Excellent
@walt!
As Christians we should accept what Jesus says. But rather than simply "proof-text", let's add one more verse with a question.
Harmonization! This is even better!!
God did not send but one prophet, He sent several, and we should not silence one prophet in favor of another when all speak the word of God. I realize you may disagree, but this is my objection to "red letter only" Christians.
But let's add one more scripture because I think it crucial to any harmonization:
Then a certain ruler asked Him, “
Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?”
“Why do you call Me good?” Jesus replied. “No one is good except God alone." (Luke 18:18-19)
Now, had Jesus simply blurted "No one is good except
the Father alone", that might have been the end of the Trinity (and also the end of any talk about Jesus as our Savior), but
that's not what Jesus said.
Rather than answer this ruler's question, Jesus
interrogates him. Why? Because it's possible this ruler recognizes Jesus for who He is.
But my question is not why this verse shows Jesus is God. I believe it most certainly does. My question to you, and for our Arian and Oneness friends on this forum, is this:
If you cannot call Jesus good, just how "no good" do you claim our spotless, unblemished Savior really is?
Is Jesus "
kind of good", perhaps "sort of good", but not "good enough" to be good?
Maybe "kind of bad", but not "bad enough" to be called bad?
Perhaps good doesn't really mean "good" and evil doesn't really mean "evil" and the whole good-bad shebang is
relative, like a sliding scale?
Good | Kind of Good | Kind of Bad | Very bad |
0------------------------------------ | 25----------------------------------- | 50----------------------------------- | 75------------------------------100 |
Here are some other things to consider:
Some here state Jesus is not God, but a "manifestation of God".
So if God is good but Jesus is not (something Arians
allege, but Jesus never
states), then how good is the "manifestation"?
Either God is not good, which is impossible, or there is a problem with this "manifestation". Was the mirror used to reflect God's attributes insufficient? A bit cloudy?
Look, I am sure I'm not the first to ask these questions. You probably, at some point, asked them yourselves. If so, please do our readers a favor and share them!
In the Trinity doctrine, Jesus is good because only God is good and Jesus is God (but not the Father). But with Arianism, Jesus is not "so good" because "only God is good" and Jesus is not God. So another question, which I'm sure many of you have answered previously, and I simply missed, is this:
How does a no good Jesus redeem or atone for anybody?
I suspect that's not a problem for the Bahai. They're not a Christians denomination and while they may claim Jesus is our savior, you may get nine different answers on exactly what he saves.
And of course, it's not a problem for our resident skeptics. They will tell you Jesus, if he existed, might have been a nice guy, but all this talk about sin, repentance, atonement, and an unblemished lamb was just a local superstition that got out of hand.
The real problem, as I see it, is for our Christian friends waving Luke 18:18-19 as if Jesus was claiming he wasn't good when of course
he had to be, if he was THE begotten and not simply "A" Son of God.
Many of the verses used to show "Jesus ain't God" can actually be used to show he is. He is, after all, the only begotten Son of God. Others verses will simply show he's the Son of Man, something Arians and Trinitarians already agree on.
@walt states the harmonization of scripture is important to him. When I was younger and studying with Arians, I was never able to harmonize Luke 18:18-19. Instead, I would remember Jesus' words as a statement "Don't call me good." when he was simply asking a question "
Why do you call me good?".
But rather than answer (let alone resolve) these questions, I strongly suspect our Arian friends will be silent and not respond at all, as any response will likely contradict a "truth" they've told us before. Personally, if I were Arian, I'd go for the sliding scale.