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Preexistence of Christ

The document outlines a series of studies in Christology, focusing on the preincarnate Son of God and emphasizing the eternal deity of Christ. It aims to provide a comprehensive treatment of Christ's person and work, supported by scriptural evidence from both the Old and New Testaments. The study will address the preincarnate person and work of Christ, asserting His eternal existence and divine attributes against historical and modern theological challenges.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
11 views6 pages

Preexistence of Christ

The document outlines a series of studies in Christology, focusing on the preincarnate Son of God and emphasizing the eternal deity of Christ. It aims to provide a comprehensive treatment of Christ's person and work, supported by scriptural evidence from both the Old and New Testaments. The study will address the preincarnate person and work of Christ, asserting His eternal existence and divine attributes against historical and modern theological challenges.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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FROM THE SERIES: SERIES IN CHRISTOLOGY PREVIOUS PAGE | NEXT PAGE

A1. The Preincarnate Son of God


Article contributed by www.walvoord.com

https://www.google.com/search?
q=walvoored+on+preexistence+of+Christ&oq=walvoored+on+preexistenc
e+of+Christ&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOTIJCAEQIRgKGKABMgkIAhAh
GAoYoAHSAQkxNzkwOGowajeoAgCwAgA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

[Author’s note: The series of studies in Christology beginning in this issue is


planned to present the whole doctrine of Christ including His Person and His
work from eternity past to eternity future. Without undue development of
any one theme, the series is intended to include every important aspect of
the subject, thereby providing for the student of Christology a
comprehensive treatment of the whole doctrine. The articles will present for
the first time in print the material which for some years has been
mimeographed for the use of seminary classes in Christology. The form of
the material is new, however, and the entire treatment has been recast to
include new material and to make plain the thought to the reader who may
not have had previous instruction in this doctrine. It is intended that the
more technical material not absolutely essential to the thought will be
included in footnotes for those interested.
The first major division of Christology dealing with the preincarnate Son of
God will occupy the articles to be printed in 1947. Instead of following the
customary division of the subject into that which is found in the Old
Testament and in the New Testament, it will be the plan to include all
material in both Testaments having bearing on the preincarnate Christ. Two
major divisions will be observed: (1) the preincarnate Person of Christ; (2)
the preincarnate work of Christ. In the first division particular attention will
be given to the testimony concerning the deity of Christ. In the second
division the works of Christ in eternity past, in creation, providence,
preservation, revelation, and salvation in the Old Testament will have
principal treatment. No attempt will be made to follow the traditional
limitation of Christology to the Person of Christ only. The importance of His
work in the total revelation of Christ justifies the extended discussion.
Messianic prophecies will be included in the later discussion of Christ
incarnate.]

Introduction

Christianity by its very name has always had Christ as its historical and
logical center. The doctrine of Christ is vitally related to every important
doctrine of theology. The important matter of bibliology—the place of the
Bible and divine revelation in theology—is logically inseparable from the
doctrine of Christ. It is a matter of history that those who have interpreted
literally the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments as the infallible and
inspired Word of God have almost always accepted the deity of Christ. It is
normal also for those who accept the unique deity of Christ to also accept
the Scriptures. the individual alone determining what is truth. This subjective
approach finally had its reductio ad absurdum in the liberalism of a decade
ago which was unblushing humanism.

The ultimate in the destruction of the Biblical doctrine of Christ was reached
early in the twentieth century when the charge of certain liberal theologians
that Jesus was only a myth began to be taken seriously in the theological
world. Liberal theology in some quarters had accepted as already proved
that Jesus was not essential to Christianity, but it remained for Arthur Drews
in his The Christian Myth (1909) to state it blatantly and win a group of
followers.1 It is safe to say that the pendulum has swung somewhat back at
present and the general opinion of modern liberal theologians is that Jesus
was an historical character, though misunderstood by ancients and moderns,
and the proper subject of scientific restudy to determine the true Jesus of
history. It is taken for granted that the destruction of grounds for implicit
faith in the infallibility of Scripture has been achieved and that the Jesus of
history was after all only a man with at best a deeper God-consciousness
than others. Douglas Clyde Macintosh, Professor of Theology and Philosophy
of Religion in Yale University, has perhaps stated what may be accepted as
the norm of present liberal attitude toward Jesus in the following statement:
In our sketch of the life and thought of the Reverend John Cotton we noted
the theory advanced by Sir Henry Vane the younger, Governor of the Colony
in 1636, that the Holy Spirit is united to the believer in the same manner as
the divine nature was united with the human Jesus. This rather startling
Christological suggestion, which seems to have been rejected as heretical by
the theological builders of that day, bids fair to be made, after some slight
reshaping, the headstone of the corner in the reconstructed temple of
Christian evangelicalism. The modification of Sir Harry Vane’s formula which
we would suggest is that it is increasingly possible for the Christian to be
united to God the Holy Spirit in essentially the same way in which the human
nature of Jesus was united with his divine nature, or indeed with God himself.
Conversely, Jesus strengthened the emphasis on progressive revelations
substitution of present religious experience as a norm of doctrine for the
infallible Scriptures. We are told today, then, that the real question is not
whether the Scriptures are infallible, whether Christ was uniquely divine, but
rather what Christ speaks to our hearts today through our religious
experiences. Barthianism, like other forms of modernism, is utterly bankrupt
as far as providing a basis for Christology. It is, in fact, a revival in new
terminology of ancient Gnostic ideas which were utterly destructive to
Christian faith. The charge that Barthianism is a new form of liberalism rather
than a new form of Reformed theology can be sustained on both theological
and philosophical grounds.4
While, therefore, the history of Christology in the past and present will serve
as a guide in the present study, the time-honored path of dependence upon
the Scriptures will be followed instead of the present modern spirit.
Christology has a more extensive field of literature than any other aspect of
theology. It is not intended that this study should be a resumé, but rather
that the great central truths which many others have stated at length should
here be reduced to a simple and comprehensive statement based upon the
Scriptures themselves for argument and proof. It is an impossibility for any
one man to embrace the entire field of Christology in an ordinary lifetime,
but it is necessary to define the Scriptural doctrine in reasonable limits
without cumbrance of historical data. The objective of life and eternity is
defined simply by Paul in the words, “That I may know him” (Phil 3:10). If this
study is used to this end, the purpose of the author will be achieved.
I. The Preincarnate Person of the Son of God

The definition of the preincarnate Person of the Son of God is to all practical
purposes the statement and proof of the eternal deity of the Second Person
of the Trinity. In view of the ancient and modern attempts to reduce in one
way or another the deity of Christ to a level below that of the First Person,
the Father, it is necessary to emphasize certain aspects of the preincarnate
Person of Christ. Crucial in this argument is the proof that Christ is eternal.
Supporting this evidence is the full-orbed revelation that Christ possessed all
the attributes of God, and that His works, titles, majesty, and promises are
all those of God Himself. The theophanies of the Old Testament provide
historical evidence of His pre-existence.

In denouncing the Arian heresy that Christ was the first of created spirits and
therefore not eternal, the church has, since 325, maintained the eternity and
deity of the Son of God in its historic creeds. The purpose of this discussion is
to restate in brief form the Scriptural evidence in support of this doctrine. For
the sake of brevity in statement, the expression preincarnate Christ will be
used as equivalent to the term preincarnate Person of the Son of God, which
is more accurate.
THE ETERNITY OF THE SON OF GOD

The doctrine of the eternity of the Son of God is most important to the
doctrine of Christology as a whole. If Christ is not eternal, then He came into
existence in time and is a created being and vastly different in being and
attributes from God Himself. If Christ is eternal, it is affirming that He has no
dependence upon another for His existence, that He is in fact self-existent. It
is saying more than that He was pre-existent. This would affirm only that He
existed before the incarnation. Arius, for instance, believed in the pre-
existence of Christ but not in His eternity. To affirm that Christ existed from
all eternity past is to attribute to Him all that self-sufficiency and
independence which is true of God.

The Scriptures bear a clear witness to the fact of the eternity of Christ,
sometimes directly, often indirectly. The Old Testament foreview of Christ
spoke of Him as the child to be born in Bethlehem “whose goings forth are
from of old, from everlasting” (Mic 5:2). As Fausset has said, “The terms
convey the strongest assertion of infinite duration of which the Hebrew
language is capable (cf. Ps 90:2; Prov 8:22, 23; John 1:1).”5 All of the Old
Testament anticipations of the coming of Christ which assert His deity are
further evidence to establish His eternity. In Isaiah 9:6, Christ is declared to
be not only “Mighty God,” but also “Everlasting Father,” or “Father of
Eternity.” The very name Jehovah which it will be shown is given to Christ as
well as to the Father and the Spirit is assertion of eternity. He is the eternal I
AM (cf. Exod 3:14).
The New Testament is, if anything, more explicit than the Old Testament.
The incarnate Christ is an unexplainable character apart from His eternal
deity. The introduction to the Gospel of John has no other justifiable
explanation than a statement of His eternity: “In the beginning was the
Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” The phrase “in
the beginning” (ἐν ἀρχῇ) probably in itself is a reference to the point in time
in eternity past beyond which it is impossible to go, as Dorner interprets
it.6 In any case the verb was (ἦν) is explicit. As Marcus Dods expresses it:
“The Logos did not then begin to be, but at that point at which all else began
to be He already was.”7 The contrast between the timeless existence of the
Word which became flesh and any creature is brought out in Johin 8:58,
where Christ said, literally translated, “Before Abraham came (γενέσθαι), I
am (εἰμί).” Christ claimed not only to have pre-existed before Abraham, but
He was claiming continuous existence. It was so patent to His listeners that
He was claiming the eternity of God that some took up stones to stone Him.
In 1 John 1:1, Christ is again described by John as “That which was from the
beginning.”
The Apostle Paul in his epistles states the same doctrine in unmistakable
terms. In Colossians 1:16-17 in one statement both the eternity and the
creatorship of Christ is declared. In verse seventeen we find, “And he is
before all things, and by him all things consist.” In verse sixteen , it is
revealed, “For by him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that
are in earth.” The two statements together assert that Christ is before all
creation and therefore self-existent and uncreated. The eternity of Christ is
further asserted in the eternal covenant (Eph 1:4), and in the declaration by
Christ Himself, “I am Alpha and Omega, the first and the last” (Rev 1:11).
The contributing arguments to these explicit Scriptures are too numerous to
mention here. His titles, works, immutability and other divine attributes, His
eternal promises, all imply and require eternity. It is a matter of history that
no denial of the eternity of Christ has endured which has not also denied the
Scriptures as the very Word of God.
THE PRE-EXISTENCE OF THE SON OF GOD

Many Scriptures which strictly speaking do not assert the eternity of Christ
speak of His existence before the incarnation. For all practical purposes
these are corroborating testimony to His eternity and have been taken as
such in church history. Theologians who have accepted the pre-existence of
Christ have in almost all cases accepted His eternity.

An important line of evidence are the many statements of the heavenly


origin of Christ. John 3:17 speaks of the fact that “God sent not his Son into
the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be
saved.” John 3:31 is more specific, “He that cometh from above is above all:
he that is of the earth is earthly, and speaketh of the earth: he that cometh
from heaven is above all.” Christ states Himself, “For I came down from
heaven, not to do mine own will, but the will of him that sent me” (John
6:38). Christ further speaks of the glory of heaven as a matter of memory
and experience (John 17:5, 24). Other Scriptures too numerous to quote
speak of His heavenly origin (John 1:15, 18, 30; 3:13, 16 ; 6:33, 42, 50, 51,
58, 62 ; 7:29 ; 8:23, 42 ; 9:39 ; Eph 1:3-5; 1 Pet 1:18-20). It is significant that
while John, Paul, and Peter all speak of His pre-existence, most of the
references are in John in connection with the proof of His deity.
The doctrine of the pre-existence of Christ is substantiated by many other
lines of evidence, such as His preincarnate works of creation, providence,
preservation, His promises made in eternity past, the theophanies, and other
intimations of pre-existence. These are considered more properly under the
second major division of the preincarnate Son of God, namely, His
preincarnate works. Their added testimony leaves no shadow of doubt as to
the pre-existence of Christ for anyone accepting the accuracy of the
Scriptures. Remaining to be considered under the present division is the
important and conclusive testimony to the Person of Christ contained in His
divine attributes, His titles, and the argument from the doctrine of the
Trinity.

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