- Dec 23, 2012
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There are many passages in the New Testament that, depending on the translation, clearly state that Christ is God. For example, there is the one that goes "Christ, Who is God over all," which however has been translated in such a way (addition of a period or a different order to the wording) that the passage does not clearly proclaim such a thing. There's also, "God appeared in a body," which is often otherwise translated as, "He appeared in a body," due to the details of the word translated as "God" being similar to the word for "He."
Now all that being said, what do Unitarians make of the passage (I believe it's at the start of Galatians) where Paul says he received the gospel and was appointed to be an apostle, "not by men or by a man" but by Jesus Christ? Isn't Paul unequivocally stating that Christ is not a man, as such? I know Christ's human form is a man, granted, but the implication then is that Christ has a nature as a man, but also another nature that allows us to say of Him that He is not (just) a man, and since He is not, genetically speaking, an angel (as Hebrews specifies for us), this leaves only one option, namely, Christ is God.
Now all that being said, what do Unitarians make of the passage (I believe it's at the start of Galatians) where Paul says he received the gospel and was appointed to be an apostle, "not by men or by a man" but by Jesus Christ? Isn't Paul unequivocally stating that Christ is not a man, as such? I know Christ's human form is a man, granted, but the implication then is that Christ has a nature as a man, but also another nature that allows us to say of Him that He is not (just) a man, and since He is not, genetically speaking, an angel (as Hebrews specifies for us), this leaves only one option, namely, Christ is God.