Jesus Autobiography
by: Lawrence Hilliard
All philosophical, theological and political discourse issues from a
presuppositional matrix. The communicator's ideas are characterized,
influenced, and motivated by such a preexisting corpus of antecedent
ideas, or embraced truth.
I begin with the presupposition that Jesus
understood perfectly and clearly who he was. His auto-noetic frame was
accurate and complete. From such a substratum his ipssissima verba would
proceed. Filtered through an Occidental mindset, in particular, a
pragmatic philosophy, the words of Jesus have been denuded of their
intrinsic authority and regenerative power. The context in which we read
the words of Christ must change, from a late Twentieth Century,
techno-centric, hedonistic, materialistic, democratic state to a matrix
of First Century Judaism. When the words of Christ are heard within the
context of his day, and understood against the backdrop of Rabbinic
Judaism, his words blaze with unsurpassed authority and cut like a
two-edged sword (Isa. 49:2). He spoke with an authority unprecedented
within the history of Israel (Ps. of Sol. 17:36, 43, Matt. 7:29, 24:35,
Mk. 1:22, 27, Lk. 4:36).
Utilizing a Messianic designation from the Old Testament and a title
rich in apocalyptic color, Jesus would identify himself to his Judiac
world. Jesus' "autobiographical designation", utilized 81 times in the
gospels, was the title "Son of Man." Through this Messianic prism we
shall see the transcendent dimension of Jesus' nature as defined by him.
"Jesus chose it [title "Son of Man"] as the ideal expression for
progressively and, to some extent, retrospectively, revealing the nature
of his person and work." (D. A. Carson, professor of New Testament,
Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Expositor's Bible Commentary, Vol.
8, p. 213) Jesus adopted and repeatedly alluded to the figure "Son of
Man" from Daniel 7:13-14,
"I kept looking in the night visions, and
behold, with the clouds of heaven one like a Son of Man was coming, and
He came up to the Ancient of Days and was presented before Him. And to
Him was given dominion, glory and a kingdom, that all the peoples,
nations, and men of every language might serve Him. His dominion is an
everlasting dominion which will not pass away; and His kingdom is one
which will not be destroyed."
Daniel in vision sees four empires in
succession depicted as bestial, verses 1-12, characterizing the savage,
rapacious nature of their rule. But another figure comes upon the scene,
he is conducted to the "Ancient of Days", the "Son of Man." In Hebrew,
the phrase "Son of Man" is bar enosh. "Enosh" emphasizes the mortal,
frail, creaturely, incurable nature of man in the bondage of corruption,
in stark contrast to the four preceding images depicting the arrogant
brutality of totalitarian power. Power exercised in the establishment
and continuance of an empire's reign. Dictatorial violence that stamps
out any residue of resistance. But this figure (Son of Man) has acquired
a kingdom not by military might or dictatorial tyranny, but through
humiliation and suffering.
In the title "Son of Man" there is a unitive
exegetic presented, the multi-faceted significance of the humiliation
and glorification of the Messiah is revealed. "...while Daniel 7:13-14
indeed speaks of the glorification of the Son of Man, it is in context a
glorification and vindication through suffering. Both aspects of
1)
humiliation and suffering, on the one hand, and
2) vindication and glory
on the other,
are signaled by the expression 'Son of Man'..." (Richard
N. Longenecker, professor of New Testament, Wycliffe College, University
of Toronto, The Christology of Early Jewish Christianity, p. 87-88)
In Rabbinical literature much is said regarding the passage in Daniel
7:13 as describing the Messiah. In the Talmud of Babylon Sanh. fol.
98.1, Daniel 7:13-14 is reconciled with Zechariah 9:9. Joshua ben Levy
said, "If Israel are worthy, the Messiah comes with the clouds of
heaven; but if they are not worthy, he comes poor, and riding on an
ass."
Samuel ben Nachman (270 C.E.) said that according to Daniel 7:13,
the angels accompany the Messiah as far as their precincts allow, while
God then conducts him to Himself, according to Jeremiah 30:21 (Midrash
on Ps. 21:7). In Zohar, Gen. folio 85.4, reference is made to Daniel
7:13 as referring to the Messiah. The Hebrew name "Anani" meaning
"clouds" is a name for the Messiah (alluding to Daniel 7:13) in the
Targum translation of I Chron. 3:24. Mention is made of the name of a
person, Anani, it is added, "Who is the Messiah that is to be
revealed,"-a direct reference to Daniel 7:13.
In the Talmud of Babylon Sanh. 96b the Messiah is named Bar-Naphle, the cloud-man. Rabbis Jarchi,
Saadiah, Gaon, Aben Ezra, and R. Joshua expounded the text of Daniel
7:13 as referring to the Messiah.
Outside of Rabbinical literature,
Justin in his Dialogue 32.1 reports that the "one like a son of man" of
Daniel 7:13 was identified with the King Messiah in mid-Second Century
Judaism.
"For the Son of Man has come to save that which was lost." (Matt. 18:11)
Jesus said unequivocally that he had the authority to forgive sins
because he was the Son of Man (Matt. 9:2, 5-6, Mk. 2:5, 9-10, Lk.
5:23-24, 7:47-48). The word "authority" is the Greek word exousia, its
root meaning is literally "out of substance or nature," indicating an
intrinsic right and power of execution. The exousia was his because he
identified himself as the "Son of Man." As the long-awaited Savior of
Israel, Jesus would embody the saving nature of God, forgiving sins on
the merit of his own intrinsic nature. "...All the good which I will do
unto you I do through the merit of the Messiah who was kept back all
those years. He is righteous and filled with salvation." (Zech. 9:9) (Pes.
R. 146b, 159b.)
Jesus exercised an atoning authority in forgiving sins redemptively, a salvational act considered exclusively Divine. The Jews
unwaveringly believed that "God keeps Salvation in His own power."
(Talmud of Babylon Sanh. 113a) "But there is forgiveness with Thee, that
Thou mayest be feared." (Ps. 130:4) "Forgiveness is solely with the
Lord; He alone is capable of forgiving. The mouth of a mortal who, after
all, is himself in need of forgiveness, cannot pronounce the sinner
pure, much less render him pure. Only He, Who is as omnipotent as He is
gracious, in the abundance of His grace and almighty power, can perform
for man that miracle of miracles, the blotting out of the consequences
of his past mistakes." (Samson Raphael Hirsch, The Hirsch Psalms, pg.
396)
"And behold, they were bringing to Him a paralytic, lying on a bed; and
Jesus seeing their faith said to the paralytic, 'Take courage, My son,
your sins are forgiven.'" "For which is easier, to say, 'Your sins are
forgiven,' or to say, 'Rise, and walk'? 'But in order that you may know
that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins'-then He said
to the paralytic-'Rise, take up your bed, and go home.'" (Matt. 9:2,
5-6, Mk. 2:5, 9-10, Luke 5:20, 23, 24, 7:47-48). No sinful mortal can
pronounce a condemned sinner forgiven and free from sin's consequences.
A sinner can share his knowledge of a savior but the saving act of
forgiveness and pardon is exclusively Divine. To forgive sins is solely
a Divine prerogative that Jesus unhesitatingly asserted, a salvational
act no Rabbi, priest, or prophet would have dared imitate for fear of
committing blasphemy. (Luke 5:21, Matt. 9:3, Mk. 2:6-7) "...the word
used in Hebrew for 'forgiven' is the Hebrew salach, literally, nislechu
lecha chatoteicha (forgiven are your sins). Today, in Hebrew, a person
may say to another, 'Ani soleach lecha' (I forgive you), but in the time
of Jesus this expression for forgiveness was only used of God's
forgiving someone (cf. Leviticus 4:26, 31, 35). "...in the healing of a
paralyzed man he used words of forgiveness reserved strictly in the Law
to God." (Dr. Robert Lindsey, Hebrew scholar, from 1945-1990 Pastor of
the Narkis Street Baptist Congregation, Jerusalem, Israel, Jesus Rabbi
and Lord, p. 48, 50.) The idea that the redemptive act of forgiving sins
is within the human domain, "Is alien to the mind of Judaism and of
early Christianity." (Vincent Taylor, The Gospel According to Saint
Mark, p. 199) Jesus recognized His own saving task as summed up in his
words at the house of Zaccheus, "Today salvation has come to this house,
because he too is a son of Abraham for the Son of Man has come to seek
and to save that which was lost." (Lk. 19:9-10)
To exercise the authority to forgive sins, as illustrated in the healing
of the paralytic (Matt. 9:2, 5-6, Mk. 2:5, 9-10, Lk. 5:20, 23, 24,
7:47-48), was not a salvific work foreign to his nature as the Son of
Man. Every Jew, confronted with the ministry of Jesus, understood the
implication of the salvational acts of forgiveness that he singularly
offered, "...the early Jewish believers in Jesus appreciated the fact
that as the Messiah, he was the one who had embodied and effected the
salvation promised of old..." (Richard N. Longenecker, The Christology
of Early Jewish Christianity, p. 103). The healing and redemptive work
of forgiving sins was an exercise of authority over the physical and
spiritual realm of human malady preadumbrating the Son of Man's role as
the eschatological judge of men and nations. "This expression [Son of
Man] goes beyond self-reference and, seen in the light of the
post-resurrection period, surely indicates that the eschatological judge
had already come on earth with the authority to forgive sin." (D. A.
Carson, Expositor's Bible Commentary, Vol. 8, p. 222) As the holder of
the intrinsic right and power of execution as the Universal Judge (Matt.
16:27, 25:31-46), to heal a body and forgive sins did not tax his
authority.
"The one like a man [the Son of Man] who sits upon the throne of God's
glory, the sublime eschatological judge, is the highest conception of
the Redeemer ever developed by ancient Judaism."-David Flusser, Jesus,
p. 103
In the Jewish Apocalyptic book, The Parables of Enoch, the date of
authorship is considered to be pre-70 C.E. (see James Charlesworth,
Jesus Within Judaism, p. 40, ff), the "Son of Man" is presented as
pre-existent from all eternity, he is specially related to God, in that
he shares both the heavenly glory of God and is God's chosen agent of
vengeance and judgment. The picture of his exalted greatness and
authority is overwhelming to behold.
"And there I saw One who had a head
of days, and His head was white like wool, and with Him there was
another whose countenance had the appearance of a man, and his face was
full of graciousness, like one of the holy angels. And I asked the angel
who went with me and showed me all the hidden things, concerning that
Son of Man, who he was, and whence he was, and why he went with the Head
of Days? And he answered and said unto me: 'This is the Son of Man who
hath righteousness, with whom dwelleth righteousness, and who revealeth
all the treasures of that which is hidden, because the Lord of Spirits
hath chosen him, and whose lot hath the pre-eminence before the Lord of
Spirits in uprightness forever. And this Son of Man whom thou hast seen
shall put down the kings and mighty from their seats, and the strong
from their thrones, and shall loosen the reins of the strong and break
the teeth of sinners. And he shall put down the kings from their thrones
and kingdoms because they do not extol and praise Him, nor humbly
acknowledge when the kingdom was bestowed upon them. And he shall put
down the countenance of the strong, and shall fill them with shame. And
darkness shall be their dwelling, and worms shall be their bed, and they
shall have no hope of rising from their beds, because they do not extol
the name of the Lord of Spirits.'" (I Enoch 46:1-6)
"And the kings and
the mighty and all who possess the earth shall bless and glorify and
extol him who rules over all, who was hidden. For from the beginning the
Son of Man was hidden, and the Most High preserved him in the presence
of His might, and revealed him to the elect. And the congregation of the
elect and holy shall be sown, and all the elect shall stand before him
on that day. And all the kings and the mighty and the exalted and those
who rule the earth shall fall down before him on their faces, and
worship and set their hope upon that Son of Man, and petition him and
supplicate him for mercy at his hands." (I Enoch 62:3-8)
"And he sat on
the throne of his glory, and the sum of judgment was given unto the Son
of Man, and he caused the sinners to pass away and he destroyed from off
the face of the earth, and those who have led the world astray. With
chains shall they be bound, and in their assemblage-place of destruction
shall they be imprisoned, and all their works vanish from the face of
the earth. And from henceforth there shall be nothing corruptible; for
that Son of Man has appeared, and has seated himself on the throne of
his glory, and all evil shall pass away before his face, and the word of
that Son of Man shall go forth and be strong before the Lord of
Spirits." (I Enoch 69:26-29)
In the above cited passages the Son of Man
is shown seated on the Throne of Glory, existing before the sun and
stars were created, executing universal judgment, and bringing salvation
at the end of ages, when he will be enthroned as king of the world.
"The
son of man has a superhuman, heavenly, sublimity. He is the cosmic judge
at the end of time; seated upon the throne of God, he will judge the
whole human race with the aid of the heavenly host, consigning the just
to blessedness and sinners to the pit of hell; and he will execute the
sentence he passes." (Encyclopedia Judaica, Vol. 15, p. 160)
The
authority of this figure "Son of Man" far transcends any anointed office
in the Old Testament or the whole angelic order. He stands signally
alone in all Judaism as the final arbiter of the destiny of men and
nations. "The image of this Bar-Enosh is fascinating and unique. It is
the figure of an almost super-human judge, who is to sit on the throne
of God and to separate the righteous from the wicked. He is to deliver
the righteous to everlasting life and the wicked to everlasting
punishment." (David Flusser, professor of early Christianity, Hebrew
University, Jewish Sources in Early Christianity, p. 56) In attempting
to define the nature of this One, the Gordian Knot, consisting merely of
a human evaluation, looms large in Judaism. Can he be a cosmic judge of
such unbounded authority and be simply super-human, or is this
description a trivialization of his true character?
The authority that the Son of Man is portrayed as being invested with,
as cited in the above passages, far transcends any delegated authority
to adjudicate legal disputes, to wage war, or to interpret the Torah.
For the Son of Man's judicial exercise encompasses the entire earth, and
in its execution the full justice of God. The Father has vested all
judiciary powers in the Son of Man (see Targum on Genesis 49:11, Targum
on Isa. 11:4, 10:27, 14:29, Targum on Ps. 72:1-2, Psalms of Solomon
17:21-30, II Baruch 72:2-6, John 5:22-24, 27-30). "Thus it seems that
the concept [the eschatological figure Son of Man] preceded the final
identification of the Son of Man with the Messiah, which became common
at the end of the second temple. It was so applied in the time of Jesus,
who used to speak of the Son of Man as the heavenly judge and it seems
that finally he identified himself with this sublime figure."
(Encyclopedia Judaica, Vol. 15, p. 160)
Jesus states unequivocally that he has an all-encompassing judicial
authority.
"For not even the Father judges anyone, but He has given all
judgment to the Son. In order that all may honor the Son, even as they
honor the Father. He who does not honor the Son does not honor the
Father who sent Him. Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word
and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgement, but has passed out of death into life."
"...and He gave Him
authority to execute judgment, because He is the Son of Man. Do not
marvel at this; for an hour is coming in which all who are in the tombs
shall hear His voice, and shall come forth; those who did the good deeds
to a resurrection of life, those who committed the evil deeds to a
resurrection of judgment." (John 5:22-24, 27-30)
The above cited
passages are startling in their boundless import. Jesus claims that he
has universal judicial authority as the Judge of all, because he is the
"Son of Man." No prophet, priest, scribe, or rabbi has ever executed
such a judicial authority. No mere man or angelic being operates in such
a realm. In the Old Testament, the prerogative of judgment belongs
exclusively to God (Gen. 18:25, Judges 11:27, Ps. 9:8, 50:60, 82:8,
94:2, 98:9, 110:6, Isa. 33:22, I Chron. 16:33, Aboth 4:29).
Jesus' use of the Messianic title Son of Man encompasses the full
breadth of his nature: preexistent, exaltation, suffering, atoning
death, glorification, enthronement, coming King and Judge. Consequently,
no devised category can contain Jesus. He bursts forth and declares that
he is illimitable. Prerogatives that are solely Divine are affirmed by
him. A trilemma confronts anyone who undertakes a serious investigation
of the Person of Jesus. Either he was a fraud, self-deceived, i.e., nut
or he was who he says he was. There can be no other options. The "good
moral teacher" category, utilized to neatly dismiss Jesus, demands by
definition truthfulness and sanity, which, if his declarations are
untrue, would nullify such a classification.
"The idea of a great moral
teacher saying what Christ said is out of the question. In my opinion,
the only person who can say that sort of thing is either God or a
complete lunatic suffering from that form of delusion which undermines
the whole mind of man. If you think you are a poached egg, when you are
looking for a piece of toast to suit you, you may be sane, but if you
think you are God, there is no chance for you." (C. S. Lewis, essay:
"What Are We to Make of Christ?" God in the Dock, p. 158)
A rubicon
decision is demanded by him, "But who do you say that I am?" (Matt.
16:15) He leaves no one in a moral no-man's land. May his spirit grace
us with a vision of his nature, a Divine unveiling from the Father.
"And
Simon Peter answered and said, 'Thou art the Christ, the Son of the
Living God.' And Jesus answered and said to him, 'Blessed are you, Simon
bar Jona, because flesh and blood did not reveal this to you, but My
Father who is in heaven.'" (Matt. 16:16-17)
"For the Son of Man has come to save that which was lost." (Matt. 18:11)
See Also:
You Cannot Reason
with God
The Lord will take away all human reasoning. From the human standpoint
it may seem impossible, but the Lord wants to show us the distinction
between human reasoning and true faith, true saving faith, which is the
gift of God.
Forgiveness
God is powerful to convert even the most sinister plots of the
unrighteous for the good of righteous.
Abandon Religion
It is so commonly believed today
that religion is a source of goodness and charity for so many people. It
is also believed that to oppose religion is also to oppose the goodness
and charity stipulated to be with it.

Lawrence Hilliard is the Founder of
Clarion Voice Communications. To access audio files and lectures of Lawrence
Hilliard visit
http://www.clarionvoice.com