THE
ATONEMENT BETWEEN GOD & MAN
<PAGE 149>
STUDY
VII
THE
MEDIATOR OF THE ATONEMENT
"THE SON OF MAN"
What this Title Does not Mean--What It Does Mean--Its Honors
Indisputable, Can be Claimed by None Other--The Son of Man as
Seen by the World--Pilate's View, Rousseau's View, Napoleon's
View--Significance of Statements, "No Beauty in Him that
we Should Desire Him"; and "His Visage Was So Marred"--"The
Chiefest Among Ten Thousand" --"Yea, He is Altogether
Lovely."
AMONG
many titles applied to our Lord, and one of those most frequently
used by himself, is "The Son of Man." Some have been
inclined to consider this a concession on our Lord's part that
he was a son of Joseph; but this is wholly wrong: he never acknowledged
Joseph as his father. On the contrary, it will be noticed that
this title which he applies to himself is used, not merely respecting
his earthly life, but also as respects his present condition and
glory. And from this fact some have swung to the other extreme,
and claim that it indicates that our Lord is now a man
in heaven--that he still retains human nature. This, as we shall
endeavor to show, is a thought wholly without warrant, a misapprehension
of the title, "The Son of Man." But meantime let us
notice that such a thought is wholly at variance with the entire
drift of the Scripture teaching. The Scripture statement is most
emphatic, that our Lord's humiliation to the human nature was
not perpetual, but merely for the purpose of effecting man's redemption,
paying man's penalty, and thereby incidentally proving his own
fidelity to the Father, on account of which he was immediately
<PAGE 150> afterward highly exalted, not only
to the glory which he had with the Father before the world was,
but to a more excellent glory, far above angels, principalities
and powers--to the divine nature, and the right hand, place of
favor, with the Majesty on high.
Notice
carefully a few of the uses of this title by our Lord, as follows:
"The
Son of Man shall send forth his angels," in the harvest of
this Gospel age. Matt. 13:41
"So
shall it be in the presence of the Son of Man," in the harvest,
the end of this age. Matt. 24:27,37
"When
the Son of Man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels
with him." Matt. 25:31
"Of
him shall the Son of Man be ashamed, when he cometh in the glory
of the Father." Mark 8:38
"What
and if ye shall see the Son of Man ascend up where he was before?"
John 6:62
"He
that came down from heaven, even the Son of Man." John 3:13
These
scriptures identify "The Son of Man" with the Lord of
glory, and with the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself, and with
the prehuman Logos, which came down from heaven and was
made flesh. And evidently the Jews did not have the thought that
the title "The Son of Man" signified the son of Joseph,
or, in the ordinary sense, the son of a man, to receive life from
a human father: this is shown by the fact that they inquired,
saying, "We have heard out of the law that Christ abideth
forever: and how sayest thou, The Son of Man must be lifted up?
Who is this Son of Man?" (John 12:34) The Jews evidently
identified the expression, "The Son of Man," with their
hoped-for Messiah, no doubt basing their hopes in large measure
upon the statement of Daniel 7:13, "I saw in the night visions,
and behold one like unto the Son of Man came with the clouds of
heaven, and came to the Ancient of Days, and they
<PAGE 151> brought him near before him, and
there was given him dominion, and glory, and a kingdom, that all
people, nations and languages should serve him: his dominion is
an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and his kingdom
shall not be destroyed." Our Lord identified himself with
this description in his Revelation 14:14, where he represents
himself as one "like unto the Son of Man, and having on his
head a golden crown, and in his hand a sharp sickle"--the
Reaper of the harvest of the Gospel age.
Nevertheless,
even though assured that this title in no sense refers to Joseph's
son, and though the evidence is conclusive that the human nature,
taken for the purpose, was sacrificed forever, and that
now he is a quickening spirit being of the highest order (Heb.
2:9,16; 1 Pet. 3:18; John 6:51; Phil. 2:9), the
question still arises, Why did our Lord choose such a name, such
a title? Have we not reason to suspect that there must be some
particular reason for it, else this particular title would not
be used, since each of our Lord's titles has a peculiar significance,
when understood?
There
is a most important reason for the use of this title. It is a
title of high honor, because a perpetual reminder of his great
Victory--of his faithful, humble obedience to all the Heavenly
Father's arrangements, even unto death, even the death of the
cross, by which he secured the title to all his present and prospective
honor and glory, dignity and power, and the divine nature. By
this title, "The Son of Man," both angels and men are
referred directly to the great exhibition of humility on the part
of the Only Begotten of the Father, and to the underlying principle
of the divine government--he that exalteth himself shall be abased,
and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted. Thus every time
this name is used it speaks a volume of valuable instruction to
all who shall be taught of God, and who are desirous of honoring
him, and doing those things which are well pleasing in his sight.
In
the same sense that our Lord was made "of the seed of David,"
and "of the seed of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob," he
<PAGE 152> was also of the seed of Adam, through
mother Eve--yet, as we have seen, "undefiled, separate
from sinners." "The seed of the woman" is referred
to as being the antagonist of the seed of the serpent, yet there
is no intimation that Eve would have any seed apart from her husband,
Adam. And in the same sense that it is proper to think of and
speak of our Lord as the seed of David, it is equally proper to
think of him as the seed of Adam, through Eve. And this, we believe,
is the thought lying back of this title--"The Son of Man."
Adam,
as the head of the race, and its appointed life-giver, failed
to give his posterity lasting life, because of his disobedience;
nevertheless, the divine promise looked forward to the time when
Messiah, identified with Adam's race, should redeem Adam and his
entire posterity. Adam was the man pre-eminently, in that
he was the head of the race of men, and in him resided the title
to the earth and its dominion. Note the prophetic reference to
Adam, "What is man that thou art mindful of him, or the son
of man that thou visitest him? Thou hast made him a little lower
than the angels, and hast crowned him with glory and honor. Thou
madest him to have dominion over the works of thy hands; thou
hast put all things under his feet: all sheep and oxen, yea, and
the beasts of the field, the fowl of the air, the fish of the
sea, and whatsoever passeth through the paths of the sea."
Psa. 8:4-8
This
earthly right, kingship, dominion, fell into disorder, was lost,
through the fall, but was part and parcel of that which was redeemed
by the great sin-offering. As it is written of our Lord, prophetically,
"Unto thee shall it come, O thou Tower of the flock, even
the first dominion." (Micah 4:8) Thus we see that
the hope of the world, under the divine arrangement, rested in
the coming of a great son and heir of Adam, a great son of Abraham,
a great son of David, a great son of Mary. Nor does this imply
that the life of this son would come either through Adam
or Abraham or David or Mary. As we have already seen, a son-in-law,
under
<PAGE 153> the divine arrangement, is counted
as a member of the family, able to redeem and to take up a forfeited
possession. In the case of our Lord, we have clearly seen that
his life came not through earthly parentage, but merely
his physical organism --that the life proceeded forth and
came from God, and that originally he was known as the Logos.
And
the more we investigate this subject the more evident all the
foregoing appears for the student of the Greek may readily inform
himself of the fact that in all the instances in which our Lord
makes use of this term, "The Son of Man," he used it
in an emphatic form, which is not distinguishable in English translation,
and which, to be appreciated in English, would need to be expressed
with emphasis upon the two words "the"--"the
Son of the Man." And our Lord's right to this title
is indisputable. As Adam alone was perfect, and all others of
his race degenerate, except this one Son who attached himself
to Adam's race, to be the Redeemer of all his lost possessions,
so when he was in the act of redeeming the race, and since he
has redeemed it from the curse or sentence of death, the title
to be the son of the man came legally and indisputably
into his possession.
And
not only was that title properly his during the period of his
giving the great "ransom for all," but it is properly
his during this Gospel age while the selection of his co-workers
in the grand restitution program is in progress. And much more
will this title properly belong to our Lord during the term of
his Millennial Kingdom, when he will as the (now highly
exalted and changed) Son of the man (Adam) prosecute the
work of restitution, "the redemption [deliverance]
of the purchased possession." Eph. 1:14; Ruth 4:1-10
"The Man Christ Jesus,"
as Viewed by Unbelievers
Not
merely the devoted followers of the Lord Jesus Christ have recognized
his wisdom and grace, and noted that he
<PAGE 154> was "filled with all the fulness
of God," but even his opponents recognized him as far beyond
the ordinary of our race, as we read, "And all bare him witness,
and wondered at the gracious words which proceeded out of his
mouth." (Luke 4:22) Others said, "Never man spake
like this man." (John 7:46) And Pilate, loathe to destroy
the life of the noblest Jew he had ever seen, endeavored, as a
last resort, to placate the malevolence of the multitude, perceiving
that it was instigated by the Scribes and Pharisees, who were
envious and jealous of our Lord's popularity. Pilate finally caused
Jesus to be brought forth to face his accusers, evidently with
the thought that a look upon his noble features would turn back
their hatred and their malice. So presenting him, Pilate exclaimed--"Behold
the Man!" with an emphasis on the words which is not
apparent in our English translation, unless the word "the"
be read with emphasis-- "Behold the Man!" As
though he would have said, The man whom you are asking me to crucify
is not only the Jew above all other Jews, but the
Man above all other men. And it was concerning our Lord's manhood
that John declares, "The Logos was made flesh....and
we beheld his glory, the glory of the only begotten of the Father--full
of grace and truth." John 1:14; 19:5
And
in this connection let us remember the oft-quoted and well-known
eulogy of "The Son of the Man," and his teachings,
by Rousseau, the celebrated Frenchman, as follows:
"How
petty are the books of the philosophers, with all their pomp,
compared with the Gospels! Can it be that writings at once so
sublime and so simple are the work of men? Can he whose life they
tell be himself no more than a man? Is there anything in his character
of the enthusiast or the ambitious sectary? What sweetness, what
purity in his ways, what touching grace in his teachings! What
a loftiness in his maxims! What profound wisdom in his words!
What presence of mind, what delicacy and aptness in his replies!
What an empire over his passions! Where is the
<PAGE 155> man, where is the sage, who knows
how to act, to suffer, and to die, without weakness, without display?
My friends, men do not invent like this; and the facts respecting
Socrates, which no one doubts, are not so well attested as about
Jesus. Those Jews could never have struck this tone or thought
of this morality. And the Gospel has characteristics of truthfulness,
so grand, so striking, so perfectly inimitable, that their inventors
would be even more wonderful than he whom they portray."
The
following eulogy on the Son of the Man is credited
to the renowned Napoleon Bonaparte:
"From
first to last Jesus is the same; always the same-- majestic and
simple, infinitely severe and infinitely gentle. Throughout a
life passed under the public eye, he never gives occasion to find
fault. The prudence of his conduct compels our admiration by its
union of force and gentleness. Alike in speech and action, he
is enlightened, consistent and calm. Sublimity is said to be an
attribute of divinity: what name, then, shall we give him in whose
character was united every element of the sublime?
"I
know men, and I tell you Jesus was not a man. Everything in him
amazes me. Comparison is impossible between him and any other
being in the world. He is truly a being by himself. His ideas
and his sentiments, the truth that he announces, his manner of
conference, are all beyond human and the natural order of things.
His birth, and the story of his life; the profoundness of his
doctrine, which overturns all difficulties, and is their most
complete solution; his Gospel; the singularity of that mysterious
being, and his appearance; his empire, his progress through all
centuries and kingdoms; all this is to me a prodigy, an unfathomable
mystery. I see nothing here of man. Near as I may approach, closely
as I may examine, all remains above comparison--great with greatness
that crushes me. It is in vain that I reflect--all remains unaccountable!
I defy you to cite another life like that of Christ."
Aye,
truth is stranger than fiction, and the perfect man
<PAGE 156> Christ Jesus, anointed with the
spirit of the Highest, was so different from the imperfect race
of which he took hold, for its redemption, that the world is certainly
excusable for questioning whether he was not more than a man.
Assuredly he was more, much more than a mere man--much
more than a sinful man: he was separate from sinners, and, as
a perfect man, was the very image and likeness of the invisible
God.
"No
Beauty in Him that We Should Desire Him"
"Yea,
he grew up like a small shoot before him, and as a root out of
dry ground: he hath no form nor honor, and when we observe him
there is not the appearance that we should desire in him. He is
despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows and acquainted
with grief: and we hid our faces from him, as it were." Isa.
53:2,3--Compare Young's
and Leeser's translations.
Some
have suggested that these scriptures indicate that our Lord's
personal appearance was inferior to that of other men, and hence
have regarded this as a proof that he was not separate from sinners,
but a partaker of sin and of its penalty of degeneration. We dissent
from this, however, as being contrary to the entire trend of the
Scriptural testimony, and incline on the contrary to bend this
statement into harmony with the general testimony of Scripture
on the subject, if it can be done without violence to the proper
principles of interpretation, and we think this can be done and
shown.
There
are various types of honorableness, beauty, comeliness --strikingly
different are the ideals of various peoples, and of the same people
under various circumstances. The ideal of beauty satisfactory
to barbarians is repulsive to the more civilized. The Indian warrior,
painted in red and yellow, and bedecked with shells and dyed feathers,
and with a girdle of gory scalps, would be the desirable ideal
before the mind of certain savages. The pugilist in the prize
ring, stripped for battle, is the ideal of manly form in what
is known as "the manly art"--to some. To others, the
richly
<PAGE 157> dressed matador, or bullfighter,
is the grand ideal of manly development, which captures the admiration
and applause of the multitude. And so ideals vary, according to
times, circumstances and conditions. Since this scripture deals
with our Lord Jesus at his first advent, it should be understood
as signifying that he did not come up to the Jewish ideal. This
is very evident, since the very one of whom Pilate exclaimed,
"Behold the Man!" was the very one of whom the Jews
cried out the more lustily, "Crucify him! Crucify him! We
have no king but Caesar!"
We
are to remember that at the time of the first advent the Jewish
nation was in subjection, under the Roman yoke: and that it had
been "trodden down of the Gentiles" for over six hundred
years. We should remember also the hopes of Israel, begotten of
the divine promises to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and reiterated
through all the prophets, to the effect that in God's due time
he would send them his Anointed One, a greater law-giver than
Moses, a greater general than Joshua, and a greater king than
David or Solomon. We should remember that at this very time Israel
was looking for Messiah according to their ideals: as it is recorded,
all men were in expectation of the Messiah. But when Jesus was
announced to be the Messiah, his presentation was so different
from all they had expected that their proud hearts were ashamed
of him; and as it were they hid their faces from him--turned their
backs upon him--especially the leaders and prominent ones of that
nation, whose guidance the common people followed. Luke 3:15
They
were expecting a great general, great king, and great lawgiver
combined, full of dignity, full of hauteur, full of ambition,
full of pride, full of self-will--haughty and domineering in word
and in act. This was their ideal of what would constitute
the necessary qualifications of the King who would conquer the
world, and make Israel the leading nation. They saw the pride,
insolence, arrogance, of Herod, appointed by the Roman Emperor
to be their king; they saw something of the Roman generals and
governors, centurions, etc.; they imagined the Roman Emperor to
be still
<PAGE 158> more strongly marked in all these
various characteristics, leading him up to predominance in the
empire: and taking their cue from these, they expected the Messiah
to possess many of these qualities still more markedly, as representing
the still greater dignity, honor and glory of the Heavenly Court
and its authority transferred to earth.
No
wonder, then, that with such expectations they were unprepared
to accept the meek and lowly Nazarene, who welcomed to his company
publicans and sinners, and whose only weapon for conquering the
world was "the sword of his mouth." No wonder that when
he was announced to be the hope of Israel, the King of the Jews,
the Messiah, they turned their backs upon him. No wonder that,
with their false expectations long cherished, they were sorely
disappointed. No wonder they were ashamed to acknowledge "Jesus,
the King of the Jews," and said, He is not the kind of beauty,
honor and dignity which we desired: he is not our ideal of the
soldier, statesman and king befitting our nation's needs or likely
to fulfil its long-cherished hopes. Ah yes! like a similar class
today looking for the Messiah's second advent, they took for granted
that their expectations built upon "traditions of the elders"
were correct, and correspondingly neglected to honestly and earnestly
search the Scriptures, which would have made them "wise unto
salvation."
That
it was to such undesirableness of appearance, and to such
lack of the "honor" (beauty) they looked for, that the
prophet referred, seems evident. It would be inconsistent to translate
and interpret the prophecy out of harmony with the historic
facts admitted to be their fulfilment: and also out of logical
harmony with the repeated declarations of his purity, as the Lamb
of God which taketh away the sin of the world--holy, harmless,
undefiled, separate from sinners.
"His Visage Was so Marred"
--Isa. 52:14,15--
Here
again a faulty translation has given rise to erroneous
<PAGE 159> thoughts respecting our Lord's
appearance: and yet even the most careless readers who have seen
faces of human creatures seriously marred by debauchery, by disease,
or misshapen by accident, have found it impossible to realize
that our Lord's visage or countenance "was more marred than
that of any man, and his form more than the sons of men."
Evidently something is amiss in such a statement, for not
such an one would Pilate present before the people, saying, "Behold
the man!" Not such an one would the common people
hail as the Son of David, and think to take by force to make him
a king. Besides, have we not the assurance that not a bone of
him was broken? But how changed is this prophetic statement for
the better--how much more consistent with the facts of Scripture
history and the logical deductions of his holiness and purity--when
rendered thus:
"As
astonished at thee have been many (so marred by man was his appearance,
and his form by the sons of men) so shall he astonish many peoples."
As the people of his day were surprised that he would submit to
the abuses of those who crowned him with thorns and smote him
and spat upon him and crucified and pierced him, so others of
all nations, now and in the future, hearing of the endurance of
"such contradiction of sinners against himself" (Heb.
12:3) have wondered and will wonder at such patience and such
meekness.
"Before
him shall kings shut their mouths; for what was not recorded [of
others] they will see [exemplified in Him]; what they had never
before heard of they shall understand." The great ones of
earth never heard of any king voluntarily submitting to such indignities
at the hands of his subjects, and in order that he might do them
good. Verily, "His is love beyond a brother's." No wonder
if all are astonished "in due time."
Undoubtedly
also our dear Redeemer's face bore marks of sorrow, for as we
have seen, his deeply sympathetic heart was "touched"
with a feeling of our infirmities: and no doubt
<PAGE 160> those marks increased, until the
close of his ministry at Calvary. We must remember that the finer
the organism and the more delicate its sensibilities, the more
it is susceptible to pain. We can readily discern that scenes
of trouble, sickness, pain and depravity, to which we become more
or less inured through our own share in the fall, and through
continual contact with human woe, would be many-fold more serious
matters to the perfect one--holy, harmless, undefiled and separate
from sinners.
We
find the same thing illustrated to some extent in our own experiences.
Those of comparatively fine sensibilities who have been accustomed
to luxury, refinement, beauty, and favorable surroundings, if
they visit the slums of a great city, and note the degradation,
the unfavorable conditions, the bad odors, the incongruous sounds,
the wretched sights of squalor, are sure to become sick at heart:
involuntarily the countenance becomes drawn, and the thought arises,
How terrible life would be under such circumstances; what a boon
death would be. Yet, perhaps, while thus soliloquizing, the eye
catches sight of children playing merrily, and perhaps the washerwoman,
from her task, catches up a snatch of a song, or a man is seen
contentedly reading a newspaper, or a boy is heard attempting
music with an old instrument. These things indicate that those
who have become accustomed to such sights and sounds and smells
and general conditions are far less influenced by them than are
those who have been accustomed from infancy to refinement.
And
this lesson illustrates in a very small measure the disparity
between our Lord's view of the earth's sinful and woeful condition
and ours. As a perfect being, who had left the courts of heavenly
glory, and had humbled himself to become a partaker of man's woe,
his sympathizer and his Redeemer, he surely felt much more than
we the miseries of "the groaning creation." What wonder,
then, if the weight of our sorrows cast a shade over the glorious
beauties of his perfect face! What wonder if contact with earth's
troubles,
<PAGE 161> and his voluntary sharing of the
human weakness and diseases (at the close of his own life, his
own vitality, as we have seen), marked deeply the face and form
of the Son of the Man! And yet we cannot for a moment
question that his communion with the Father, his fellowship of
the holy Spirit and the approval of his own conscience, that he
did always those things which were pleasing in the Father's sight,
must have given to our Redeemer's face a peaceful expression,
which would make it a combination of joy and of sorrow, of trouble
and of peace. And his knowledge of the Heavenly Father's plan
must have enabled him to rejoice in the things which he suffered,
realizing how they would shortly work out, not only a blessing
to himself, but also "salvation unto the ends of the earth."
If, therefore, the sorrows of men shadowed his countenance, we
may be sure that his faith and hope were also marked in facial
expression, and that the peace of God which passeth all understanding
kept his heart, and enabled him to be always rejoicing, in the
midst of the greatest contradictions of sinners against himself.
"The
Chiefest Among Ten Thousand"
To
the sinful, envious, hateful heart of the fallen nature, everything
akin to beauty, goodness, truth and love is distasteful, there
is no beauty in it, nothing desired--it is a reproof. Our Lord
expressed this matter forcefully, when he said, "The darkness
hateth the light, and they that are of the darkness come not to
the light, because the light makes manifest their darkness."
(John 3:19,20) We see a further illustration of this fact,
that an evil heart may at times hate and despise a glorious countenance,
a lovelit countenance, not only in the fact that our dear Redeemer
was thus despised by those who cried, "Crucify him,"
but also in the cases of the others. Note the various records
of martyrdom for the Truth's sake, and note how little was the
melting influence of the countenances of those who could look
up
<PAGE 162> from their personal sufferings,
and pray for blessings upon their persecutors. The testimony respecting
the first Christian martyr--Stephen--is to the effect that his
face was radiant and beautiful, so as to be even comparable to
the face of an angel. "All that sat in the council looking
steadfastly on him, saw his face as it had been the face of an
angel." (Acts 6:15) And yet, because of the hardness
of their hearts, so far from loving his angelic face, which must
have been much less angelic than that of the Master, and instead
of heeding his wonderful words, which were much less wonderful
than those of the Great Teacher, "they ran upon him with
one accord...and they stoned Stephen," even as they cried
out to Pilate to have the Lord of glory crucified.
"Yea,
he is altogether lovely."
* * *
"The heav'ns declare thy glory, Lord;
Through all the realms of boundless space.
The soaring mind may roam abroad,
And there thy power and wisdom trace.
"Author of nature's wondrous laws,
Preserver of its glorious grace,
We hail thee as the great First Cause,
And here delight thy ways to trace.
"By faith we see thy glory now,
We read thy wisdom, love and grace;
In praise and adoration bow,
And long to see thy glorious face.
"In Christ, when all things are complete--
The things in earth and things in heav'n--
The heav'ns and earth shall be replete
With thy high praises, ever given."
THE
ATONEMENT BETWEEN GOD & MAN |