Some Thoughts on the
"Proofs" of the Alleged Divinity of Jesus
by Gary Miller © 1998, 1999 -
MUSLIM ANSWERS, P.
O. Box 1227, Windermere, FL 34786 - U. S. A.
One of the crucial issues which separates
Islam and Christianity is their beliefs concerning the nature of Jesus -
peace be upon him. The majority of Christians believe that Jesus is
"Divine", i.e. they believe him to be God incarnate. Muslims, on the other
hand, beleive that Jesus was only a great Prophet of God and a faultless
human being.
Approach to a
Muslim--Christian Dialogue
The doctrine of the Trinity says
that the three distinct co-equals are altogether God -- or that God is made
up of three co-equal "persons". In particular, Jesus is said to be
"God the Son", or the "Son of God". In a Muslim-Christian
dialogue, inevitably the Muslim will question the details regarding this
theology. The Christian, on the other hand, will usually form a common
explanation by complaining that Muslims simply do not understand the
Trinity, and that what the Muslim accuses the Christians of is one thing
which Christians don't really believe. In short Muslims do not understand
how the Christians understood the Trinity. The Muslim seeks to find
clarifications of the teachings of this doctrine by asking for explanations
as to how that would be so, because the term Son of God cannot have a
literal interpretation: Sonship and divine nature would be two attributes
which are incomparable, because sonship describes someone who receives life
while divine nature describes someone who receives life from no one. To be a
son is to be less than divine and to be divine is to be no one's son.
Eventually the Christians would seek refuge in the response of "these are
things which we cannot understand."
Verification and
Understanding
Christians seem to be confusing two
concepts -- the concept of verification and the concept of understanding.
This can be illustrated in the example of hydrogen combining with oxygen to
make water. We can verify this statement in a laboratory to see whether this
statement is a statement of fact. But after verification, that does not mean
what we have understood the nature of atoms. Verification and understanding
are two different concepts. Thus, what Muslims should do is to re-direct the
discussions because the first issue is more basic than simply resolving all
the difficult points of Trinitarian doctrines. It is not the
explanation of how to understand the concept of the Trinitarian doctrine
that we seek, but rather, to seek verifications of their belief, that is,
why in the first place must we believe that Jesus is divine (not how but
why).
The Trinity -- A Church
Doctrine
If Muslims pursue this approach,
ultimately many Christians will usually say that "the Church says so",
that is, it is the Church's doctrine. Thus many Christians' arguments stop
short of questioning the Church's authority. They will not challenge it to
find out the basis for their claim or their teaching. Although many
Christians in fact concede that this is the case on the subject of
Trinitarian doctrine, there are also others who insist that Jesus did talk
about the Trinity himself.
"Let them produce
proof"
We have been told in the Qur'an to
tell the Christians "Let them produce proof". Thus we demand them to
provide documentation that Jesus himself claimed unqualified divinity for
himself, and that he said in so many words: "I am God". The Muslims
are advised by another Qur'anic verse to tell the Christians: "Say: O
people of the Book you have no ground to stand upon unless you stand fast by
the Law, the Gospel and all the Revelation that has come to you from your
Lord." This demand is reasonable, for Muslims are also told in another
verse that Jesus never claimed to be God. Therefore if the Christians were
to look into their own scripture they would not be able to find any saying
of Jesus, that should him clearly claiming to be equal with God.
Explicit and implicit
statements
From the Biblical record, the
sayings accredited to Jesus are very small because after allowing for
duplications in the Four Gospels' account of his -life, these sayings could
be reprinted in two columns of a typical newspaper. And none of these texts
is a clear claim to divinity, because nowhere does he explicitly claim to be
God. All the quotations are implicit. The difference is, an explicit
statement is one which requires no explanation. The meaning is right on the
.surface of the word. For example, when your gas gauge in your car shows
empty, you do not need to ask your passenger to interpret it for you. it is
very clear. An implicit statement is a statement where the meaning is
carried just beneath the surface of the word. It requires some thought
before we determine what was meant by the words. And all quotations that are
cited by Christians in order to put in the mouth of Jesus the claim of deity
are implicit -- which means interpretation is required. Thus what happens
is, when we are told what Jesus said, we are then told what he meant. In
other words, they interpret the meaning for us.
Christians' claim
The Christians' claim of Jesus to be
God through his Virgin birth (The Immaculate Conception) is cited as
one case of insufficient evidence. But, the Bible also tells us about the
Creation of Adam -- i.e. without father or mother; and the account of the
miracle associated with the prophet Elisha. Also, the case of Melchizekdek
can be cited: "without father or mother or genealogy, and has neither
beginning of days nor end of life, but resembling the Son of God" -
Hebrews 7:3. For these men, no Christian will say he was divine. Yet
each has the qualifications in common with Jesus. Another claim is that
Jesus was God because the Hebrew Scripture predicted his coming before he
was born. Yet the Christians seem to betray a selective or forgetful recall
of the Scriptures because in places where they predict the coming of John
the Baptist they quote prophecies from the Book of Malachi.
Son of Man, Son of God,
Messiah, Savior
Another argument of Christians that
Jesus claimed to be God is that Jesus constantly used the terms, "Son of
God", "Son of Man" and "Messiah" and "Savior".
Since he uses these terms, they argued, therefore he was claiming to be God.
These terms were also applied to other individuals as well, in the Bible.
For example, Ezekiel was addressed as "Son of Man". Jesus himself
speaks of the peace makers as "sons of God". It is interesting to
note that even though Jesus is called the "Son of God" in the Bible,
he is never called "God the Son", which is what the Christians have
made him into due to their Trinitarian theology. Even Cyrus the Persian is
called "Messiah", or "the anointed", in Isaiah Chapter 45.
This verse has been translated in a misleading way. The meaning of the
Hebrew word "Messiah" is "God's anointed". Here, when it
refers to Cyrus, they translated the Hebrew word "Messiah" with
"God's anointed". But in places where- the Bible is talking about Jesus,
when the term "Messiah" appears, instead of translating it as
"anointed", they simply transliterate it (i.e. they write the Hebrew
words with the Roman Alphabet without translating it) so that it reads
"Messiah". Interestingly this word "Messiah" is in the Greek
equivalent written as "Christ". Thus there seems to be a conspiracy
to give us the impression that there is only one Messiah, one Christ and no
other. As for the term "Savior", the word is clearly applied to other
individuals besides Jesus, for example the Book of II Kings, Chapter 13,
Verse 5, says: "And the Lord gave Israel a Savior, so they went out from
under the hand of the Syrians; and the children of Israel dwelt in their
tents as beforetime."
"I and My Father are
One"
In John, Chapter 10, Verse 30, Jesus
is quoted as saying "I and my Father are one". Some Christian
scholars have insisted that the only probable understanding of these Words
are: as one in essence or nature. Yet there are several examples where the
same Greek words were used but not understood in the same way. For example,
John 17:11 says: "And now I am no more in the world but these are in the
world and I come to thee. Holy Father keep through their own name, those who
thou hast given me that they may be one, as we are."
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