, or angel, being distinct from his Father, sent by his Father, long before his incarnation... The appearances of Christ to the patriarchs are described like the appearance of an angel, or man really distinct from God; yet one in whom God, or Jehovah, had a peculiar indwelling, or with whom the divine nature had a personal union. 2. Christ, when he came into the world, is said, in several passages of Scripture, to have divested himself of some glory which he had before his incarnation. …(John 17:4,5; 2 Cor 8:9). ...Nor can it be said of Christ, as man, that he was rich, if he were never in a richer state before than while he was on earth. 3. ...that the soul of Jesus Christ should pre-exist, that it might have an opportunity to give its previous actual consent to the great and painful undertaking of making atonement for man's sins. ...The covenant of redemption between the Father and the Son is therefore represented as being made before the foundation of the world. ("Pre-Existence of Jesus Christ" emphasis added)


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The Jewish people, who for centuries were the custodians of Sacred Scripture and before that the beneficiaries of  Patriarchal oral instruction, were thoroughly convinced about the pre-existence of the Christ: "...The Jews uniformly maintained the pre-existence of the Messiah" ("Pre-Existence of Jesus Christ"). Everything carefully evaluated, we can be assured from the Bible of the pre-existence of Jesus Christ and his respective roles then and since: "Any view which fails to include the Divine preexistence of Mary's Son is certainly erroneous" (Jackson 2).


The first time Jesus Christ came to this earth, "God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved" (John 3:17). However, upon the Second Coming of Jesus Christ, our Lord will retrieve the saved or obedient and punish the disobedient (Hebrews 5:9; 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18; 2 Thessalonians 1:7-9). What will Jesus do with you upon his return (Mark 16:16; 1 John 1:9)?
Works Cited
Applebury, T.R. Studies in First Corinthians. CD-ROM. Joplin: College P., 1963.
"Christology." McClintock and Strong Encyclopedia. CD-ROM. Seattle: Biblesoft, 2000.
Clarke, Adam. Adam Clarke's Commentary. CD-ROM. Seattle: Biblesoft, 1996.
Coffman, James Burton. James Burton Coffman Bible Study Library. CD-ROM. Abilene: ACU P., 1989.
"Incarnation." McClintock and Strong Encyclopedia. CD-ROM. Seattle: Biblesoft, 2000.
Jackson, Wayne. "The Pre-Existence and Birth of Jesus." Spiritual Sword. 1.3. (1970): 1-4.
Lipscomb, David. A Commentary on the New Testament Epistles: First Corinthians. J.W. Shepherd, ed. Nashville: Gospel Advocate, 1987. CD-ROM. Austin: Wordsearch, 2005.
"Logos." McClintock and Strong Encyclopedia. CD-ROM. Seattle: Biblesoft, 2000.
McGarvey, J.W. and Philip Y. Pendleton.  Four-Fold Gospel. Cincinnati: Standard, 1914. CD-ROM. Austin: Wordsearch, 2004.
Mosher, Keith. "The Pre-Existence of Jesus." Jesus Christ: The Gift of God's Grace and the Object of Man's Faith. Curtis A. Cates, ed. Memphis: Memphis School of Preaching, 1992. 310-317.
Nichols, Flavil H. "For He Himself Knew What Was in Man." CD-ROM. Spiritual Sword. 18.3 (1987): 25-26.
"Person of Christ." International Standard Bible Encyclopaedia (ISBE). CD-ROM. Seattle: Biblesoft, 1996.
"Pre-Existence of Jesus Christ." McClintock and Strong Encyclopedia. CD-ROM. Seattle: Biblesoft, 2000.
Vestal, Mike. "The Triune Nature of God." The Godhead: A Study of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. CD-ROM. Southaven: Southaven Church of Christ, 1998. 119-139.
Winkler, Daniel. "The Life of Christ." CD-ROM. Spiritual Sword. 30.4 (1999): 29-33.
Woods, Guy N. A Commentary on the New Testament Epistles: Peter, John and Jude. Nashville: Gospel Advocate, 1991. CD-ROM. Austin: Wordsearch, 2005.
Wycliffe Bible Commentary. CD-ROM Chicago: Moody P., 1962


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