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Life, for most of us, is filed with heartaches,
disappointments, grief, and even intense pain. Even the person who
"wins" in the game of life-the one who is born into a happy family,
gets the best education available, lands the most rewarding job,
marries the right person, has a happy marriage and wonderful children-must
eventually face the reality of death. One is left wondering: Is
this all life has to offer? Is it worth it?
The
cartoon was touchingly graphic, if somewhat tragic. A dejected,
shabbily dressed and lanky gentleman enters his house with drooping
shoulders amidst a ramshackle of a dwelling. Some malnourished kids
are strewn on the floor. A melancholy, creased-faced wife stares
with a blank look from the side of the room. “Honey, I heard some
good news today,” he says, obviously at the end of a hard day. “We
pass this way but once!”
Most
men, a philosopher once said, “lead lives of quiet desperation.”
And the well-known founder of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud, once
described the best efforts of his craft as “turning neuroses into
common unhappiness.”
A
somewhat crude bumper sticker puts it this way: “Life is hell. Then
you die.”
What
really is the purpose of life? Is there some transcendent meaning
to existence? If God did create the world, what does He have in
mind?
Was
He simply lonely, so decided to create some beings who would just
bow before Him every day in worship and admiration? Did God create
man just for His own pleasure, even amusement? After a life of struggle,
intense pain, frustration, repeated disappointments, sicknesses,
and multiple disasters, what does man get at the end if he “wins”?
And is it worth it? What will really compensate for the atrocities
and hardships which he has had to endure for these millennia?
Is
the best that human life has to offer really good enough? Think
about it. You go to good schools and get the prestigious academic
awards and degrees; land a prestigious, well-paying job that gives
you the status and recognition that any person would crave. You
get married, buy a posh home, possibly with some vacation homes
in choice resorts. You buy the Mercedes or the Lincoln, even afford
a yacht or a small airplane. You have some fine kids, who go on
to make you proud. Life is absolutely terrific—until you are discovered
with cancer or some rare disease. Your marriage falls apart; you
are “re-engineered” out of your job and thrown onto the rubbish
heap of unemployment.
What
position would ever reach in life where you would feel totally secure,
totally safe from harm? It is as if life is not designed to work.
As one pop song says, “If it ain’t one thing it’s another.”
Even
if you had a perfect life, you can’t keep it forever. You are going
to die. All your achievements will one day mean nothing to you.
Others might talk about them; but when you are in the grave, they
will be of little use to you. What is life all about and what on
earth is God doing?
In
fact, look at the vastness and immensity of the universe. Does this
little speck of a planet really matter, and is human life significant,
after all?
Our
universe contains fifty billion galaxies—not planets, but
galaxies. Each one of these galaxies contains billions—yes billions—of
stars like our sun. Our sun is in the Milky Way galaxy, which has
100 billion stars. Does God even know we are here?
No
wonder the Psalmist asks, “What is man that You are mindful of him,
and the son of man that You visit him?” (Psalm 8:4).
It
is easy to look at the immense size of the universe and say that
man is really insignificant in the cosmos.
The
Copernican Revolution radically shattered man’s self-importance
by showing that the earth was not the center of the universe and
that, in fact, the earth revolves around the sun, rather than the
other way around. Our hagio-centric notions were crushed. Then Freud
came along and showed that man was the unwitting captive of unconscious
drives and psychological forces which render him, as the famed psychologist
B. F. Skinner put it, “beyond freedom and dignity.”
Karl
Marx came on the scene and told us that man was the victim of historical
forces and was subject to the inevitability of history. Before Marx
introduced his philosophy, Charles Darwin had convinced many that
human existence itself came about through blind, random, evolutionary
forces, and there was no cosmic design to our existence.
The
nineteenth and twentieth centuries have not been particularly favoring
to man’s sense of uniqueness. But the latest scientific discoveries
are overturning some of the inferences from Copernicus.
It
is now seen that rather than man being some insignificant part of
a vast and majestic universe, the universe’s very design and creation
had man in mind! The “Anthropic Principle,” developed by the brilliant
astrophysicist and cosmologist Brandon Carter from Cambridge
University, teaches plainly that all the seemingly arbitrary and
unrelated constants in Physics have one thing in common: they are
precisely the values you need if you are to have a universe capable
of producing life. In short, the laws of physics are fine-tuned
to produce human life on earth. The Anthropic Principle derives
from the greek word anthropos, man. So man has regained a
centrality which he lost five hundred years ago at the hands of
Nicholas Copernicus.
The
Anthropic Principle has gained a following from some of the most
accomplished scientists of the latter twentieth century. The evidence
for it is simply overwhelming.
There
are four fundamental physical forces in the universe critical to
the support of human life: gravity, electromagnetism, strong nuclear
force, and weak nuclear force. Says the book, Is There a Creator
Who Cares About You?:
“Elements
vital for our life (particularly carbon, oxygen, and iron) could
not exist were it not for the fine-tuning of the four forces in
the universe. We already mentioned one force, gravity. Another is
the electromagnetic force. If it were significantly weaker, electrons
would not be held around the nucleus of an atom. “Would that be
serious?” Some might wonder. Yes, because atoms could not combine
to form molecules. Conversely, if this force were much stronger,
electrons would be trapped on the nucleus of an atom. There could
be no chemical reactions between atoms—meaning no life. Even from
this standpoint, it is clear that our existence and life depend
on the fine-tuning of the electronic-magnetic force.”
Let’s
take a few more examples:
“Gravity
is roughly 1039 times weaker than electron-magnetism. If gravity
had been 1033 times weaker than electromagnetism, stars would be
a billion times less massive and would burn a million times faster.
“The
nuclear weak force is 1028 times the strength of gravity. Had the
weak force been slightly weaker, all the hydrogen in the universe
would have been turned to helium (making water impossible, for example).
“A
stronger nuclear strong force (by as little as 2 percent would have
prevented the formation of protons—yielding a universe without atoms.
Decreasing it by 5 percent would have given us a universe without
stars.
“If
the difference in mass between a proton and a neutron were not exactly
as it is—roughly twice the mass of an electron—then all neutrons
would become protons or vice versa. Say good-bye to chemistry as
we know it—and to life.
“The
very nature of water—so vital to life—is something of a mystery
(a point noticed by one of the forerunners of anthropic reasoning
in the nineteenth century, Harvard biologist Lawrence Henderson).
Unique among the molecules, water is lighter in its solid form:
Ice floats. If it did not, the oceans would freeze from the bottom
up and earth would now be covered with solid ice. This property
in turn is traceable to unique properties of the hydrogen atom”
(from Patrick Glynn’s God: The Evidence—The Reconciliation of
Faith and Reason in a Postsecular World).
The
intellectual force of the Anthropic Principle was one of the factors
which convinced the former atheist, Dr. Patrick Glynn, who got his
Ph. D. from the prestigious Harvard University, to reject atheism
as intelligently untenable. In his book, God: The Evidence,
Glynn says, “Ironically the picture of the universe bequeathed to
us by the most advanced twentieth-century
science is closer in spirit to the vision presented in the
book of Genesis than anything offered since Copernicus.”
Glynn
says, significantly—and this will be the thrust of this booklet—that
the Anthropic Principle comes down to “the observation that the
myriad laws of physics were fine-tuned from the very beginning of
the universe for the creation of man—that the universe we inhabit
appeared to be expressly designed for the emergence of human beings.”
Religion
has not offered a rational explanation as to why this is so. What
really does God have in mind? Just that man at the end will inherit
immortality in human form? Is there something much bigger and grander
in God’s design? Religion has not been able to come up with the
correct answer.
What
the Christian world is telling millions about that which God has
in store for the saved is far inferior to what He has in mind. Read
on for the PROOF! Believe it or not, the Bible reveals that man’s
awesome destiny is to be like God!
Could
you please, at this point, stop reading and pray, for without the
Spirit’s guidance we cannot come to the truth. Truth might be aided
by scholarship but does not come through scholarship. Conviction
of truth comes through the Holy Spirit. There are many brilliant
minds who do not and will not in this age understand God’s truth.
Pray now for God’s divine guidance on this subject.
Admission
Let
us make one significant concession at the outset: There is a sense
in which the view that man will become God “as God is God” is clearly,
demonstrably false. If essential to the very definition of God is
eternity and self-existence—which it is—then man cannot, can
never, become God, and any such view is patently absurd. Man
is finite and contingent; God is eternal and necessary. So we could
end the essay here by saying that this teaching is rank heresy and
philosophical nonsense. But language must be understood in its context,
and literary analysis has to—contrary to the deconstructionists—take
into consideration the intent of the author.
What
we have meant to convey is clearly captured in our famous phrase,
“God is reproducing Himself,” and in our assertion that humans will
become “God-beings.” We have not taught that humans, as God-beings,
would take the supreme place of the Father, or knock him off His
throne. The Father and the Son will always be above deified beings.
But we would be of the same species of being—for God is a species
of being. The Father is right now over the Son quantitatively and
hierarchically, but the Father and Son are equal in nature.
So
let’s understand from the beginning: Man will not take the place
of the Father and the Son and will never by any stretch of the imagination
deserve the level of praise and honor as the Father and the Son.
Deified humans will always owe all praise and honor to the two divine
Persons who confer divinity on them. They will not be so arrogant
as to want the same honor or homage. But they will be of the same
nature, having the same divine magnificence.
So
don’t resist this doctrine on the basis of fear that you would be
taking away from God’s glory and praise. No, the Father and Son
will stand out for all eternity for their indescribable love which
made them decide to share power with pieces of clay.
Imagine
this incredible love—this awesome, language-defying love and unselfishness.
Here were two Persons existing alone for all eternity—and our minds
can’t grasp eternity—and deciding at some point that rather than
keeping all this power and magnificence to themselves they would
create a race of beings, very low in status, just corruptible flesh
and blood, and eventually, through a process of time and testing,
bestow upon them their own divinity. This was a spirit quite the
opposite of Satan’s. Satan wanted more power and honor than he had.
He sought to get, not give. But Jesus, giving a clue to the divine
nature, thought if not robbery to hold on to divinity but emptied
himself of it, veiled it while on the earth, and became a man in
order that man might become God. This is love personified. If we
reject this doctrine of deification, we shortchange the love of
God!
Many
times, opponents of this truth of deification use semantics to override
the truth of man’s real destiny. So we concede: Man obviously cannot
be eternal and is not self-existent, so the incommunicable part
of God’s nature cannot be conferred. However, this by no means disproves
that God is reproducing Himself and that we will become exactly
like God and Christ by nature and power.
Jesus’ Glory
To
understand the truth about man’s destiny it is essential that we
understand who Jesus really is. If Jesus is not God, then man can’t
be God. John 17 clearly shows that Jesus preexisted His human birth
and possessed deity. (For a booklet proving the essential truth
that Jesus had always existed, write for Is Jesus Really God?)
In
John 17:5 Jesus asks the Father for the glory which He had before
the world was. Recall that Philippians 2:5-9 establishes that Jesus
gave up something when he became man; He gave up his divine glory,
or, to put it in more precise theological language, His divine prerogatives
were veiled during His earthly existence. Thus he could be hungry,
tired, express lack of knowledge, and die.
So
Jesus gave up His divine glory, which was His deity. But note. He
asks the Father to give back that glory after His resurrection.
“And now, O Father, glorify Me together with Yourself [or “in Your
own presence”] with the glory which I had with You before the world
was.”
Acts
3:13 shows that the Father honored Jesus’ request and glorified
him. “The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the God of our fathers,
glorified His servant Jesus.”
It
will be very important to define what we mean by the glory
of Jesus Christ. Could it mean His divine transcendence and deity?
While
it is true that there are a variety of meanings to the word glory
(doxa in Greek), and that the Bible shows that man already
has a form of glory, context demonstrates what particular meaning
should be adopted. In the context of John 17, glory definitely means
divinity and the powers associated with divinity, which Jesus gave
up (Philippians 2).
Let’s
turn to one of the most important evangelical scholarly sources
today, the 933-page Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels: A Compendium
of Contemporary Biblical Scholarship. Under the heading “Glory,”
the dictionary says that the Septuagint version of the Old Testament
gives the technical meaning to glory (doxa) as “honor intended
for God, or the the majesty or eminence which radiated from God’s
own being.” Keep that definition in mind.
While
the Synoptics (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) develop the concept of glory
eschatologically, John, who wrote to prove the full deity of Jesus
Christ, uses it to prove his theological point. For example, in
John 1:14 he says we have beheld His glory. “Like Peter, John saw
that Jesus was not mere man, but was God made flesh, though his
Divine powers were veiled.”
The
writer of the article on glory makes the interesting and noteworthy
point that John’s view, linking Jesus’ glory with His divinity,
is “consonant with the view offered elsewhere where the divinity
of the Son of God is inseparable from His glory (1 Cor 2:8; 2
Cor 4:4; Eph 3:16; Heb 1:3; Jas 2:1). When the NT writers
reached the conclusion that Christ was eternally one with God, it
was left to John to sketch these results into the Messiah’s earthly
life.”
So
note the connection between Christ’s glory and His divinity.
Now,
if later we will see that this very glory of Christ is to be shared
with His saints—His being “the firstborn among many brethren”—then
what but prejudice or emotional and/or cultural reaction would make
us resist the necessary and logical conclusion that resurrected
believers will be divine beings, too? Who is imposing his presuppositions
on the text, the person who follows the clear direction of the text
of the person terrified by the thought that he might be taking something
away from God’s honor? Hebrews 1:3 is very significant. It says
Jesus is “the brightness of His glory and the express image of His
person.” So the glory of Christ is the glory of God, which is the
divinity of the Father.
The
fact that man is not eternal and self-existent does not mean that
man can never possess all the attributes of divinity by adoption.
There is nothing logically impossible about this. It is only a philosophical
presupposition about what constitutes what incommunicability of
God, largely reflective of Platonic philosophy and Eastern mysticism,
which would mitigate against this biblical truth.
Hebrews
1:3 says Jesus reflects the glory of God. The book of Hebrews was
specifically written to an essentially Jewish audience to reinforce
the divinity of Jesus an His superiority over the angels, Moses,
and everything under the Old Covenant economy. In Hebrews 1, the
writer establishes Jesus’ preeminence over the cosmos and the angels.
Again,
we acknowledge that glory can have a variety of meanings but we
must use context to determine precise meaning.
A
most fascinating essay appears under the title “Glory” in The
Dictionary of the Later New Testament and Its Developments.
Commenting on Hebrews 1:3, which says Jesus reflects God’s glory,
the scholar says, “The juxtaposition of doxa with hypostasis
in the ontological characterization of Jesus clearly articulates
Jesus’ status. Jesus is God’s glory, God’s very being. This hymn/confession
formed part of the author’s strategy to distinguish between Jesus
and the angels…Jesus is ontologically superior to any and all angelic
agent; Jesus is equal with God; Jesus is God...The ritual of confessing
‘Jesus as the glory of Yahweh’ created and reinforced the boundary
lines between Christianity and Judaism.”
In
his summary, the author states: “In the later New Testament writings
and apostolic fathers, glory language is what G.B. Caird called
‘bivocal’…That is, glory possesses both a subjective and an objective
field of meaning. On the subjective side glory refers to the act
of worship (i.e., ‘give glory to God’; ‘glorify God’). On the objective
side glory denotes the object of worship (i.e., God’s presence).
Glory in both its subjective and objective senses evidences the
development of the church’s faith and practice. When glory began
to be ascribed to Jesus within the church’s liturgy and when Jesus
was identified with ‘God’s glory in the church’s confession, Christianity
was well on its way toward Nicea and Chalcedon. Glory language was
an important vehicle for conveying the Christian redefinition of
God.”
Nicea
and Chalcedon unmistakably acknowledged the church’s creed that
Jesus was God and glory language reinforced that. Now, what is the
implication of that same glory language being applied to human beings?
What except recalcitrant prejudice and theological bigotry could
cause serious biblical scholars to resist the conclusion that if
Jesus’ reflecting God’s glory is a way of attesting to His divinity,
then man’s reflecting the glory of Jesus means just that, too?
Hebrews
2 shows that Jesus, like man, was made for a little while lower
than the angels. This is the natural meaning of the text, which
is to show Jesus’ present superiority to the angels. The angels
were above Jesus while He was a human being on the earth, but now
that He is glorified He is above them—which is exactly what will
happen when true believers are resurrected! Glorified humans will
be above angels, not lower than them or even equal to them.
In
fact, the writer to the Hebrews, after showing Jesus’ likeness to
the Father, goes on to establish the likeness of the resurrected
saints with Jesus. If A equals B and B equals C, then how can we
avoid the conclusion A equal C?
Hebrews
2:10 says that “it was fitting for Him, for whom are all things
and by whom are all things, in bringing many sons to glory, to make
the captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings.” Jesus’
mission is to bring many sons to glory. This is the gospel!
IN what way is this glory distinguishable from the glory of Christ
Himself, and why would we want to suppress this incredible truth?
It is not a doctrine of devils, introduced by Lucifer in the Garden
of Eden. It is not the mythical invention of some cult leader who
founded his “true church” in the 1930s. It is the very revelation
of God Almighty who loves you more than you could ever imagine and
who has willed to share His divinity with you for all eternity!
Now
turn to an even more startling and certainly indubitable text in
2 Thessalonians 2:14: “to which He called you by our gospel [this
is vital to the gospel], for the obtaining of the glory of our
Lord Jesus Christ.” Now what is the glory of Jesus Christ?
Whatever it is, it is exactly what we shall attain. The attempt
to now limit what man will attain disingenuous, if not dishonest!
If you admit that the glory of Christ means His divinity; if you
admit, as the two evangelical scholars (cited above) show that glory
language is the language of divinity and it moved Christianity from
a narrow monotheism, then why not accept the plain, logical conclusion
that this divinity will be shared with mankind at the resurrection?
In
1 Peter 5:10 we have the unmistakable words from the pen of inspiration:
“But may the God of all grace, who called us to His eternal glory
by Christ Jesus, after you have suffered a while, perfect, establish,
strengthen, and settle you.” What? It is the Father who has called
us to His Glory—which, as Hebrews 1:3 says, is the same glory of
Christ. This means that the saints—those called and truly converted
in this age—will, in the resurrection, be no less divine than the
Father and the Son! Let’s not engage in semantical gymnastics about
our inability to attain “the incommunicable aspects of divinity”—His
eternity and self-existence. The truth is, God is reproducing Himself!
He is conferring divinity on pieces of clay!
Colossians
3:4 says, “When Christ who is our life appears, then you also will
appear with Him in glory.” This is future. Second Corinthians 3:18
says that we
are being transformed into his likeness with ever- increasing glory.”
(New International Version). Romans 8:17 says that we are heirs
of God and fellow-heirs with Christ, which must mean that we have
a stake in divinity.
Now
there are some who say that our receiving the glory of Christ merely
means that the character and righteousness which the first Adam
failed to achieve because of sin will be restored in mankind at
the resurrection. That is, we will finally achieve perfection of
moral attributes—and this is what “glory” is intended to imply,
not that man will become a God-being.
That
sounds noble on the surface, but it is flawed, for Christ, despite
His humanity, was perfect and had not a flaw in character. If the
glory which He asked for was anything less than the divine power
of His preexistence, then He would be asking the Father to give
back something which He had in full measure and demonstration during
his earthly existence, namely his moral perfection and sinlessness.
While
His omnipresence, omnipotence, and omniscience were veiled on earth,
His sinless character was not.
When
Romans 8:29 says we are to be conformed to the image of His Son,
some say this image is spiritual perfection and moral excellence—anything
to dilute the full impact of the marvelous truth that God is reproducing
Himself. How man resists God, even when God wants to do Him good!
We
shall have the moral perfection, yes, but more than that. The Bible
reveals we will receive God’s glory, God’s image, and God’s body.
Hebrews 1:3 shows that Christ is the express image of God. We do
not limit the meaning of this description to moral qualities, so
why would we place such limitations on the same term when it is
used of humans? How else can we explain Romans 5:2? It states that
through Jesus Christ “we have access by faith into his grace in
which we stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of God.”
What,
in this context, restricts “glory of God” to something less than
His very essence, His divinity? So why would we want to restrict
it? Why not go with the plain sense of Scripture, unless there are
indicators otherwise? Is this not a sound principle for understanding
the meaning of any scriptural text?
Notice
another point in 1 Corinthians 15:23: “But each one in his own order:
Christ the firstfruits, afterward those who are Christ’s at His
coming.” Have you ever noticed that Christ the firstfruits is not
distinguished from the other fruits in the harvest? In the agricultural
economy from which the analogy is taken, the firstruits were of
the same kind as the other to follow. It was not a different sort—only
the firstfruits.
Isn’t
this analogy clearly suggestive and reinforcing of the point we
have seen in Scripture that our gift of salvation is similar to
the exaltation that Jesus received?
First
John 3:2 says that when Jesus appears “we shall be like Him,
for we shall see Him as He is.” Again, why restrict the meaning
of “we shall be like Him”? We already look like Jesus looked when
He came to this earth the first time. We already bear the image
of God in a limited sense. This text obviously means that the resurrected
saints will be like Jesus in a far greater way than any of
us have experienced in this life.
Notice
that we shall “SEE Him.” This is not referring to His invisible
moral qualities and His attributes, but what we can see as resurrected
spirit-beings! It does not yet appear what we shall be for no one
has ever achieved that status.
Philippians
3:21 says that Christ will “transform our lowly body that it
may be conformed to His glorious body.” What else could this
mean? We are to have bodies like Jesus’ body! We are to have His
glory. We are to have His image. We are to be like Him. He is God.
He is glorified. He is Spirit. He is perfect and absolutely righteous.
Yes, He is also eternal and self-existent, and we cannot be. But
think about it! Our children are not the same age as we are and
we begot them, yet are they any less our species of being because
we have the age and reproductive supremacy over them?
Let
us hold firmly to the powerful truth of “Christ in you, the hope
of glory.” The Holy Spirit in us is the earnest of salvation, the
guarantee that God is eventually going to bestow His divinity upon
those who humbly submit to His will and accept His provisions for
salvation! The Holy Spirit is just the earnest or down payment of
the great salvation. We diminish God’s great salvation when we don’t
proclaim this truth.
Common Objections
There
are some common objections to the biblical truth that God is reproducing
Himself. The most commonly repeated are found Isaiah 42-44.
Isaiah
42:8 says, “I am the Lord, that is My name; and My glory I
will not give to another.” At first glance, this verse appears to
contradict 2 Thessalonians 2:14; 2 Peter 5:10; and other texts which
clearly say that God will give His glory to others. But upon closer
examination it becomes clear that Isaiah 40-45 is a polemic against
the false gods of the surrounding Near Eastern nations, and warning
to Israel not to worship or acknowledge them. Israel was exchanging
the glory and honor of Yahweh for the false gods of the nations
which, as Isaiah says, are really not gods, but are useless, powerless,
so-called “gods,” creations of men’s hands, unlike the eternal,
omnipresent God. The passages are brilliant pieces of polemic.
Read
the full text in Isaiah 42:8: “I am the Lord,
that is My name; and My glory I will not give to another; nor
My praise to carved images.” The last words tell us clearly
what is meant. God is addressing idolatry. He is saying that He
will never share His glory with pagan idols and false gods. Romans
8:29 tells us plainly that He will share His glory with his
human creatures.
Isaiah
43:10 says, “Before Me there was no god was formed, nor shall there
be after Me.” This is a favorite among those who deny that man will
eventually become God. But read the next three verses (and the entirety
of Isaiah 42-45), an you will see clearly that this section is not
discussing man’s destiny, but is condemning the use of false gods.
God Almighty is saying that He is the only true God, and
that the so-called “gods” of the heathen are nothing.
Incidentally,
event he famed anti-cult expert Robert Bowman has stated clearly
that there is a difference between polytheistic deification and
monotheistic deification. The Mormon view that men can become gods
is totally unbiblical and bears no resemblance to the view advocated
in this booklet. Men will not become “gods” but, more properly,
God-beings. It is not just a semantical difference, for while
the Bible declares emphatically that God is one, it reveals that
there is more than one member of the God-family (see again the booklet,
Is Jesus Really God? for a thorough explanation). Humans
will not evolve into “gods,” but will acquire divinity through the
One who alone has the power to grant it.
So
Isaiah is right—no “god” will be formed! But the one God, Yahweh,
will reproduce Himself, adding many divine beings to His eternal
family! There will be no “gods” forming independently.
These
texts from Isaiah can in no way assail the undeniable biblical truth
that God is reproducing Himself and will accomplish His purpose.
Another
text frequently quoted and ripped out of context is Luke 20:36,
which says that in the world of the future, saints will be like
angels, neither marrying nor given in marriage. Now, no really serious
biblical scholar could quote this passage to disprove the deification
of man. If the doctrine is false, this text could never prove it.
What
is the context of the discussion? It is about whether the sons of
this age will marry in the next life (verses 27-34). Jesus, in saying
no, compares resurrected saints with the angels, who are sexless
beings, and says that in the future world glorified humans will
be like angels in that they will be sexless beings. He does
not say that the glorified saints will be like angels in
every way; nor does He say that the saints will be
angels.
As
we have seen, other texts show clearly that the glory God intends
to share with man far exceeds the glory of the angels.
Weak Texts
We
of the Church of God movement have often given a less-than-adequate
defense of this pivotal biblical doctrine. Some use texts like Revelation
3:9 and Psalm 82:6 to defend this doctrine. The Revelation text
says people will come to worship at the feet of the saints. Ah,
some have said, only God should be worshiped. In fact, the very
book of Revelation has the writer, John, refusing to accept an angel’s
worship before him; so if we see people worshiping or bowing before
the saints’ feet after the resurrection, then they must be God-beings.
Yes, that could be so, but it is an ambiguous text for the Greek
word translated “worship” can mean simply to do obeisance or to
show particular honor. Sometimes it does mean worship of a deity,
but it is an ambiguous text and shouldn’t have been one of the major
texts used to prove the doctrine.
Weaker
yet is the use of Psalm 82:6 and Jesus’ citation of it as proof
of the deification of man. The psalm, speaking to humans, states,
“You are gods.” This is an example of poor exegesis, for a simple,
common-sense interpretation should say that if humans in the present
tense are said to be gods, and we are clearly limited beings, then
how could that text prove future deification? Besides, the term
is used of angels and even human judges and kings.
A
stronger text, but not sufficient to prove our case is 2 Peter 1:4,
which says we have been given great and precious promises “that
through these you may be partakers of the divine nature.” An opponent
could say that we have already become partakers of the divine nature—though
not fully—through the Holy Spirit. Or, one could argue that the
divine nature is simply godly character, which is comprised of love,
patience, kindness, and so on.
Unfortunately,
some have focused on these weak arguments and concluded that the
doctrine of the deification of man is unscriptural and should be
rejected. They fail to see that the real proof of this doctrine
lies elsewhere in the Scripture.
Others,
however, resist the doctrine for different reasons.
Why the Resistance?
Some
of the psychological factors influencing the resistance to the biblical
truth that man will become God are understandable. There is a natural
sense of awe and reverence for the uniqueness and majesty of God
and the exclusivity of worship that is due to Him. That is right
and proper.
At
a time when New Age philosophy is strong, with the teaching that
each of us is a “god” with the divine spark inside, it is necessary
that biblical Christians raise their voices against this damnable
heresy. Human beings are not inherently good and godlike. We are
sinners in need of redemption and salvation from the clutches of
sin. We receive goodness only through God, who is transcendent.
Besides,
there are some charismatics with the equally damnable teaching that
men are really “little gods,” misapplying the Psalm 82:6 text, “You
are gods.” We are not little gods, and this carry-over from Gnosticism
must be firmly resisted.
Also,
traditional Christians are careful to maintain the distinction between
the Creator and the creature.
“Evangelicals
are determined to preserve the distinction between the Creator and
the creation, particularly in light of Paul’s teaching in Romans
1:18-32 that the heart of idolatry and rebelling against God is
to worship the creature rather than the Creator,” says Professor
Craig Blomberg in his jointly authored 1997 work How Wide the
Divide? A Mormon and an Evangelical In Conversation.
But
if God’s own revelation shows that one day He will take the initiative
to share His glory with mankind (Romans 5:2), then we will be more
than mere creatures.
The
point is, we must not impose our own ideas and philosophy on the
biblical revelation, but must accept it for what it is.
A
most gifted evangelical scholar, Professor Craig Blomberg, in his
debate with the Mormon scholar Stephen Robinson (How Wide the
Divide?) asserts, “We can come to share perfectly God’s communicable
attributes, but can never usurp God’s unique role by becoming all-powerful,
all-knowing, and all-present.”
But
notice the word “usurp,” thrown in to create an emotional distraction
and resistance. If God in Scripture clearly states that He has called
us to His eternal glory, where does the “usurping” come in? Satan
wanted to “usurp,” but by God’s grace man will receive deification.
And notice that not one text is given to show that God cannot make
us all-knowing, all-powerful, and all-present. It is simply stated
as a given.
It
is only philosophy, not the biblical text or inescapable logic,
which decides which attributes are communicable and which are not.
Platonic philosophy is more influential here than Scripture.
Why
would it be impossible for God to make us omnipresent, omnipotent,
and omniscient? Why? By what logical law? What in Aristotelian logic
would be violated? Would the law of non-contradiction be violated?
Didn’t Jesus change from humanity—full humanity—to being fully God?
There
is a fierce theological and philosophical debate going on right
now in evangelical theological circles about God, and many of the
old assumptions are coming under sharp questioning. A lot of philosophical
presuppositions have been imposed on Scripture and it is time that
we put aside our traditions for the clear teaching of the Word of
God. Paul says, “Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy.”
As the brilliant evangelical philosopher Norman Geisler said in
a Christianity Today article over twenty-two years ago, “You cannot
beware philosophy unless you are first aware of philosophy.” When
you study philosophy you realize that these neat categories, “communicable
and incommunicable,” are man-made and not infallible. Why use them
to judge Scripture, rather than the other way around?
Comparisons With Incarnation
The
profound difficulty modern Christians have with the concept of deification
is comparable to the problem the Jews and others had with the Incarnation
in the first century.
The
Incarnation was a problem to many who felt that the eternal, transcendent
God could never stoop so low as to become man. Indeed, to this very
day a key Unitarian argument is that the unchangeable, eternal God
could not become a man and die. God can’t die, God can’t change.
Men impose certain categories on God and inhibit biblical revelation.
It is the same with the concept of deification.
The
noted church father Athanasius put it well: “God became man in order
that man might become God.” Exactly right!
The
Incarnation was a signal as to the intention of God to deify man.
In fact, in the very creation account, the fact that the animals
were made after their own kind but man made after the image and
likeness of God—the God-kind—allows us to catch a glimpse of God’s
divine purpose.
The
Incarnation of Jesus Christ was a further revelation, and at the
Second Coming the full manifestation of God’s plan will be unveiled.
In
a brilliantly argued article in the July 1996 issue of Affirmation
and Critique, Kerry Robichaux says, “It appears that many Christians
wish to protect God’s integrity: yet in a sense the greater risk
to God’s integrity was taken in His becoming a man.
“The
New Testament speaks of the Incarnation as an emptying (Phil. 2:7)
and Christ’s death as his humiliation (Acts 8:33). That man may
become God is not merely the elevation of man to the eternal plan”
but the glorification of God Himself in man.
“It
serves to magnify God, not to minify Him…But if we ignore the full
provisions of His salvation and fail to enjoy the full extent of
His communicability, we risk insulting Him in His grace and His
economy.”
While
the Protestants like to talk glibly about salvation, they take away
from the magnificence of God’s grace and the magnitude of His salvation.
To take the text slightly out of its original context, “How shall
we escape if we neglect so great a salvation?” The churches neglect
“so great a salvation” by not teaching people what God really has
in mind. The Church of God has this truth. Shouldn’t your efforts
be fully behind a church that teaches people this wonderful truth?
Which
biblical truth is more important than this and which one really
exalts the great God more than this doctrine which shows the incredible
extent of His love? How grateful we should be to come in contact
with a church that has this precious knowledge!
Kerry
Rubichaux, in the Affiration and Critique article, writes,
“Therefore, when we speak of God’s salvation we ought to view it
more broadly than modern Protestant Christianity. While Protestantism
typically sees salvation and redemption as virtually identical,
and therefore focuses on the suffering and death of Christ, we are
compelled to consider God’s salvation as something much fuller as
that which consummates in man’s sharing of God’s life, nature, and
expression to become His genuine sons and, in kind, like Him.”
The
Incarnation was divinity brought into humanity and the deification
at the Second Coming will be humanity brought into divinity.
The
only barriers to accepting this doctrine are philosophical speculation
(particularly Platonic philosophy) and Eastern mysticism, which
posits the view that God is totally Other and inaccessible to man,
dealing with us by intermediaries. Yes, the Scripture says God dwells
in “unapproachable light,” but He will bring that light of His divinity
to man who will then be one with Him.
The
truths about the Sabbath, the holy days, the Kingdom of God ruling
on the earth, the fulfillment of prophecy, the death of Christ,
and His resurrection and ascension are all subsumed into what God
really is doing in history and what really shows that “God is love.”
Thank
God for this vital truth!
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