Video version here
Eleven (now sixteen)
years ago Richard Dawkins released his book The God Delusion. In that
book a highly educated and respected Oxford professor takes much delight in
using out of date, barely reasoned arguments that a first-year undergrad is
trained to debate, to try and refute the existence of God. He then ends the
book saying we can’t be completely sure God doesn’t exist - the guy couldn’t
even convince himself with his own arguments. In the second chapter of his book
he begins by attacking the God of the Bible with a line of accusations about
his character. According to Dawkins, God is a lot of horrible things, including
“filicidal.” What’s filicidal you ask? He’s accusing him of murdering his own
child. He’s obviously referring to the death of Christ on the Cross and the
Christian belief that it was the Father’s will to crush the suffering servant
for the sins of all of us. Some atheists love to trash this as divine child
abuse, or child murder.
Now at first
glance you have to agree with Richard Dawkins. Child sacrifice is a horrible
crime and one we all agree on these days. Sadly this was not always the case.
Many cultures in the ancient world, and not so ancient world, practiced child
sacrifice. In fact, as recently as the modern era tribes were encountered in
Africa, the Americas, and other regions which practiced child sacrifice to
their gods. The Bible always called this evil!
Yahweh
himself strongly commanded the Israelites to never do such an abominable thing
in Israel, of course they disobeyed him, but that’s a discussion for another
video. Even when God tested Abraham and asked him to sacrifice his son, God
never intended to allow it to happen. He provided a substitute, a lamb, and it
is very likely that God was using this test, at least partially, to show
Abraham, the former pagan, the futility and evil of child sacrifice. So, if
child sacrifice is thoroughly pagan, and the Bible calls it an evil practice,
then how could God the Father kill his own son?
Because God
the Father is not the Father of God the son, in the same way that any human
father is to their son. In human child sacrifice a human father takes their
defenceless child, and brutally murders them to appease some terrible, petty
deity, in order to get better crops, favour in war, or some other perceived
blessings. If God were Jesus’ Father in the human sense, then this would pull
apart the whole gospel. But God is not Jesus’ Father in this way.
Just as God
the Father is fully God, so is Jesus, the Son of God fully God, along with the
Spirit who is also fully God. One God in three persons. They have lived in
perfect relationship for eternity, and always will. Their relationship is as
eternal as their power, and there is no helpless member of the Trinity. Jesus
is God’s son in the sense that he is eternally begotten of the Father, of the
same essence, and is an equal person, in the three-person Godhead. In his
earthly ministry he submits to the Father as a son does to their father, and he
now sits at the right hand of the Father on the same throne. The Father’s will
is the Son’s will, and the Spirit’s will. They are united and unified in a way
that we as humans can only dream of and will not fully experience until heaven.
Therefore,
Jesus was not some helpless human being sired by some Zeus like deity in a
nubile human beauty and killed in some petty ritual. No, the cross was the
culmination of God’s plan of redemption, that had been conceived before the
creation of the world, by all of the Godhead, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Jesus
was raised as a man, by human parents, but he was the God-man, fully man and
fully God. Perfectly capable of taking care of himself, to a degree that none
of us can fully comprehend.
After all Jesus
said this: “17 For this reason the Father loves me, because I lay down my life
that I may take it up again. 18 No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of
my own accord. I have authority to lay it down, and I have authority to take it
up again. This charge I have received from my Father.” (John 10:17-18). Jesus
laid down his life by his own will, because, if he hadn’t no one would have
been able to lay a finger on him.
God didn’t
murder his Son, God the Father and God the Son got together with God the Spirit
and hatched the ultimate plan to rescue us from the consequences of our sin. The
people who murdered Jesus were the corrupt Romans officials and weak Jewish
leaders. But he went to his death willingly to pay the sacrifice for our sins. He
let them nail him to the cross, so the punishment we deserve for our sins could
be forgiven.
How could
God kill his own son, is the wrong question. Why did Jesus willingly die for us
is the question we should ask? And the answer? Because he loved us and wanted to
make a way for us to come to the Father.
No comments:
Post a Comment