by jimwalton » Thu Apr 06, 2017 10:19 am
> John 10.18
Jesus says some things in plain Aramaic : ). "I lay [down my life] of my own accord." While it was the Father's will that asked Jesus to sacrifice his life (Isa. 53.10), Jesus' voluntarily submitted to that purpose. The Father "gave" the Son, who agreed to be given and was glad to be given. Jesus laid down his life "from himself" (the Greek terms).
But he's not done. Jesus follows that with "I have authority to lay it down and authority to take it up again." Since he is divine, and shares the principle of divine action, his authority is not restricted to secondary causality. It is his own rule in free agreement with the will of the Father. There is a bond of action that the Father and Son share in perfect union and equality. They are the same being (Jn. 10.30).
> John 10.22-42
This passage shows that Jesus considered that his miracles were a corroborative sign of his deity since they showed that his character and actions were in perfect union with the Father's character and actions. A number of the prophecies pertained to these very works (Isa. 61.1-3 is an obvious example, but there are many more). Jesus' miracle-working power was part of the prophetic picture.
> they are signs pointing to the spirit of the Father within him, as chapter 10 concludes.
Sure, but what does Jesus mean by "the Father is in me, and I in the Father"? He is repeating his claim from v. 30 that he is one with the Father, that the two of them share deity as one essence. He is saying that his works of mercy and love are proofs that he and God are the same being.
> Psalm 110
David wrote the psalm as a prophetic oracle about the king, probably after David conquered Jerusalem. The New Testament, however, and Jesus himself, is quite adamant that the ultimate fulfillment of this psalm isn't David, but Jesus (Mk. 12.35-37).
In Ps. 110.1, David is learning YHWH speaking to the messiah (a perspective shared by Judaism). The "lord" in question clearly isn't David. The king of Israel was co-regent with YHWH (1 Chr. 29.23), a visible representative of God (1 Chr. 28.5). But this verse has a different slant. YHWH is commanding the person to take his place at his right hand, the highest place of honor (1 Ki. 2.19). It's a statement of divinity, repeatedly interpreted by the NT to be declaring exactly that truth (Mt. 22.41-46 and parallels; Acts 2.34ff.; 1 Cor. 15.25; Heb. 1.13; 10.13).