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The Greatest Man Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 15, 2021 (message contributor)
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.
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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