SON OF MAN AND THE SON OF GOD Rev. N. D. PENDLETON 1906
NEW CHURCH LIFE.
VOL. XXVI. JANUARY, 1906. NO. 1.
The two descriptive titles of the Lord, the Son of Man and the son of God, occur in the New Testament with nearly equal frequency. To the casual reader they appear to be used interchangeably. Nevertheless each has its own distinctive meaning and special usage. That is, wherever the term "Son of Man" is employed, the subject referred to, both in the spiritual and literal senses, differs from that which is treated of when the "Son of God" is mentioned. In fact, these two titles designate two distinct phases of the Divine manifestation, which must be clearly seen before certain important arcana of the Word can be understood.
At first sight we are apt to conclude that the expression "Son of God" testifies to the fact that the Lord was conceived of Jehovah, and on the other hand, the title "Son of Man" gives like testimony that He was born of woman. This view, however, is primitive. For as we shall see, the "Son of Man" involves much more than the fact of ultimate birth into the world, yet the general idea of an assumption of the human is not dissociated from it. That is to say, the "Son of Man" is always employed to express an idea of the Divine under finite human form. There can be little doubt, however, but that the origin of the title arose from the ancient knowledge that the God of the Universe was, in time, to be born into the world as a man. In this connection we note that in the most ancient prophecy concerning the Messiah He was called the "seed of woman," (Gen. iii. 15). But so far as we know He was not called the "Son of Man" either in the Most Ancient or Ancient Churches, nor yet in the early stages of the Jewish Church. The historical appearance is that the title "Son of Man" was a later derivation from the original expression "Seed of Woman." This much is certain, that the prophet Daniel was the first to employ it as distinctly descriptive of the Messiah. "I saw in the night visions, and, behold, one like the son of Man came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of days, and they brought Him near before Him." (Daniel vii. 13.) Ever after this the title "Son of Man" was recognized as a distinct appellation of the Messiah. When the Lord called Himself by that name, no Jew of His day was in doubt as to the meaning of His claim.
Before Daniel, several of the prophets, especially Ezekiel, spoke of themselves as the Son of Man. It is said in the Writings that they did this because of their representative character, that is, they, as prophets, represented the Great Prophet, the Son of Man, who was to come into the world. It might be argued from this that before Daniel's time the "Son of Man" was recognized as one of the Messianic titles. This may, of course, be so, but to my mind the inference is not necessary. However, Daniel's employment of the phrase is unmistakable. But, as before indicated, much more is involved in the usage of the term than the mere fact that He was born of Mary. In truth, when that is distinctly referred to, He is called neither the son of God nor yet the Son of Man, but the son of Mary, by which title the maternal human is signified, which had in itself nothing more of Divinity than that of any other man, but was in all respects mortal. A true conception of the subject leads to the conclusion that the Son of Man was no more born of Mary than was the Son of God. Both are titles of the Divine Human, which was not only conceived by also born of Jehovah God. Yet in this respect there is a marked difference between the Son of Man and the Son of God, which will become clearer as our subject progresses.
By these two titles the Divine Human is presented under two different aspects. Stated in the most general form the Son of Man signifies the Divine Human as to Truth, while the Son of God has reference to the Divine Human as to Good. This is seen when the subject is viewed under a spiritual idea, i. e., when the thought of the mortal human is removed.
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The distinction here made at first appears abstract, yet as we shall see it is most definite, and will receive ample confirmation from the literal usage of the terms in the New Testament. We gain a more concrete idea of this distinction when we see that the Son of Man refers to the Lord as the Word, while the Son of God has special reference to His Human as Divine. It can at once be seen that the Word and the Truth are the same thing. On the other hand, Divine Good in the Human and the Divinity of the Human are one idea.
The Son of Man, then, is the Lord as to Truth or as the Word, but we must think of the Word as spiritually understood. For the spiritual understanding of the Word is the true Son of Man, even as it is the true Word. There is a perfect parallel between the letter of Scripture and the Human assumed from Mary, for both by the process of glorification are put off. The letter of Scripture, in itself, is only a verbal containant of the Word; even as the human assumed from Mary was only a mortal vestment of the Son of Man. Since the Son of Man is the Word spiritually understood, or the Word as it is in the heavens, we conclude that the Son of Man is the Divine Truth as it is received by the angels.
Beginning with the celestial heavens, and coming down through the successive spheres, there is an emanation of light from the Divine. This light is the Divine Truth in the heavens, and by virtue of its accommodation to human minds it is called the Son of Man, and this for the obvious reason that such accommodation is nothing more than a clothing of the truth with finite forms, ever more gross as it descends through the several expanses down into the world where it reaches its finality in the literal Scriptures.
We note that this descending Truth, which in itself is Divine and Infinite, adds to itself finite forms, whence it becomes clear that this process not only involves but is an assumption of the human by the Divine; for the finite forms assumed by the descending Truth were human forms taken from the minds of the angels. In this sense the human was assumed from the very beginning of creation. The actual assumption of the flesh, in time, was nothing more than a furthering and completion of that which was begun at the first. The Human called the Son of Man in the heavens was assumed from the beginning, but the deep fact is that this human was not Glorified until the assumption had reached the last degree,--until the Son of Man came into the world.
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Then the process of Glorification was instituted from highests to lowests and from lowests to highests.
The Human was assumed from the beginning. It has been assumed in all times and it will continue to be assumed to all eternity. For, under a most exalted idea, the assumption of the human and the act of creation are one and the same thing, from which we draw this conclusion that the coming of the Lord into the world was involved in and necessitated by the first act of creation; and, furthermore, that when He did come, it could only be as the Son of Man, as the Divine Truth, veiled and accommodated by finite vessels. Remember the teaching that the Lord descended as the Divine Truth, yet He did not separate the Divine Good. This Divine Truth, by virtue of its finite veilings, subject to mutations and, in the minds of men, to temptations. Hence the oft-repeated statement that the Lord as the Son of Man was tempted and suffered even to the passion of the cross. He thus suffered because He was the Truth finited, the Word become flesh. And in His person He suffered at the hands of the Jews in order that their treatment of the Word might be thus represented.
This touches upon the grand distinction between the Son of Man and the Son of God, and gives us the reason why New Testament so often speaks of the suffering of the one, but never of the other. The point is that Truth clothed with finite forms can be afflicted, but not Good, especially the Divine Good signified by the Son of God. Truth can be afflicted, even such truth as that which is in the heavens. Therefore the Son of Man underwent temptations much deeper than the sufferings of the mortal human. This human endured toil and pain even to the anguish of death. But his real temptations,--those by which the heavens were purified, the world of Spirits cleansed, and the hells subdued,--He sustained in His character of the Son of Man, the Truth, the Word. Yet it would not be right to exclude the sufferings of the mortal part and say that these had no reference to the process of Glorification. On the contrary, they afforded the material basis for every affliction, however internal. For while the Son of Man, strictly speaking, is the Truth in the heavens, yet that term includes the truth in the world, and, in its broadest sense, the body of the Lord assumed on the earth.
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For this reason we conceive that when the Lord, as the Son of Man, was tempted, there was conflict throughout the whole sphere of creation, for such is the range of the truth called the Son of Man. When He was Glorified, as the result of His final temptation on the cross, the heavens trembled, the earth quaked, and the veil in the temple of Jerusalem was rent in twain.
It is said that the heavens trembled, by which is meant that they, on that occasion, were moved from inmosts to outmosts, this movement causing a readjustment of all things thereof, so that they stood before the Lord renewed. Moreover, the fact stands out that this movement, resulting in a reformation of the heavens, was the consequence of a gigantic conflict. This we learn from Arcana Coelestia, 4295, where it is said that the angels tempted the Lord and that in consequence He fought with the whole angelic heaven. This combat was represented by Jacob's wrestling with the angel. The reason the angels could tempt the Lord was that the truth with them was not pure. This was especially the case prior to His Glorification. These impure truths, inflowing into His mind, brought on an inmost conflict whereby the supreme ends of life were touched, moved and readjusted; for of temptations of this class, it is said, they are the inmost of all, inasmuch as they act upon ends, and with such subtlety as to escape observation.
The purifying of the world of spirits and the subjugation of the hells was the well known consequence of the Lord's Glorification. Very many arcana are revealed to us with reference to this phase of the subject, which are more or less familiar. But as to the coincident reforming of the heavens not so much is known, and this, perhaps, for the reason that angelic temptations can hardly he understood by men. Yet the fact of such temptations is revealed, and we are allowed to draw one conclusion with regard to their effect, which is of more than passing importance. When the Lord fought with and overcame the devils, they were cast down and hound forever in hell. On the other hand, as a result of His contention with the angels, they were enlightened and lifted up into a higher and more celestial order. This conclusion is obvious and is confirmed by A. C. 4075, where something of the nature of these supreme temptations is revealed, i. e., that they had reference to the appearances of truth and to the seeming good which prevailed in the ancient heavens.
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In this number it is said that when the Lord made His Human Divine, He called to Himself societies of spirits and angels, for He willed that all things should be done according to order. We must understand that the Lord's mind, that is, the mind which is below the soul, was, in its form and construction, like that of another man in its relation to the spiritual world. But there is this grand difference, man is brought into intimate relations with only a few societies, while the Lord's mind encompassed and thus included the whole angelic heavens, yea the entire world of Spirits. His mind also encompassed all the hells, but did not include them. By his Glorification they were excluded, though in a sense they were still encompassed, for otherwise they could not have continued to exist.
Again, there was a difference between the mind of man and that of the Lord in this that man derives his goods and truths from the angelic societies with which he is associated, but of the Lord it is said that He did not derive anything of Good and Truth from the angels, but only by them from the Divine. Angelic societies were serviceable to Him as instrumentalities for receiving the Divine Life according to the angelic degree, and in serving Him in this capacity those societies were themselves purified and exalted. Thus are we to understand the mutual relation and reciprocal action between the mind of the Lord and the angelic heavens. Hence, it is said that He called to Himself societies of spirits and angels according to His good pleasure, and so far as they were serviceable. This action and reaction between the mind of the Lord and the heavens, was as an inmost temptation to Him, and also to the angels, because of the angelic influx with impure truths and apparent goods, which He resisted and corrected. On these occasions He was most intimately moved, and they were thrown into a commotion so great as to call for an entire re-adjustment.
The number before us gives several examples of these temptations, but we can at present consider only one of them, i. e., the one which refers to certain societies which were in love to God, and believed that if they looked upon the Infinite and worshiped the hidden God, they could be in love to Him. But it was shown them that they could not, inasmuch as it was necessary that the Infinite should be made finite by intellectual ideas.
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It is said that these societies were serviceable to the Lord in introducing Him into their ideas, and through them into a knowledge of the Divine Truth itself, which was that they could not be saved unless the Human was made Divine and thus rendered an object upon which men and angels might look. The point here is that the Lord was not instructed in this latter truth by those societies, but, as said, only by them from the Divine. Perceiving their apparent truth, He by it as a means entered into the real Divine Truth. And by His so doing those societies were corrected, that is, were thrown into commotion and afterwards were lifted up and instructed.
In this way the Lord passed through the entire heavens as He was being Glorified. Or, perhaps it would be better to say, that in this way the entire heavens were passed through His mind successively, serving as the highest human instrumentality in His Glorification, and being by that process corrected, reformed, and re-established into a new and superior image of the Divine Human. This view gives us an exalted idea of the meaning of the Son of a Man who suffered, and at the same time it places a proper limitation upon that in the Lord which was capable of suffering.
The Doctrine teaches that suffering cannot be predicated of the essential Divine, for no angel or spirit can in any degree approach this. The same is true of the Divine Good, and of the essential Divine Truth which, being above all appearances or finite forms, cannot be brought within the reach of affliction. To be explicit, that in the Lord which suffered is called the "Truth Divine bound." This Truth is represented in the Word by the binding of Isaac by Abraham. We quote:
Truth Divine when bound was what could be tempted in the Lord.... It was this Truth that was no longer acknowledged when the Lord was in the world, wherefore it was that by virtue of which the Lord underwent and sustained temptations. This Truth Divine in the Lord is what is called the Son of Man. but Good Divine in the Lord is what is called the Son of God. Concerning the Son of Man the Lord frequently declares that He should suffer, but never concerning the Son of God. . . . "Behold, we go up to Jerusalem, and the son of Man shall be delivered to the chief Priests and to the Scribes, and they shall condemn Him, and shall deliver Him to the Gentiles to mock and scourge Him, and to crucify," (Matt. xx, 19).
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In all of which, by the Son of Man, is meant the Lord as to Truth Divine, or as to the Word in the internal sense, i. e., that it should be rejected by the chief Priests and Scribes, should be spitefully entreated, should be scourged, spat upon, and crucified. . . . The Lord's rising again upon the third day implies also, that 'Truth Divine, or the Word, as to its internal sense, as it was understood in the Ancient Church, should rise again in the consummation of the Age; which also is the third day: wherefore it is said that there should appear the sign of the Son of Man (i. e., a revelation of the internal sense of the Word). A. C. 2813.
Again,
Truth Divine in the Lord's Human Divine which underwent temptations . . . is not the essential Divine Truth . . . but it is Truth Rational, such as the angels are in, consisting of appearances of truth, and is what is called the Son of Man, but before Glorification. . . . In order that a distinct idea may be had of this most mysterious circumstance, it may be expedient to call the truth appertaining to the Lord, which could be tempted and which underwent temptation, Truth Divine in the Lord's Human Divine. But the truth which could not be tempted,. . .by the appellation Divine Truth in the Lord's Divine Human. A. C. 2814.
This rational Truth Divine was with the Lord prior to His Glorification. He acquired it by the ordinary human method of learning. The Written Scripture was His teacher. This is clear from the fact that He began life in total ignorance and by degrees learned all things. From first crude beginnings He successively passed through all outward appearances to inward angelic realities, even to the inmost, receiving into his mind the sum of finite thought and affection. As to this totality of human good and truth He was called the Son of Man. It appears, therefore, that He became the Son of Man in an even higher degree as He ascended from lower to higher forms of truth; that He as a man assumed the heavens to Himself and made of them a basis for His ascension to the Divine. The heavens served in this capacity as a higher human than that assumed from the world of nature, which yet was one with the worldly human, even as a man's internal is one with his external, or as his mind is one with his body.
Mary clothed the Divine Soul with a material body; the heavens vested it with an angelic mind; the Lord Glorified both. For as to both He was the Son of Man who was tempted and by temptations Glorified.
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From this we would anticipate that the Gospels would predicate Glorification of the Son of Man but not of the Son of God. And such is the case. Nowhere is it said that the Son of God should be Glorified but of the Son of Man, Jesus said: "The hour is come that the Son of Man should be Glorified. . . Father Glorify Thy Name. Then a voice came from heaven, I have both Glorified and will Glorify it again." John xii, 23, 28.
As it was the Son of Man alone who could be tempted, it follows that of Him alone could Glorification be predicated, for Glorification was the result of temptation. And as we have seen, this Son of Man was none other than the Truth Divine bound, which was truth in the heavens in the minds of the angels, or what is the same, the Truth infilling the heavens and descending thence into the world, which Truth was the same as the internal sense of the Word, including also its literal sense.
This infilling and descending Truth being the characteristic of the Son of Man, and being that by which the Divine manifests itself, is none other than that which we know as the Truth of Revelation. Hence we would expect to find the coming of the Lord, in and by revelation, spoken of as a coming of the Son of Man; and this especially of the Second Coming, when the truths of the internal sense of the Word were to be revealed in angelic brightness. And in this connection we observe that it was the Son of Man whom Daniel saw in the clouds of the heavens; which vision is the well-known representation of the Second Advent.
In the New Testament also the invariable custom is to speak of the Second Coming as a coming of the Son of Man. The disciples said, "What shall be the sign of Thy coming?" Jesus answered, "The Son of Man coming in the clouds of heaven," which signifies a revelation of the internal sense of the Word, i. e., of angelic Truth Divine.
If we trace this matter further and inquire into the first pronounced effect of the coming of the Lord, we shall find it to be that of Judgment; because He never effects a general coming unless the condition in both worlds is such that a separation between the good and evil has become a prime necessity. This separation, we are told, is accomplished by an influx of Truth from Him, and is, moreover, an influx of that Truth signified by the Son of Man. Hence we read that it was the Son of Man who placed the sheep on His right hand and the goats on His left. (Matt. xxv. 31, 33.)
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It was the Son of Man who judged the twelve tribes of Israel. (Matt. xix. 28.) Of Him, also, it is said that He should render unto every man according to his deeds, (Matt. xvi, 27). And before Him the worthy should stand. (Luke xxi. 36). Furthermore it is directly stated that "The Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment to the Son . . . and hath given Him authority, because He is the Son of Man." (John v. 22, 27.)
Judgment is the first effect of revealed Truth. It separates the evil from the good, which separation is mainly accomplished in the world of spirits, but not so manifestly in this world. Still the difference is only an appearance. Involved in every general judgment there are innumerable particular ones pertaining to individual men. By the reception of the truths of Revelation evils and falses are parted from goods and truths in the minds of men. This separation is the first and also the last step in man's regeneration. That is, by it he is reformed, regenerated and saved. Such, then, is the special function of the Son of Man with the individual. Hence we are taught: "The Son of Man came to give His life a redemption for many," (Matt. xx. 28). "The Son of Man came to save," (Luke ix. 56) "The Son of Man is come to seek and to save that which was lost," (Luke ix, 56). "The Son of Man forgives sins," (Mark ii. 10). "He is the Lord of the Sabbath," (Luke vi. 5). "He is the meat which endureth unto everlasting life." (John vi. 27).
Now we observe that wherever in the New Testament the term "Son of Man" is employed, one or more of the following subjects is treated of: 1st. His sufferings or passion and thence also His Glorification; 2d. His advent into the world, either First or Second, especially the Second; 3d. Judgment on the occasion, either general or particular; and 4th. Reformation and Regeneration, that is, salvation.
Considering, then, that it was the Son of Man who could be tempted and thus undergo Glorification, and that neither of these things could be predicated of the Son of God, and observing that the Son of Man is predicated of the Divine in the heavens, we must conclude that the Son of God is the Divine above the heavens, for only that which is above the heavens is beyond the reach of temptation.
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And if in this connection we would complete the Trine, we must say that the Father is the Infinite Divine in Itself; thus making an apparent distinction between the Divine in Itself and the Divine proximately above the heavens. Contrasting this with the usual Trine of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, we observe that the Son of Man and the Holy Spirit are parallel. Moreover, the teaching of the Writings concerning these two as the Divine infilling the heavens is constant. In one passage they are mentioned together as having the same significance in this respect. However, there is a remarkable distinction between them which must be noted. It is said that the Son of Man was Truth Divine in the Lord prior to His Glorification, while of the Holy Spirit it is said that it was "not yet" because Jesus was not yet glorified. The conclusion is obvious that the Son of Man became the Holy Spirit by Glorification.
Both remain the last named in the Trinity, but the change from the one to the other indicates that great change which occurred in the heavens at the time of the Glorification, which we may indicate by saying that the Truth Divine bound became the Divine Truth proceeding and infilling. The difference between the two is a grand one, for the Holy Spirit is also free from all temptation. The Son of Man, glorified, can no more be afflicted. No longer can He be touched by the sphere of evil. And this leads to a consideration of that other distinction made when it is said that a sin against the Son of Man may be forgiven, but not a sin against the Holy Spirit. There is not time, at present, to trace this matter into its details, but it is interesting to note that inasmuch as regeneration is a type of glorification, so with the individual a sin against the Son of Man is the same as a sin prior to regeneration; while a sin against the Holy Spirit is to sin after regeneration. The first may be forgiven but not the latter.
It would appear, then, that by Glorification the Son of Man became the Holy Spirit. And we might expect a discontinuance of the use of that term after the Glorification was accomplished. Such, however, is not the case, for it was predicted that the Lord as the Son of Man should come again, and this because the Son of Man signifies the internal sense of the Word, or the angelic understanding thereof, which was to be revealed in the latter days.
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This angelic understanding was not the same before as after the Glorification; but it was similar in this that Divine Truth could only be comprehended, and therefore revealed, under finite forms or human appearances, find Divine Truth thus accommodated is the Son of Man, whether before or after Glorification, and call only by adequately expressed by that term.
All the names of the Lord, when resolved into their supreme significance, merge into one idea. Yet wisdom consists in seeing this one idea under several aspects and according to different degrees. Hence the Trine is given Its, not a trine of Persons, nor even of essentials, but a trinal progression of the One Essential. Such a trinal progression is necessitated by the fact that the human mind must contemplate the absolute Infinite on the one hand, and the concrete finite on the other; and by the further fact that the finite was produced from the Infinite,--that creation is and can only be a result of the uncreate. Thus we must conceive of the absolute Divine in itself; then of the Divine in the conatus or effort to pass into creation, and finally of the Divine in creation. These are not three but one essential. The Father is the Divine in itself. The Son is the Divine passing into creation The Holy Spirit, or Son of Man, is the Divine in creation.
For this reason it was said above that while the Son of Man was the Divine in the heavens, the Son of God was the Divine above the heavens. Of course, the Son of God is and always was one with the Father; the Divine conatus is one with the Divine Esse. Yet we are allowed to conceive of the distinction here made and think of the Divine conatus as it touches the plane of first finition above the heavens producing the appearance of the Spiritual Sun. A philosophic idea of this Divine, here regarded as the Son of God in the abstract sense, is given in Swedenborg's work Oat the Infinite, where it is called the "Divine Nexus" between the Infinite and the finite. That Nexus, while it serves as a medium between the Infinite and the finite, is said to be altogether Divine and one with the Infinite, yet by virtue of its action as a medium, a distinction is made. Human reason certainly demands a medium, yet nothing but Divinity can be predicated of it, and therefore also unity with the Divine Esse. This raises the question whether we may with any degree of propriety speak of the Son of God as prior to the actual assumption of the flesh.
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This can not be done in any individual sense. But the point is whether we may discover in this Divine nexus, existing from the beginning of creation, a parallel with the Son of God, the only Begotten, born in time. The passage referred to in the work On the Infinite speaks of the nexus as the Son of God from eternity, and I am mindful of the fact that that phrase is suggestive of a grave heresy. It should be noted, however, that Swedenborg, while treating of this matter, plainly indicates that the heresy we fear is not entertained by him.
Certain it is that the term "Son of Man" signifies something which was in existence prior to the assumption of the flesh, and of which we may gain a distinct idea. That something was also Divine in itself, yet it was so clothed with finite appearances as to outwardly appear human, i. e., the Truth Divine in the heavens before the Advent. By Glorification this Divine so infilled those investing appearances as to render them also Divine. Such is the remarkable truth concerning Glorification with reference to every plane assumed, even to the last which consisted of flesh and bones.
The phenomenon of Glorification with the Lord, and in a limited sense of regeneration with man, is produced by the reflex of the Divine after it has entered created forms by influx. For as by influx all things were created, so by reflux all created things were redeemed, and in the highest sense glorified. Creation by influx has reference to the internal creative process. It presupposes external vessels for the reception of influx, produced by the original Divine Proceeding through the instrumentality of the natural sun.
In order, then, that the inmost purpose in creation might he accomplished, it was necessary that that which was created should be redeemed. To this end it was needful that every plane of creation should be rebound to the Divine by an indissoluble link, which rebinding consisted in this that the Divine should go forth, enter into, compose, and return, bearing the impress of that which was created back to itself. Now, in order that this might be done, the Infinite Divine sent itself into nature by the process of conception, generation, and birth. Wherefore the Holy Thing born of Mary was "called" the Son of God. The Soul of our Lord thus born, was one with the Infinite Divine; hence by conception. He was the Son of God. By ultimate birth He was the Son of Mary.
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By the gradual opening of His mind, in the degree below the Soul, to the reception of Truth Divine. He became the Son of Man. And by Glorification of both mind and body He re-entered into supreme union with the Soul, which was one with the Infinite Father. Thus Glorification was the return of that which was sent into nature. It was the reflex of the Divine back to the Infinite, bearing with it, however, a certain impress or appearance of creation. Thus the Divine became Human and the Human Divine, by the process of the assumption and Glorification, whereby: creation from firsts to lasts was indissolubly linked to the Divine in the Person of Jesus Christ our Lord.
It is clear, then, that the Lord was called the Son of God by virtue of the Divine Soul which from the beginning, and at all times, was one with the Father. Wherefore Glorification was not, and could not be, predicated of the Son of God, or this Divine Soul. But on the other hand, His Mind was that which was called the Son of Man. This could be and was Glorified. Hence we would naturally expect to find a different series of subjects treated of in the New Testament, where the Son of God is mentioned, i. e., different from those discovered as pertaining to the Son of Man. And this is certainly the case. We have seen what the predicates of the Son of Man are. Let us now briefly consider those of the Son of God.
In the beginning of this paper it was noted that the Son of Man was the Lord as to Truth, while the Son of God was the Lord as to good. A variant of the same teaching is, that the Son of Man is the Lord as to the Word, while the Son of God is the Lord as to the Divine Human. Observe that the Divine Human was not only conceived, but also born of Jehovah God! Now it is this Divine Human, thus conceived and born, which is distinctively the Son of God. Therefore, where the Lord's Divinity and His oneness with the Father are treated of, He is called the Son of God, as, for instance, in the case of the overshadowing of Mary. The Divine conception is there insisted upon. Hence the Holy Thing born of Mary was "called" the "Son of God." The term is also found where other subjects are treated of, but these subjects are invariable derivations of this central idea. Thus, from the idea of the Lord's Divinity, and His oneness with the Father, flows the thought of the Divine power resident with Him.
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Hence as the Son of God He performed His many miracles. As the Son of God He cast out devils, calmed the storm and raised the dead.
The purpose in all these deeds of power was that men might believe in Him as the Son of God, and by belief receive life through Him. Hence these two, i. e., faith in Him and life from Him, are predicated exclusively of the Son of God. "Jesus said . . .Dost thou believe in the Son of God? (John x. 38). "He is condemned already because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten son of God," (John iii. 18). Again, "the hour cometh and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the son of God and they that hear shall live; the Son hath life in Himself," (John v. 25). "These things are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ the son of God, and that believing ye might live through His name," (John xx. 30).
Thus the Son of God is the Divine Human conceived and born of Jehovah God. His predicates, therefore, are personal Divinity, Oneness with the Father, Divine power thence, and, with men, faith in Him and life from Him. But the predicates of the Son of Man are Temptations, Glorification, Advent in revealed Truth, judgment on the occasion, and regeneration. It can be seen at a glance that these two series are entirely distinct. In fact, they differ at all points. Generally speaking, one is a descending and the other an ascending series. That is, the Son of God, the Divine Soul, descended into the world, while the Son of Man by Glorification ascended up to the Divine. When this was accomplished, the Divine Human was the result, and this Divine Human is both the Son of God and the Son of Man.
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