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The Uniqueness Of Jesus Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Aug 21, 2020 (message contributor)
Summary: Jesus was one of a kind. There has never been anyone like Him in all of history.
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THE UNIQUENESS OF JESUS Based on John7:25-46
An advertisement that was originally printed in the
Miner's Magazine as a serious add was later published by
the Reader's Digest as humor. The ad read, "Wanted:
Man to work on nuclear fissionable isotope molecular
reactive counter and three-phase cyclotronic uranium
photosynthesizers. No experience necessary." Of course, it
was a joke. No one is that unique. On the other hand, how
can you find anyone with experience in a field that never
existed before?
The New Testament has a similar problem in the spiritual
realm. The complex task of saving sinners, and yet
remaining just an absolutely loyal to his nature of holiness
was God's problem. Of course, it is only a problem from our
point of view. In His eternal wisdom it was solved before the
world began. The job called for an extremely unique person.
He had to be fully man, for only a man could live a perfect
human life. If he was not truly man, the life he lived would
not be truly human. Yet, only God could insure that such a
life could be lived. The paradox is that only God could do
what was necessary, but it could only be done as a man. The
solution could only be Jesus Christ-the God-Man. All the
paradoxes and problems of the relationship of God and man
are resolved in Christ who was both.
Robert C. Moyer wrote, "In Jesus divine omnipotence
moved in a human arm. In Jesus divine wisdom was cradled
in a human brain. In Jesus divine love throbbed in a human
heart. In Jesus divine compassion glistened in a human eye.
In Jesus divine grace poured forth from human lips." Jesus
was the most unique of all men, but not just because He was
God, but rather, because He was really man. That is, He
was the only complete example of ideal manhood ever seen
on this planet. Adam was the only other man who was ever
perfect in his manhood, and he fell. Jesus alone lived a
perfect human life. Jesus was unique, not just because He
was more than a man, but because He was fully a man. He
was the man par-excellence.
We need, therefore, to stress His humanity as He did of
Himself. His favorite name for Himself was the Son of Man.
In the bureau of standards in Washington there is a gold bar
exactly one yard long which is the standard by which every
measuring instrument in the United States is judged. There
has to be one, and only one, final absolute standard. Jesus is
that standard in the realm of human life, morality, and
character. As deity He was no standard for human life.
Only as man did He become our standard and ideal. In the
incarnation the human ideal became real.
Herman Horne points out that realism and idealism are
combined in Jesus Christ. He writes, "Human nature at its
possible best gives us the ideals for man. If we want to know
what the ideals of man's complete living are, we must know
what human nature is at its best; what it's elements are;
what it is possible for each element to attain in its
development. Thus the real is the basis of the ideal; the real
at its best is the ideal; the real is the actual; the ideal is what
is possible for the real to become. Such idealism as this has
its feet on the ground; is practical. Idealism without
reference to what the real can become is visionary."
Christian idealism is based on the real of Christ. Jesus is the
example of what the real man can become. He is the ideal
which we shall attain, for we shall be like Him when we see
Him as He is, according to John.
Meanwhile, it is our task to learn of Him, and strive
toward His ideal manhood. Paul said in Eph. 4:12-13 that
the gifts of Apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors and
teachers was, "For the equipment of the saints, for the work
of ministry, for building up the body of Christ, until we all
attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the
Son of God, to mature manhood, to the measure of the
stature of the fullness of Christ." He is our standard, and we
are to measure up to Him as the goal of all our study,
listening, worship, and service as Christians.
O Man of the far away ages,
O Man of the far away land,
More art Thou than all of the sages,
More art Thou than creed or command.
To crown Thee we need but to know Thee;
We need but to live Thee to prove,
For time nor decay can o'er throw Thee-