Trailblazer said: It seems to me that the plain meaning of that verse is that Jesus is not as good as God. I certainly do not think it means that Jesus is not good, but rather Jesus is saying that relative to God I am as nothing, thus not good... That is Jesus’ way of humbling Himself before God.
Oeste said: By your own explanation, Jesus is “thus not good”, so I’m not sure how a “thus not good” Jesus died for our sins. Also I don’t think being as nothing to God makes us “not good”. All of creation is as nothing to God, and therefore was not good as soon as it was made. Yet we see God describing his creation as "good" in Genesis.
Sorry, I worded that badly. I should have left “thus not good” off of the end of the sentence.
The point is that relative to God, Jesus considered Himself as nothing, because God is so great. But Jesus only said this when He was speaking from the
Station of a Servant of God. Jesus also spoke
as God, with the Voice of God, so in that station He was just as good as God because He was identical to God (although I do not believe He was God in the flesh).
Trailblazer said: Jesus had more than one station. In one station Jesus spoke as God,with the Voice of God; in another station Jesus spoke as a Messenger of God, and in a third station Jesus spoke as a Servant of God, a state of utter servitude. In this state, Jesus considered Himself as utterly effaced and non-existent compared to God. That would explain why Jesus said “"No one is good--except God alone.”
Oeste said: Let's accept your assertion that Jesus is no good because he considers himself "...as utterly effaced and non-existent compared to God." What if he didn’t consider himself "...utterly effaced and non-existent to God"? Would he be good then?
And if he's no good regardless of how he considers himself, how does Jesus' consideration of himself matter?
I hope I explained that above.
Jesus is good, but relative to God Jesus did not consider Himself good, since God is so great. Jesus was humble, but being humble does not change the goodness of Jesus; in fact, it is good to be humble.
Trailblazer said: Jesus was good, as good as God, because Jesus was a perfect mirror image of God.
Oeste said: If Jesus here, is “as good as God” but earlier, as you stated “thus not good”, I see us left with a theological inconsistency.
Please forget I ever said
“thus not good.” I was probably in a bit of a rush when I wrote that.
Trailblazer said: As such, Jesus perfectly manifested the Attributes of God, so Jesus was a Manifestation of God.
Oeste said: This produces another quandary. Here you state “Jesus perfectly manifested the Attributes of God”. Goodness is an attribute of God, yet according to Arians, Jesus is not God. So obviously Jesus cannot manifest good. This begs the question: Why do Arians believe Jesus is incapable or only partially capable of "manifesting" this one particular attribute?
I do not know what Arians believe (or why they believe it) but I will explain what I believe. Jesus does not have to
be God in order to manifest the Attributes of God. In fact, to say that Jesus manifested the Attributes of God means that Jesus was not God, because if Jesus was God then Jesus would not have to
manifest the Attributes of God. Rather, Jesus would
possess the Attributes of God.
Manifest: display or show (a quality or feeling) by one's acts or appearance; demonstrate.
https://www.google.com/search
Jesus
perfectly manifested the Attributes of God. Good is an Attribute of God, so Jesus manifested good (as well as all the other Attributes, including but not limited to Loving, Gracious, Merciful, Just, Forgiving, Patient).
If Jesus is God, you already know Jesus has this attribute. But if you’re an Arian, you must first acknowledge Jesus isn’t good somehow at your front door, then claim he somehow is as you slide on over to the back.
Of course, if Jesus
is God, then Jesus has this Attribute of good. But Jesus does not have to
be God in order to have this Attribute of good, because as a perfect mirror image of God, Jesus can
manifest good. Indeed, all humans can manifest God’s Attributes, such as Good, Loving, Gracious, Merciful, Just, Forgiving, Patient. The difference between Jesus and other humans is that Jesus perfectly manifests these Attributes; all we can do is strive to be like Jesus, but we can never be as good as Jesus.
Oeste said: I really see no other way to explain
Luke 18:19. Jesus is good because only God is good and Jesus is God.
The other way to explain it is as I said; Jesus perfectly manifested good because Jesus was a perfect mirror image of God’s Attribute of good.
However, Jesus was not God because there are some Attributes that
Only God Has, including Eternal, Holy, Unchanging, Impassable, Infinite, All-powerful, Everywhere-present, All-Wise, All-Knowing, Self-Existent, Self-Sufficient, Immaterial. No human can have those Attributes, not even Jesus.
Trailblazer said: As a
Messenger of God, what Jesus was “sent” by God with a message to reveal to humanity and what Jesus revealed was identical with the Will of God Himself. …However, as a
Servant of God, Jesus subjugated Himself to God and testified that
there is no other God but God.
Oeste said: Just to be clear, at
Luke 18:19 we're dealing with Jesus as
Teacher. Let's look at the verse again, slight different rendition:
18 And a certain ruler asked him, saying, Good
Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?
19 And Jesus said unto him, Why callest thou me good? none is good, save one, even God.
So as a Good Teacher God whom sent, Jesus had a message to reveal to humanity. In that sense Jesus was a Messenger, a Messenger who came to teach humanity something. Here are
some things Jesus came to teach:
Luke 18:
20 Thou knowest the commandments, Do not commit adultery, Do not kill, Do not steal, Do not bear false witness, Honour thy father and thy mother.
Oeste said: Even so, Jesus is not saying he's not as good as God teaching because there is no implicit comparison in the text. We would have to read the comparison into the text in order to come out with one.
No, Jesus is not saying that, but how could an
immaterial God teach us anything? God had to manifest Himself in the form of the man Jesus, and Jesus did the teaching for God.
Trailblazer said:
John 1:18 No man hath seen God at any time, the only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, he hath declared him.
Oeste said: I don't know of any major religion that claims Jesus arrived in his fully glorified state and while this verse might come up in an overall discussion of the Trinity, I'm not sure how this ties in with
Luke 18:19.
It's late!
No, it is not really related... I kind of went off on a tangent.