by jimwalton » Wed Sep 13, 2017 10:47 pm
You're getting frustrated already. We've barely begun.
> Isa.42.1
Of course Isa. 42.1 speaks of Israel as a servant and God the master, but there is no connection with fatherhood here. You had to go to the Septuagint to get it, but it's not in the Masoretic text, which reads "servant".
The problem with your textual analysis is that it doesn't hold true across the board. *Pais theou* is a messianic designation more than it means strictly "son". *Pais theou* almost across the board means "servant of God" with no relation to God's fatherhood, and no implication of connecting "father" with the notion of inferiority. *Pais* is continually used in the sense of "servant" (2 Sam. 7.5, 8, 19, 20,21, 25, 26; cf. Lk. 1.69). The term “servant of YHWH” is applied in the OT to…
1\. A worshipper of God (Neh. 1.10; Dan. 6.21; so to Abraham (Ps. 105.6, 42); to Joshua (Josh. 24.29); to Job (Job 1.8).
2\. A minister or ambassador of God called to any service (Isa. 44.6); of Nebuchadnezzar (Jer. 27.6); of the prophets (Amos 3.7); of Moses (Dt. 34.5).
3\. Peculiarly of the Messiah (Isa. 42.1; 52.13)
In other words, the designation of *pais* is not one of inferiority, but one of devotion and calling.
> In John 5 Jesus says the Son can do nothing except what the Father has for him to do. The assumption here is that sons are to do whatever their fathers say.
Right. I already addressed this. There is no debating that Jesus recognized the Father's authority.
> Jn. 4.22
Of course Jesus is speaking corporately from the vantage point of the Jews in contrast to the Samaritans. This is clear in his next phase ("for salvation is from the Jews"). It is no implication that Jesus worships the Father. Remember that at this point in the conversation Jesus has yet to reveal himself to the woman (4.26).
> That Jesus prays to God and does his works implies that he worships/serves Him as well.
That Jesus prays is an indication of communication, not of subservience. The "work" is a shared partnership (Jn. 5.17). Even the Jews correctly interpret that he is making himself *equal to God* (Jn. 5.18), not subservient to him.
> In the Temptation narratives Jesus refuses to worship Satan because he must worship God alone.
Jesus is quoting Scripture indicating that God is the only being worthy of worship. This is no implication that Jesus worships God.
> That Jesus still calls the Father his God in John 20:17 after his resurrection suggests he still relates to the Father as a worshiper.
No, it indicates that He and His Father still have the same unique relationship as equals.
> Further, Jesus appears to assume here that his current relationship to God is the same as Mary's relationship to God.
Never.
> He says here that the Father is the Father of both himself and of Mary.
John 20.17? Why does he bother with the separation of "my Father and your Father" then? If it's what you say, it would be "our Father." Instead, His particular relationship to God is unique, distinct from any human relationship. He is the eternal Son of the Father, she is a member of God's family by faith (Jn. 1.12). Jesus is the only begotten of the Father (Jn. 1.14), the firstborn of all creation. By his death and resurrection, many more family members have been brought into God's family. His use of "your father" denotes their new status after the resurrection.
> He talks about our God and our Father all the time
Never.
> John 5.19-20...I mean, that's not a claim to equality.
The Jews understand him perfectly (v. 18): He is "making himself equal with God." In 19ff. Jesus claims authority to duplicate and continue the Father's works, to bestow life upon men, to execute divine judgment, and to raise the dead in the last day. He claims unity with the Father. "The Father and I track together as one all the time. His actions are my actions; his ways are my ways; his thoughts are my thoughts." Jesus isn't just claiming to be a prophet or a good guy or a great teacher. He's claiming sameness. It's as if the Son was the protagonist in a book the Father was writing. Any action the Father takes must occur through his Son, who is his incarnation in the book. Also, any action the Son takes is genuinely an action of the Father who is doing the "writing." The two persons are distinct, but one and the same.
> John 6.38. He is perfectly obedient as a Son ought to be.
Christ was responsive to the Father's leadership during his incarnation. Repeatedly we read in John's gospel that Christ did the will of the Father and was responsive to the Father’s authority (see also John 4.34 & 8.28). At the same time, Christ's submission to the Father was based on equality and shared authority.
> 1 Cor. 15.28
The Son always recognizes the authority of the Father, and He exercises the Father's sovereignty in relation to the world. The goal of the lordship of Jesus in exercise of the Father's sovereignty is therefore to make the reconciled and judged world subject to God.
> ughhh. Worship is a particular kind of service.
So you're saying that because Jesus' life conformed to the will of God, he worshipped God as an inferior? Nah, too much of a stretch to make your point. Jesus conformed to the will of God, conversed with him in prayer, and pleased God in all that He did. This is not statement that Jesus was an inferior. Please.
> 1 Cor. 15.28, again. "The glorified Lord Jesus Christ is still the Father's servant."
The issue with this term is its broad range of meaning, so you just can't claim "inferiority." When a women submits to a man, there is no necessary implication of inferiority because Eph. 5.21 says that we should "submit to one another out of reverence for Christ." So if we're all equally inferior, then no one's inferior. We're all equal.
The term can also mean "to renounce your own will for the sake of another"—a voluntary taking up of the cause of another. It doesn't imply inferiority.
The term can also mean "to arrange in military fashion under the command of a leader." A sergeant isn't necessarily inferior to a lieutenant, but he is under his command. The term doesn't imply inferiority.
So it's not so "astounding". I'm quite convinced you are reading into texts what you want to see, and it's not there. Christ's servant relationship to the Father is quite complex, multi-faceted, and nuanced, and not at all a clear black-and-white. It's never portrayed as a position of inferiority, but as two equals with one deferring to the other.
I can already tell from this conversation that there is probably not going to be a meeting of the minds, here. We have very disparate viewpoints.