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Crisis Regarding Christ
by The Rev. Dr. Curtis I. Crenshaw
Rev.
Dr. Curtis I. Crenshaw
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Some years ago a preacher visited my church.
After the Sunday School class, during which I was teaching on
various cults, he said, "In my church we have no creed but
Christ." I responded, "Which Christ? The one of the
Mormons, the Jehovah's Witnesses, the word-faith movement, the
kenotic Christ, or of the ancient creeds?" Today we have
a crisis regarding Christ because we no longer value truth.
Suffice it to say, the historic Church
has always assumed that there was truth and error, not just opinions.
It was zealous to maintain the truth about the Son as revealed
in Holy Scripture. It was not tolerant (the politically correct
word today) of error concerning Christ, though they could be tolerant
of minor things. It came together on several occasions in ecumenical
councils to proclaim the Gospel, the truth about Christ, writing
doctrinal statements that were considered binding on all Christians.
It realized that faith was only as good as its object, and the
object of faith (Christ) only as good as the content about Him.
And from that day to now, those councils, especially the Council
of Chalcedon, have been considered by all branches of Christendom,
Protestant, Roman Catholic, and Eastern Orthodoxy, to be the epitome
of orthodoxy regarding the person of Christ. During the greatest
revival in the history of the Church, the Reformation, the Reformers
did not challenge Chalcedon's teaching that Christ was fully God,
fully man yet sinless, one person, and no mixture of the two natures
of divinity and humanity (John 1:1-3, 14; 5:28; 10:30; Col. 1:15ff;
2:9; Heb. 1:1ff; etc). That was bedrock.
Unfortunately, today is different. The ambiance
of this age is ripe for heresy since personal opinion is
considered to be more important than truth. The Church
has become obsessed with making people feel comfortable, not with
truth. The Church has devolved into a radical egalitarianism,
and truth has been reduced to its lowest common denominator. Now
each individual-with or without his Bible-will decide for himself
what truth is; forget the early councils.
In contrast to the heresies, the early
fathers understood that Christology was at the heart of redemption,
that who Christ was determined whether man was redeemed or not.
Their constant watchword was "what is not assumed [in the
incarnation] is not redeemed." Thus if Christ had not assumed
full humanity (sin excepted), we would have no redemption. Some
said that He did not have a human will in the incarnation (heresy
of monothelitism), which would mean that man's will was not redeemed.
Others had said that Christ had not assumed a rational human soul
(heresy of Apollinarism); thus man's soul was not redeemed.
This worked the other way also. The
early Church fathers recognized that if Christ had not been fully
God and functioning fully as God, there could be no reconciliation
of God and man, no infinite merit to what Christ had done, but
only the work of a man. At the Council of Ephesus, therefore,
the fathers clearly stated in A.D. 431: "If anyone shall
say that Jesus as man is only energized by the Word of God,
and that the glory of the only-begotten is attributed to Him as
something not properly His: let him be anathema" (emphasized
added). Again, they proclaimed: "If any man shall say that
the one Lord Jesus Christ was glorified by the Holy Spirit, so
that He used through Him a power not His own and from Him received
power against unclean spirits and power to work miracles before
men and shall not rather confess that it was His own Spirit
through which He worked these divine signs; let him be anathema"
(emphasis added).
Anything less than one who functioned
fully as man and fully as God in one Person would man
to die for our sins. He had to be God to give infinite value to His
work. He had to be one person to bring God and man together. There
could be no compromise between the two natures lest He become a hybrid
of deity and humanity and not really either one, but each nature must
be fully what it was before the union.
But let us consider some of the modern
heresies about Christ, which are just the old ones updated. First,
in the early part of this century, we saw the beginning of the
"search for the historical Jesus" movement, which
continues today, though sometimes under a different label (We
are now in the Third Quest.). The four Gospels were not
considered reliable, but had to be demythologized to get to the
"real," human Jesus. These men wanted just a human Jesus,
much like themselves, creating a more palatable and benign Jesus
after their own image, attractive to all, threatening to none.
They did not want the supernatural, divine Son of God who was
Virgin born, and who would meet them in judgment at the Last Day.
Second, one well-known twentieth-century theologian
wrote a book shortly before he died espousing Christ as two persons,
the ancient Nestorian heresy. He railed against the early
fathers: "However distasteful it may be to those students
whose knowledge is confined to fifteen minutes of a broader lecture
in the Systematic Theology class, and all the more distasteful
to the professor who knows little more than those fifteen minutes,
they must be forced to acknowledge that the Chalcedonian bishops
and the later theologians were talking non-sense, because their
terms had no sense at all."1 But Chalcedon was the great council
that confirmed Ephesus where in turn Nestorius was condemned.
In Nestorianism we have a moral cooperation
between the human Jesus and the divine Son but not a hypostatic
union of natures in one Person, hence two persons were
associated with one body. Here the Word was not made man,
not born of the Virgin, but united with a man by indwelling
him, much like prophets of old had God indwelling them. In this
view, salvation is a moral cooperation between man and God, not
a work of the God-Man alone. Since the Word did not become man,
there is no revelation of God personally, only a veiled, vague
sense of Him through some man called Jesus. But Chalcedon proclaimed
that God became man, the Second Person of the Holy Trinity
adding to His divine Person sinless humanity, born of the
Virgin Mary. Man is in a hopeless, sinful estate, and the God-Man
rescues him and reveals God perfectly. Indeed, he who seen Jesus
has seen the Father (John 14:9).
Third, we have our Arians, those who
deny the deity of Christ altogether, such as the Jehovah's Witnesses,
the word-faith movement,2 and the Mormons who deny everything possible.
In Arianism, Christ was a created being, not eternal, and not
equal with the Father. In Arianism, salvation is worked out by
man under the watchful eye of God. Indeed, man can be god. There
is no reconciliation of man with God since there is no real union
of God and man in one person. Thus salvation is eliminated. If
Christ is only a creature, God is not revealed, but a wholly other
being. Thus God is eliminated.
Fourth, the most popular heresy of the Church
today is a somewhat new twist on Arianism. Kenosis has
several variations. There is full kenosis that teaches that Christ
ceased to be God altogether at His "incarnation." What
happened to the Trinity during this "suspended animation"
is not usually addressed, but this radical form is usually taught
by liberals.
A more subtle but no less deadly version, usually
taught by evangelicals, is that He did not function fully
as God at the "incarnation" but gave up the use
of His divine attributes. Then after (!) the incarnation,
Jesus took up the full use of His divine attributes once again.
Of course we must ask when the incarnation ended. Indeed, is not
Christ still the God-Man in heaven today so that the incarnation
is permanent?
One evangelical kenotic theologian states:
"[Jesus] did, however, limit himself to exercising [omnipresence]
only in connection with the restrictions imposed by a human body,
which meant that he could be in only one physical location at
a time. . . ."3 Consider the implications of
this statement. Besides the fact that God cannot cease to be God
or cease to function as God (His nature cannot change), this version
of kenosis is presenting incarnation by subtraction rather
than by addition. Indeed, kenosis is incarnation by deicide!
The Church and Holy Scripture, however, have taught that the second
Person of the Trinity added to His divine person a perfect
human nature while not sacrificing anything of His deity. Again
this theologian states: "Perhaps, at least for part of
his [Jesus'] life, he even gave up the consciousness that he had
such [divine] capabilities and had exercised them with the Father
and the Holy Spirit prior to the incarnation" 4 (emphasis
added). Can it get any worse? The Son was God while on earth;
He just forgot about it!
The implications of the ancient but
modern deviations are also heretical. Sin has only finite implications
since Christ did not need to function as the infinite God to accomplish
our salvation. The essence of the Trinity is fatally compromised
with one Member whose divine nature changed, who forgot who He
was, and who was impotent as God while on earth. The work
of the Trinity is also fatally compromised as now there is no
cooperation of the Three Persons in redemption.5 Indeed, we have
no reconciliation of God and man for there is no meaningful union
of God and man in Christ. What is given with one hand ("He
was God while on earth") is taken back with the other hand
("He did not function as God"). We must lovingly stand
with Chalcedon for truth regarding kenosis: This is an updated
Arian heresy that robs people of their salvation.
If there was ever a need for a second
Reformation, it is today,
and this Reformation must begin where the first one did: with
the Church's stand for truth and with the Christ of the Councils
and of the Bible. We must not invent a new "Jesus" for
each succeeding generation, but proclaim the old, revealed Jesus,
who never changes (Heb. 13:8). The gates of hell shall not prevail
against the Church that proclaims Christ as the Son of God!

- Gordon Clark, The Incarnation, p.
75.
- Some of the leaders in this movement
are Kenneth Hagen, Kenneth and Gloria Copeland, Charles Capps,
Fred Price, and their ultimate source was E. W. Kenyon who died
some years ago.
- From Millard J. Erickson, The Word
Became Flesh, p. 549.
- Ibid., p. 550.
- We could also say that the sacraments
are fatally compromised. Since there was no meaningful divine
presence in Christ, how could a lone man accomplish salvation?
It was a physical work without God involved personally. By analogy
the sacraments would be empty physical elements with no divine
presence making then means of grace.
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