Jesus Christ, Redeemer in the
Bible
How does the Bible show that Jesus is the
Redeemer?
Sacred
Scripture is made up of a number of books, different in
many ways, but all brought together in Jesus Christ. From
Genesis to the Apocalypse or the book of Revelation,
Jesus Christ is the center. The story of the Bible is the
story of Jesus Christ. In the Old Testament we are
prepared for the coming of Jesus Christ. In the New
Testament Jesus Christ is with us, in His life on earth
in the Gospels, in His life in the Church in the rest of
the books.
To grasp
then what Jesus Christ was and what He came into the world to
accomplish, we must study all of the Old Testament and the New
Testament. No one passage gives us the whole story of Jesus
Christ. In the study of the human body the various members must
be seen in relation to the body itself. So, too, the various
passages in the Bible must be seen in relation to the whole
Bible.
We must
remember, too, that the picture of Jesus Christ in the Old
Testament is a sketch, to be filled in the New Testament. A
quick glance at the passage in the Old Testament will show us
Jesus Christ as the descendant of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Juda,
and David. It will show us that He is to be a king, with divine
qualities or characteristics. Thus He is called Emmanuel, that
is, God with us (Isa. 7:14). He is called Mighty God, Wonderful
Counsellor, the Father of the world to come, the Prince of
Peace (Isa. 9:6). He will have the spirit of God (Isa. 11:2;
61:1). He shall be give the title “The Lord, our Just one”
(Jer. 23:6).
In the
New Testament the angel Gabriel tells Mary that her son “shall
be great, and shall be called the Son of the Most High; and the
Lord God will give him the throne of David his father... the
Holy One to be born shall be called the Son of God” (Luke
1:32,35). When Joseph, the foster-father of Jesus, was told of
the origin of his foster-son, he was told to “call his name
Jesus” (Matt. 1:21), in fulfillment of Isaias 7:14, “and they
shall call his name Emmanuel, which is, interpreted, God with
us.” At his birth the shepherds were told by the angel that
“today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you, who
is Christ the Lord” Then they heard this praise of God: “Glory
to God in the highest, and on earth peace among men of good
will” (Luke 2:10-14).
At the
age of twelve Jesus and His parents went up to Jerusalem to
celebrate the feast of the Passover, St. Luke records for us
the first words from the lips of the youthful Jesus, speaking
of God as His Father. “Did you not know that I must be about my
Father’s business” (Luke 2:41-50)? When Jesus began His public
life one of the first scenes is that of His baptism by John the
Baptist. A voice from Heaven speaks to Him: “Thou art my
beloved Son, in thee I am well pleased” (Luke 3:22).
In two of the three temptations
recorded in the desert, the devil begins “if thou art the Son
of God ...” (Luke 4:3, 9). Upon our Lord’s return to Nazareth,
he entered the synagogue and read from Isaias: “The spirit of
the Lord is upon me ...” (Luke
4:18).
Thou
are the Christ
Jesus began to manifest Himself through His teaching and
miracles. As He did so the people came to realize that “if this
man were not from God, he could no nothing” (John 9:33). The
Apostles came to realize that this was not a mere man Who had
called them. They came to believe as Peter said for all of
them: “Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Matt.
16:16). So, too, did the leaders of His own people realize that
He was claiming for Himself more than any one of their Prophets
had ever claimed for themselves. They accused Him of claiming
to be “equal to God” (cf. John 5:18), of claiming to be God
(cf. John 10:33). Christ’s answer to this claim was that His
words indicate “that the Father is in me and I in the Father
... for the Father and I are one” (John 10:30, 38).
There
came a time, however, when Jesus Christ proclaimed His divinity
in all solemnity. He stood before the Great Council, the
Sanhedrin, that had the right to judge in religious matters.
Here, in answer to the question put to Him by the High Priest,
“I adjure thee by the living God that thou tell us whether thou
art the Christ, the Son of God,” Jesus answered, “thou hast
said it”; Jesus was the Son of God (Matt. 26:63-64). It was for
this that He was put to death.
The
Apostles had come to believe that Jesus Christ was the Son of
the living God (Matt. 16:16). A clear expression of this belief
is to be found on the lips of doubting Thomas. Eight days after
His Resurrection, when our Lord appeared to His Apostles,
Thomas was absent. On this occasion, Thomas was there. Our Lord
appeared and offered His hands and side for Thomas to examine.
Then there burst from the heart and lips of Thomas: “My Lord
and my God.” “Because thou hast seen me, thou has believed,” so
spoke Christ. He accepted the titles, for He was truly the Lord
and the God of Thomas as well as all the Apostles (John
20:26-29).
Son of
God, Lord, God: these are names for Jesus Christ. To put it in
another way: Jesus Christ is the Son of God. He is Lord, He is
God. The people of His time knew that He claimed to be equal to
God (John 5:18). He claimed the same honor that was given to
God the Father (John 5:23), the same right to judge all men
that belongs to God (John 5:22,27), the same life that God the
Father had (John 5:26). He went further. He said that to see
Him was to see Go the Father (John 14:9).
Jesus
Christ is by nature God. By nature God the Father is God; so,
too, is the Holy Spirit by nature God. There is, however, but
one God; there are not three Gods. There is but the one divine
nature. Therefore He is God as is God the Father, as is God the
Holy Spirit. “The Father and I are one.” They are one in
nature. Hence it is as right and just to apply the name of God
to Jesus Christ as it is to the Father and to the Holy Spirit.
It is as right and just to adore Jesus Christ as it is the
Father and the Holy Spirit. Thus St. Paul says that “at the
name of Jesus every knee should bend of those in heaven, on
earth and under the earth, and every tongue should confess that
the Lord Jesus Christ is in the glory of God the Father” (Phil.
2:10-11).
This is
the doctrine taught by the Catholic Church. In her prayers the
Catholic Church adores, thanks, asks, and begs pardon of Jesus
Christ as she does of God the Father and God the Holy Spirit.
It is true that the Church also prays through Jesus Christ, for
as man He is the mediator between God and all men (cf. 1 Tim.
2:5). It is for this reason, too, that we read of our Lord
saying that the Father is greater than He (John 14:28). Jesus
Christ is true God; He is also true Man. As God He is one with
God the Father.
Jesus
Christ is also called the Word. “In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was God ... And the
Word was made flesh” (John 1:1,14). The Word existed with God
in the beginning, that is, in the beginning of time. Genesis
begins by saying, “In the beginning God created heaven and
earth.” John is referring to this and he is telling us that the
Word was with God before the creation. As God existed before
creation, so did the Word. What existed before creation is
eternal, for there was no time. The Word then is eternal. Jesus
Christ is the Word, therefore He is eternal. But the Word is
God. Jesus Christ therefore is God.
Meaning of the
“Word”
For the origin and meaning of the concept “word,” we must look
to the Old Testament. The Old Testament frequently expresses
the idea of God’s word. When God created, He is described as
saying ... and it was done: “And God said...” When God gave the
Ten Commandments to Moses, the phrase “and the Lord spoke all
these words” is used to introduce them. Again we read: “And the
Lord spoke to Moses saying: Speak to Aaron and his sons, and to
all his sons, and to all the children of Israel, saying to
them: “This is the word which the Lord had commanded.’” In the
Prophets it is common to read expressions such as this: “The
word that came to Jeremias from the Lord, saying: Stand in the
gate of the house of the Lord, and proclaim there this word,
and say: Hear ye the word of the Lord...”
In Psalm
118, one of the words used for the law is “word.” God’s law is
then God’s word: it is God’s revelation given to the Chosen
People through His word. St. Paul has summed up this thought
and at the same time has shown where the Son fits into this
idea at the beginning of his epistle to the Hebrews: “God who
at sundry times and in divers manners spoke in time past to the
fathers by the prophets, last of all in these days has spoken
to us by his Son...” (Heb. 1:1-2).
The Son
then is the Word, and the Word is God, and the Word was made
flesh. Jesus Christ then is both the Word and the Son. The term
“Word” is very apt to express the Second Person of the Blessed
Trinity, the Son. When we think of something we express our
idea in a word. At times this word is only in the mind, at
other times we express the word externally; that is, we speak.
God thinks of Himself; He expresses His thought of Himself in
the Word, the Second Person, His Son. With us the word is
separate from the idea and is different from our human nature.
Our word is not another self or another person. In God,
however, the Word is another person for it is a perfect
expression of the thought that the Father has of Himself.
Mysterious, yes; profound, yes.
As was
said, at times we speak the word in our mind. St. Paul writes
that “last of all in these days (God) has spoken to us by His
Son.” God first spoke to us through the Word in the work of
creation, as St. John says (1:3): “All things were made through
him (the Word).” Last of all He spoke through the Word in the
Incarnation: “The only-begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the
Father, he has revealed him” (John 1:18). The Word made flesh
is the revelation of God to man, for the Word is God, and He
reveals God through His life and through His teaching. Let us
red what He said: “I have manifested thy name to the men whom
thou has given me out of the world. They were thine and thou
has given them to me, and they have kept thy word. Now they
have learnt that whatever thou hast given me is from thee;
because the words that thou hast given me I have given them.
And they have received them (the words) and have known of a
truth that I came forth from thee...” (John 17:6-8).
St. John
has summed up the revelation of the Word to God: “In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God and the Word
was God” (John 1:1). The Word is eternal; He is with God, that
is, in the company of God the Father, yet distinct, or as we
say, another person whom we call the Son, or the Second Person
of the Trinity. He is God, one with the Father, consubstantial
with the Father. This Word became flesh; therefore Jesus Christ
Who is this Word made flesh is God; He is eternal; He is the
Son, the Second Person of the adorable Trinity.
“Hear, O
Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord” (Deut. 6:4). One Lord:
one God, the God of Israel! This is fundamental to the
revelation made by God to the Chosen People. The exclusive
unity of God was the first doctrine of the covenant between God
and His People.
When
Jesus Christ claimed to be God, it would seem that this claim
attacked the very basis of the Jewish religion. But strong was
monotheism, the Jews could not overlook certain passages in the
Old Testament in which the divine name was given to others. In
what is called the Book of Emmanuel (chapters 7 to 12), Isaias
is speaking of a child who “is born to us,” and of a son who
“is given to us.” In chapter 7 he write that “his name shall be
called Emmanuel,” that is, God with us. And in chapter 9 he
adds that “his name shall be called ... Mighty God.”
As the
name, God, is applied to the Father, so is it applied to the
Son. But Jesus Christ is the Son; therefore He is God. Hence
our Lord could say as He did: “I and the Father are one.” There
is but one God, as we have already said. Even though “God” is
applied to both the Father and the Son, there is but one God.
Both the Father and the Son are divine, both have the divine
nature, both are eternal, omnipotent, infinite. In all of these
things they are one. Ye they are distinct, for God the Father
is the First Person, and God the Son, the Second Person of the
Blessed Trinity. Hence Jesus could say: “I and the Father,”
that is, two persons, “are one,” that is, one in
nature.
Jesus
Christ therefore is one with the Father because together with
His human nature he has the divine nature; He is distinct from
the Father because He is the Son, the Second Person of the
Trinity. There is only one “I” in Jesus Christ; that “I” is a
divine person. But there are two natures in Him, the divine
nature and the human nature. In us wherever there is a human
nature, there is an “I,” one person; but in Jesus Christ there
are two natures, yet only one “I” or person, and that is the
divine person of the Son.
All of
this is very profound; it is mysterious. Yet those who wish to
appreciate and understand Jesus Christ must know Who He is,
what He is, and what He means to them. We have seem Who He is,
and what He is. Now let us reflect on what He means to the
human race.
Jesus
Christ is God, our Creator, our Maker, our beginning and end.
We came from Him and we must go to Him; He has destined us for
an eternal life with Himself. We must pay Him homage, honor,
adoration, obedience. Since Jesus Christ is God, all of this
belongs to Him as much as to the Father. So in the Apocalypse,
St. John “beheld and I heard a voice of many angels around
about the throne, and the living creatures and the elders, and
the number of them were thousands an thousands, saying with a
loud voice, ‘Worthy is the lamb who was slain to receive power
and divinity and wisdom and strength and glory and blessing ...
To him who sits upon the throne and to the Lamb, blessing and
honor and glory and dominion, forever and ever’” (Apoc.
5:11-13).
This is
the worship that the Catholic Church gives to Jesus Christ. It
prays to Him as it does to God the Father. It gives to Him the
same adoration that it gives to God the Father. It gives to Him
the same adoration that it gives to God the Father. Since there
is but one God, any honor paid to God the Son (or God the Holy
Ghost) is paid to God the Father; to honor one person is to
honor all three, for the three persons are one God.
Yet, we
find Jesus Christ praying to God as creatures pray to Him:
“Father, the hour has come. Glorify thy Son, that thy Son may
glorify thee.” “I pray for them ... Yet not for these only do I
pray ...” “Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.” He goes
so far as to tell the Apostles that “if you loved me, you would
indeed rejoice that I am going to the Father, for the Father is
greater than I” (John 14:29). Jesus Christ as a human being is
not as great as the Father, even though, as divine, He is equal
to Him.
St. Paul who wrote of Jesus
Christ “who though he was by nature God,” also wrote: “For
there is one God, and one Mediator, between God and man,
himself man, Christ Jesus” (1 Tim. 2:5). He also said that
Jesus Christ as high priest “is able at all times to save those
who come to Go through Him, since he lives always to make
intercession for them” (Hev. 7:26). He added: “For Jesus, in
the days of his earthly life, with a loud cry and tears,
offered up prayers and supplications to him who was able to
save him from death, and was heard because of his reverent
submission. And he, Son though he was, learned obedience from
the things that he suffered...” (Heb. 5:7-8).
It is
through Jesus Christ that God is revealed to man. Eternal life,
the destiny of all men, comes to us through Jesus Christ
because He has redeemed us through His blood. He Himself said:
“Now this is everlasting life, that they may know thee, the
only true God, and him whom thou hast sent, Jesus Christ” (John
17:3). There is no other way to eternal life, for “I am the
way,” says Jesus
Christ.
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