No, that's not what it says. It literally says: "Who, in [the] form of God...". It doesn't add the whole "before he came to Earth" bit!
Umm, bryce, Jesus sure wasn't in the "form of God" while he was on earth, so obviously it was talking about his pre-earth existence.
He was in the form of God from the moment he was created and always has been.
All the angels were created, so does that mean that all angels are in the form of God?
By that, it means he shared the same nature as God. In scripture neither Jesus nor his disciples EVER say he was "equal to" God!
So what does it mean to "share the same nature as God?" What does that mean? If Jesus is just a mere angel like you claim him to be, then all angels have share the same nature of God. Second, the very face that he did have the same nature as God would mean that he is God. You can't have a human nature unless you are a human. You can't have an animal nature unless you are an animal..and you can't have the same nature as God unless you are in fact...God.
It does make sense! He was always meant to serve God, but his role on Earth was to serve him in a specific way (which included being humble as an example for all mankind). That level of humility was not required in heaven (where the angels will worship him). He was only made lower than the angles while on Earth (to inspire mankind). That's why it says that he lowered himself as a servant as a human.
No because verse 7 is not making a distinction between his service to God in heaven, and his service to God on earth. It is making the distinction between him being in the form of God in heaven and the form of a human on earth. His position of a servant wouldn't change if he was always in the service of his Father, regardless of whether the service is in heaven or on earth. So there is absolutely no reason why Paul would say he "took the nature/form of a servant" unless there is a radical change being made from a non-servant to a servant.
Not only that, but the whole "...did not consider equality with God something to be grasped", why even say that if Jesus was not equal with God? Jesus would never consider being equal to God, so why make the statement? The statement would be irrelevant unless Jesus was already equal to God.
Hebrews 1:4
So he became as much superior to the angels as the name he has inherited is superior to theirs.
Right, so if Jesus was/is an angel as you would like to believe, how could he become superior to the angel? Why wouldn't it be rendered to "superior to the OTHER angels"? Makes no sense.
Hebrews 2:9
But we do see Jesus, who was made lower than the angels for a little while, now crowned with glory and honor because he suffered death, so that by the grace of God he might taste death for everyone.
Heb 2:5 also CONTRADICTS your view that Jesus is an angel. Verse 5 states "It is NOT to angels that HE has subjected the world to come." But God subjected everything to Jesus (verse 8). So therefore, Jesus is not an angel. It is called "Reading Comprehension", bryce.
The phrase "servant" conjures the image of someone poor and "lowly" (peasant, slave, indentured servant, etc.). This is the type of person who is required to be meek and humble in life.
And also "to serve". A servant is one who serves, and if he had to take the "nature" of a servant, then obviously he wasn't a servant to begin with because if he was, he wouldn't have had to take the nature of something that he already was!!!
The language chosen is meant to impress upon us how we should generally act in a way that emulates Christ. That is the role he took on Earth because his "mission" was to inspire Christians, and ultimately die for our sins. In heaven, he will reign over us and the Angels, and while he is still technically a "servant" of God, he has been given all authority in heaven and Earth to judge all mankind, and he sits "at God's right hand".
Well, I am open to whether or not Jesus is still a servant of God, perhaps maybe his role is still a servant. However, I do not believe he was a servant of God BEFORE he took his human manestification. But regardless, his secondary position to the Father says nothing about his nature of Deity.
But as I've pointed out above, that is not necessarily the case. He was never equal to God and the scripture doesn't say that he was.
Let me break it down for you. It says that Jesus did "not see equality with something to be grasped"? What does the word "grasped" mean? According to dictionary.com, it means "to seize or hold". Now, we can re-word the sentence to...
..."did not see equality with God something to hold on to". Why would Paul say this if Jesus was NEVER equal to God in the first place, or if Jesus never even CONSIDERED himself to be equal to God??? Why would Jesus not see quality with God something to hold on to, if he never had it to hold on too?? See what I'm saying?
He was HIGHER than all the angels, and by making himself a servant he made himself LOWER than all the angels.
But bryce, angels themselves are servants of God...they serve God, do they not? So how could making himself a servant make him lower than the angels when all angels serve God? Makes no sense.
Neither one of those positions necessarily equates to "equal with God". Secondly, the reason why Paul mentions him not viewing equality with God "something to be grasped", was (in my opinion) to illustrate the fact he would never make that claim about himself! This is what he was falsely charged with doing, that ultimately led to his death.
I would almost agree with you on your assessment if it weren't for the fact that it says "but made himself nothing". In this context, "but" is used to draw a contrast between what was before it, and what was said after it. That whole 3 or 4 verses is comparing Jesus' equality with God in the beginning, to him lowering his position thereafter.
No, that's not what I'm saying. I'm saying that he was NOT omniscient, only that Simon viewed him that way because from Simon's perspective, he might as well have been (since he knows everything about Simon and all of the other disciples).
So he knows everything about the disciples, but that is the extent of his omnisience? Gotcha.
But knowing everything about all of your disciples, and even knowing most future events does not necessarily mean that you know EVERYTHING. And Matthew 24:36 tells us that he didnt!
In that case, then neither does the Father (Rev 19:12).
Nope, it's still a contradiction because the reason Peter knows that Jesus "knows all things" is presumably because Jesus told him BEFORE HE DIED that Peter would deny him three times!
Predicting a future event is hardly reasons for someone to give you the attribute of omniscience. Just sayin.
Jesus was human when he had this future knowledge, knowledge that no other human could have possibly had. Therefore, from Peter's perspective, he knew all things.
I guess we will have to just disagree here. I disagree based on other (in my opinion) Trinity proof texts, and since I believe firmly that these texts have Trinity implications, I can't help but interpret John 21:7 as implying Jesus' omniscience.
But in fact he didn't know ALL things, because Matthew 24:36 tells us something that Jesus did not know, and Luke 2:52 tells us the Jesus "grew" in Wisdom.
Right, the limitations of being a human. I wouldn't expect Jesus to be a baby born, and despite the fact he is a baby his spirit is an adult so he is actually an adult in a child's body just waiting to get older.
No. Because I'm not reading that passage literally like you are because such a literal interpretation doesn't make any sense. Jesus was "the word" in a figurative sense.
Ok but it says the word was God...so whether figuratively or literally what do you think is being implied here?
Because it's not literal! Jesus (the person) wasn't a collection of letters to be arraigned as part of a sentence. He was a person who brought the message of God's salvation.
Ok, granted it isn't "word" in a literal sense but what do you think it means when it says the Word was with God and the Word was God?
If Jesus, John or Paul wanted to make the point that Jesus was God ANY of them would have just plainly said so!
It is...Thomas plainly called Jesus God (John 20:28).
But HOW could they be expected to do that that if they are susceptible to temptations that Jesus wasn't? Do you deny that Hebrews 4:15 says Jesus was tempted in the same way that we are?
I don't believe that Heb 4:15 means what you think it means. I am tempted every day to fornicate. Was Jesus tempted to fornicate? No. So that right there proves that Jesus wasn't tempted in the same way you and I are. What it does mean is Jesus knows what it is like to be approached by someone that is trying to influence you do to something bad. That doesn't mean that Jesus actually considered to commit such acts in the same way that we are.