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The Character of Jesus Christ
The surpassing eminence of the character of Jesus has been acknowledged by men of the most varied type:
- Kant testifies to His ideal perfection;
- Hegel sees in Him the union of the human and the Divine;
- the most advanced sceptics do Him homage;
- Spinoza speaks of Him as the truest symbol of heavenly wisdom;
- the beauty and grandeur of His life overawe Voltaire;
- Napoleon I, at St. Helena, felt convinced that
Between him [Jesus] and whoever else in the world there is no possible term of comparison
(Montholon,Récit de la Captivité de l'Empereur Napoléon
). - Rousseau testifies:
If the life and death of Socrates are those of a sage, the life and death of Jesus are those of a god.
- Strauss acknowledges:
He is the highest object we can possibly imagine with respect to religion, the being without whose presence in the mind perfect piety is impossible
. - To Renan
The Christ of the Gospels is the most beautiful incarnation of God in the most beautiful of forms. His beauty is eternal; his reign will never end.
- John Stuart Mill spoke of Jesus as
a man charged with a special, express, and unique commission from God to lead mankind to truth and virtue
.
Not that the views of the foregoing witnesses are of any great importance for the theological student of the life of Jesus; but they show at least the impression made on the most different classes of men by the history of Christ. In the following paragraphs we shall consider the character of Jesus as manifested first in His relation to men, then in His relation to God.
A. JESUS IN HIS RELATION TO MEN
In His relation to men Jesus manifested certain qualities which were perceived by all, being subject to the light of reason; but other qualities were reserved for those who viewed Him in the light of faith. Both deserve a brief study.
(1) In the Light of Reason
There is no trustworthy tradition concerning the bodily appearance of Jesus, but this is not needed in order to obtain a picture of His character. It is true that at first sight the conduct of Jesus is so many-sided that His character seems to elude all description. Command and sympathy, power and charm, authority and affection, cheerfulness and gravity, are the some of the qualities that make the analysis impossible. The make-up of the Gospels does not facilitate the work. At first they appear to us a bewildering forest of dogmatic statements and moral principles; there is no system, no method, everything is occassional, everything fragmentary. The Gospels are neither a manual of dogma nor a treatise on casuistry, though they are the fountain of both. No wonder then the various investgators have arrived at entirely different conclusion at the study of Jesus. Some call Him a fanatic, others make Him a socialist, others again an anarchist, while many call Him a dreamer, a mystic, an Essene. But in this variety of views there are two main concepts under which the others may be summarized: Some consider Jesus an ascetic, others an aesthete; some emphasize His suffering, others His joyfulness; some identify Him with ecclesiasticism, others with humanism; some recognize in Him the prophetic picture of the Old Testament and the monastic of the New, others see in Him only gladness and poetry. There may be solid ground for both views; but they do not exhaust the character of Jesus. Both are only by-products which really existed in Jesus, but were not primarily intended; they are only enjoyed and suffered in passing, while Jesus strove to attain an end wholly different from either joy or sorrow.
(a) Strength
Considering the life of Jesus in the light of reason, His strength, His poise,
and His grace are His most characteristic qualities. His strength shows itself
in His manner of life, His decision, His authority. In His rugged, nomadic,
homeless life there is no room for weakness or sentimentality. Indecision is
rejected by Jesus on several occasions: No man can serve two masters
; He that
is not with me, is against me
; Seek first the kingdom of God, these are some
of the statements expressing Christ's attitude to indecision of will. Of Himself
He said: My meat is to do the will of him that sent me
; I seek not my own
will, but the will of him that sent me.
The authority of the Master does not
allow its power to be questioned; He calls to men in their boats, in their
tax-booths, on their homes, Follow me
, and they look up into His face and obey.
St. Mathew testifies, The multitude…glorified God that gave such power to
men
; St. Mark adds, the kingdom of God comes to power
; St. Luke says, Thou
hast given him power over all flesh
; the Book of the Acts reads, God anointed
him … with power
; St. Paul too is impressed with the power of our Lord
Jesus
. In His teaching Jesus does not argue, or prove, or threaten, like the
Phrarisees, but He speaks like one having authority. Nowhere is Jesus merely a
long-faced ascetic or a joyous comrade, we find Him everywhere to be leader of
men, whose principles are built on a rock.
(b) Poise
It may be said that the strength of Christ's character gives rise to another
quality which we may call poise. Reason is like the sails of the boat, the will
is its rudder, and the feelings are the waves thrown upon either side of the
ship as it passes through the waters. The will-power of Jesus is strong enough
to keep a perfect equilibrium between His feelings and His reason; His body is
the perfect instrument in the performance of His duty; His emotions are wholly
subservient to the Will of His Father; it is the call of complying with His
higher duties that prevents His austerity from becoming excessive. There is
therefore a perfect balance or equilibrium in Jesus between the life of His
body, of His mind, and of His emotions. His character is so rounded off that, at
first sight, there remains nothing which could make it characteristic. This
poise in the character of Jesus produces a simplicity which pervades every one
of His actions. As the old Roman roads led stright ahead in spite of mountains
and valleys, ascents and declivities, so does the life of Jesus flow quietly
onward in accordance with the call of duty, in spite of pleasure or pain, honour
or ignominy. Another trait in Jesus which may be considered as flowing from the
poise of His character is His unalterable peace, a peace which may be ruffled
but cannot be destroyed either by His inward feelings or outward encounters. And
these personal qualities in Jesus are reflected in his teaching. He establishes
an equilibrium between the rightousness of the Old Testament and the justice of
the New, between the love and life of the former and those of the latter. He
lops off indeed the Pharisaic conventionalism and externalism, but they were
merely degenerated outgrowths; He urges the law of love, but shows that it
embraces the whole Law and the Prophets; He promises life, but it consists not
so much in our possession as in our capacity to use our possession. Nor can it
be urged that the poise of Christ's teaching is destroyed by His three paradoxes
of self-reliance, of service, and of idealism. The law of self-sacrifice
inculcates that we shall find life by losing it; but the law of biological
organisms, of physiological tissues, of intellectual achivements, and of
economic processes shows that self-sacrifice is self-realization in the end. The
second paradox is that of service: Whosoever will be the greater among you, let
him be your minister: and he that will be first among you, shall be your
servant.
But in the industrial and artistic world, too, the greatest men are
those who have done most service. Thirdly, the idealism of Jesus is expressed in
such words as The life is more than the meat
, and Not in bread alone doth man
live, but in every word that proceedeth from the mouth of God.
But even our
realistic age must grant that the reality of the law is its ideals, and again,
that the world of the idealist is impossible only for the weak, while the strong
character creates the world after which he strives. The character of Jesus
therefore is the embodiment of both strength and poise. It thus verifies the
definition given by such an involved writer as Emerson: Character is centrality,
the impossibility of being displaced or overset…The natural measure of this
power is the resistence of circumstances.
(c) Grace
But if there were not a third essential element entering into the character
of Jesus, it might not be attractive after all. Even saints are at times bad
neighbours; we may like them, but sometimes we like them only at a distance. The
character of Christ carries with it the trait of grace, doing away with all
harshness and want of amiability. Grace is the unconstrained expression of the
self-forgetting and kindly mind. It is a beautiful way of doing the right thing,
in the right way, at the right time, therefore opens all hearts to its possessor.
Sympathy is the widst channel through which grace flows, and the abundance of
the stream testifies to the reserve of grace. Now Jesus sympathizes with all
classes, with the rich and the poor, the learned and the ignorant, the happy and
the sad; He moves with the same sense of familiarity among all classes of
society. For the self-righteous Pharisees He has only the words, Woe to you,
hypocrites
; he disciples, Unless you become as little children, you shall not
enter into the kingdom of heaven.
Plato and Aristotle are utterly unlike Jesus;
they may speak of natural virtue, but we never find children in their arms.
Jesus treats the publicans as His friends; He encourages the most tentative
beginnings of moral growth. He chooses common fishermen for the corner -stones
of His kingdom, and by His kindliness trains them to become the light of the
world and the salt of the earth; He bends down to St. Peter whose character was
a heap of sand rather than a solid foundation, but He graciously forms Peter
into the rock upon which to build his Church. After two of the Apostles had
fallen, Jesus was gracious to both, though He saved only one, while the other
destroyed himself. Women in need are not excluded from the general graciousness
of Jesus; He receives the homage of the sinful woman, He consolves the sorrowing
sisters Martha and Mary, He cures the mother-in -law of St. Peter and restores
the health of numerous other women of Galilee, He has words of sympathy for the
women of Jerusalem who bewailed His sufferings, He was subject to His mother
till He reached man's estate, and when dying on the Cross commanded her to the
care of His beloved disciple. The grace of the Master is also evident in the
form of His teaching: He lays under contribution the simple phases of nature,
the hen with her chickens, the gnat in the cup, the camel in the narrow street,
the fig tree and its fruit, the fishermen sorting the catch. He meets with the
lightest touch, approaching sometimes the play of humour and sometimes the
thrust of irony, the simple doubts of His disciples, the selfish questions of
His hearers, and the subtlest snares of his enemies. He feels no need of thrift
in His benefits on the few as abundantly as the vastest multitudes. He flings
out His parables into the world that those who have ears may hear. There is a
prodigality in this manifestation of Christ's grace that can only be symbolized,
but not equalled, by the waste of seed in the realm of nature.
(2) In the Light of Faith
In the light of faith the life of Jesus is an uninterrupted series of acts of
love for man. It was love that impelled the Son of God to take on human nature,
though He did so with the full consent of His Father: For God so loved the
world, as to give his only begotten Son
(John, iii, 16). For thirty years Jesus
shows His love by a life of poverty, labour, and hardship in the fulfillment of
the duties of a common trademan. When His public ministry began, He simply spent
Himself for the good of His neighbour, doing good, and healing all that were
oppressed by the devil
(Acts, x, 38). He shows a boundless compassion for all
the infirmities of the body; He uses His miraculous power to heal the sick, to
free the possessed, to resuscitate the dead. The moral weaknesses of man move
His heart still more effectively; the woman at Jacob's well, Mathew the publican,
Mary Magdalen the public sinner, Zacheus the unjust administrator, are only a
few instances of sinners who received encouragement from the lips of Jesus. He
is ready with forgiveness for all; the parable of the Prodigal Son illustrates
His love for the sinner. In His work of teaching He is at the service of the
poorest outcast of Galilee as well as of the theological celebrities of
Jerusalem. His bitterest enemies are not excluded from the manifestations of His
love; even while He is being crucified He prays for their pardon. The Scribes
and Pharisees are treated severely, only because they stand in the way of His
love. Come to me, all you that labour, and are burdened, and I will refresh
you
(Matt., xi, 28) is the message of His heart to poor suffering humanity.
After laying down the rule, Greater love than this no man hath, that a man lay
down his life for his friends
(John, xv, 13), He surpasses as it were His own
standard by dying for His enemies. Fulfilling the unconscious prophecy of the
godless high-priest, It is expedient for you that one man should die for the
people
(John, xi, 50), He freely meets His sufferings which He could have
easily avoided (Matt., xxvi, 53), undergoes the greatest insults and ignominies,
passes through the most severe bodily pains, and sheds His blood for men unto
remission of sins
(Matt., xxvi, 28). But the love of Jesus embraced not only
the spiritual welfare of men, it extended also to their temporal happiness:
Seek ye therefore first the kingdom of God, and his justice, and all these
things shall be added unto you
(Matt., vi, 33).
B. JESUS IN HIS RELATION TO GOD
Prescinding from the theological discussions which are usually treated in the
theses De Verbo Incarnato
, we may consider the relations of Jesus to God under
the headings of His sanctity and His Divinity.
(1) Sanctity of Jesus
From a nagative point of view, the sanctity of Jesus consists in His
unspotted sinlessness. He can defy His enemies by asking, Which of you shall
convince me of sin?
(John, viii, 46). Even the evil spirits are forced to
acknowledge Him as the Holy One of God (Mark, i, 24; Luke, iv, 34). His enemies
charge Him with being a Samaritan, and having a devil (John, viii, 48), with
being a sinner (John, ix, 24), a blasphemer (Matt., xxvi, 65), a violator of the
Sabbath (John, ix, 16), a malefactor (John, xviii, 30), a disturber of the peace
(Luke, xxiii, 5), a seducer (Matt., xxvii, 63). But Pilate finds and declares
Jesus innocent, and, when pressed by the enemies of Jesus to condemn Him, he
washes his hands and exclaims before the assembled people, I am innocent of the
blood of this just man
(Matt., xxvii, 24). The Jewish authorities practically
admit that they cannot prove any wrong against Jesus; they only insist, We have
a law; and according to the law he ought to die, because he made himself the Son
of God
(John, xix, 7). The final charge urged against Christ by His bitterest
enemies was His claim to be the Son of God.
The positive side of the sanctity of Jesus is well attested by His constant
zeal in the service of God. At the age of twelve He asks His mother, Did you
not know, that I must be about my father's business?
. He urges on His hearers
the true adoration in spirit and in truth (John, iv, 23) required by His Father.
Repeatedly He declares His entire dependence on His Father (John, v, 20, 30;
etc.); He is faithful to the Will of His Father (John, viii, 29); He tells His
disciples, My meat is to do the will of him that sent me
(John, iv, 34). Even
the hardest sacrifices do not prevent Jesus from complying with His Father's
Will: My Father, if this chalice may not pass away, but I must drink it, thy
will be done
(Matt., xxvi, 42). Jesus honours His Father (John, ii, 17), and
proclaims at the end of His life, I have glorified thee on the earth
(John,
xvii, 4). He prays almost incessantly to His Father (Mark, i, 35; vi, 46; etc.),
and teaches His Apostles the Our Father (Matt., vi, 9). He always thanks His
Father for His bounties (Matt., xi, 25; etc.), and in brief behaves throughout
as only a most loving son can behave towards his beloved father. During His
Passion one of His most intense sorrows is His feeling of abandonment by His
Father (Mark, xv, 34), and at the point of death He joyfully surrenders His Soul
into the hands of His Father (Luke, xxiii, 46).
(2) Divinity of Jesus
The Divinity of Jesus is proved by some writers by an appeal to prophecy and miracle. But, though Jesus fulfilled the prophecies of the Old Testament to the letter, He Himself appears to appeal to them mainly in proof of His Divine mission; He shows the Jews that He fulfills in His Person and His work all that had been foretold of the Messias. The prophecies uttered by Jesus Himself differ from the predictions of the Old Testament in that Jesus does not speak in the name of the Lord, like the seers of old, but in His own name. If it could be strictly proved that they were made in virtue of His own knowledge of the future, and of His own power to dispose of the current of events, the prophecies would prove His Divinity; as it is they prove at least that Jesus is a messenger of God, a friend of God, inspired by God. This is not the place to discuss the historical and philosophical truth of the miracles of Jesus, but we know that Jesus appeals to His works as bearing witness to the general truth of His mission (John, x, 25, 33, 38), and also for the verity of some particulr claims (Matt., ix, 6; Mark, ii, 10, 11; etc.) They show, therefore, at least that Jesus is a Divine legate and that His teaching is infallibly true.
Did Jesus teach that He is God? He certainly claimed to be the Messias (John,
iv, 26), to fulfill the Messianic descriptions of the Old Testament (Matt., xi,
3-5; Luke, vii, 22-23; iv, 18-21), to be denoted by the current Messianic names,
king of israel
(Luke, xix, 38; etc), Son of David
(Matt., ix, 27; etc), Son
of man
(passim), he that cometh in the name of the Lord
(Matt., xxi, 9.etc).
Moreover, Jesus claims to be greater than Abraham (John, viii, 53, 56), than
Moses (Matt., xix, 8-9), than Solomon and Jonas (Matt., xii, 41-42); He
habitually claims to be sent by God (John, v, 36, 37, 43; etc), calls God His
Father (Luke, ii, 49; etc), and He willingly accepts the titles Master
and
Lord
(John, xiii, 13, 14). He forgives sin in answer to the observation that
God alone can forgive sin (Mark, ii, 7, 10; Luke, v, 21, 24; etc). He acts as
the Lord of the Sabbath (Matt., xii, 8; etc), and tells St. Peter that as Son
He is free from the duty of paying temple-tribute (Matt., xvii, 24, 25).
From the beginning of His ministry he allows Nathanael to call Him Son of God
(John, i, 49); the Apostles (Matt., xiv, 33) and Martha (John, xi, 27) give Him
the same title. Twice He approves of Peter who calls Him the Christ, the Son of
God
(John, vi, 70), Christ, the Son of the living God
(Matt., xvi, 16). Four
distinct times does He proclaim Himself the Son of God; to the man born blind
(John, x, 30, 36); before the two assemblies of the Jewish Sanhedrin on the
night before His death (Matt., xxvi, 63-64; Mark, xiv, 61-62; Luke, xxii, 70).
He does not manifest His Divine Sonship before Satan (Matt., iv, 3, 6) or before
the Jews who are deriding Him (Matt., xxvii, 40). Jesus does not wish to teach
the evil spirit the mystery of His Divinity; to the Jews He gives a greater sign
than they are asking for. Jesus, therefore, applies to Himself, and allows
others to apply to Him, the title Son of God
in its full meaning. If there had
been a misunderstanding He would have corrected it, even as Paul and Barnabas
corrected those who took them for gods (Acts, xiv, 12-14).
Nor can it be said that the title Son of God
denotes a merely adoptive
sonship. The foregoing texts do not admit of such an interpretation. St. Peter,
for instance, places his master above John the Baptist, Elias, and the Prophets
(Matt., xvi, 13-17). Again, the Angel Gabriel declares that the Child to be born
will be the Son of the most High
and Son of God
(Luke, i, 32, 35), in such a
way that He will be without an earthly father. Mere adoption presupposes the
existence of the child to be adopted; but St. Joseph is warned that That which
is conceived in her [Mary], is of the Holy Ghost
(Matt., i, 20); now one's
being conceived by the operation of another implies one's natural relation of
sonship to him. Moreover, the Divine Sonship claimed by Jesus is such that he
and the Father are one (John, x, 30, 36); a merely adopted sonship does not
constitute a physical unity between the son and his adoptive father. Finally if
Jesus had claimed only an adoptive sonship, He would have deceived His judges;
they could not have condemned Him for claiming a prerogative common to all pious
Israelites. Harnack (Wesen des Christentums, 81) contends that the Divine
Sonship claimed by Jesus is an intellectual relation to the Father, springing
from special knowledge of God. This knowledge constitutes the sphere of the
Divine Sonship
, and is implied in the words of Matt., xi, 27: No one knoweth
the Son, but the Father: neither doth any one know the Father, but the Son, and
he to whom it shall please the Son to reveal him
. But if the Divine Sonship of
Christ is a mere intellectual relation, and if Christ is God in a most
figurative sense, the Paternity of the Father and the Divinity of the Son will
be reduced to a figure of speech. (See CHRISTOLOGY.)
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