Dr. John Ankerberg:
Do you think Jesus ever considered Himself to be God?
The handful of liberal scholars in the Jesus Seminar
claim Jesus never said He was God. Further, they claim
that later Christians deliberately excluded other
books, other gospels, which pictured Jesus differently
than the books which are now part of the New Testament
Canon. As you’ll hear in this program, the Jesus
Seminar is wrong on both points. Well, let’s begin
with "Jesus claimed to be God." Can Christians use the
Jesus Seminar’s own critical methodology to examine
the evidence, and still prove that Jesus DID claim to
be God? The answer is, "Yes." Dr. Gary Habermas, a
philosopher and historian, has written over 100
articles for scholarly journals on the life of Christ.
As a Christian, there are many reasons that have led
him to accept all of the content in the New Testament
books as true and authoritative. But he knows
non-Christian scholars do not believe the same way. So
he starts with the snippets of material in the New
Testament that they do accept and do think are
historically reliable—and uses that material to prove
that Jesus did refer to Himself as God. Now, Dr.
Habermas argues that no matter which source, which
stratum New Testament critics turn to, in all five of
them you’ll find that Jesus designates Himself as Son
of man which, as you’ll see, is a reference to Deity
in Daniel 7:13,14. So listen as Dr. Habermas uses the
critics’ own arguments to show Jesus did claim to be
God.
Dr. Gary Habermas:
We ended the last program by mentioning the critical
comeback that seems so obvious that, you know, we’ve
got to face it right away. And that goes something
like this: "Don’t take for granted that the red letter
editions of the New Testament are exactly what Jesus
said. How do you know Jesus said what Mark said He
said, what Luke said He said, what John said He said,
what Matthew said He said?"
Now, I made a couple of
claims last program that Jesus claimed to be Son of
man and Son of God. Let’s take a look at a couple of
these with critical methodology, a sort of a lowest
common denominator, a text that’s nothing but a book
of ancient literature. Okay, the New Testament is a
book of ancient literature. Let’s think about this
like the critics do and let’s address ourselves to the
issue, "Did Jesus ever claim to be the Son of man?"
Now, using a sort of
Monday morning quarterbacking scenario, I mean, it
goes something like this. When guys sit around on
Monday morning, they remake yesterday’s football game
and they make it in their own image. "You know, if
you’d only done this or you’d only done that." And
really, that’s what a lot of critics are saying after
Bultmann, that the Gospel writers are putting words
into Jesus’ mouth. They are Monday morning
quarterbacking Jesus’ teaching. How do we know the Son
of man is not just an added teaching?
Well, there’s two
important criteria that are given by the critics
themselves, both of which are fulfilled by the Son of
man sayings. These are criterion of authenticity. Now,
the first one is multiple attestation. If you have a
saying in more than one source, you have a pretty good
idea that this is authentic. In fact, the Jesus
Seminar themselves used that criteria in the beginning
of the book The Five Gospels.
Now, the teaching that
Jesus was the Son of man. It’s His favorite
self-designation, according to the Gospels, and it is
found in all five what are often called the
traditional Gospel strata. And the traditional Gospel
strata are Mark; "M"—the material that Matthew has
that nobody else has; "L"—the material that Luke has
and no one else has; John, and this enigmatic "sayings
document" that they call "Q." Five strata. And guess
what. Son of man appears in all five.
So, it’s pretty uniform
that this is what Jesus called Himself.
Now, the comeback is,
"Well that just means it’s a popular name. How do we
know the Church didn’t make it up? And really, what
Son of man means is, it was the most popular title for
Jesus when the Gospels were written, see?" And they
put it back in Jesus’ mouth in 30 A.D. "But really
what it was, it was the most popular title for Him
when the Gospels were written." That’s the second. And
this is called "the criterion of dissimilarity": If
Jesus did not get something from the Jews, and if
Jesus’ teachings are not found in the early Church,
probably they are authentic. This is the critical
criterion of dissimilarity. And guess what. "Son of
man" cannot be laid at the feet of the Jews. They have
a concept of "Son of man," but they would never apply
it to Jesus.
But what about the
Church? Isn’t this a great example of Monday morning
quarterbacking? They read their favorite designation
back into the mouth of Jesus, so it’s the favorite
designation of Jesus when the Gospels are written.
Doesn’t work. It doesn’t work because Jesus is never
called the Son of man in any of the New Testament
epistles. In fact, He’s not called Son of man anywhere
outside the Gospels except one place, and there it’s
talking about the heavenly exalted Son of man. The
earthly Son of man, the earthly Jesus, is never called
Son of man anywhere else outside the Gospels and only
on the lips of Jesus, except in an instance where a
man is simply reading that title, you know, "You say
you’re the Son of man..." back to Jesus. So it’s a
title distinctly on the lips of Jesus alone. In other
words—let me unpack this just a little bit—it couldn’t
be a Monday morning later title read into the words of
Jesus because then it would be the Church’s favorite
title, but it’s not found in the Church.
So the best conclusion
is, first of all, it’s in all five layers, therefore
it goes to Jesus. And secondly, it can’t be dated to
the Jews; it can’t be dated to the Church. You know?
Jesus must really have called Himself the Son of man,
and I’ve got a problem because the Son of man of
Daniel 7:13,14 is a very special figure, as we’ve said
before. He comes from the Ancient of Days. He’s a
preexistent, divine figure setting up God’s Kingdom on
Earth. And if Jesus claimed to be that, and you don’t
want to believe in the Deity of Christ, now you’re
going up against a mountain of evidence.
Ankerberg:
Now, did Jesus ever just come out and say that He was
the Son of God? What is the evidence? Again, Dr.
Habermas takes the critics’ own assumptions, points
out evidence about Jesus from five different sources
or layers of historical information, and shows that
they all reveal Jesus said He was the Son of God.
Listen:
Habermas:
Now, the second title—and as I said, this one seems to
be a more obvious title of Deity—is Son of God. Did
Jesus ever call Himself the Son of God?
Let me reflect on a few
passages here that are very helpful in Jesus referring
to Himself as the Son of God and that we can’t Monday
morning quarterback it into the lips of the early
Christian community.
Okay. First of all, in
Matthew 11:27—and its parallel in Luke—here we have a
passage that comes from what the critics call "Q,"
early sayings document. Very, very early. They believe
this predates the Gospels by decades. And yet in
Matthew 11:27 and its parallel Jesus says...He said,
"I’ve come to you to reveal the Father." And this is
the way He says it. It said, "No one knows the Son
except the Father, and no one knows the Father except
the Son and those to whom He will reveal Him."
Now, in that passage
Jesus is claiming unique knowledge of God, and this is
found in the very early "Q" strata, according to the
way the critics arrange this, and that’s a tough text.
Another text is Mark
14:36, and here Jesus calls God "Abba." A lot has been
written about this, including by German New Testament
scholar Joachim Jeremias, and Jeremias claims that
Abba is a very special title. You don’t really find
this usage anywhere else in the Jewish community. It’s
translated "Father" or maybe even the very
personalized "Daddy." But it’s in Aramaic and this may
be a hint of Jesus’ exact language. Don’t forget, the
New Testament was written in Greek. Jesus probably
spoke in Aramaic. And if "Abba" is Aramaic, some
people think we have a window here into the exact word
of Jesus, but what does that word mean? It’s an
indication of God being His Father.
So you have a statement
in "Q," you have "Abba." And maybe the strongest
statement of all—Mark 13:32. Now, if you look this up
you’re going to think, "Man! Is he nuts?" This isn’t a
verse about the Deity of Christ because Jesus is
saying "the time of My coming." He says, "That time,
no man knows; the angels don’t know; not even the Son
but the Father only." The reason that’s a strong verse
that Jesus is the Son of the Father or the Son of God
is that He says He doesn’t know the time of His
coming. My point is this. If the Church is making this
statement up and putting the words back onto the lips
of Jesus, why do they say something, as one theologian
says that is "theologically embarrassing"? If they
want to say Jesus is the Son of man, just let them
say; or Son of God, just let them say right out: And
Jesus answered and said, Behold, I’m the Son of God.
But no! They’ve got to go and say, "I don’t know the
time of My coming."
That’s difficult.
Because if He’s the Son of God, why doesn’t He know
the time of His coming? Now, I think that can be
explained traditionally because Jesus had a human
nature/Jesus had a divine nature. But be that as it
may, that sentence does not seem like it can be made
up because it’s too embarrassing. Just say He claimed
to be the Son of God. No. They had to say "the Son
doesn’t know the time of His coming." And that’s a
rough sentence. So Jesus probably said it.
You’ve got a "Q"
statement; you’ve got an "Abba" statement; you’ve got
an "I don’t know the time of my coming" statement. And
I think in all of those cases we have evidence that
Jesus did claim to be the Son of God, as the Gospels
proclaim.
Ankerberg:
Now, once again, we want to drive home the point that
using the critical scholars’ own assumptions, you can
show that Jesus claimed to be God. That doesn’t mean
we agree with their assumptions; it just means that
the historical evidence is so strong, non-Christians
can come to believe in Christ by examining these
facts. Dr. Habermas summarizes this point. Listen:
Habermas:
Maybe we can backtrack here just a little bit and talk
about theological definitions and in particular the
method that I’m using here. My point is this. If you
take the traditional view of Jesus Christ as laid out
in the Gospels, red letter edition; Acts; Epistles of
Paul, obviously no one is going to dispute the fact
that Jesus in those texts claims to be the Son of God,
died on the cross for our sins, was raised from the
dead.
But I’m taking a
different approach, what I might call a minimal facts
approach, what I might call "lowest common
denominator" approach here, and what I’m saying is,
even if the critics are right about their methodology
and can note, say, five layers of tradition in the
traditional Gospels, including the "Q" which is taken
from the German for "source" and what it means is, "a
sayings document." It’s believed by critics that a
sayings document was circulated in the early Church
with nothing but sayings of Jesus—and they take this
very seriously—and that’s a document that includes
Matthew 11:27 on Jesus being the Son of God.
We’ve talked about
creeds. Evangelicals don’t think like that because
they think, "Hey, look. This whole book is Scripture.
Why do we have to look at pieces?"
But the critic who sees
the New Testament as a book of ancient literature and
maybe nothing more, he sees it’s very important—and I
think he’s right—that if we have some early statements
that predate the books in which they appear, i.e.,
Paul’s saying "I gave you that which I was given";
Paul’s saying, "Observe the traditions of the
elders"—if we have these little tiny confessions that
predate the books in which they are written, the point
is, they’re really early. And I’ve argued they’re
apostolic. So if these kinds of critical, lowest
common denominator ways of thinking—you have creeds,
you have Q, you have Sources, and the Gospels—my point
is, even using their methods, we really come up with
some of the strongest arguments for the Deity, death,
burial, resurrection of Jesus.
Ankerberg:
Now, one of the most outrageous claims being made by
the Jesus Seminar today is that the 27 books that now
make up the Canon of the New Testament were chosen for
political reasons, not because these books were known
and accepted by all Christians. The Jesus Seminar
claims later Christians purposely suppressed other
books and Gospels about Jesus that depicted Jesus in a
far different way than Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
One of the books they claim was purposely kept out of
the Canon was the Gospel of Thomas. But Dr. Habermas
shows such claims are not true—that the Gospel of
Thomas wasn’t even in existence before 150 A.D. and
all the books in the New Testament were written before
90 A.D. So the book of Thomas couldn’t be part of the
Canon. Listen:
Habermas:
You know, John, this is one of questions that really
kind of sets me off. Now, we have Gospels; we have
those little creedal passages in Acts; we have Paul.
Critics are wanting to give us Paul, almost carte
blanche for those five, six, eight epistles that are
considered genuine epistles. We’ve got to argue our
way for those little creeds in Acts and for some of
the Gospels. But this is obviously the traditional
Canon. And critics want to get you on other grounds.
Now, I’m not talking about the moderate critics, but
let’s go over with the Jesus Seminar people. They want
to tell you that we kept other books out of the Canon
by a political move. And the other sources are there,
but we wanted a single Jesus so we orchestrated what
was going to be in the canon and what wasn’t and why
didn’t we include things like—the best case scenario
is made for the Gospel of Thomas—which is a sayings
document with a little over a hundred sayings of
Jesus, something like "Q." That’s what they’ll say.
Now, why do we keep
something out—let’s make Thomas our test case here—why
do we keep that out of the canon? A couple of things I
want to say here.
Number one, no matter
what you do with other books, you still have to deal
with the evidence from A.) Paul; B.) Acts creeds; C.)
Gospels. Whether there are other books or not, you
have to deal with this. And after all, Paul is the
early Apostle; Peter is the early Apostle; James, the
brother of Jesus is the early Apostle; Thomas—this is
called a sayings book but nobody believes it was
written by the Apostle Thomas. So the traditional
Canon is there for a reason: it’s more authoritative.
What does "more authoritative" mean? It’s written by
the guys who were in the closest proximity to Jesus.
Now, how about this
thing that "there was a political move and you want to
keep the other books out, like Thomas?" Let me tell
you something. There was no political move involved
because there weren’t books at that time like Thomas
that could be kicked out of the Canon. They didn’t
decide, "Mark, you’re in; Gospel of Thomas is out,"
because the Gospel of Thomas didn’t even exist at that
time.
The Jesus Seminar is a
distinct minority when they want to say Thomas comes
back to 50 [A.D.]. And you know what? I can show you
some of their documents where they first said Thomas
is perhaps 90 A.D., and then 50 A.D. You know what it
appears there? They need some other documents they can
put in the 50s to say they are rivals.
Everybody else has
Thomas in the second century. The reason nobody made a
decision against Thomas in 50, 60, 80, 90 A.D. is
because there was no Thomas, according to the vast
majority of scholars.
So, there’s no orthodox
Canon where the people say, "This is it. We’re only
going to take this stuff and we’ll throw everything
else out." There’s a main reason for this.
Evangelicals would be laughed out of court if we said,
"We’ve got a book. It’s about a hundred years late,
second century. But we like it. So we’re going to
bring it back for the Canon."
Do you know what they’d
say? "Don’t you think a hundred years is just...150ish
A.D., is just a little too late to be an early
source for Jesus?"
That’s what Thomas is.
The reason it’s rejected in the Canon is because it’s
late. Not because they didn’t like the politics; they
didn’t like the Jesus. We have a bunch of floating
Jesuses around. You can’t show that. You can’t show
there’s an authoritative Jesus that is not the One
that’s represented by His Apostles—like Paul, Peter,
James. It’s not there because it’s not physically
existing—and I’m speaking about the Gospel of Thomas.
Ankerberg:
Now, how would you show a non-Christian that the 27
books making up the New Testament are truthful books
about Jesus, that they were accepted by eyewitnesses
of Jesus’ life, such as the Apostles, and known to be
authoritative books by Christians who knew the
Apostles? Well, there is solid, historical evidence
that forms the foundation for our trust in these
books. Listen:
Habermas: I’d
like to say one other thing about the early Canon. Two
blocks of books we’ve been dealing with here: the
Gospels and Acts, Acts traditionally seen as volume 2
of Luke. That’s five books. The Epistles of Paul—the
critics will give you five, six, eight. Conservatives
want thirteen Epistles of Paul. But these two blocks
of books were accepted at the end of the first
century. Nobody waited until Nicea in 325 [A.D.]. How
do I know? Take three early Christian writers:
Clement, about 95 A.D.; Ignatius, about 107 A.D.;
Polycarp, about 110 A.D. Nine little Epistles. And
they cite Paul—cite, quote, refer to Paul in his
Epistles just short of a hundred times. They cite 12
of his 13 epistles. The only one they leave
out—Philemon. And you can imagine why. Only one
chapter; not theological. But Paul is called inspired.
He’s called an Apostle. And his writings are quoted
right there at about 100 A.D. by three authoritative
writers. The Gospels—they cite the Gospels and Acts
well over 100 times. These two bodies of literature,
Gospels plus Acts, Paul’s Epistles—12 out of 13 are
cited—they are recognized as inspired right there at
the close of the New Testament Canon, about 100 A.D.
Go back to the Thomas
thesis. The reason others don’t come in? There are no
competitors, there are no other Gospels floating
around to compete with the Gospels and Acts. No other
epistles are of the status of Paul in writing epistles
like that and we have about 200 citations of them
within...right at the close of the first century.
Folks, this is very, very early material.
Let me add one other
thing. Clement, 95 A.D.; Ignatius, 107 A.D.; Polycarp,
about 110 A.D.—they cite the Gospels and they cite
Paul over 200 times. But you know what? They didn’t
refer to the "Gospel of Thomas." Why? Because they’re
trying to push him out of the Canon? No. There’s no
Thomas around. They don’t know it; they don’t cite it.
That’s why we have much more evidence for the
authoritative New Testament, Gospels, Acts, and Paul’s
Epistles.
(Transcribed from our
series Is the Jesus of History the Jesus of Faith?)