Summary: Great men are themselves a testimony to the greatness of Jesus. It would be hard to find any famous person who has ever made a comment about Jesus who did not admit His uniqueness and greatness.

Ivan Maddox has pointed out that there have only been three perfect people in

this world, and they were Adam, Eve, and Jesus Christ, who is called the second

Adam. So two Adam’s and an Eve make up the total population of that mini list of

people who were perfect. That list is quickly reduced to one when we make the list

consist of those who stayed perfect by never sinning. Jesus, by the process of

elimination, becomes the only person to survive on the list of people who have

been perfect and who have stayed perfect all of their lives.

Each of the three who started perfect did so because they were direct creations

of God, and did not come by means of human reproduction only, as did all other

humans who have ever lived. Adam was a direct creation, and Eve was made from

his body by supernatural creation. Jesus came from a mother, as have all others,

but He had no natural father, but was conceived by the Holy Spirit, and so was

created by a combination of the supernatural and natural. The fact that Jesus was

the only man to ever live that never fell out of fellowship with God because of sin

in His life is basis enough to call Him the greatest man who ever lived. But there is

far more that makes Him worthy of that title.

Charles Jefferson in his book The Character of Jesus gives a list of great

people in history who were all very different from each other. He then writes,

“What characteristic is common to all? In such a heterogeneous company is it

possible to find any mark which makes them akin? It is possible, and the quality

which is common to all is an extraordinary capacity for achievement. These men

all did things, enduring things, so that the world was not the same after they had

gotten done with it. They carved statues or painted pictures or led armies or ruled

states or composed music or framed laws or wrote poems or made discoveries or

inventions which enriched the lives and homes of men. They achieved something

worth while. They made a mark on the mind of the world. The product of their

genius is an imperishable possession of our race.”

In the light of that paragraph we must ask, “What did Jesus leave or achieve?”

We have no great books from His pen. We have no art or sculpture, or any

physical creation or invention from Him. He never led an army to any victory,

nor did He ever lead a government. His greatness is not like the greatness of any

other man, but it is greater than that of any other man. Charles Lamb said, “ "If

Shakespeare was to come into this room, we should all rise up to meet him; but if

Christ was to come into it, we should all fall upon our knees." We honor the

greatness of others, but we worship the greatness of Jesus, for His is the greatest

of greatness. We cannot minimize the awesome impact of the teachings of Jesus on all of

history. His Sermon of the Mount has been praised by most all the religious

leaders of the world, but it is not as a teacher that Jesus is the greatest of men, for

there have been many great teachers. Jesus was great in a different way than

other great people have been great. He was great at being a man. He was the

greatest human being that ever lived. He was not great just because of what He

did, but because of what He was. Others became great because of the things they

were able to create, or deeds they were able to accomplish, but Jesus became

great because He was the only man in history who was everything that an ideal

man could be. He was the ultimate man, for He was what God intended man to be,

and what man will be when history ends and eternity begins with all of the

redeemed being like Jesus.

Jefferson points out that all other great men in history were great at what they

could do or produce, but they were not great as people. Their manhood was

defective. Alexander the Great was great as a general, but as a man he was

pathetic. He was a man of anger and drunkenness, and in a fit even killed his own

friend. Other great generals, like Napoleon, were also, in spite of their gifts of

leadership, pygmies as men. They were immoral in many ways and were not

examples to follow for the good life. Even the great men of the Bible were far from

ideal. God used them and blest them out of His grace and not because they were

worthy. Noah got drunk and cursed his own grandson, Abraham gave his wife to

Pharaoh, Moses was a murderer, and David was a murderer and an adulterer,

Solomon married idolaters and became one himself, and all of the Apostles Jesus

chose were men of pride and prejudice. Jefferson writes again, “ It is one of the

saddest of all surprises to discover on reading the biographies of the world's

immortal workers how many of them have been narrow and superstitious, selfish

and envious, sordid in their ambitions and groveling in their aims, achieving one

significant or beautiful piece of work in the glory of which the shabbiness of their

character has been swallowed up.” Study the lives of all great men and you will

have to conclude that no great men are the greatest of men, and that is why Jesus

stands out as the most unique of all great men. He was the greatest because He was

the ideal man.

Great men are themselves a testimony to the greatness of Jesus. It would be

hard to find any famous person who has ever made a comment about Jesus who

did not admit His uniqueness and greatness. Let me share just a few quotes from

great minds. Someone has put together a much larger list, and I am just lifting out

some of them.

Philip Schaff, Swiss-born U.S. biblical scholar, 1858

“This Jesus of Nazareth without money and arms, conquered more millions

than Alexander, Caesar, Mohammed and Napoleon; without science and

learning he shed more light on matters human and Divine than all

philosophers and scholars combined; without the eloquence of schools, he

spoke much words of life as were never spoken before or since the produced

effects which lie beyond the reach of orator or poet; without writing a single

line, he set more pens in motion, furnished themes for more sermons,

orations, discussions…than the whole army of great men of ancient and

modern times.”

Michael Faraday, one of the greatest experimental philosophers; Doctorate from

Oxford University, holding 97 unsought for distinctions who discovered Electricity

“I bow before him who is Lord of all.”

Mark Hopkins, American educator and theologian, president of Williams College

(1836-1872), 1802-1887

“No revolution that has taken place in society can be compared to

that which has been produced by the words of Jesus Christ.”

Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor of the French (1804-1814). A brilliant

military strategist, 1769-1821

“Between him and whoever else in the world, there is no possible

term of comparison. He is truly a being by himself. His ideas and

his sentiments, the truth which he announces, his manner of

convincing, are not explained by human organization. The nearer I

approach, the more carefully I examine, everything is above me -

everything remains grand, of a grandeur which overpowers.”

Ernest Renan, French historian, religious scholar and linguist

“All history is incomprehensible without Christ.”

“Whatever may be the surprises of the future, Jesus will never be

surpassed.”

H. G. Wells, British writer, 1866-1946

W hen asked which person left the

most permanent impression on history,

he replied that judging a person’s

greatness by historical standards:

“By this test, Jesus stands first.”

“I am a historian, I am not a believer, but I must confess as a

historian that this penniless preacher from Nazareth is irrevocably

the very center of history. Jesus Christ is easily the most dominant

figure in all history.”

“Christ is the most unique person of history. No man can write a

history of the human race without giving first and foremost place to

the penniless teacher of Nazareth.”

Kenneth Scott Latourette, former President of American Historic Society

In A History of Christianity:

“It is evidence of His importance, of the effect that He has had upon

history and presumably, of the baffling mystery of His being that no

other life ever lived on this planet has evoked so huge a volume of

literature among so many people and languages, and that, far from

ebbing, the flood continues to mount.”

“As the centuries pass by, the evidence is accumulating that

measured by its effect on history, Jesus is the most influential life

ever lived on this planet. The influence appears to be mounting.”

“No other life lived on this planet has so widely and deeply affected

mankind.”

Sholem Asch, Polish-born American Yiddish writer, 1880-1957

“Jesus Christ is the outstanding personality of all time. No other teacher -

Jewish, Christian, Buddhist, Mohammedan - is still a teacher whose

teaching is such a guidepost for the world we live in. Other teachers may

have something basic for an Oriental, an Arab, or the Occidental; but every

act and word of Jesus has value for all of us.”

There is no need to go on, for it is a fact, not even the enemies of Christianity

have bad things to say of Jesus. He is even recognized by famous atheists to have

been truly great. There is no debate here, but there is debate as to the reality of the

manhood of Jesus. One of the first heresies in the early church was called

Docetism, which got its name from the Greek word dokeo meaning “to seem.”

They taught that Jesus did not become a real man in the flesh, but just took on the

form of a man. He seemed real, but he was not an authentic man. He was a pretend

man. This was a rejection of the Incarnation and the Word becoming flesh, and it

was rejected by the early church as heresy. We want to look at how strongly the

book of Hebrews stresses the reality of the humanity of Christ. If He was not a real

man, then He does not count as the greatest man, or even a great man, for if He

was just God pretending to be a man, then the competition is not fair at all. His

perfect manhood would be all fake, for it would be no problem for God to pretend

to be a man. His humanity had to be real to fulfill the plan of God, and we will see

why, but first consider the evidence for-

I. THE REALITY OF HIS HUMANITY

Verse 11 says Jesus is of the same family with the children of God. Verse 14 says

that He shared the same flesh and blood. Verses 10 and 18 say that He suffered,

and verse 18 says that He was tempted. Jesus called men His brothers, and He was

just like them, even to the point of being able to die. He was a real man in every

way that a man can be a man. He was without sin, but He lived in a body and a

world that was under the influence of sin everywhere, and so He suffered the

limitations and weaknesses of the flesh. He got hungry and tired, and He got

frustrated with people, especially His disciples. He wept in times of sorrow, and He

rejoiced in times of celebration. He lived a completely authentic human life. The

following list of Scriptures has been compiled by Diane S. Dew that make it clear

that Jesus was not a fake, but a real man. Physically, He was the same as we are.

A. He was born of our flesh, of a woman.

Genesis 3:15

Isaiah 7:14 (Matthew 1:23)

Matthew 1:16, 21, 25

Luke 1:31, 32; 2:7

John 1:14

Acts 2:30

Romans 1:3; 8:3

Galatians 4:4

Hebrews 2:14-18

B. He grew physically.

Isaiah 53:2

Luke 2:40, 52

C. He had a body of flesh and bones.

Luke 24:39

1 Timothy 3:16

Hebrews 2:14

D. His veins contained blood.

John 19:34

E. He hungered.

Matthew 4:2 (Luke 4:2)

Matthew 21:18

Mark 11:12

F. He thirsted. Psalms 69:21

John 19:28

G. He became weary and slept.

Matthew 8:24 (Mark 4:38)

John 4:6

H. He died.

Matthew 27:50 (Mark 15:37; Luke 23:46; John 19:30)

1 Peter 3:18

Hebrews 2:9, 14

We can see that He also had all the same emotions as we do. When He saw

injustice he became angry as in Matt. 21:12,13, 23 where He cleansed the temple of

the racketeering. He had great mental anguish as in Luke 22:44. He could be filled

with great joy as in Luke 10:21. Jesus had to struggle in prayer just as we do, and

he had to fight off temptation. It is hard to find any emotion that Jesus did not

share with us. The record is clear that His life was not just an act, but it was a real

life of a man.

II. THE REASON FOR HIS HUMANITY

First of all, you need to be a man to understand a man. You cannot understand

any animal completely because you do not know how they feel or think, if they do,

about anything completely. You can see the dog wag its tail and understand they

feel happy and glad to see you, but when you scold them and they walk away with

their tail between their legs, how bad do they feel hurt, and what are they thinking?

You can’t know, and you cannot understand how they feel about most of life’s

experiences because you are not like them. They cannot understand you either,

because they do not have the body and mind of a man.

To fully identify with a person you have to have similar experiences. If you have

never lost a mate by divorce or death, you can understand the pain of what it must

be, but you do not really know what it is like. If you have never had a serious

disease you cannot fully grasp what it is like for those who do. If you have never

been tempted to a particular sin, it does not make a lot of sense to you, for it is so

easy to not do those things that have no appeal. Only those with the same

attraction to a particular sin can understand it in others. We could go on and on

with thousands of experiences and show that you have to be one with someone to

really identify with them. That is why Jesus had to become a man and go all the

way into the life of a real human. If we were to have a high priest who could

understand us and intercede for us, we needed one who had been where we are,

and so knows what the battle really is. The suffering of Jesus was not just the cross,

but the being tempted in every way like we are, but without sin. Not to ever give in

to temptation is a pain we can never know, for all men do give in at some point, but

Jesus never did. To never fail, and to never give in to some temptation out of

God’s will is to live a hard life. We tend to thinks it was a snap to be perfect, but

the fact is, it was the hardest life that could be lived. Jesus lived the greatest life

ever lived, but it was also the hardest ever lived. Try and be perfect for a week, and

you will begin to grasp how impossible it would be to be perfect for 33 years.

Verse 10 tells us that it was through His suffering that He became perfect. You

do not become perfect by avoiding all temptation to do evil. The person who grows

up in isolation and who never has a chance to do anything evil is not the perfect or

ideal person. It is the one who faces the worst that life can throw at them, and yet

stands fast in not yielding to the forces that push and pull toward evil. That is the

life Jesus lived. Heb. 4:15 says He was tempted in every way just as we are, but He

demonstrated that a man can face all temptation and still be faithful to God. Paul

wrote in I Cor. 10:13, “No temptation has seized you except what is common to

man. And God is faithful; he will not let you be tempted beyond what you can bear.

But when you are tempted, he will also provide a way out so that you can stand up

under it.”

Men all too seldom call on God in the time of great temptation. It is easier to

just give in, for it is painful to resist. Jesus took full advantage of this promise of

God’s help, and He was able to overcome all temptation. But the point is, it was

suffering that He had to endure, and because He knows the power of temptation

and how difficult it is to resist, He is a more sympathetic High Priest on our behalf.

An alcoholic does not want a teetotaler defending him, and a sinner does not want a

judge who has never struggled with sin. Jesus became a man in all the fulness of

manhood so that He can be the best possible helper that a man can have. He did

not live the perfect life just so He could look down on the rest of mankind as

pathetic wimps. It is true that He is the perfect example that we are to try to

imitate, but the fact is we cannot, and so we need more than a good example. We

need one who could be perfect, but who also knows how difficult it is, and how

great a torture it is to live in the flesh and not submit to the sins of the flesh. We

need a perfect example who is able to love those who are not perfect, and who does

not expect us to be perfect. We need one who can forgive our imperfection and

save us in spite of it. He lived the perfect life so that He could be the perfect

sacrifice that would make it possible to save those who can never be perfect.

The greatest man is not just the one who excels all others in some area, but the

one who excels and yet can be one with those who do not excel, or who do not even

have the ability to compete. Jesus is the greatest in every area in which He is a

competitor, but He is never exclusive of others in any of these areas. Greatness so

often leads to pride and an attitude that makes one feel they are no longer brothers

with their fellow man. They would admit they are of the same species, but not in

the same class. Verse 11 say Jesus is not ashamed to call men His brothers. He had

such sympathy and compassion for those who were so far removed from His

perfection that He seemed to specialize in coming to their rescue. He loved the

woman at the well who was the town sinner, and she became one of His most loyal

followers. He loved those who were hated by society. The publicans and the harlots

were those he had fellowship with. He even took a thief with Him as the first person

to join Him in heaven. His perfection did not take Him away from the sinner at all,

but made it possible for Him to bring the sinner up to a higher level because He

loved and forgave them.

Among other things, Jesus became a real man so as to reveal to mankind just

what man was created to be in relation to God and other people. Jesus

demonstrates in an actual human life what man is to be. He is what God made man

for, and He is the ideal that all men will be when God’s plan is complete. We shall

be like Him when we see Him as He is. He became a man to demonstrate the

possibility of man living in full obedience to God if they keep their focus on God.

Jesus had to pray often and get alone with God to keep his focus right. It was not

easy to be a perfect man. He could not do it without staying in touch with His

heavenly Father. He said, "I do nothing of myself; but as my Father hath taught

me, I speak these things." John 8:28. Jesus was dependent completely on the

guidance and strength He received from His Father. There is not an hint of pride

in Jesus where He claims to be ideal in His own power. He was so fully human that,

even though He was the Son of God, He could not be the perfect man without

dependence and submission to the Higher Power, which was His heavenly Father.

Had He been just a fake man, put on like a mask, it would be no problem for Him

to live perfectly as God, but He had to live perfectly as a real man, for only a real

man could lay down his life for mankind. The perfect sacrifice had to be a man,

and so Jesus had to live the life of a real man to be that perfect sacrifice.

It would be no example to us if God faked living the ideal human life. It is only

an example of great value if Jesus lived a real human life and thereby showed that

it is possible to stay so close to God that you can overcome the world, the flesh and

the devil. We cannot do it perfectly, but His example is a constant challenge to

make it our aim to live life as He did.

III THE RESULTS OF HIS HUMANITY

The result of Jesus becoming a man and living the perfect life in the flesh is that

it qualified Him to do for us what no one else could do. He could die in our place.

He could be our substitute, and pay the penalty for our sin that we might be set

free from that penalty, which was death. The result of His humanity is the plan of

salvation was able to be completed successfully, and all who will receive Jesus as

their Savior are given the promise of eternal life with Him. He took on Himself

what we could not do, and by His death He destroyed him who has the power of

death. The plan of salvation was God’s do it yourself project. Man could not do it,

but the God-Man could. Even He could not have done it, however, had He not

become man. His humanity was a key factor in the whole process.

I read this interesting account of what a surgeon did decades ago. “On February

15, 1921, there was a doctor who performed an appendectomy. The doctor

performing the surgery was Dr. Evan Kane who over his 37-year medical career

had performed nearly 4,000 appendectomies, so this surgery was not at all unusual

except for two things.

First of all, this was the first time that local anesthesia had ever been used in major

surgery. Dr. Kane believed that local anesthesia was safer than putting a patient

completely to sleep. Most of his colleagues agreed with him in principle, but they

wanted to see first if it would actually work.

So Dr. Kane searched for a volunteer, a patient who would be willing to undergo

surgery while under local anesthesia. It wasn't easy to find one. Most people are

squeamish at the thought of being awake during their own surgery. Others are

fearful that the anesthesia might wear off too soon.

Finally, though, Dr. Kane found a volunteer, and on Tuesday morning, February

15th, the operation began. The patient was prepped and wheeled into the operating

room. A local anesthetic was applied. And as Dr. Kane had done thousands of

times before, he cut open the tissues and removed the appendix. The patient had

only minor discomfort and recovered quickly, dismissed two days later.

Dr. Kane had proven his theory. Thanks to the willingness of a brave volunteer,

Dr. Kane demonstrated that local anesthesia was an alternative, even a preferred

alternative.

But I said there were two facts that made this surgery unusual. I've told you the

first: the use of local anesthesia. The second unusual thing was the patient -- the

patient was Dr. Kane. You see, in order to prove his point, Dr. Kane operated on

himself. The doctor became a patient in order to convince the patients to trust the

doctor.”

You do not have to be a brain surgeon to see how this illustrates what Jesus did

for us in becoming a man and dying for our sin. The surgeon was a pioneer who

went ahead so others could follow without fear. Jesus is the pioneer and perfecter

of our faith. He went into the realm of death and faced the power of death and hell

and conquered that we might follow Him without fear. You can study all of the

great people of history and be awed by their gifts and works, but there is only one

who can forgive your sin and promise you a place in God’s family forever. There is

no competition here, and because Jesus does for us what no one else can, and

because what He does is everlasting, it makes Him the sole competitor for the title

of the greatest man who ever lived.