A Nonchurchgoer's Guide to Jesus and His Kingdom

Jesus Christ Is God

Surely you have heard of Jesus of Nazareth as described by the four gospels:  Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.  Never in the history of humanity has there been a life like that of Jesus.  He went about doing good for everyone He encountered.  He healed the sick, fed the hungry, and taught all those who were ignorant of God.  For His innumerable kindnesses He was repaid with rejection, physical abuse, and death by crucifixion.  However, none of this treatment surprised Him, for it had been the plan of God all along for these things to happen so that He could be raised from the dead three days later – demonstrating not only the enduring nature of His love for us, but also the indestructibility of His power.

Before ascending into heaven, the resurrected Jesus appeared to His followers in multiple and convincing ways, commissioning them to go into all the world bearing witness to what they had seen and heard.  That testimony, recorded two thousand years ago, and preserved in what we call the New Testament of the Bible,  is still valid today…and will be for all eternity.  He loves you and me.  There is no human being whom He does not love, no human being for whom He did not die.   This is what the apostles’ testimony emphatically declares.

The life that Jesus lived (and this is an amazing thought) had been predicted hundreds of years in advance by multiple authors in a variety of ways throughout the documents we call the Old Testament of the Bible.  In fact, over a thousand years elapsed between the time that the first and last of Israel’s prophets wrote of Him.  Although He was given many titles in both testaments, it is the title of “Messiah” that is most immediately significant.  This word means “Anointed” and refers to Israel’s expected King who would bring righteousness and peace not just to that nation but to all nations.  This word was translated into Greek and subsequently into English as “Christ” – and thus we call Him Jesus Christ.

The reason that the life of Jesus Christ was so different from that of any other person, and so particularly described well in advance, is that He was God while we are human.  Stated another way, He was sinless while we have sinned.  His sinlessness, however, did not lead Him to avoid us.  Rather, it led Him to walk among us and show us how we ought to be living and treating one another: that is, with love.  This same Jesus is reigning as God over heaven and earth even now, and He desires to forgive you of your sins and show you how to live with the same motivations He had.  Turn your heart to Him today and every day; He will see and hear.  He will forgive you, and then guide you through your conscience.  You do not need anyone else to show you how to live…but you do need Him.  Let Him bring His righteousness and peace to your heart.

For more, see There Is No Trinity; There Is Only Christ.

21 Responses

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  1. ROBERT WHEELER TODD said, on December 31, 2010 at 6:11 pm

    Hi Mike,
    When I pull out my wallet, open it to a photo of my wife, point to that photo and say, “This is my wife.” Do you really believe the photo is my wife. Of course not. When I speak of Christ Jesus and say, “This is God” that is not so. He is the IMAGE of His God and His Father, not THE DEITY HIMSELF as no one has seen THE DEITY HIMSELF. Jesus is the first of all creation, a created being, a Deity but not THE DEITY. God, the Father of His Son Christ Jesus, always existed. Christ did exist before all else was created as He, Christ, was used by His Father to create all there is… including the ages, TIME itself. God did not die on the cross (pole) but His Son, Jesus, did. Christ is the Anointed One, as you say, and the One Who does the anointing is superior to the Anointed. The One superior to Christ is God. What do you think?
    Bob
    k7vhq@earthlink.net

    • Mike said, on January 6, 2011 at 7:01 am

      I think you have said many things that are right. However, you have also said, “Jesus is…a Deity but not THE DEITY…” This cannot be for God has told us that He is one.

      • steve said, on April 13, 2011 at 9:41 pm

        Mike,
        The Bible testifies to Jesus being a deity. The Bible also testifies to Satan being a deity. And Since Nimrod, some men have set themselves up as deities and have been worshiped as gods (the Pharaoh- the son of the sun-god Ra, Japan Emperor Hirohito-WWII). This does not make them God Almighty. That would be Jehovah.

        • Mike Gantt said, on April 14, 2011 at 5:41 am

          God (Jehovah) will not share His glory with another (Isaiah 42:8; 48:11). The only way Jesus could be Lord with the glory that the Bible describes is if He were God Himself. This was the meaning of the Second Coming. That is, Jesus came the first time as a man and the second time as God. In the gospels He is portrayed as a man. In Acts through Revelation He is declared the exalted Messiah seated at the right hand of God. In His coming, which was “in the clouds,” He fully reassumed His throne over all – revealing that our Redeemer was in fact also our Creator (Daniel 7:13-14). See Whatever Became of Jesus Christ? to better understand the Second Coming and what it revealed about Jesus Christ.

          • steve said, on April 15, 2011 at 9:43 pm

            Mike,
            1. “God (Jehovah) will not share His glory with another (Isaiah 42:8; 48:11). The only way Jesus could be Lord with the glory that the Bible describes is if He were God Himself.”

            Answer: That is the point; Jesus and Jehovah are two different persons.

            2. “This was the meaning of the Second Coming. That is, Jesus came the first time as a man and the second time as God.”

            Answer: Not sure where you are getting this from. You just cannot go around making things up because they sound good and intellectual.

            3. “In Acts through Revelation He is declared the exalted Messiah seated at the right hand of God.”

            Answer: Who exalted Jesus? Did he exalt himself? Philipans 2:6-10 provide the answer. Messiah means “Anointed One”. Who anointed Jesus?

            As far as the thought that he is not referred to by Jesus past the Gospels, 1 Corinthians 8:6 states, “there is actually to us one God the Father, out of whom all things are, and we for him; and there is one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things are, and we through him”.

            Check out Titus 2:5, Revelation 1:1, and 1 Peter 1:3. Jesus is clear distinguished from his Father Jehovah

            4. “In His coming, which was “in the clouds,” He fully reassumed His throne over all – revealing that our Redeemer was in fact also our Creator (Daniel 7:13-14).”

            Answer: What is indicated by “clouds”? Invisibility. When an airplane is in a thick cloud or above the clouds, people on the ground usually cannot see it, although they may hear the roar of the engines. Jehovah told Moses: “I am coming to you in a dark cloud.” Moses did not see God, but that cloud indicated Jehovah’s invisible presence. (Ex. 19:9; see also Leviticus 16:2; Numbers 11:25.) If Christ were to appear visibly in the heavens, it is obvious that not “every eye” would see him. If he appeared over Australia, for example, he would not be visible in Europe, Africa, and the Americas, would he?

            • Mike Gantt said, on April 16, 2011 at 10:41 am

              Answer: That is the point; Jesus and Jehovah are two different persons.

              I addressed the “two different persons” issue in this comment.

              Answer: Not sure where you are getting this from. You just cannot go around making things up because they sound good and intellectual.

              I got this from the Bible – that is, the Holy Scriptures inspired by the Holy Spirit. I am not smart enough to have figured it out for myself, nor did I learn it from anyone else.

              Answer: Who exalted Jesus? Did he exalt himself? Philipans 2:6-10 provides the answer. Messiah means “Anointed One”. Who anointed Jesus?

              As I wrote above, I addressed the “two different persons” issue in this comment.

              As far as the thought that he is not referred to by Jesus past the Gospels, 1 Corinthians 8:6 states, “there is actually to us one God the Father, out of whom all things are, and we for him; and there is one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things are, and we through him”. Check out Titus 2:5, Revelation 1:1, and 1 Peter 1:3. Jesus is clear distinguished from his Father Jehovah

              I never said that Jesus wasn’t referred to as Jesus after the gospels. Read again my comment in which I addressed your “two different persons” question.

              Answer: What is indicated by “clouds”? Invisibility. When an airplane is in a thick cloud or above the clouds, people on the ground usually cannot see it, although they may hear the roar of the engines. Jehovah told Moses: “I am coming to you in a dark cloud.” Moses did not see God, but that cloud indicated Jehovah’s invisible presence. (Ex. 19:9; see also Leviticus 16:2; Numbers 11:25.) If Christ were to appear visibly in the heavens, it is obvious that not “every eye” would see him. If he appeared over Australia, for example, he would not be visible in Europe, Africa, and the Americas, would he?

              I agree with you that “in the clouds” refers to invisibility.

  2. Anonymous said, on January 7, 2011 at 11:37 pm

    Is it okay to “say” I believe in One God, and likewise “think” that God is three persons as in Matthew 28:19? Thanks.

    • Mike said, on January 8, 2011 at 3:31 am

      God is not three persons. He is one. The Jesus who was walking the earth as one of us, who was crucified, and was raised from the dead, and who ascended into to heaven…is now our Heavenly Father.

  3. Phil Nickel said, on March 27, 2011 at 8:02 am

    “God is not three persons. He is one. The Jesus who was walking the earth as one of us, who was crucified, and was raised from the dead, and who ascended into to heaven…is now our Heavenly Father.”

    Please direct me to the passage that evidences this conclusion, that He has become another “Heavenly Father”, besides that One He told us to love and worship while He was on earth. That would make two “Fathers”, something not mentioned in Scripture, and a title for the incarnate Christ that I have never read as being assingned to Him in the Writings. I am seeking to clear up extra-biblical impurities so that the refined word of God may stand as it is revealed, not as it is interpreted, and I may be missing something of great significance here.

  4. Anonymous said, on March 27, 2011 at 4:26 pm

    Indeed our God is One. The Father, Son and the Holy Spirit. Thanks for sharing your understanding.

  5. [...] The full truth about Jesus is that He was God in the flesh.  Though God is spirit, He visited us for a time…as one of us.  Upon His resurrection from the dead, He ascended in heaven to resume His reign over heaven and earth.  Thus He shall always be our one and only God.  To misunderstand Jesus Christ, therefore, is to misunderstand God’s visitation to the human race. In short, Jesus Christ is God. [...]

  6. [...] During the days of Israel and the church, He appointed humans to represent Him.  Now, He represents Himself (Jesus Christ is God). [...]

  7. [...] The Bible is “by Jesus” because the Holy Spirit was motivating all those who wrote its words.  The many different authors over many different generations had a common inspiration: the Holy Spirit of God.  See 2 Timothy 3:14-17 and 2 Peter 1:20-21.  The Holy Spirit of God is, of course, the Holy Spirit of Jesus (see Jesus Christ Is God). [...]

  8. [...] There is no use comparing ourselves to each other (or to Hitler – that’s how low everyone seems to want to set the bar).  We must compare ourselves to the only One who is a true standard:   Jesus Christ. [...]

  9. [...] Jesus Christ is our God! [...]

  10. [...] the New Testament thus portrays the dawning of Jesus Christ, what then is the full day?  Jesus Christ is God!  Let us repent of our ways and worship Him now and [...]

  11. [...] What is much more difficult to do – and, in fact, impossible – is to debunk Jesus Christ.  This is because there is nothing wrong or false in Him.  See Jesus Christ Is God. [...]

  12. [...] Christ is a type of God.  And Christ is God. [...]

  13. [...] steps of the prophets who came before Him.  Jesus was indeed a prophet Himself (though He was also much more than a prophet).  And His experiences in life were like that of the prophets before [...]


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