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Tag Archives: Incarnation

T. F. Torrance on the virgin birth

07 Saturday Dec 2019

Posted by thecruciformpen in People to Know, Resources, Reviews

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Books, Christmas, Incarnation, New Creation, T. F. Torrance, Virgin Birth

TFT_Incarnation

I’ve been reading Thomas F. Torrance’s Incarnation: The Person and Life of Christ a second time and I am once again struck with how profound Torrance is in his understanding of the incarnation of the eternal Son of God into our human being.

This is evident in his discussion of the virgin birth as a sign in relation to a thing signified:

The virgin birth cannot be understood apart from the whole mystery of Christ, apart from the union of divine and human nature in the one person of Jesus Christ. The virgin birth is the outward sign, the signitive form in humanity which the creative entry of the Son of God takes, when he assumes our human nature into union with his divine nature…[T]he mystery of the birth and the mystery of the person of Christ cannot be separated, and the mystery of the birth has to be understood  in the light of the mystery of his person, the sign in the light of the thing signified, not the thing signified in the light of the sign.

Or the insightful way he thinks about the virgin birth in relation to the resurrection:

In fact the birth of Jesus of the virgin Mary and the resurrection of Jesus from the virgin tomb (‘where no one had ever yet been laid’) are the twin signs which mark out the mystery of Christ…The incarnation is not only a once and for all act of assumption of our flesh, but the continuous personal union of divine and human nature in the one person of the incarnate Son, a personal union which he carried all the way through our estranged estate under bondage into the freedom and triumph of the resurrection…These are then the twin signs testifying to the miraculous life of the Son of God within our humanity, the one at the beginning and the other at the consummation of the earthly life of Jesus. Both these acts were sovereign creative acts of God’s grace in and upon and out of our fallen humanity, and they are, in the full sense, one continuous act including the whole historical life and work of the incarnate Son.

Or once again, explaining what the virgin birth teaches us about a new humanity:

[T]he incarnation of the Son in our humanity has its source in the hidden creative act of God, but it also assumes a form in the entry of the Son into our humanity which is appropriate to and is required by the nature of the incarnate Son as creator  as well as creature…It reveals God as the creator and redeemer actually with us in our estranged human existence, and as God bringing out of our fallen and sinful existence a new humanity that is holy and perfect.

Or, finally, consider how Torrance sees a fruitful analogy between the virgin birth and the salvation of each new believer:

John of Damascus remarked that Mary conceived through her ear: she heard the Word and the Word spoken by the Spirit in her ear begot himself in her and through her, and so the Word which Mary heard and received and obeyed  became flesh of her flesh. That is the normative pattern for the believer in his or her attitude toward the Word announced in the gospel, which tells men and women of the divine act of grace and decision taken already on their behalf in Christ…As in the annunciation of the word to Mary, Christ the Word himself became flesh, so in the enunciation of the gospel, we surrender in like manner to Christ the Word now made flesh, and there takes place in us the birth of Jesus, or rather, we are in a remarkable way given to share through grace in his birth and to share in the new creation in him. That is the Christian message – the Christmas message…What happened once and for all, in utter uniqueness in Jesus Christ, happens in every instance of rebirth into Christ, when Christ enters into our hearts and recreates us. Just as he ws born from above of the Holy Spirit, so we are born from above of the Holy Spirit through sharing in his birth.

 

The above selections of text are all quoted from chapter three, “The Once and for all Union of God and Man: Christ’s Birth into our Humanity” (pgs.87-104).

If you buy and read this book over Christmas it will be the most profound “Christmas book” that you read this year. Guaranteed.

Buy it from Amazon here: Incarnation: The Person and Life of Christ

What was the motivation for the Incarnation?

10 Saturday Oct 2015

Posted by thecruciformpen in Reviews

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Christology, Incarnation, Sin

incarnation anywayI recently finished an interesting read: Incarnation Anyway: Arguments for Supralapsarian Christology by Edwin Chr. van Driel (Oxford University Press, 2008). The book deals with the question of God’s motivation for the incarnation. Was it contingent upon sin, or did the triune God have a deeper motive in becoming human? As the title of the book suggests, van Driel argues for the latter. He proposes that God’s desire for intimate friendship and love with his creation has the most explanatory power for understanding the incarnation. Understanding the incarnation, in other words, as merely a divine response to sin does not do justice to the full beauty and majesty of Immanuel, God with us.

 

It may be important to compare and contrast this book with another of a similar strand. Van Driel comes to very similar conclusions on this topic as the traditional Greek Orthodox viewware_orthodox_way has it. For example, Kalistos Ware, in his book The Orthodox Way (St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1979), says the incarnation “is God’s supreme act of deliverance, restoring us to communion with himself. But what would have happened if there had never been a fall? Would God have chosen to become man, even if man had never sinned?” (pg. 70). Following the lead of St. Isaac the Syrian (Bishop of Nineveh, late 7th century) Ware suggests that “Even had there been no fall, God in his own limitless, outgoing love would still have chosen to identify himself with his creation by becoming man” (pg. 70).

However, an important difference here is van Driel’s refusal to postulate a hypothetical scenario of unfallen humanity. Speculating about an unreal situation does not help us understand the motivation for the incarnation. Rather than engage in speculation van Driel insists that we deal directly with the situation that has in fact obtained: “I do not ask what would have happened if we had not sinned; I ask about the incarnation as it happened, about the Christ as we have him; and my point is that the incarnation gives us so much, is so rich in gifts of divine friendship and intimacy, that it cannot be explained as only a divine countermeasure against sin…the category of redemption is not rich enough to explain the wonder of his presence” (pg. 164-65).

Van Driel is not trying to minimize the importance of redemption from sin. Rather, he is trying to highlight the magnificence and majesty that is displayed in the incarnation, and suggesting that if we think of the incarnation as only a divine response to sin then we are flattening out God’s purpose in becoming human. The practical implications of this are important for 1) our spiritual walk with God, and 2) our evangelism.

If the incarnation is merely a divine countermeasure against sin, that assumes that our relationship to him is based on a problem-solution model; the fall of humanity into sin is the problem, God’s solution is redemption (via the incarnation). The problem with this model, according to van Driel, is that once the solution is obtained there is no further need for a continued relationship with the incarnate Christ. In other words, what further need is there for Christ to remain incarnate once the redemption has been accomplished? The problem (sin) has been dealt with, atonement has been made. Van Driel’s proposal is that God’s motive goes beyond a mere countermeasure for sin. God desires to be as close as possible with his creatures in love and friendship. And because this desire came before sin there is abundant reason for us to continue to engage with him daily in intimate friendship, and further, the deeper motive for Christ to remain human, even now, still stands.

The other practical implication relates to our evangelism. Van Driel suggests that to suppose the incarnation is contingent upon our need for redemption leads to the improper conclusion that before we can introduce someone to Christ we must first convince them that they are sinners, and therefore need redemption. Although, van Driel doesn’t use this analogy, I think he would say this is putting the proverbial cart before the horse. He is not saying that we are not sinners who need redemption. Rather, he is laying out a vision of the incarnation in which the love of God precedes the need of redemption, and therefore serves as a more acceptable starting point for inviting people into a living relationship with this God.

This was a fascinating read. I find myself sympathetic with the main thrust of the book. However, I can’t help but wonder if van Driel has really understood the biblical-theological significance of sin. We live in a society where moral relativism rules the day. I think it is important for us to grapple with the biblical teaching on sin and its contemporary significance. Additionally, as for the motive behind the incarnation, it is a false dichotomy to suggest that it must be either a countermeasure against sin or a step toward loving fellowship with humanity; I think the two are intricately bound up with one another. To separate them as mutually exclusive motives for the incarnation creates an unnecessary disjunction in the purpose of God. Even human beings can havefallen complex motives for action. Is it wrong to suppose God had complex motives?

In sum, I think Incarnation Anyway is worth thoughtful study, but it would be helpful to supplement with another book on the topic of sin. So read it alongside Fallen: A Theology of Sin (Crossway, 2013), an excellent  compilation of essays written by evangelical scholars (D.A. Carson, Douglas Moo, Paul House, Gerald Bray, Bryan Chapell, Sydney Page, Robert W. Yarbrough, etc.).

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