Source: Bahá'í Library Online (bahai-library.com), curated by Jonah Winters. Used by permission of the curator. Original citation: Jack McLean, The Deification of Jesus, bahai-library.com. ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── The Deification of Jesus BY JACK McLEAN D espite the growing numbers of encounters in recent years of the world religions in forums of exchange Christianityl continues to set itself apart through a firm belief in the uniqueness of its founder, Jesus Christ. While individual Christians may acknowledge the inspitational nature of the non- Christian founders of religions, adherents of the major branches of Christianity are united in the belief that Christ has no equal. This conviction in the uniqueness of Jesus has become the unassailable fbrtress of Christian belief. Such a belief is the product of historical and theological developments in the early church. Through a series of creeds baseli on theological speculation Jesus the Son was declared to be the very essenc~ of Divinity walking upon the earth, the Godhead Itself united with a deified Holy Spirit in a trinitarian theology. These creeds, far from descending upon Ithe church fathers as divine revelation, underwent a long historical development that was not uncontested. They were finally elaborated in their present f~rm after four centuries of acrimonious theological quarreling that necessitate~ four world councils of the church-those of Nicaea, Ephesus, Constantin3. 1980), p, 201. 42 WORLD ORDER: SPRING/SUMMER 1980 not a means of solution. The leaders of the church passed beyond the bounds of "intellectual honesty and humility" and put forth doctrines that reflected their own imperfect understanding as perfect reflections of the will of the Holy Spirit."? Baha'is have also been warned about the same dangers: "In past dispensations many errors arose because the believers in God's revelation were overanxious to encompass the Divine Message within the framework of their limited understanding ... to argue that something was true because it appeared desirable and necessary." 7 0 Christian affirmations about the divinity of Jesus would warrant several observations. First, it seems clear that the deification of Jesus belies the oft- repeated Christian affirmation that revelation is static. The deification issue evolved as a historical process, both biblically and in the creeds. New Testament exegesis of Christ's earliest christological titles as the "Suffering Servant" and the "True Prophet" contrasted with later incarnation theology clearly indi- cates this. The Apostles' Creed, the first of the extrabiblical creeds, devised by the church of Rome as a reaction to Gnosticism, in no way even hints at Christ's identification with the Godhead. The deification itself did not occur until Nicaea in A.D. 325, the doctrine being later ratified as trinitarian theology at Constantinople in A.D. 381. Though it would be quite wrong in Baha'i terms to subordinate Christ to other mythological redeemers as the Gnostic heresy had done, one can still clearly discern how much of the Gnostic theological substratum Paul used in his own presentation of Christ. Paul's thematic presentation of the fall of man and his enslavement to the evil powers, "rulers of this age" (1 Cor. 2: 8) , and his victorious redemption by the Christ savior, all reveal features of a cosmic drama that is quite Gnostic. 71 It was the Arian schism, however, that brought the whole question of Christ's divinity into the forefront of the debate. It is tempting for Baha'is to see in Arius an ally of the Baha'i view that basically subordinates the prophetic figure to God. Upon closer examination, however, Arius' subordinationist Christology reveals itself to be at variance with Baha'i teaching. Unlike Arius who taught that Christ was properly a phenomenon, a created and finite Being, Baha'I theology teaches that the Divine Manifestations are eternal in their station of the Logos-that is, preexistent to their human condition. 7 2 Naturally, the physical vehicle is phenomenal like that of other men. Baha'i teaching also holds to the "essential sinless ness" of the Divine Manifestation, whereas Arius indicated that Christ was liable not to change alone but also to sin." 3 The three major councils of the church-Nicaea, Constantinople, and Chal- cedor; -that evolved successively the deification, trinitarian, and incarnation 69. The Universal House of Justice, Wellspring of Guidance, p. 87. 70. Ibid., pp, 87-88. 71. Brandon in "The Gnostic Problem in Early Christianity" states that by the phrase "rulers of this age" Paul does not intend the temporal authorities but demonic beings who had control of the lives of men. He also discusses other Gnostic influences in Paul. Religion in Ancient History, pp. 324-36. 72. 'Abdu'l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, comp. and trans. Laura Clifford Barney, rev. ed. (Wilmette, Ill.: Baha'i Publishing Trust, 1964), p. 174. Orthodox theology of the early church also taught the preexistence of the Logos. 73. Ibid., p. 197. THE DEIFICATION OF JESUS 43 :l the bounds aspects of Christian doctrine all have the common and objectionable feature that reflected of compromising the Divine Unity. The Divine Unity is one of the "major will of the beliefs" of the Baha'i Faith, "the integrity of which," Shoghi Effendi states, dangers: "In "no one of its followers should allow to be compromised." 74 All of these :l's revelation creeds tampered with the Divine Unity by recasting Christ's relationship to ramework of the Father in its pagan mythological meaning, which was that God had ue because it generated offspring. The wording of the creeds, as well as Cyril's pantheistic theotokos (mother of God) clearly indicate this.75 Baha'u'Ilah, however, rrant several specifically rejects the belief that the Manifestation of God can somehow elies the oft- share in God's essence as the homoousisos of Nicaea held, or coinhabit the fication issue Divine essence in a triune Godhead as the Constantinopolitan doctrine of :w Testament trinity maintained: "If any be set up by His side as peers, if they be regarded Servant" and as identical with His Person, how can it, then, be maintained that the Divine clearly indi- Being is One and Incomparable, that His Essence is indivisible and peerless" eeds, devised (my emphasis)? 76 As for the incarnation, first outlined in Paul's theology even hints at and canonized at Chalcedon, it has been qualified by Shoghi Effendi as a lid not occur "crude and fantastic" "theory." 7 7 rian theology The question then is raised. If Christ is not all these things, what in the Baha'i understanding is He? Only the briefest outline can be offered here; ate Christ to but the answer, I believe, is clearly in complete harmony both with Gospel one can still teaching and with much Christian scholarship. Paul's writings do not con- en Paul used stitute divine revelation for a Baha'i. This, of course, would meet with major )f the fall of objections from Christians who believe that all scripture is divinely inspired 1 Cor. 2:8), (2 Tim. 3: 16). features of a The Baha'i writings indicate that each Divine Manifestation is "known by a different name" and "fulfills a definite mission."78 Baha'i recognition of question of Christ's sonship would apply equally to "Son of Man," the more common of or Baha'is to the titles used by Christ, and to the term "Son of God." As I pointed out earlier, the prophetic Christ is "Son of God" not in any mythological sense as in a sharing of God's oordinationist divine essence but in terms of His messiahship or spiritual kingship. Christians Unlike Arius have fastened almost exclusively upon the mythological meaning of the term, finite Being, that Christ is God's offspring, and have ignored the counterpart implied in mal in their the term, that the "Son" is one who above all shows obedience and humility 72 Naturally, to the Father-that is, the "Son" does the Father's will. The term "Son of ha'I teaching Man" contains paradoxical assertions that the Christ figure would achieve the tion, whereas redemption of mankind by suffering a humiliating death and yet at the same ilso to sin. 7 3 time indicates a cosmological figure of paramount importance who would le, and Chal- usher in a spiritual kingdom promised from the beginning of the world. 7 9 I incarnation The Baha'i writings are in harmony with these views since they recognize the sacrificial death of Jesus "as a ransom for the sins and iniquities of all of the s that by the 74. Shoghi Effendi, World Order of Bahd'u'lldh, p. 114. s but demonic 75. The Nicene Creed reads, for example: "begotten from the Father ... true istic influences God from true God ... from the substance of the father." Kelly, Early Christian Doctrines, p. 232, passim. Laura Clifford 76. Baha'u'Ilah, Gleanings, p. 70. l 74. Orthodox n. Shoghi Effendi, World Order of Baha'u'ltah, p. 112. 78. Baha'u'Ilah, Gleanings, p. 52. 79. Cullmann, Cbristology of the New Testament, pp. 158, 142. 44 WORLD ORDER: SPRING/SUMMER 1980 peoples of the earth" and His having ushered in a spiritual kingdom. 8 0 The later Christian obsession with Christ as God, due mainly to the theology of Paul and the councils, is belied by the New Testament itself, which re- veals a variety of christological titles. The Christ figure of the New Testament, j notwithstanding the preeminence of the title of sonship, is depicted as a mosaic j of christological images, each with its own history rooted in a different tradi- 1 tion. For early Christians Christ was the True Prophet, the Suffering Servant of Deutero-Isaiah (Heb. ebed Yahweh 'the Righteous One'). There are also tradi- tions of Jesus as the High Priest, Jesus as Lord, and so on.S1 Such a mosaic is consistent with Baha'u'llah's explanation that the prophetic figute reveals a wide range of spiritual attributes, from the state of servitude at one end of the scale, "a servitude the like of which no man can possibly attain," and covering successively the stages of Apostleship, Guardianship, Messengership, Prophethood, Lordship, reaching ultimately to Divinity, "the Call of God Him- self."82 In addition to this prophetic mission, Baha'i teaching points to the pre- existent or' metaphysical reality of Christ. However, rather than restricting this preexistent reality to Jesus alone, Baha'i scripture attributes it to all of iri the Founders of the world's great religions. This is the reality of the Divine " Word (Logos) or Divine Manifestation: "Therefore the reality of prophet- hood, which is the Word of God and the perfect state of manifestation, did not have any beginning, and will not have any end.... "83 Not only does Baha'I teaching accord with the preexistence of the Word as stated in the prologue to St. John's Gospel (John 1), but also Christian scholarship has interpreted '!H the passage to mean that the Logos means God's self-revelation, a view that coincides perfectly with Baha'i teaching. 84 Further, the hellenistic notions of the term, which are implicit in John's usage, are also pertinent to the comparative aspects of the two religions. For the pre-Socratics and the Stoics as well as the Jewish philosopher, Philo of Alexandria, the Logos was an intermediary between God and man. For the I!~i 80. Baha'u'Ilah, Gleanings, p. 76. In view of this text of Baha'u'Ilah I feel that it is proper for a Baha'i to speak of the blood sacrifice of Jesus. However, a Baha'i ~Ii would not link this notion to a belief in original sin as it is in Christian theology. The church's aggregate condemnation of the whole human race prior to Christ's coming has been qualified as "superstitious" by 'Abdu'l-Baha (The Reality of Man: Excerpts from W"itings of Bahd'u'lkih and 'Abdu'l-Bahd, rev. ed. [Wilmette, Ill.: Baha'i Pub- lishing Trust, 1962]), p. 47. Baha'u'llah reminds us, though, that there are limits :li to the intellectual understanding of the mystery of sacrifice. See Gleanings, p. 76; cf. Baha'u'Ilah, The Kitdb-i-[qan: The Book of Certitude, trans. Shoghi Effendi, 3d ed. (Wilmette, Ill.: Baha'i Publishing Trust, 1974), p. 129. 81. See Cullmann, Cbristology of tbe New Testament. 82. Baha'u'llah, Gleanings, p. 55. 83. 'Abdu'l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 174. 84. Cullmann, Cbristology of the New Testament, pp. 265-66. Because of Baha'u'- llah's and 'Abdu'l-Baha's endorsement of Logos theology, I cannot concur with those who look to Ebionite Christology as being closer to the Baha'i concept of the Manifesta- tion. It is in some ways; however, the Johannine Logos that is endorsed in the Baha'i Faith and that is also used by Paul was rejected by the Ebionites. Ebionites also rejected the virgin birth, which is espoused in the Baha'i Faith. THE DEIFICATION OF JESUS 45 ~dom.80 Gnostics the Logos as intermediary was finally personalized in the form of a the theology Savior. There are direct parallels here with Baha'i belief, which also points .f, which re- to the Divine Word as an intermediary between God and man. However, one v Testament, reservation must be stated here. John's Gospel depicts the very act of creation Ias a mosaic as being ascribed to the Logos. In Baha'i teaching God is the creator. 85 fferent tradi- 19 Servant of 85. Baha'u'Ilah, Kitdb.i-[qan, p. 103. .re also tradi- ich a mosaic igure reveals t one end of attain," and essengership, )f God Him- to the pre- .n restricting it to all of f the Divine of prophet- uion, did not , does Baha'i the prologue .s interpreted a view that cit in John's .eligions. For rer, Philo of nan. For the ah I feel that ever, a Baha'i itian theology. .hrist's coming Man: Excerpts .: Baha'I Pub- iere are limits mings, p. 76;· hi Effendi, 3d ise of Baha'u'> :ur with those the Manifesta- dorsed in the Ebionites also