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God's Human Nature Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 2, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: The full Gospel is Christmas and Easter, and that Jesus was fully man and fully God. He was the God-Man. If you take either one out of the church year you have destroyed it, and if you take either of the natures of Jesus out of him you have destroyed the Gospel and the Jesus of the New Testament.
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Superman has always been popular as a comic book character, and I can remember racing across
the snow in a blizzard to trade comic books with a friend in order to get some new adventures of this
heaven-like hero of humanity. In our day now the movies of superman have made millions because
they appeal to the universal human fantasy that man can be God-like, and fly on his own power, be
invincible as he fights the forces of evil. We love to have our super heroes. This is true in every
culture. Some of the early Christians exalted Jesus to the level of a superman. It is understandable why
they did, but the majority of Christians got together and declared these Christians heretics by making
Jesus a superman. They were guilty of thinking too highly of the deity of our Lord. This seems very
strange to us, but the world is full of strange things. There is a rare metal called gallium which melts
at 86 degrees, so that if you held it in your hand for awhile it would begin to melt. That does not fit
our image of a metal, but it is a fact. It seems equally unlikely that anyone could think too highly of
Christ's deity. How could this be possible?
The Christians who were called heretical were saying that Jesus was so divine than he could
never be truly human. They so exalted the deity of Christ that they denied his humanity. They said
he could not have been a real man for human nature is evil, and a holy God could never take on a
human nature. These people were called Docetists from the Greek word meaning to seem. They said
Jesus only seemed to be human.
Their theology has come down to us in the Acts of John which was written in the second century.
In it Jesus does come down from the cross and does not suffer at all. That would be totally unworthy
of the Son of God. The people saw him suffer on the cross, but that was only an illusion. Jesus
appears to John and reveals to him that he is really not suffering at all. It is all a trick, and it is like
superman acting weak when he is not. This superman image of Jesus became popular, and we have
Gnostic documents from the third and fourth century that tell us Jesus did not really die. It was all an
illusion and Jesus was really laughing as he watched them nailing him to the cross, for it was not
real. The church declared these writings heretical for they rejected the real humanity of Jesus.
The New Testament does not give us this superman concept at all. The Jesus of the New
Testament could not stop bullets, for he could not even stop whip on his back. It cut through his
skin and made him bleed, as did the crown of thorns on his head. The spear went through his side
and the nails through his hands. He had to endure the pain a suffering of a fully human body.
The battle raged for centuries between the two groups with one saying it was all illusion and the
other saying the pain was real in a real human body. Orthodox Christianity said Jesus was not a fake
man, but he was totally real as a man. One heresy after another tried to deny the full humanity of
Christ, but the church stuck to the Scripture and said he was fully real in his humanity. The battle
goes on yet today, for many believe Jesus was fully God, but not fully man. They say his humanity
was only a disguise. Charles Colson in The Struggle For Men's Hearts and Minds tells of a survey
by Christianity Today in which people were asked if they believed Jesus was fully God and fully
man. Among the general public only 26 percent said yes. Among evangelical Christians only 43
percent said yes. That means that the majority of believers are still rejecting one of the major
doctrines of orthodox Christianity. They do not realize that they are heretical in their beliefs.
All of this brings us again to the introductory paragraph of Paul's letter to the Romans. In it he
spells out the essence of the Gospel which centers in the two characteristics of Jesus, which are his
humanity and his deity. Like the two ends of shoelaces, these two realities tie up the Gospel
package. If you cut one side off you lose it all. Paul says in v. 3 that the Gospel regards God's Son as
to his human nature and then in v.4 he says it regards God's Son as to his divine nature. Only a man
could come from the seed of David. The word used here is spermatos. Jesus had a human nature that