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Christology

In Christianity, Christology (from the Greek Χριστός, Khristós and -λογία, -logia), translated from Greek as 'the study of Christ', is a branch of theology that concerns Jesus. Different denominations have different opinions on questions such as whether Jesus was human, divine, or both, and as a messiah what his role would be in the freeing of the Jewish people from foreign rulers or in the prophesied Kingdom of God, and in the salvation from what would otherwise be the consequences of sin.[1][2][3][4][5]

Paolo Veronese, The Resurrection of Jesus Christ (c. 1560)

The earliest Christian writings gave several titles to Jesus, such as Son of Man, Son of God, Messiah, and Kyrios, which were all derived from Hebrew scripture.[web 1] These terms centered around two opposing themes, namely "Jesus as a preexistent figure who becomes human and then returns to God", versus adoptionism – that Jesus was human who was "adopted" by God at his baptism, crucifixion, or resurrection.[web 1]

From the second to the fifth centuries, the relation of the human and divine nature of Christ was a major focus of debates in the early church and at the first seven ecumenical councils. The Council of Chalcedon in 451 issued a formulation of the hypostatic union of the two natures of Christ, one human and one divine, "united with neither confusion nor division".[6] Most of the major branches of Western Christianity and Eastern Orthodoxy subscribe to this formulation,[6][7] while many branches of Oriental Orthodox Churches reject it,[8][9][10] subscribing to miaphysitism.

Definition and approaches

Christology (from the Greek Χριστός, Khristós and -λογία, -logia), literally 'the understanding of Christ',[11] is the study of the nature (person) and work (role in salvation)[note 1] of Jesus Christ.[1][4][2][need quotation to verify][3][web 1][web 4][note 2] It studies Jesus Christ's humanity and divinity, and the relation between these two aspects;[5] and the role he plays in salvation.

"Ontological Christology" analyzes the nature or being[web 5] of Jesus Christ. "Functional Christology" analyzes the works of Jesus Christ, while "soteriological Christology" analyzes the "salvific" standpoints of Christology.[14]

Several approaches can be distinguished within Christology.[note 3] The term Christology from above[15] or high Christology[16] refers to approaches that include aspects of divinity, such as Lord and Son of God, and the idea of the pre-existence of Christ as the Logos ('the Word'),[17][16][18] as expressed in the prologue to the Gospel of John.[note 4] These approaches interpret the works of Christ in terms of his divinity. According to Pannenberg, Christology from above "was far more common in the ancient Church, beginning with Ignatius of Antioch and the second century Apologists."[18][19] The term Christology from below[20] or low Christology[16] refers to approaches that begin with the human aspects and the ministry of Jesus (including the miracles, parables, etc.) and move towards his divinity and the mystery of incarnation.[17][16]

Person of Christ

 
Christ Pantocrator, Holy Trinity's monastery, Meteora, Greece

A basic Christological teaching is that the person of Jesus Christ is both human and divine. The human and divine natures of Jesus Christ apparently (prosopic) form a duality, as they coexist within one person (hypostasis).[21] There are no direct discussions in the New Testament regarding the dual nature of the Person of Christ as both divine and human,[21] and since the early days of Christianity, theologians have debated various approaches to the understanding of these natures, at times resulting in ecumenical councils, and schisms.[21]

Some historical christological doctrines gained broad support:

Influential Christologies which were broadly condemned as heretical[note 5] are:

  • Docetism (3rd–4th centuries) claimed the human form of Jesus was mere semblance without any true reality.
  • Arianism (4th century) viewed the divine nature of Jesus, the Son of God, as distinct and inferior to God the Father, e.g., by having a beginning in time.
  • Nestorianism (5th century) considered the two natures (human and divine) of Jesus Christ almost entirely distinct.
  • Monothelitism (7th century), considered Christ to have only one will.

Various church councils, mainly in the 4th and 5th centuries, resolved most of these controversies, making the doctrine of the Trinity orthodox in nearly all branches of Christianity. Among them, only the Dyophysite doctrine was recognized as true and not heretical, belonging to the Christian orthodoxy and deposit of faith.

Salvation

In Christian theology, atonement is the method by which human beings can be reconciled to God through Christ's sacrificial suffering and death.[24] Atonement is the forgiving or pardoning of sin in general and original sin in particular through the suffering, death and resurrection of Jesus,[web 6] enabling the reconciliation between God and his creation. Due to the influence of Gustaf Aulèn's (1879–1978) Christus Victor (1931), the various theories or paradigmata of atonement are often grouped as "classical paradigm", "objective paradigm", and the "subjective paradigm":[25][26][27][28]

Other theories are the "embracement theory" and the "shared atonement" theory.[42][43]

Early Christologies (1st century)

Early notions of Christ

The earliest christological reflections were shaped by both the Jewish background of the earliest Christians, and by the Greek world of the eastern Mediterranean in which they operated.[44][web 1][note 13] The earliest Christian writings give several titles to Jesus, such as Son of Man, Son of God, Messiah, and Kyrios, which were all derived from Hebrew scripture.[web 1][16] According to Matt Stefon and Hans J. Hillerbrand:

Until the middle of the 2nd century, such terms emphasized two themes: that of Jesus as a preexistent figure who becomes human and then returns to God and that of Jesus as a creature elected and "adopted" by God. The first theme makes use of concepts drawn from Classical antiquity, whereas the second relies on concepts characteristic of ancient Jewish thought. The second theme subsequently became the basis of "adoptionist Christology" (see adoptionism), which viewed Jesus' baptism as a crucial event in his adoption by God.[web 1]

Historically in the Alexandrian school of thought (fashioned on the Gospel of John), Jesus Christ is the eternal Logos who already possesses unity with the Father before the act of Incarnation.[49] In contrast, the Antiochian school viewed Christ as a single, unified human person apart from his relationship to the divine.[49][note 14]

Pre-existence

The notion of pre-existence is deeply rooted in Jewish thought, and can be found in apocalyptic thought and among the rabbis of Paul's time,[51] but Paul was most influenced by Jewish-Hellenistic wisdom literature, where "'Wisdom' is extolled as something existing before the world and already working in creation.[51] According to Witherington, Paul "subscribed to the christological notion that Christ existed prior to taking on human flesh[,] founding the story of Christ [...] on the story of divine Wisdom".[52][note 15]

Kyrios

The title Kyrios for Jesus is central to the development of New Testament Christology.[53] In the Septuagint it translates the Tetragrammaton, the holy Name of God. As such, it closely links Jesus with God – in the same way a verse such as Matthew 28:19, "The Name (singular) of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit".[54]

Kyrios is also conjectured to be the Greek translation of Aramaic Mari, which in everyday Aramaic usage was a very respectful form of polite address, which means more than just 'teacher' and was somewhat similar to 'rabbi'. While the term Mari expressed the relationship between Jesus and his disciples during his life, the Greek Kyrios came to represent his lordship over the world.[55]

The early Christians placed Kyrios at the center of their understanding, and from that center attempted to understand the other issues related to the Christian mysteries.[53] The question of the deity of Christ in the New Testament is inherently related to the Kyrios title of Jesus used in the early Christian writings and its implications for the absolute lordship of Jesus. In early Christian belief, the concept of Kyrios included the pre-existence of Christ, for they believed if Christ is one with God, he must have been united with God from the very beginning.[53][56]

Development of "low Christology" and "high Christology"

Two fundamentally different Christologies developed in the early Church, namely a "low" or adoptionist Christology, and a "high" or "incarnation" Christology.[57] The chronology of the development of these early Christologies is a matter of debate within contemporary scholarship.[58][59][60][web 7]

The "low Christology" or "adoptionist Christology" is the belief "that God exalted Jesus to be his Son by raising him from the dead",[61] thereby raising him to "divine status".[web 8] According to the "evolutionary model"[62] or evolutionary theories,[63] the Christological understanding of Jesus developed over time,[64][65][66] as witnessed in the Gospels,[59] with the earliest Christians believing that Jesus was a human who was exalted, or else adopted as God's Son,[67][68] when he was resurrected.[66][69] Later beliefs shifted the exaltation to his baptism, birth, and subsequently to the idea of his pre-existence, as witnessed in the Gospel of John.[66] This "evolutionary model" was proposed by proponents of the Religionsgeschichtliche Schule, especially Wilhelm Bousset's influential Kyrios Christos (1913).[67] This evolutionary model was very influential, and the "low Christology" has long been regarded as the oldest Christology.[70][71][web 8][note 16]

The other early Christology is "high Christology", which is "the view that Jesus was a pre-existent divine being who became a human, did the Father's will on earth, and then was taken back up into heaven whence he had originally come",[web 8][72] and from where he appeared on earth.[note 17] According to Bousset, this "high Christology" developed at the time of Paul's writing, under the influence of Gentile Christians, who brought their pagan Hellenistic traditions to the early Christian communities, introducing divine honours to Jesus.[73] According to Casey and Dunn, this "high Christology" developed after the time of Paul, at the end of the first century CE when the Gospel of John was written.[74]

Since the 1970s, these late datings for the development of a "high Christology" have been contested,[75] and a majority of scholars argue that this "high Christology" existed already before the writings of Paul.[57][note 18] According to the "New Religionsgeschichtliche Schule",[75][web 10] or the Early High Christology Club,[web 11] which includes Martin Hengel, Larry Hurtado, N. T. Wright, and Richard Bauckham,[75][web 11] this "incarnation Christology" or "high Christology" did not evolve over a longer time, but was a "big bang" of ideas which were already present at the start of Christianity, and took further shape in the first few decades of the church, as witnessed in the writings of Paul.[75][web 11][web 8][note 19] Some 'Early High Christology' proponents scholars argue that this "high Christology" may go back to Jesus himself.[80][web 7]

There is a controversy regarding whether Jesus himself claimed to be divine. In Honest to God, then-Bishop of Woolwich, John A. T. Robinson, questioned the idea.[81] John Hick, writing in 1993, mentioned changes in New Testament studies, citing "broad agreement" that scholars do not today support the view that Jesus claimed to be God, quoting as examples Michael Ramsey (1980), C. F. D. Moule (1977), James Dunn (1980), Brian Hebblethwaite (1985) and David Brown (1985).[82] Larry Hurtado, who argues that the followers of Jesus within a very short period developed an exceedingly high level of devotional reverence to Jesus,[83] at the same time rejects the view that Jesus made a claim to messiahship or divinity to his disciples during his life as "naive and ahistorical".[failed verification] According to Gerd Lüdemann, the broad consensus among modern New Testament scholars is that the proclamation of the divinity of Jesus was a development within the earliest Christian communities.[84] N. T. Wright points out that arguments over the claims of Jesus regarding divinity have been passed over by more recent scholarship, which sees a more complex understanding of the idea of God in first century Judaism.[85] However, Andrew Loke argues that if Jesus did not claim and show himself to be truly divine and rise from the dead, the earliest Christian leaders who were devout ancient monotheistic Jews would have regarded Jesus as merely a teacher or a prophet; they would not have come to the widespread agreement that he was truly divine, which they did.[86][87]

New Testament writings

The study of the various Christologies of the Apostolic Age is based on early Christian documents.[2]

Paul

 
Saint Paul delivering the Areopagus sermon in Athens, by Raphael, 1515

The oldest Christian sources are the writings of Paul.[88] The central Christology of Paul conveys the notion of Christ's pre-existence[51][52] and the identification of Christ as Kyrios.[89] Both notions already existed before him in the early Christian communities, and Paul deepened them and used them for preaching in the Hellenistic communities.[51]

What exactly Paul believed about the nature of Jesus cannot be determined decisively. In Philippians 2, Paul states that Jesus was preexistent and came to Earth "by taking the form of a servant, being made in human likeness". This sounds like an incarnation Christology. In Romans 1:4, however, Paul states that Jesus "was declared with power to be the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead", which sounds like an adoptionistic Christology, where Jesus was a human being who was "adopted" after his death. Different views would be debated for centuries by Christians and finally settled on the idea that he was both fully human and fully divine by the middle of the 5th century in the Council of Ephesus. Paul's thoughts on Jesus' teachings, versus his nature and being, are more defined, in that Paul believed Jesus was sent as an atonement for the sins of everyone.[90][91][92]

The Pauline epistles use Kyrios to identify Jesus almost 230 times, and express the theme that the true mark of a Christian is the confession of Jesus as the true Lord.[93] Paul viewed the superiority of the Christian revelation over all other divine manifestations as a consequence of the fact that Christ is the Son of God.[web 4]

The Pauline epistles also advanced the "cosmic Christology"[note 20] later developed in the Gospel of John,[95] elaborating the cosmic implications of Jesus' existence as the Son of God: "Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come."[96] Paul writes that Christ came to draw all back to God: "Through him God was pleased to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven" (Colossians 1:20);[97][98] in the same epistle, he writes that "He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation" (Colossians 1:15).[99][89][94]

The Gospels

 
The Four Evangelists, by Pieter Soutman, 17th century

The synoptic Gospels date from after the writings of Paul. They provide episodes from the life of Jesus and some of his works, but the authors of the New Testament show little interest in an absolute chronology of Jesus or in synchronizing the episodes of his life,[100] and as in John 21:25, the Gospels do not claim to be an exhaustive list of his works.[2]

Christologies that can be gleaned from the three Synoptic Gospels generally emphasize the humanity of Jesus, his sayings, his parables, and his miracles. The Gospel of John provides a different perspective that focuses on his divinity.[web 4] The first 14 verses of the Gospel of John are devoted to the divinity of Jesus as the Logos, usually translated as "Word", along with his pre-existence, and they emphasize the cosmic significance of Christ, e.g.: "All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made."[101] In the context of these verses, the Word made flesh is identical with the Word who was in the beginning with God, being exegetically equated with Jesus.[web 4]

Controversies and ecumenical councils (2nd–8th century)

Post-Apostolic controversies

Following the Apostolic Age, from the second century onwards, a number of controversies developed about how the human and divine are related within the person of Jesus.[102][103] As of the second century, a number of different and opposing approaches developed among various groups. In contrast to prevailing monoprosopic views on the Person of Christ, alternative dyoprosopic notions were also promoted by some theologians, but such views were rejected by the ecumenical councils. For example, Arianism did not endorse divinity, Ebionism argued Jesus was an ordinary mortal, while Gnosticism held docetic views which argued Christ was a spiritual being who only appeared to have a physical body.[22][23] The resulting tensions led to schisms within the church in the second and third centuries, and ecumenical councils were convened in the fourth and fifth centuries to deal with the issues.[citation needed]

Although some of the debates may seem to various modern students to be over a theological iota, they took place in controversial political circumstances, reflecting the relations of temporal powers and divine authority, and certainly resulted in schisms, among others that separated the Church of the East from the Church of the Roman Empire.[104][105]

First Council of Nicaea (325) and First Council of Constantinople (381)

In 325, the First Council of Nicaea defined the persons of the Godhead and their relationship with one another, decisions which were ratified at the First Council of Constantinople in 381. The language used was that the one God exists in three persons (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit); in particular, it was affirmed that the Son was homoousios (of the same being) as the Father. The Nicene Creed declared the full divinity and full humanity of Jesus.[106][107][108] After the First Council of Nicaea in 325 the Logos and the second Person of the Trinity were being used interchangeably.[109]

First Council of Ephesus (431)

In 431, the First Council of Ephesus was initially called to address the views of Nestorius on Mariology, but the problems soon extended to Christology, and schisms followed. The 431 council was called because in defense of his loyal priest Anastasius, Nestorius had denied the Theotokos title for Mary and later contradicted Proclus during a sermon in Constantinople. Pope Celestine I (who was already upset with Nestorius due to other matters) wrote about this to Cyril of Alexandria, who orchestrated the council. During the council, Nestorius defended his position by arguing there must be two persons of Christ, one human, the other divine, and Mary had given birth only to a human, hence could not be called the Theotokos, i.e. "the one who gives birth to God". The debate about the single or dual nature of Christ ensued in Ephesus.[110][111][112][113]

The First Council of Ephesus debated miaphysitism (two natures united as one after the hypostatic union) versus dyophysitism (coexisting natures after the hypostatic union) versus monophysitism (only one nature) versus Nestorianism (two hypostases). From the Christological viewpoint, the council adopted Mia Physis ('but being made one', κατὰ φύσιν) – Council of Ephesus, Epistle of Cyril to Nestorius, i.e. 'one nature of the Word of God incarnate' (μία φύσις τοῦ θεοῦ λόγου σεσαρκωμένη, mía phýsis toû theoû lógou sesarkōménē). In 451, the Council of Chalcedon affirmed dyophysitism. The Oriental Orthodox rejected this and subsequent councils and continued to consider themselves as miaphysite according to the faith put forth at the Councils of Nicaea and Ephesus.[114][115] The council also confirmed the Theotokos title and excommunicated Nestorius.[116][117]

Council of Chalcedon (451)

 
Christological spectrum during the 5th–7th centuries showing the views of the Church of the East (light blue), the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic Churches (light purple), and the Miaphysite Churches (pink)

The 451 Council of Chalcedon was highly influential, and marked a key turning point in the christological debates.[118] It is the last council which many Lutherans, Anglicans and other Protestants consider ecumenical.[7][8]

The Council of Chalcedon fully promulgated the Western dyophysite understanding put forth by Pope Leo I of Rome of the hypostatic union, the proposition that Christ has one human nature (physis) and one divine nature (physis), each distinct and complete, and united with neither confusion nor division.[102][103] Most of the major branches of Western Christianity (Roman Catholicism, Anglicanism, Lutheranism, and Reformed), Church of the East,[119] Eastern Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy subscribe to the Chalcedonian Christological formulation, while many branches of Oriental Orthodox Churches (Syrian Orthodoxy, Coptic Orthodoxy, Ethiopian Orthodoxy, and Armenian Apostolicism) reject it.[8][9][10]

Although the Chalcedonian Creed did not put an end to all christological debate, it did clarify the terms used and became a point of reference for many future Christologies.[8][9][10] But it also broke apart the church of the Eastern Roman Empire in the fifth century,[118] and unquestionably established the primacy of Rome in the East over those who accepted the Council of Chalcedon. This was reaffirmed in 519, when the Eastern Chalcedonians accepted the Formula of Hormisdas, anathematizing all of their own Eastern Chalcedonian hierarchy, who died out of communion with Rome from 482 to 519.

Fifth-seventh Ecumenical Council (553, 681, 787)

The Second Council of Constantinople in 553 interpreted the decrees of Chalcedon, and further explained the relationship of the two natures of Jesus. It also condemned the alleged teachings of Origen on the pre-existence of the soul, and other topics.[web 12]

The Third Council of Constantinople in 681 declared that Christ has two wills of his two natures, human and divine, contrary to the teachings of the Monothelites,[web 13] with the divine will having precedence, leading and guiding the human will.[120]

The Second Council of Nicaea was called under the Empress Regent Irene of Athens in 787, known as the second of Nicaea. It supports the veneration of icons while forbidding their worship. It is often referred to as "The Triumph of Orthodoxy".[web 14]

9th–11th century

Eastern Christianity

Western medieval Christology

The term "monastic Christology" has been used to describe spiritual approaches developed by Anselm of Canterbury, Peter Abelard and Bernard of Clairvaux.[citation needed] The Franciscan piety of the 12th and 13th centuries led to "popular Christology". Systematic approaches by theologians, such as Thomas Aquinas, are called "scholastic Christology".[121]

In the 13th century, Thomas Aquinas provided the first systematic Christology that consistently resolved a number of the existing issues.[122] In his Christology from above, Aquinas also championed the principle of perfection of Christ's human attributes.[123][124][125]

The Middle Ages also witnessed the emergence of the "tender image of Jesus" as a friend and a living source of love and comfort, rather than just the Kyrios image.[126]

Reformation

John Calvin maintained there was no human element in the Person of Christ which could be separated from the Person of The Word.[127] Calvin also emphasized the importance of the "Work of Christ" in any attempt at understanding the Person of Christ and cautioned against ignoring the Works of Jesus during his ministry.[128]

Modern developments

Liberal Protestant theology

The 19th century saw the rise of Liberal Protestant theology, which questioned the dogmatic foundations of Christianity, and approached the Bible with critical-historical tools.[web 15] The divinity of Jesus was problematized, and replaced with an emphasis on the ethical aspects of his teachings.[129][note 21]

Roman Catholicism

Catholic theologian Karl Rahner sees the purpose of modern Christology as to formulate the Christian belief that "God became man and that God-made-man is the individual Jesus Christ" in a manner that this statement can be understood consistently, without the confusions of past debates and mythologies.[131][note 22] Rahner pointed out the coincidence between the Person of Christ and the Word of God, referring to Mark 8:38 and Luke 9:26 which state whoever is ashamed of the words of Jesus is ashamed of the Lord himself.[133]

Hans von Balthasar argued the union of the human and divine natures of Christ was achieved not by the "absorption" of human attributes, but by their "assumption". Thus, in his view, the divine nature of Christ was not affected by the human attributes and remained forever divine.[134]

Topics

Nativity and the Holy Name

The Nativity of Jesus impacted the Christological issues about his person from the earliest days of Christianity. Luke's Christology centers on the dialectics of the dual natures of the earthly and heavenly manifestations of existence of the Christ, while Matthew's Christology focuses on the mission of Jesus and his role as the savior.[135][136] The salvific emphasis of Matthew 1:21 later impacted the theological issues and the devotions to Holy Name of Jesus.[137][138][139]

Matthew 1:23 provides a key to the "Emmanuel Christology" of Matthew. Beginning with 1:23, the Gospel of Matthew shows a clear interest in identifying Jesus as "God with us" and in later developing the Emmanuel characterization of Jesus at key points throughout the rest of the Gospel.[140] The name 'Emmanuel' does not appear elsewhere in the New Testament, but Matthew builds on it in Matthew 28:20 ("I am with you always, even unto the end of the world") to indicate Jesus will be with the faithful to the end of the age.[140][141] According to Ulrich Luz, the Emmanuel motif brackets the entire Gospel of Matthew between 1:23 and 28:20, appearing explicitly and implicitly in several other passages.[142]

Crucifixion and resurrection

The accounts of the crucifixion and subsequent resurrection of Jesus provides a rich background for christological analysis, from the canonical Gospels to the Pauline Epistles.[143]

A central element in the christology presented in the Acts of the Apostles is the affirmation of the belief that the death of Jesus by crucifixion happened "with the foreknowledge of God, according to a definite plan".[144] In this view, as in Acts 2:23, the cross is not viewed as a scandal, for the crucifixion of Jesus "at the hands of the lawless" is viewed as the fulfilment of the plan of God.[144][145]

Paul's Christology has a specific focus on the death and resurrection of Jesus. For Paul, the crucifixion of Jesus is directly related to his resurrection and the term "the cross of Christ" used in Galatians 6:12 may be viewed as his abbreviation of the message of the Gospels.[146] For Paul, the crucifixion of Jesus was not an isolated event in history, but a cosmic event with significant eschatological consequences, as in 1 Corinthians 2:8.[146] In the Pauline view, Jesus, obedient to the point of death (Philippians 2:8), died "at the right time" (Romans 5:6) based on the plan of God.[146] For Paul, the "power of the cross" is not separable from the resurrection of Jesus.[146]

Threefold office

The threefold office (Latin munus triplex) of Jesus Christ is a Christian doctrine based upon the teachings of the Old Testament. It was described by Eusebius and more fully developed by John Calvin. It states that Jesus Christ performed three functions (or "offices") in his earthly ministry – those of prophet, priest, and king. In the Old Testament, the appointment of someone to any of these three positions could be indicated by anointing him or her by pouring oil over the head. Thus, the term messiah, meaning "anointed one", is associated with the concept of the threefold office. While the office of king is that most frequently associated with the Messiah, the role of Jesus as priest is also prominent in the New Testament, being most fully explained in chapters 7 to 10 of the Book of Hebrews.

Mariology

Some Christians, notably Roman Catholics, view Mariology as a key component of Christology.[web 16] In this view, not only is Mariology a logical and necessary consequence of Christology, but without it, Christology is incomplete, since the figure of Mary contributes to a fuller understanding of who Christ is and what he did.[147]

Protestants have criticized Mariology because many of its assertions lack any Biblical foundation.[148] Strong Protestant reaction against Roman Catholic Marian devotion and teaching has been a significant issue for ecumenical dialogue.[149]

Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict XVI) expressed this sentiment about Roman Catholic Mariology when in two separate occasions he stated, "The appearance of a truly Marian awareness serves as the touchstone indicating whether or not the christological substance is fully present"[150] and "It is necessary to go back to Mary, if we want to return to the truth about Jesus Christ."[151]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The work of Jesus Christ:
    • Veli-Matti Kärkkäinen: "soteriology, the doctrine of salvation"[12]
    • biblicaltraining.org: "The Past Work of Christ, The Atoning Savior";[web 2]; "Present work of Christ: work as mediator and Lord";[web 3] "Future work of Christ: work as coming judge and reigning king"[web 3]
  2. ^ Definitions:
    • Bart Ehrman: "the understanding of Christ";[11] "the nature of Christ – the question of Christology"[1]
    • Bird, Evans & Gathercole (2014): "New Testament scholars often speak about "Christology", which is the study of the career, person, nature, and identity of Jesus Christ."[4]
    • Raymond Brown (1994): "[C]hristology discusses any evaluation of Jesus in respect to who he was and the role he played in the divine plan."[13]
    • Bernard L. Ramm (1993): "Christology is the reflective and systematic study of the person and work of Jesus Christ."[3]
    • Matt Stefon, Hans J. Hillerbrand (Encyclopedia Britannica): "Christology, Christian reflection, teaching, and doctrine concerning Jesus of Nazareth. Christology is the part of theology that is concerned with the nature and work of Jesus, including such matters as the Incarnation, the Resurrection, and his human and divine natures and their relationship."[web 1]
    • Catholic Encyclopedia: "Christology is that part of theology which deals with Our Lord Jesus Christ. In its full extent it comprises the doctrines concerning both the person of Christ and His works."[web 4]
  3. ^ Bird, Evans & Gathercole (2014): "There are, of course, many different ways of doing Christology. Some scholars study Christology by focusing on the major titles applied to Jesus in the New Testament, such as "Son of Man", "Son of God", "Messiah", "Lord", "Prince", "Word", and the like. Others take a more functional approach and look at how Jesus acts or is said to act in the New Testament as the basis for configuring beliefs about him. It is possible to explore Jesus as a historical figure (i.e., Christology from below), or to examine theological claims made about Jesus (i.e., Christology from above). Many scholars prefer a socio-religious method by comparing beliefs about Jesus with beliefs in other religions to identify shared sources and similar ideas. Theologians often take a more philosophical approach and look at Jesus' "ontology" or "being" and debate how best to describe his divine and human natures."[4]
  4. ^ John 1:1–14
  5. ^ Heretical Christologies:
    • Docetism is the doctrine that the phenomenon of Jesus, his historical and bodily existence, and above all the human form of Jesus, was mere semblance without any true reality. Broadly it is taken as the belief that Jesus only seemed to be human, and that his human form was an illusion. Docetic teachings were attacked by Ignatius of Antioch and were eventually abandoned by proto-orthodox Christians.[22][23]
    • Arianism, which viewed Jesus as primarily an ordinary mortal, was condemned as heretical in 325, exonerated in 335, and eventually re-condemned as heretical at the First Council of Constantinople (381).[22][23]
    • Nestorianism opposed the concept of hypostatic union, and emphasized a radical distinction between the two natures (human and divine) of Jesus Christ. It was condemned by the Council of Ephesus (431).
    • Monothelitism held that although Christ has two natures (Dyophysitism), his will is united. The doctrine was promoted by Emperor Heraclius and Ecumenical Patriarch Sergius I as a compromise position between Chalcedonianism and various minority christologies. It was condemned as heretical by the Third Council of Constantinople (681).
  6. ^ The "ransom theory" and the "Christ Victor" theory are different, but are generally considered together as Patristic or "classical" theories, to use Gustaf Aulén's nomenclature. These were the traditional understandings of the early Church Fathers.
  7. ^ According to Pugh, "Ever since [Aulén's] time, we call these patristic ideas the Christus Victor way of seeing the cross."[31]
  8. ^ Called by Aulén the "scholastic" view
  9. ^ Penal substitution:
    • Vincent Taylor (1956): "the four main types, which have persisted throughout the centuries. The oldest theory is the Ransom Theory [...] It held sway for a thousand years [...] The Forensic Theory is that of the Reformers and their successors."[35]
    • Packer (1973): "Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, Melanchthon and their reforming contemporaries were the pioneers in stating it [i.e. the penal substitutionary theory] [...] What the Reformers did was to redefine satisfactio (satisfaction), the main mediaeval category for thought about the cross. Anselm's Cur Deus Homo?, which largely determined the mediaeval development, saw Christ's satisfactio for our sins as the offering of compensation or damages for dishonour done, but the Reformers saw it as the undergoing of vicarious punishment (poena) to meet the claims on us of God's holy law and wrath (i.e. his punitive justice)."[36]
  10. ^ Mark D. Baker, objecting against the pebal substitution theory, states that "substitution is a broad term that one can use with reference to a variety of metaphors."[37]
  11. ^ Which Aulén called the "subjective" or "humanistic" view. Propagated, as a critique of the satisfaction view, by Peter Abelard
  12. ^ Christ suffering for, or punished for, the sinners.
  13. ^ Early Christians found themselves confronted with a set of new concepts and ideas relating to the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, as well the notions of salvation and redemption, and had to use a new set of terms, images, and ideas in order to deal with them.[44] The existing terms and structures which were available to them were often insufficient to express these religious concepts, and taken together, these new forms of discourse led to the beginnings of Christology as an attempt to understand, explain, and discuss their understanding of the nature of Christ.[44] Early Jewish Christians had to explain their concepts to a Hellenistic audience which had been influenced by Greek philosophy, presenting arguments that at times resonated with, and at times confronted, the beliefs of that audience. This is exemplified by the Apostle Paul's Areopagus sermon that appears in Acts 17:16–34,[45] where Paul is portrayed as attempting to convey the underlying concepts about Christ to a Greek audience. The sermon illustrates some key elements of future christological discourses that were first brought forward by Paul.[46][47][48]
  14. ^ The views of these schools can be summarized as follows:[50]
    • Alexandria: Logos assumes a general human nature;
    • Antioch: Logos assumes a specific human being.
  15. ^ Witherington: "[Christ's Divinity] We have already seen that Paul, in appropriating the language of the christological hymns, subscribed to the christological notion that Christ existed prior to taking on human flesh. Paul spoke of Jesus both as the wisdom of God, his agent in creation (1 Cor 1:24, 30; 8:6; Col 1:15–17; see Bruce, 195), and as the one who accompanied Israel as the 'rock' in the wilderness (1 Cor 10:4). In view of the role Christ plays in 1 Corinthians 10:4, Paul is not founding the story of Christ on the archetypal story of Israel, but rather on the story of divine Wisdom, which helped Israel in the wilderness."[52]
  16. ^ Ehrman:
    • "The earliest Christians held exaltation Christologies in which the human being Jesus was made the Son of God – for example, at his resurrection or at his baptism – as we examined in the previous chapter."[71]
    • "Here I'll say something about the oldest Christology, as I understand it. This was what I earlier called a 'low' Christology. I may end up in the book describing it as a 'Christology from below' or possibly an 'exaltation' Christology. Or maybe I'll call it all three things [...] Along with lots of other scholars, I think this was indeed the earliest Christology."[web 9]
  17. ^ Proponents of Christ's deity argue the Old Testament has many cases of Christophany: "The pre-existence of Christ is further substantiated by the many recorded Christophanies in the Bible."[152] "Christophany" is often[quantify] considered a more accurate term than the term "theophany" due to the belief that all the visible manifestations of God are in fact the preincarnate Christ. Many argue that the appearances of "the Angel of the Lord" in the Old Testament were the preincarnate Christ. "Many understand the angel of the Lord as a true theophany. From the time of Justin on, the figure has been regarded as the preincarnate Logos."[153]
  18. ^ Richard Bauckham argues that Paul was not so influential that he could have invented the central doctrine of Christianity. Before his active missionary work, there were already groups of Christians across the region. For example, a large group already existed in Rome even before Paul visited the place. The earliest centre of Christianity was the twelve apostles in Jerusalem. Paul himself consulted and sought guidance from the Christian leaders in Jerusalem (Galatians 2:1–2;[76] Acts 9:26–28,[77] 15:2).[78] "What was common to the whole Christian movement derived from Jerusalem, not from Paul, and Paul himself derived the central message he preached from the Jerusalem apostles."[79]
  19. ^ Loke (2017): "The last group of theories can be called 'Explosion Theories' (one might also call this 'the Big-Bang theory of Christology'!). This proposes that highest Christology was the view of the primitive Palestinian Christian community. The recognition of Jesus as truly divine was not a significant development from the views of the primitive Palestine community; rather, it 'exploded' right at the beginning of Christianity. The proponents of the Explosion view would say that the highest Christology of the later New Testament writings (e.g. Gospel of John) and the creedal formulations of the early church fathers, with their explicit affirmations of the pre-existence and ontological divinity of Christ, are not so much a development in essence but a development in understanding and explication of what was already there at the beginning of the Christian movement. As Bauckham (2008a, x) memorably puts it, 'The earliest Christology was already the highest Christology.' Many proponents of this group of theories have been labelled together as 'the New Religionsgeschichtliche Schule' (Hurtado 2003, 11), and they include such eminent scholars as Richard Bauckham, Larry Hurtado, N. T. Wright and the late Martin Hengel."[75]
  20. ^ The concept of "cosmic Christology", first elaborated by Saint Paul, focuses on how the arrival of Jesus as the Son of God forever changed the nature of the cosmos.[89][94]
  21. ^ Gerald O'Collins and Daniel Kendall have called this Liberal Protestant theology "neo-Arianism."[130]
  22. ^ Grillmeier: "The most urgent task of a contemporary Christology is to formulate the Church's dogma – 'God became man and that God-made-man is the individual Jesus Christ' – in such a way that the true meaning of these statements can be understood, and all trace of a mythology impossible to accept nowadays is excluded."[132]

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  • Weaver, J. Denny (2001), The Nonviolent Atonement, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
  • Witherington, Ben (2009), "Christology – Paul's christology", in Hawthorne, Gerald F.; Martin, Ralph P.; Reid, Daniel G. (eds.), Dictionary of Paul and His Letters: A Compendium of Contemporary Biblical Scholarship, InterVarsity Press, ISBN 978-0-8308-7491-0
Web-sources
  1. ^ a b c d e f g Matt Stefon, Hans J. Hillerbrand, Christology, Encyclopedia Britannica
  2. ^ "The Work of Jesus Christ: Summary".
  3. ^ a b "Lecture 8: The Work of Jesus Christ: Summary".
  4. ^ a b c d e Catholic encyclopedia, Christology
  5. ^ thinkapologetics.com, http://thinkapologetics.blogspot.com/2009/05/jesus-functional-or-ontological.html?m=1 Jesus- A Functional or Ontological Christology?]
  6. ^ Collins English Dictionary, Complete & Unabridged 11th Edition, atonement, retrieved 3 October 2012: "2. (often capital) Christian theol a. the reconciliation of man with God through the life, sufferings, and sacrificial death of Christ b. the sufferings and death of Christ"
  7. ^ a b Larry Hurtado, "The Origin of 'Divine Christology'?"
  8. ^ a b c d Ehrman, Bart D. (14 February 2013). "Incarnation Christology, Angels, and Paul". The Bart Ehrman Blog. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  9. ^ [Bart Ehrman (6 February 2013), "The Earliest Christology"
  10. ^ Larry Hurtado (10 July 2015), "Early High Christology": A "Paradigm Shift"? "New Perspective"?
  11. ^ a b c Bouma, Jeremy (27 March 2014). "The Early High Christology Club and Bart Ehrman – An Excerpt from 'How God Became Jesus'". Zondervan Academic Blog. HarperCollins Christian Publishing. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  12. ^ "The Fifth Ecumenical Council – Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America". Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  13. ^ "The Sixth Ecumenical Council – Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America". Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  14. ^ "The Seventh Ecumenical Council – Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America". Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  15. ^ Jaroslav Jan Pelikan, The debate over Christology in modern Christian thought
  16. ^ "Mariology Is Christology", in Vittorio Messori, The Mary Hypothesis, Rome: 2005. [11] 5 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine

Further reading

Overview
Early high Christology
  • Moehlman, Conrad Henry (1960), How Jesus Became God: An Historical Study of the Life of Jesus to the Age of Constantine, Philosophical Library
  • Rubenstein, Richard E. (1999), When Jesus Became God: The Epic Fight over Christ's Divinity in the Last Days of Rome, Harcourt Brace & Co.
  • Hurtado, Larry W. (2003), Lord Jesus Christ: Devotion to Jesus in Earliest Christianity, Eerdmans, ISBN 978-0802860705, OCLC 51623141
  • Hurtado, Larry W. (2005), How on Earth did Jesus Become a God? Historical Questions about Earliest Devotion to Jesus, Eerdmans, ISBN 978-0802828613, OCLC 61461917
  • Bauckham, Richard (2008), Jesus and the God of Israel: God Crucified and Other Studies on the New Testament's Christology of Divine Identity[ISBN missing]
  • Ehrman, Bart D. (2014), How Jesus became God: The Exaltation of a Jewish Preacher from Galilee, Harper Collins
  • Bird, Michael F.; Evans, Craig A.; Gathercole, Simon; Hill, Charles E.; Tilling, Chris (2014), How God Became Jesus: The Real Origins of Belief in Jesus' Divine Nature – A Response to Bart Ehrman, Zondervan[ISBN missing]
  • Loke, Andrew Ter Ern (2017), The Origin of Divine Christology, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-1107199262
  • Bird, Michael F. (2017), Jesus the Eternal Son: Answering Adoptionist Christology, Wim. B. Eerdmans Publishing[ISBN missing]
Atonement
  • Pugh, Ben (2015), Atonement Theories: A Way through the Maze, James Clarke & Co[ISBN missing]

External links

  • Encyclopædia Britannica, Christology – full access article

christology, christianity, from, greek, Χριστός, khristós, λογία, logia, translated, from, greek, study, christ, branch, theology, that, concerns, jesus, different, denominations, have, different, opinions, questions, such, whether, jesus, human, divine, both,. In Christianity Christology from the Greek Xristos Khristos and logia logia translated from Greek as the study of Christ is a branch of theology that concerns Jesus Different denominations have different opinions on questions such as whether Jesus was human divine or both and as a messiah what his role would be in the freeing of the Jewish people from foreign rulers or in the prophesied Kingdom of God and in the salvation from what would otherwise be the consequences of sin 1 2 3 4 5 Paolo Veronese The Resurrection of Jesus Christ c 1560 The earliest Christian writings gave several titles to Jesus such as Son of Man Son of God Messiah and Kyrios which were all derived from Hebrew scripture web 1 These terms centered around two opposing themes namely Jesus as a preexistent figure who becomes human and then returns to God versus adoptionism that Jesus was human who was adopted by God at his baptism crucifixion or resurrection web 1 From the second to the fifth centuries the relation of the human and divine nature of Christ was a major focus of debates in the early church and at the first seven ecumenical councils The Council of Chalcedon in 451 issued a formulation of the hypostatic union of the two natures of Christ one human and one divine united with neither confusion nor division 6 Most of the major branches of Western Christianity and Eastern Orthodoxy subscribe to this formulation 6 7 while many branches of Oriental Orthodox Churches reject it 8 9 10 subscribing to miaphysitism Contents 1 Definition and approaches 1 1 Person of Christ 1 2 Salvation 2 Early Christologies 1st century 2 1 Early notions of Christ 2 1 1 Pre existence 2 1 2 Kyrios 2 2 Development of low Christology and high Christology 2 3 New Testament writings 2 3 1 Paul 2 3 2 The Gospels 3 Controversies and ecumenical councils 2nd 8th century 3 1 Post Apostolic controversies 3 2 First Council of Nicaea 325 and First Council of Constantinople 381 3 3 First Council of Ephesus 431 3 4 Council of Chalcedon 451 3 5 Fifth seventh Ecumenical Council 553 681 787 4 9th 11th century 5 Eastern Christianity 6 Western medieval Christology 7 Reformation 8 Modern developments 8 1 Liberal Protestant theology 8 2 Roman Catholicism 9 Topics 9 1 Nativity and the Holy Name 9 2 Crucifixion and resurrection 9 3 Threefold office 9 4 Mariology 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksDefinition and approaches EditChristology from the Greek Xristos Khristos and logia logia literally the understanding of Christ 11 is the study of the nature person and work role in salvation note 1 of Jesus Christ 1 4 2 need quotation to verify 3 web 1 web 4 note 2 It studies Jesus Christ s humanity and divinity and the relation between these two aspects 5 and the role he plays in salvation Ontological Christology analyzes the nature or being web 5 of Jesus Christ Functional Christology analyzes the works of Jesus Christ while soteriological Christology analyzes the salvific standpoints of Christology 14 Several approaches can be distinguished within Christology note 3 The term Christology from above 15 or high Christology 16 refers to approaches that include aspects of divinity such as Lord and Son of God and the idea of the pre existence of Christ as the Logos the Word 17 16 18 as expressed in the prologue to the Gospel of John note 4 These approaches interpret the works of Christ in terms of his divinity According to Pannenberg Christology from above was far more common in the ancient Church beginning with Ignatius of Antioch and the second century Apologists 18 19 The term Christology from below 20 or low Christology 16 refers to approaches that begin with the human aspects and the ministry of Jesus including the miracles parables etc and move towards his divinity and the mystery of incarnation 17 16 Person of Christ Edit See also Prosopon Hypostatic union and Trinity Christ Pantocrator Holy Trinity s monastery Meteora Greece A basic Christological teaching is that the person of Jesus Christ is both human and divine The human and divine natures of Jesus Christ apparently prosopic form a duality as they coexist within one person hypostasis 21 There are no direct discussions in the New Testament regarding the dual nature of the Person of Christ as both divine and human 21 and since the early days of Christianity theologians have debated various approaches to the understanding of these natures at times resulting in ecumenical councils and schisms 21 Some historical christological doctrines gained broad support Monophysitism Monophysite controversy 3rd 8th centuries After the union of the divine and the human in the historical incarnation Jesus Christ had only a single nature Monophysitism was condemned as heretical by the Council of Chalcedon 451 Miaphysitism Oriental Orthodox churches In the person of Jesus Christ divine nature and human nature are united in a compound nature physis Dyophysitism Eastern Orthodox Church Catholic Church Lutheranism Anglicanism and the Reformed Churches Christ maintained two natures one divine and one human after the Incarnation articulated by the Chalcedonian Definition Monarchianism including Adoptionism and Modalism God as one in contrast to the doctrine of the Trinity Condemned as heretical in the Patristic era but followed today by certain groups of Nontrinitarians Influential Christologies which were broadly condemned as heretical note 5 are Docetism 3rd 4th centuries claimed the human form of Jesus was mere semblance without any true reality Arianism 4th century viewed the divine nature of Jesus the Son of God as distinct and inferior to God the Father e g by having a beginning in time Nestorianism 5th century considered the two natures human and divine of Jesus Christ almost entirely distinct Monothelitism 7th century considered Christ to have only one will Various church councils mainly in the 4th and 5th centuries resolved most of these controversies making the doctrine of the Trinity orthodox in nearly all branches of Christianity Among them only the Dyophysite doctrine was recognized as true and not heretical belonging to the Christian orthodoxy and deposit of faith Salvation Edit Main articles Salvation in Christianity and Atonement in Christianity In Christian theology atonement is the method by which human beings can be reconciled to God through Christ s sacrificial suffering and death 24 Atonement is the forgiving or pardoning of sin in general and original sin in particular through the suffering death and resurrection of Jesus web 6 enabling the reconciliation between God and his creation Due to the influence of Gustaf Aulen s 1879 1978 Christus Victor 1931 the various theories or paradigmata of atonement are often grouped as classical paradigm objective paradigm and the subjective paradigm 25 26 27 28 Classical paradigm note 6 Ransom theory of atonement which teaches that the death of Christ was a ransom sacrifice usually said to have been paid to Satan or to death itself in some views paid to God the Father in satisfaction for the bondage and debt on the souls of humanity as a result of inherited sin Gustaf Aulen reinterpreted the ransom theory 29 calling it the Christus Victor doctrine arguing that Christ s death was not a payment to the Devil but defeated the powers of evil which had held humankind in their dominion 30 note 7 Recapitulation theory 32 which says that Christ succeeded where Adam failed Theosis divinization is a corollary of the recapitulation 33 Objective paradigm Satisfaction theory of atonement note 8 developed by Anselm of Canterbury 1033 4 1109 which teaches that Jesus Christ suffered crucifixion as a substitute for human sin satisfying God s just wrath against humankind s transgression due to Christ s infinite merit 34 Penal substitution also called forensic theory and vicarious punishment which was a development by the Reformers of Anselm s satisfaction theory 35 36 note 9 note 10 Instead of considering sin as an affront to God s honour it sees sin as the breaking of God s moral law Penal substitution sees sinful man as being subject to God s wrath with the essence of Jesus saving work being his substitution in the sinner s place bearing the curse in the place of man Governmental theory of atonement which views God as both the loving creator and moral Governor of the universe 38 Subjective paradigm Moral influence theory of atonement note 11 developed or most notably propagated by Abelard 1079 1142 39 40 who argued that Jesus died as the demonstration of God s love a demonstration which can change the hearts and minds of the sinners turning back to God 39 41 Moral example theory developed by Faustus Socinus 1539 1604 in his work De Jesu Christo servatore 1578 who rejected the idea of vicarious satisfaction note 12 According to Socinus Jesus death offers humanity a perfect example of self sacrificial dedication to God 41 Other theories are the embracement theory and the shared atonement theory 42 43 Early Christologies 1st century EditSee also Christ title Resurrection Exaltation of Christ Pre existence of Christ and Incarnation of Christ Early notions of Christ Edit The earliest christological reflections were shaped by both the Jewish background of the earliest Christians and by the Greek world of the eastern Mediterranean in which they operated 44 web 1 note 13 The earliest Christian writings give several titles to Jesus such as Son of Man Son of God Messiah and Kyrios which were all derived from Hebrew scripture web 1 16 According to Matt Stefon and Hans J Hillerbrand Until the middle of the 2nd century such terms emphasized two themes that of Jesus as a preexistent figure who becomes human and then returns to God and that of Jesus as a creature elected and adopted by God The first theme makes use of concepts drawn from Classical antiquity whereas the second relies on concepts characteristic of ancient Jewish thought The second theme subsequently became the basis of adoptionist Christology see adoptionism which viewed Jesus baptism as a crucial event in his adoption by God web 1 Historically in the Alexandrian school of thought fashioned on the Gospel of John Jesus Christ is the eternal Logos who already possesses unity with the Father before the act of Incarnation 49 In contrast the Antiochian school viewed Christ as a single unified human person apart from his relationship to the divine 49 note 14 Pre existence Edit The notion of pre existence is deeply rooted in Jewish thought and can be found in apocalyptic thought and among the rabbis of Paul s time 51 but Paul was most influenced by Jewish Hellenistic wisdom literature where Wisdom is extolled as something existing before the world and already working in creation 51 According to Witherington Paul subscribed to the christological notion that Christ existed prior to taking on human flesh founding the story of Christ on the story of divine Wisdom 52 note 15 Kyrios Edit The title Kyrios for Jesus is central to the development of New Testament Christology 53 In the Septuagint it translates the Tetragrammaton the holy Name of God As such it closely links Jesus with God in the same way a verse such as Matthew 28 19 The Name singular of the Father the Son and the Holy Spirit 54 Kyrios is also conjectured to be the Greek translation of Aramaic Mari which in everyday Aramaic usage was a very respectful form of polite address which means more than just teacher and was somewhat similar to rabbi While the term Mari expressed the relationship between Jesus and his disciples during his life the Greek Kyrios came to represent his lordship over the world 55 The early Christians placed Kyrios at the center of their understanding and from that center attempted to understand the other issues related to the Christian mysteries 53 The question of the deity of Christ in the New Testament is inherently related to the Kyrios title of Jesus used in the early Christian writings and its implications for the absolute lordship of Jesus In early Christian belief the concept of Kyrios included the pre existence of Christ for they believed if Christ is one with God he must have been united with God from the very beginning 53 56 Development of low Christology and high Christology Edit Main article Exaltation of Jesus Two fundamentally different Christologies developed in the early Church namely a low or adoptionist Christology and a high or incarnation Christology 57 The chronology of the development of these early Christologies is a matter of debate within contemporary scholarship 58 59 60 web 7 The low Christology or adoptionist Christology is the belief that God exalted Jesus to be his Son by raising him from the dead 61 thereby raising him to divine status web 8 According to the evolutionary model 62 or evolutionary theories 63 the Christological understanding of Jesus developed over time 64 65 66 as witnessed in the Gospels 59 with the earliest Christians believing that Jesus was a human who was exalted or else adopted as God s Son 67 68 when he was resurrected 66 69 Later beliefs shifted the exaltation to his baptism birth and subsequently to the idea of his pre existence as witnessed in the Gospel of John 66 This evolutionary model was proposed by proponents of the Religionsgeschichtliche Schule especially Wilhelm Bousset s influential Kyrios Christos 1913 67 This evolutionary model was very influential and the low Christology has long been regarded as the oldest Christology 70 71 web 8 note 16 The other early Christology is high Christology which is the view that Jesus was a pre existent divine being who became a human did the Father s will on earth and then was taken back up into heaven whence he had originally come web 8 72 and from where he appeared on earth note 17 According to Bousset this high Christology developed at the time of Paul s writing under the influence of Gentile Christians who brought their pagan Hellenistic traditions to the early Christian communities introducing divine honours to Jesus 73 According to Casey and Dunn this high Christology developed after the time of Paul at the end of the first century CE when the Gospel of John was written 74 Since the 1970s these late datings for the development of a high Christology have been contested 75 and a majority of scholars argue that this high Christology existed already before the writings of Paul 57 note 18 According to the New Religionsgeschichtliche Schule 75 web 10 or the Early High Christology Club web 11 which includes Martin Hengel Larry Hurtado N T Wright and Richard Bauckham 75 web 11 this incarnation Christology or high Christology did not evolve over a longer time but was a big bang of ideas which were already present at the start of Christianity and took further shape in the first few decades of the church as witnessed in the writings of Paul 75 web 11 web 8 note 19 Some Early High Christology proponents scholars argue that this high Christology may go back to Jesus himself 80 web 7 There is a controversy regarding whether Jesus himself claimed to be divine In Honest to God then Bishop of Woolwich John A T Robinson questioned the idea 81 John Hick writing in 1993 mentioned changes in New Testament studies citing broad agreement that scholars do not today support the view that Jesus claimed to be God quoting as examples Michael Ramsey 1980 C F D Moule 1977 James Dunn 1980 Brian Hebblethwaite 1985 and David Brown 1985 82 Larry Hurtado who argues that the followers of Jesus within a very short period developed an exceedingly high level of devotional reverence to Jesus 83 at the same time rejects the view that Jesus made a claim to messiahship or divinity to his disciples during his life as naive and ahistorical failed verification According to Gerd Ludemann the broad consensus among modern New Testament scholars is that the proclamation of the divinity of Jesus was a development within the earliest Christian communities 84 N T Wright points out that arguments over the claims of Jesus regarding divinity have been passed over by more recent scholarship which sees a more complex understanding of the idea of God in first century Judaism 85 However Andrew Loke argues that if Jesus did not claim and show himself to be truly divine and rise from the dead the earliest Christian leaders who were devout ancient monotheistic Jews would have regarded Jesus as merely a teacher or a prophet they would not have come to the widespread agreement that he was truly divine which they did 86 87 New Testament writings Edit The study of the various Christologies of the Apostolic Age is based on early Christian documents 2 Paul Edit Saint Paul delivering the Areopagus sermon in Athens by Raphael 1515 The oldest Christian sources are the writings of Paul 88 The central Christology of Paul conveys the notion of Christ s pre existence 51 52 and the identification of Christ as Kyrios 89 Both notions already existed before him in the early Christian communities and Paul deepened them and used them for preaching in the Hellenistic communities 51 What exactly Paul believed about the nature of Jesus cannot be determined decisively In Philippians 2 Paul states that Jesus was preexistent and came to Earth by taking the form of a servant being made in human likeness This sounds like an incarnation Christology In Romans 1 4 however Paul states that Jesus was declared with power to be the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead which sounds like an adoptionistic Christology where Jesus was a human being who was adopted after his death Different views would be debated for centuries by Christians and finally settled on the idea that he was both fully human and fully divine by the middle of the 5th century in the Council of Ephesus Paul s thoughts on Jesus teachings versus his nature and being are more defined in that Paul believed Jesus was sent as an atonement for the sins of everyone 90 91 92 The Pauline epistles use Kyrios to identify Jesus almost 230 times and express the theme that the true mark of a Christian is the confession of Jesus as the true Lord 93 Paul viewed the superiority of the Christian revelation over all other divine manifestations as a consequence of the fact that Christ is the Son of God web 4 The Pauline epistles also advanced the cosmic Christology note 20 later developed in the Gospel of John 95 elaborating the cosmic implications of Jesus existence as the Son of God Therefore if anyone is in Christ he is a new creation The old has passed away behold the new has come 96 Paul writes that Christ came to draw all back to God Through him God was pleased to reconcile to himself all things whether on earth or in heaven Colossians 1 20 97 98 in the same epistle he writes that He is the image of the invisible God the firstborn of all creation Colossians 1 15 99 89 94 The Gospels Edit The Four Evangelists by Pieter Soutman 17th century The synoptic Gospels date from after the writings of Paul They provide episodes from the life of Jesus and some of his works but the authors of the New Testament show little interest in an absolute chronology of Jesus or in synchronizing the episodes of his life 100 and as in John 21 25 the Gospels do not claim to be an exhaustive list of his works 2 Christologies that can be gleaned from the three Synoptic Gospels generally emphasize the humanity of Jesus his sayings his parables and his miracles The Gospel of John provides a different perspective that focuses on his divinity web 4 The first 14 verses of the Gospel of John are devoted to the divinity of Jesus as the Logos usually translated as Word along with his pre existence and they emphasize the cosmic significance of Christ e g All things were made through him and without him was not any thing made that was made 101 In the context of these verses the Word made flesh is identical with the Word who was in the beginning with God being exegetically equated with Jesus web 4 Controversies and ecumenical councils 2nd 8th century EditMain article First seven ecumenical councils Post Apostolic controversies Edit Following the Apostolic Age from the second century onwards a number of controversies developed about how the human and divine are related within the person of Jesus 102 103 As of the second century a number of different and opposing approaches developed among various groups In contrast to prevailing monoprosopic views on the Person of Christ alternative dyoprosopic notions were also promoted by some theologians but such views were rejected by the ecumenical councils For example Arianism did not endorse divinity Ebionism argued Jesus was an ordinary mortal while Gnosticism held docetic views which argued Christ was a spiritual being who only appeared to have a physical body 22 23 The resulting tensions led to schisms within the church in the second and third centuries and ecumenical councils were convened in the fourth and fifth centuries to deal with the issues citation needed Although some of the debates may seem to various modern students to be over a theological iota they took place in controversial political circumstances reflecting the relations of temporal powers and divine authority and certainly resulted in schisms among others that separated the Church of the East from the Church of the Roman Empire 104 105 First Council of Nicaea 325 and First Council of Constantinople 381 Edit In 325 the First Council of Nicaea defined the persons of the Godhead and their relationship with one another decisions which were ratified at the First Council of Constantinople in 381 The language used was that the one God exists in three persons Father Son and Holy Spirit in particular it was affirmed that the Son was homoousios of the same being as the Father The Nicene Creed declared the full divinity and full humanity of Jesus 106 107 108 After the First Council of Nicaea in 325 the Logos and the second Person of the Trinity were being used interchangeably 109 First Council of Ephesus 431 Edit In 431 the First Council of Ephesus was initially called to address the views of Nestorius on Mariology but the problems soon extended to Christology and schisms followed The 431 council was called because in defense of his loyal priest Anastasius Nestorius had denied the Theotokos title for Mary and later contradicted Proclus during a sermon in Constantinople Pope Celestine I who was already upset with Nestorius due to other matters wrote about this to Cyril of Alexandria who orchestrated the council During the council Nestorius defended his position by arguing there must be two persons of Christ one human the other divine and Mary had given birth only to a human hence could not be called the Theotokos i e the one who gives birth to God The debate about the single or dual nature of Christ ensued in Ephesus 110 111 112 113 The First Council of Ephesus debated miaphysitism two natures united as one after the hypostatic union versus dyophysitism coexisting natures after the hypostatic union versus monophysitism only one nature versus Nestorianism two hypostases From the Christological viewpoint the council adopted Mia Physis but being made one katὰ fysin Council of Ephesus Epistle of Cyril to Nestorius i e one nature of the Word of God incarnate mia fysis toῦ 8eoῦ logoy sesarkwmenh mia physis tou theou logou sesarkōmene In 451 the Council of Chalcedon affirmed dyophysitism The Oriental Orthodox rejected this and subsequent councils and continued to consider themselves as miaphysite according to the faith put forth at the Councils of Nicaea and Ephesus 114 115 The council also confirmed the Theotokos title and excommunicated Nestorius 116 117 Council of Chalcedon 451 Edit Christological spectrum during the 5th 7th centuries showing the views of the Church of the East light blue the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic Churches light purple and the Miaphysite Churches pink The 451 Council of Chalcedon was highly influential and marked a key turning point in the christological debates 118 It is the last council which many Lutherans Anglicans and other Protestants consider ecumenical 7 8 The Council of Chalcedon fully promulgated the Western dyophysite understanding put forth by Pope Leo I of Rome of the hypostatic union the proposition that Christ has one human nature physis and one divine nature physis each distinct and complete and united with neither confusion nor division 102 103 Most of the major branches of Western Christianity Roman Catholicism Anglicanism Lutheranism and Reformed Church of the East 119 Eastern Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy subscribe to the Chalcedonian Christological formulation while many branches of Oriental Orthodox Churches Syrian Orthodoxy Coptic Orthodoxy Ethiopian Orthodoxy and Armenian Apostolicism reject it 8 9 10 Although the Chalcedonian Creed did not put an end to all christological debate it did clarify the terms used and became a point of reference for many future Christologies 8 9 10 But it also broke apart the church of the Eastern Roman Empire in the fifth century 118 and unquestionably established the primacy of Rome in the East over those who accepted the Council of Chalcedon This was reaffirmed in 519 when the Eastern Chalcedonians accepted the Formula of Hormisdas anathematizing all of their own Eastern Chalcedonian hierarchy who died out of communion with Rome from 482 to 519 Fifth seventh Ecumenical Council 553 681 787 Edit The Second Council of Constantinople in 553 interpreted the decrees of Chalcedon and further explained the relationship of the two natures of Jesus It also condemned the alleged teachings of Origen on the pre existence of the soul and other topics web 12 The Third Council of Constantinople in 681 declared that Christ has two wills of his two natures human and divine contrary to the teachings of the Monothelites web 13 with the divine will having precedence leading and guiding the human will 120 The Second Council of Nicaea was called under the Empress Regent Irene of Athens in 787 known as the second of Nicaea It supports the veneration of icons while forbidding their worship It is often referred to as The Triumph of Orthodoxy web 14 9th 11th century EditThis section is empty You can help by adding to it February 2019 Eastern Christianity EditMain articles East West Schism and Eastern Orthodox Church This section is empty You can help by adding to it March 2019 Western medieval Christology EditThe term monastic Christology has been used to describe spiritual approaches developed by Anselm of Canterbury Peter Abelard and Bernard of Clairvaux citation needed The Franciscan piety of the 12th and 13th centuries led to popular Christology Systematic approaches by theologians such as Thomas Aquinas are called scholastic Christology 121 In the 13th century Thomas Aquinas provided the first systematic Christology that consistently resolved a number of the existing issues 122 In his Christology from above Aquinas also championed the principle of perfection of Christ s human attributes 123 124 125 The Middle Ages also witnessed the emergence of the tender image of Jesus as a friend and a living source of love and comfort rather than just the Kyrios image 126 Reformation EditJohn Calvin maintained there was no human element in the Person of Christ which could be separated from the Person of The Word 127 Calvin also emphasized the importance of the Work of Christ in any attempt at understanding the Person of Christ and cautioned against ignoring the Works of Jesus during his ministry 128 Modern developments EditSee also Historical Jesus and Quest for the Historical Jesus Liberal Protestant theology Edit The 19th century saw the rise of Liberal Protestant theology which questioned the dogmatic foundations of Christianity and approached the Bible with critical historical tools web 15 The divinity of Jesus was problematized and replaced with an emphasis on the ethical aspects of his teachings 129 note 21 Roman Catholicism Edit Catholic theologian Karl Rahner sees the purpose of modern Christology as to formulate the Christian belief that God became man and that God made man is the individual Jesus Christ in a manner that this statement can be understood consistently without the confusions of past debates and mythologies 131 note 22 Rahner pointed out the coincidence between the Person of Christ and the Word of God referring to Mark 8 38 and Luke 9 26 which state whoever is ashamed of the words of Jesus is ashamed of the Lord himself 133 Hans von Balthasar argued the union of the human and divine natures of Christ was achieved not by the absorption of human attributes but by their assumption Thus in his view the divine nature of Christ was not affected by the human attributes and remained forever divine 134 Topics EditNativity and the Holy Name Edit See also Nativity of Jesus and Holy Name of Jesus The Nativity of Jesus impacted the Christological issues about his person from the earliest days of Christianity Luke s Christology centers on the dialectics of the dual natures of the earthly and heavenly manifestations of existence of the Christ while Matthew s Christology focuses on the mission of Jesus and his role as the savior 135 136 The salvific emphasis of Matthew 1 21 later impacted the theological issues and the devotions to Holy Name of Jesus 137 138 139 Matthew 1 23 provides a key to the Emmanuel Christology of Matthew Beginning with 1 23 the Gospel of Matthew shows a clear interest in identifying Jesus as God with us and in later developing the Emmanuel characterization of Jesus at key points throughout the rest of the Gospel 140 The name Emmanuel does not appear elsewhere in the New Testament but Matthew builds on it in Matthew 28 20 I am with you always even unto the end of the world to indicate Jesus will be with the faithful to the end of the age 140 141 According to Ulrich Luz the Emmanuel motif brackets the entire Gospel of Matthew between 1 23 and 28 20 appearing explicitly and implicitly in several other passages 142 Crucifixion and resurrection Edit Main articles Crucifixion of Jesus and Resurrection of Jesus The accounts of the crucifixion and subsequent resurrection of Jesus provides a rich background for christological analysis from the canonical Gospels to the Pauline Epistles 143 A central element in the christology presented in the Acts of the Apostles is the affirmation of the belief that the death of Jesus by crucifixion happened with the foreknowledge of God according to a definite plan 144 In this view as in Acts 2 23 the cross is not viewed as a scandal for the crucifixion of Jesus at the hands of the lawless is viewed as the fulfilment of the plan of God 144 145 Paul s Christology has a specific focus on the death and resurrection of Jesus For Paul the crucifixion of Jesus is directly related to his resurrection and the term the cross of Christ used in Galatians 6 12 may be viewed as his abbreviation of the message of the Gospels 146 For Paul the crucifixion of Jesus was not an isolated event in history but a cosmic event with significant eschatological consequences as in 1 Corinthians 2 8 146 In the Pauline view Jesus obedient to the point of death Philippians 2 8 died at the right time Romans 5 6 based on the plan of God 146 For Paul the power of the cross is not separable from the resurrection of Jesus 146 Threefold office Edit Main article Threefold office The threefold office Latin munus triplex of Jesus Christ is a Christian doctrine based upon the teachings of the Old Testament It was described by Eusebius and more fully developed by John Calvin It states that Jesus Christ performed three functions or offices in his earthly ministry those of prophet priest and king In the Old Testament the appointment of someone to any of these three positions could be indicated by anointing him or her by pouring oil over the head Thus the term messiah meaning anointed one is associated with the concept of the threefold office While the office of king is that most frequently associated with the Messiah the role of Jesus as priest is also prominent in the New Testament being most fully explained in chapters 7 to 10 of the Book of Hebrews Mariology Edit Main articles Mariology and Roman Catholic Mariology Some Christians notably Roman Catholics view Mariology as a key component of Christology web 16 In this view not only is Mariology a logical and necessary consequence of Christology but without it Christology is incomplete since the figure of Mary contributes to a fuller understanding of who Christ is and what he did 147 Protestants have criticized Mariology because many of its assertions lack any Biblical foundation 148 Strong Protestant reaction against Roman Catholic Marian devotion and teaching has been a significant issue for ecumenical dialogue 149 Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger later Pope Benedict XVI expressed this sentiment about Roman Catholic Mariology when in two separate occasions he stated The appearance of a truly Marian awareness serves as the touchstone indicating whether or not the christological substance is fully present 150 and It is necessary to go back to Mary if we want to return to the truth about Jesus Christ 151 See also EditCatholic spirituality Christian messianic prophecies Christian views of Jesus Christological argument Crucifixion of Jesus Doubting Thomas Eucharist Eutychianism Five Holy Wounds Genealogy of Jesus Great Church Great Tribulation Harrowing of Hell Kingship and Kingdom of God Last Judgement Life of Jesus in the New Testament Miracles of Jesus Names and titles of Jesus in the New Testament Religious perspectives on Jesus Paterology Pneumatology Rapture Scholastic Lutheran Christology Second Coming of Christ Transfiguration of Jesus Universal resurrectionNotes Edit The work of Jesus Christ Veli Matti Karkkainen soteriology the doctrine of salvation 12 biblicaltraining org The Past Work of Christ The Atoning Savior web 2 Present work of Christ work as mediator and Lord web 3 Future work of Christ work as coming judge and reigning king web 3 Definitions Bart Ehrman the understanding of Christ 11 the nature of Christ the question of Christology 1 Bird Evans amp Gathercole 2014 New Testament scholars often speak about Christology which is the study of the career person nature and identity of Jesus Christ 4 Raymond Brown 1994 C hristology discusses any evaluation of Jesus in respect to who he was and the role he played in the divine plan 13 Bernard L Ramm 1993 Christology is the reflective and systematic study of the person and work of Jesus Christ 3 Matt Stefon Hans J Hillerbrand Encyclopedia Britannica Christology Christian reflection teaching and doctrine concerning Jesus of Nazareth Christology is the part of theology that is concerned with the nature and work of Jesus including such matters as the Incarnation the Resurrection and his human and divine natures and their relationship web 1 Catholic Encyclopedia Christology is that part of theology which deals with Our Lord Jesus Christ In its full extent it comprises the doctrines concerning both the person of Christ and His works web 4 Bird Evans amp Gathercole 2014 There are of course many different ways of doing Christology Some scholars study Christology by focusing on the major titles applied to Jesus in the New Testament such as Son of Man Son of God Messiah Lord Prince Word and the like Others take a more functional approach and look at how Jesus acts or is said to act in the New Testament as the basis for configuring beliefs about him It is possible to explore Jesus as a historical figure i e Christology from below or to examine theological claims made about Jesus i e Christology from above Many scholars prefer a socio religious method by comparing beliefs about Jesus with beliefs in other religions to identify shared sources and similar ideas Theologians often take a more philosophical approach and look at Jesus ontology or being and debate how best to describe his divine and human natures 4 John 1 1 14 Heretical Christologies Docetism is the doctrine that the phenomenon of Jesus his historical and bodily existence and above all the human form of Jesus was mere semblance without any true reality Broadly it is taken as the belief that Jesus only seemed to be human and that his human form was an illusion Docetic teachings were attacked by Ignatius of Antioch and were eventually abandoned by proto orthodox Christians 22 23 Arianism which viewed Jesus as primarily an ordinary mortal was condemned as heretical in 325 exonerated in 335 and eventually re condemned as heretical at the First Council of Constantinople 381 22 23 Nestorianism opposed the concept of hypostatic union and emphasized a radical distinction between the two natures human and divine of Jesus Christ It was condemned by the Council of Ephesus 431 Monothelitism held that although Christ has two natures Dyophysitism his will is united The doctrine was promoted by Emperor Heraclius and Ecumenical Patriarch Sergius I as a compromise position between Chalcedonianism and various minority christologies It was condemned as heretical by the Third Council of Constantinople 681 The ransom theory and the Christ Victor theory are different but are generally considered together as Patristic or classical theories to use Gustaf Aulen s nomenclature These were the traditional understandings of the early Church Fathers According to Pugh Ever since Aulen s time we call these patristic ideas the Christus Victor way of seeing the cross 31 Called by Aulen the scholastic view Penal substitution Vincent Taylor 1956 the four main types which have persisted throughout the centuries The oldest theory is the Ransom Theory It held sway for a thousand years The Forensic Theory is that of the Reformers and their successors 35 Packer 1973 Luther Calvin Zwingli Melanchthon and their reforming contemporaries were the pioneers in stating it i e the penal substitutionary theory What the Reformers did was to redefine satisfactio satisfaction the main mediaeval category for thought about the cross Anselm s Cur Deus Homo which largely determined the mediaeval development saw Christ s satisfactio for our sins as the offering of compensation or damages for dishonour done but the Reformers saw it as the undergoing of vicarious punishment poena to meet the claims on us of God s holy law and wrath i e his punitive justice 36 Mark D Baker objecting against the pebal substitution theory states that substitution is a broad term that one can use with reference to a variety of metaphors 37 Which Aulen called the subjective or humanistic view Propagated as a critique of the satisfaction view by Peter Abelard Christ suffering for or punished for the sinners Early Christians found themselves confronted with a set of new concepts and ideas relating to the life death and resurrection of Jesus as well the notions of salvation and redemption and had to use a new set of terms images and ideas in order to deal with them 44 The existing terms and structures which were available to them were often insufficient to express these religious concepts and taken together these new forms of discourse led to the beginnings of Christology as an attempt to understand explain and discuss their understanding of the nature of Christ 44 Early Jewish Christians had to explain their concepts to a Hellenistic audience which had been influenced by Greek philosophy presenting arguments that at times resonated with and at times confronted the beliefs of that audience This is exemplified by the Apostle Paul s Areopagus sermon that appears in Acts 17 16 34 45 where Paul is portrayed as attempting to convey the underlying concepts about Christ to a Greek audience The sermon illustrates some key elements of future christological discourses that were first brought forward by Paul 46 47 48 The views of these schools can be summarized as follows 50 Alexandria Logos assumes a general human nature Antioch Logos assumes a specific human being Witherington Christ s Divinity We have already seen that Paul in appropriating the language of the christological hymns subscribed to the christological notion that Christ existed prior to taking on human flesh Paul spoke of Jesus both as the wisdom of God his agent in creation 1 Cor 1 24 30 8 6 Col 1 15 17 see Bruce 195 and as the one who accompanied Israel as the rock in the wilderness 1 Cor 10 4 In view of the role Christ plays in 1 Corinthians 10 4 Paul is not founding the story of Christ on the archetypal story of Israel but rather on the story of divine Wisdom which helped Israel in the wilderness 52 Ehrman The earliest Christians held exaltation Christologies in which the human being Jesus was made the Son of God for example at his resurrection or at his baptism as we examined in the previous chapter 71 Here I ll say something about the oldest Christology as I understand it This was what I earlier called a low Christology I may end up in the book describing it as a Christology from below or possibly an exaltation Christology Or maybe I ll call it all three things Along with lots of other scholars I think this was indeed the earliest Christology web 9 Proponents of Christ s deity argue the Old Testament has many cases of Christophany The pre existence of Christ is further substantiated by the many recorded Christophanies in the Bible 152 Christophany is often quantify considered a more accurate term than the term theophany due to the belief that all the visible manifestations of God are in fact the preincarnate Christ Many argue that the appearances of the Angel of the Lord in the Old Testament were the preincarnate Christ Many understand the angel of the Lord as a true theophany From the time of Justin on the figure has been regarded as the preincarnate Logos 153 Richard Bauckham argues that Paul was not so influential that he could have invented the central doctrine of Christianity Before his active missionary work there were already groups of Christians across the region For example a large group already existed in Rome even before Paul visited the place The earliest centre of Christianity was the twelve apostles in Jerusalem Paul himself consulted and sought guidance from the Christian leaders in Jerusalem Galatians 2 1 2 76 Acts 9 26 28 77 15 2 78 What was common to the whole Christian movement derived from Jerusalem not from Paul and Paul himself derived the central message he preached from the Jerusalem apostles 79 Loke 2017 The last group of theories can be called Explosion Theories one might also call this the Big Bang theory of Christology This proposes that highest Christology was the view of the primitive Palestinian Christian community The recognition of Jesus as truly divine was not a significant development from the views of the primitive Palestine community rather it exploded right at the beginning of Christianity The proponents of the Explosion view would say that the highest Christology of the later New Testament writings e g Gospel of John and the creedal formulations of the early church fathers with their explicit affirmations of the pre existence and ontological divinity of Christ are not so much a development in essence but a development in understanding and explication of what was already there at the beginning of the Christian movement As Bauckham 2008a x memorably puts it The earliest Christology was already the highest Christology Many proponents of this group of theories have been labelled together as the New Religionsgeschichtliche Schule Hurtado 2003 11 and they include such eminent scholars as Richard Bauckham Larry Hurtado N T Wright and the late Martin Hengel 75 The concept of cosmic Christology first elaborated by Saint Paul focuses on how the arrival of Jesus as the Son of God forever changed the nature of the cosmos 89 94 Gerald O Collins and Daniel Kendall have called this Liberal Protestant theology neo Arianism 130 Grillmeier The most urgent task of a contemporary Christology is to formulate the Church s dogma God became man and that God made man is the individual Jesus Christ in such a way that the true meaning of these statements can be understood and all trace of a mythology impossible to accept nowadays is excluded 132 References Edit a b c Ehrman 2014 p 171 a b c d O Collins 2009 pp 1 3 a b c Ramm 1993 p 15 a b c d Bird Evans amp Gathercole 2014 p 134 n 5 a b Ehrman 2014 p ch 6 9 a b Davis 1990 p 342 a b Olson Roger E 1999 The Story of Christian Theology Twenty Centuries of Tradition Reform InterVarsity Press p 158 ISBN 978 0 8308 1505 0 a b c d Armentrout amp Boak Slocum 2005 p 81 a b c Espin amp Nickoloff 2007 p 217 a b c Beversluis 2000 pp 21 22 a b Ehrman 2014 p 108 Karkkainen 2016 Brown 2004 p 3 Christology from within and ahead by Mark L Y Chan 2001 ISBN 90 04 11844 6 pp 59 62 1 O Collins 2009 p 16 17 a b c d e Brown 2004 p 4 a b O Collins 2009 pp 16 17 a b Pannenberg 1968 p 33 Philippe Bobichon Filiation divine du Christ et filiation divine des chretiens dans les ecrits de Justin Martyr in Patricio de Navascues Benlloch Manuel Crespo Losada Andres Saez Gutierrez dir Filiacion Cultura pagana religion de Israel origenes del cristianismo vol III Madrid 2011 pp 337 378 online O Collins 2009 p 16 a b c Introducing Christian Doctrine by Millard J Erickson L Arnold Hustad 2001 p 234 a b c Ehrman 1993 a b c McGrath 2007 p 282 Atonement Cross F L ed The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church New York Oxford University Press 2005 Weaver 2001 p 2 Beilby amp Eddy 2009 pp 11 20 Gustaf Aulen Christus Victor An Historical Study of the Three Main Types of the Idea of Atonement E T London SPCK New York Macmillan 1931 Vincent Taylor The Cross of Christ London Macmillan amp Co 1956 pp 71 77 2 Pugh 2015 p 8 Leon Morris Theories of the Atonement in Elwell Evangelical Dictionary Pugh 2015 p 1 Pugh 2015 pp 1 26 Pugh 2015 p 31 Tuomala Jeffrey 1993 Christ s Atonement as the Model for Civil Justice American Journal of Jurisprudence 38 221 255 doi 10 1093 ajj 38 1 221 a b Taylor 1956 pp 71 72 a b Packer 1973 Baker 2006 p 25 Beilby amp Eddy 2009 p 17 a b Weaver 2001 p 18 Beilby amp Eddy 2009 p 18 a b Beilby amp Eddy 2009 p 19 Jeremiah David 2009 Living With Confidence in a Chaotic World pp 96 amp 124 Nashville Tennessee Thomas Nelson Inc Massengale Jamey 2013 Renegade Gospel The Jesus Manifold a b c McGrath 2006 pp 137 141 Acts 17 16 34 McGrath 2006 pp 137 41 Creation and redemption a study in Pauline theology by John G Gibbs 1971 Brill Publishers pp 151 153 Mercer Commentary on the New Testament by Watson E Mills 2003 ISBN 0 86554 864 1 pp 1109 1110 a b Charles T Waldrop 1985 Karl Barth s christology ISBN 90 279 3109 7 pp 19 23 Historical Theology An Introduction by Geoffrey W Bromiley 2000 ISBN 0567223574 pp 50 51 a b c d Grillmeier amp Bowden 1975 p 15 a b c Witherington 2009 p 106 a b c Mini S Johnson 2005 Christology Biblical and Historical ISBN 81 8324 007 0 pp 229 235 Matthew 28 19 Oscar Cullmann 1959 The Christology of the New Testament ISBN 0 664 24351 7 p 202 Oscar Cullmann 1959 The Christology of the New Testament ISBN 0 664 24351 7 pp 234 237 a b Ehrman 2014 p 125 Loke 2017 a b Ehrman 2014 Talbert 2011 p 3 6 Ehrman 2014 pp 120 122 Netland 2001 p 175 Loke 2017 p 3 Mack 1995 Ehrman 2003 a b c Bart Ehrman How Jesus became God Course Guide a b Loke 2017 pp 3 4 Talbert 2011 p 3 Geza Vermez 2008 The Resurrection pp 138 139 Bird 2017 pp ix xi a b Ehrman 2014 p 132 Ehrman 2014 p 122 Loke 2017 p 4 Loke 2017 pp 4 5 a b c d e Loke 2017 p 5 Galatians 2 1 2 Acts 9 26 28 Acts 15 2 Bauckham 2011 pp 110 111 Loke 2017 p 6 Robinson John A T 1963 Honest to God p 72 Hick John The Metaphor of God Incarnate page 27 A further point of broad agreement among New Testament scholars is that the historical Jesus did not make the claim to deity that later Christian thought was to make for him he did not understand himself to be God or God the Son incarnate such evidence as there is has led the historians of the period to conclude with an impressive degree of unanimity that Jesus did not claim to be God incarnate Hurtado Larry W 2005 How on earth did Jesus become a god historical questions about earliest devotion to Jesus Grand Rapids Michigan Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Company pp 4 6 ISBN 0 8028 2861 2 Gerd Ludemann An Embarrassing Misrepresentation Free Inquiry October November 2007 the broad consensus of modern New Testament scholars that the proclamation of Jesus s exalted nature was in large measure the creation of the earliest Christian communities Wright N T 1999 The challenge of Jesus rediscovering who Jesus was and is Downers Grove Illinois InterVarsity Press p 98 ISBN 0 8308 2200 3 Andrew Ter Ern Loke The Origin of Divine Christology Cambridge University Press 2017 pp 100 135 Loke Andrew 18 February 2019 Is Jesus God A Historical Evaluation Concerning the Deity of Christ Ethos Institute Retrieved 8 September 2022 Ehrman 2014 p 113 a b c Grillmeier amp Bowden 1975 pp 15 19 Sanders E P 1977 Paul and Palestinian Judaism Minneapolis Fortress Press ISBN 978 0 8006 1899 5 Dunn James D G 1990 Jesus Paul and the Law Studies in Mark and Galatians Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press pp 1 7 ISBN 0 664 25095 5 Sanders E P St Paul the Apostle Theological views Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 15 May 2020 O Collins 2009 p 142 a b Larry R Helyer 2008 The Witness of Jesus Paul and John An Exploration in Biblical Theology ISBN 0 8308 2888 5 p 282 Enslin Morton S 1975 John and Jesus ZNW 66 1 2 1 18 doi 10 1515 zntw 1975 66 1 2 1 ISSN 1613 009X S2CID 162364599 Per the Gospel of John No longer is John the Baptizer an independent preacher He is but a voice or to change the figure a finger pointing to Jesus The baptism story is not told although it is referred to John 1 32f But the baptism of Jesus is deprived of any significance for Jesus not surprising since the latter has just been introduced as the preexistent Christ who had been the effective agent responsible for the world s creation Enslin p 4 2 Corinthians 5 17 Colossians 1 20 Zupez John 2014 Celebrating God s Plan of Creation Salvation Emmanuel 120 356 359 Colossians 1 15 Karl Rahner 2004 Encyclopedia of theology a concise Sacramentum mundi ISBN 0 86012 006 6 p 731 John 1 3 a b Fahlbusch 1999 p 463 a b Rausch 2003 p 149 Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers 2nd series Vol XIV p 207 translated edition by H R Percival http www fordham edu halsall basis ephesus html The Seven Ecumenical Councils of the Undivided Church trans H R Percival in Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers 2nd Series ed P Schaff and H Wace repr Grand Rapids MI Wm B Eerdmans 1955 XIV pp 192 142 Jonathan Kirsch God Against the Gods The History of the War Between Monotheism and Polytheism 2004 Charles Freeman The Closing of the Western Mind The Rise of Faith and the Fall of Reason 2002 Edward Gibbon The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 1776 88 21 A concise dictionary of theology by Gerald O Collins 2004 ISBN 0 567 08354 3 pp 144 145 The creed the apostolic faith in contemporary theology by Berard L Marthaler 2007 ISBN 0 89622 537 2 p 114 2 Campbell James P June 2010 Mary and the Saintsby James P Campbell 2005 pp 17 20 ISBN 978 0829430301 Essential theological terms by Justo L Gonzalez 2005 ISBN 0 664 22810 0 p 120 3 Doctrine and practice in the early church by Stuart George Hall 1992 ISBN 0 8028 0629 5 pp 211 218 4 Systematic Theology by Lewis Sperry Chafer 1993 ISBN 0 8254 2340 6 pp 382 384 5 The Blackwell Companion to Eastern Christianity by Ken Parry 2009 ISBN 1 4443 3361 5 p 88 6 Fundamentals of Catholicism God Trinity Creation Christ Mary by Kenneth Baker 1983 ISBN 0 89870 019 1 pp 228 231 7 Mary Mother of God by Carl E Braaten and Robert W Jenson 2004 ISBN 0802822665 p 84 a b Price amp Gaddis 2006 pp 1 5 Meyendorff 1989 pp 287 289 The Westminster Dictionary of Christian Theology by Alan Richardson and John Bowden 1983 ISBN 0664227481 p 169 Christology Biblical And Historical by Mini S Johnson 2005 ISBN 81 8324 007 0 pp 74 76 8 Gilson Etienne 1994 The Christian Philosophy of Saint Thomas Aquinas Notre Dame IN University of Notre Dame Press p 502 ISBN 978 0 268 00801 7 Christology Biblical And Historical by Mini S Johnson 2005 ISBN 81 8324 007 0 pp 76 79 9 O Collins 2009 p 208 12 Aquinas as authority by Paul van Geest Harm J M J Goris pp 25 35 10 Christology Key Readings in Christian Thought by Jeff Astley David Brown Ann Loades 2009 ISBN 0 664 23269 8 p 106 Calvin s Christology by Stephen Edmondson 2004 ISBN 0 521 54154 9 p 217 Calvin s First Catechism by I John Hesselink 1997 ISBN 0 664 22725 2 p 217 Dunn 2003 p ch 4 O Collins amp Kendall 1996 pp 30 31 Rahner 2004 pp 755 767 Grillmeier 1975 p 755 Encyclopedia of theology a concise Sacramentum mundi by Karl Rahner 2004 ISBN 0 86012 006 6 p 1822 The eschatology of Hans Urs von Balthasar by Nicholas J Healy 2005 ISBN 0 19 927836 9 pp 22 23 Theology of the New Testament by Georg Strecker 2000 ISBN 0 664 22336 2 pp 401 403 Matthew by Grant R Osborne 2010 ISBN 0 310 32370 3 p lxxix Matthew 1 13 by Manlio Simonetti 2001 ISBN 0 8308 1486 8 p 17 Matthew 1 2 Luke 1 2 by Louise Perrotta 2004 ISBN 0 8294 1541 6 p 19 All the Doctrines of the Bible by Herbert Lockyer 1988 ISBN 0 310 28051 6 p 159 a b Matthew s Emmanuel by David D Kupp 1997 ISBN 0 521 57007 7 pp 220 224 Who do you say that I am essays on Christology by Jack Dean Kingsbury Mark Allan Powell David R Bauer 1999 ISBN 0 664 25752 6 p 17 The theology of the Gospel of Matthew by Ulrich Luz 1995 ISBN 0 521 43576 5 p 31 Who do you say that I am Essays on Christology by Jack Dean Kingsbury Mark Allan Powell David R Bauer 1999 ISBN 0 664 25752 6 p 106 a b New Testament christology by Frank J Matera 1999 ISBN 0 664 25694 5 p 67 The speeches in Acts their content context and concerns by Marion L Soards 1994 ISBN 0 664 25221 4 p 34 a b c d Christology by Hans Schwarz 1998 ISBN 0 8028 4463 4 pp 132 134 Paul Haffner 2004 The mystery of Mary Gracewing Press ISBN 0 85244 650 0 p 17 Walter A Elwell Evangelical Dictionary of Theology Second Edition Grand Rapids MI Baker Academic 2001 736 Erwin Fahlbusch et al Mariology The Encyclopedia of Christianity Grand Rapids MI Leiden Netherlands Wm B Eerdmans Brill 1999 2003 409 Communio 1996 Volume 23 p 175 Raymond Burke 2008 Mariology A Guide for Priests Deacons seminarians and Consecrated Persons ISBN 1 57918 355 7 p xxi Theology for Today by Elmer L Towns 2008 ISBN 0 15 516138 5 p 173 Angel of the Lord by T E McComiskey in The Evangelical Dictionary of Theology 2001 ISBN 0 8010 2075 1 p 62Sources EditPrinted sourcesArmentrout Donald S Boak Slocum Robert 2005 An Episcopal dictionary of the church ISBN 978 0 89869 211 2 Baker Mark D 1 December 2006 Proclaiming the Scandal of the Cross Contemporary Images of the Atonement Baker Academic ISBN 978 1 4412 0627 5 Bauckham R 2011 Jesus A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press Beilby James K Eddy Paul R 2009 The Nature of the Atonement Four Views InterVarsity Press Bermejo Rubio Fernando 2017 Feldt Laura Valk Ulo eds The Process of Jesus Deification and Cognitive Dissonance Theory Numen Leiden Brill Publishers 64 2 3 119 152 doi 10 1163 15685276 12341457 eISSN 1568 5276 ISSN 0029 5973 JSTOR 44505332 S2CID 148616605 Beversluis Joel Diederik 2000 Sourcebook of the world s religions ISBN 978 1 57731 121 8 Bird Michael F Evans Craig A Gathercole Simon 2014 Endnotes Chapter 1 How God Became Jesus The Real Origins of Belief in Jesus Divine Nature A Response to Bart Ehrman Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 51961 4 Bird Michael F 2017 Jesus the Eternal Son Answering Adoptionist Christology Wim B Eerdmans Publishing Brown Raymond Edward 2004 An Introduction to New Testament Christology Paulist Press Chilton Bruce The Son of Man Who Was He Bible Review August 1996 35 Cullmann Oscar The Christology of the New Testament trans Louisville Westminster John Knox Press 1980 ISBN 0 664 24351 7 Davis Leo Donald 1990 The First Seven Ecumenical Councils 325 787 Their History and Theology Theology and Life Series 21 Collegeville MN Michael Glazier Liturgical Press ISBN 978 0 8146 5616 7 Dunn James D G 2003 Jesus Remembered Christianity in the Making Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 8028 3931 2 Ehrman Bart D 1993 The Orthodox corruption of scripture the effect of early Christological controversies on the text of the New Testament New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 510279 6 Ehrman Bart D 2003 Lost Christianities The Battles for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 972712 4 Ehrman Bart 2014 How Jesus became God The Exaltation of a Jewish Preacher from Galilee Harper Collins Espin Orlando O Nickoloff James B 2007 An introductory dictionary of theology and religious studies ISBN 978 0 8146 5856 7 Fahlbusch Erwin 1999 The encyclopedia of Christianity Brill Fuller Reginald H The Foundations of New Testament Christology New York Scribners 1965 ISBN 0 684 15532 X Greene Colin J D Christology in Cultural Perspective Marking Out the Horizons Grand Rapids Eerdmans Publishing 2004 ISBN 0 8028 2792 6 Grillmeier Alois 1975 Jesus Christ III Christology in Rahner Karl ed Encyclopedia of Theology A Concise Sacramentum Mundi reprint ed A amp C Black ISBN 9780860120063 retrieved 9 May 2016 Grillmeier Aloys Bowden John 1975 Christ in Christian Tradition From the Apostolic Age to Chalcedon ISBN 978 0 664 22301 4 Hodgson Peter C Winds of the Spirit A Constructive Christian Theology Louisville Westminster John Knox Press 1994 Karkkainen Veli Matti 2016 Christology A Global Introduction Baker Academic Kingsbury Jack Dean The Christology of Mark s Gospel Philadelphia Fortress Press 1989 Letham Robert The Work of Christ Contours of Christian Theology Downer Grove IVP 1993 ISBN 0 8308 1532 5 Loke Andrew Ter Ern 2017 The Origin of Divine Christology vol 169 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 19142 5 Mack Burton L 1995 Who wrote the New Testament The making of the Christian myth Harper San Francisco ISBN 978 0 06 065517 4 McGrath Alister E 2006 Christianity an introduction ISBN 978 1 4051 0901 7 MacLeod Donald The Person of Christ Contours of Christian Theology Downer Grove IVP 1998 ISBN 0 8308 1537 6 McGrath Alister E 2007 Christian theology an introduction Malden Mass Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 5360 7 Meyendorff John 1989 Imperial unity and Christian divisions The Church 450 680 A D The Church in history Vol 2 Crestwood NY St Vladimir s Seminary Press ISBN 978 0 88 141056 3 Netland Harold 2001 Encountering Religious Pluralism The Challenge to Christian Faith amp Mission InterVarsity Press O Collins Gerald Kendall Daniel 1996 Focus on Jesus Essays in Christology and Soteriology Gracewing Publishing O Collins Gerald 2009 Christology A Biblical Historical and Systematic Study of Jesus ISBN 978 0 19 955787 5 Packer J I 1973 What did the Cross Achieve The Logic of Penal Substitution Tyndale Biblical Theology Lecture Pannenberg Wolfhart 1968 Jesus God and Man ISBN 978 0 664 24468 2 Wolfhart Pannenberg Systematic Theology T amp T Clark 1994 Vol 2 Price Richard Gaddis Michael 2006 The acts of the Council of Chalcedon ISBN 978 0 85323 039 7 Pugh Ben 2015 Atonement Theories A Way through the Maze James Clarke amp Co Rahner Karl 2004 Encyclopedia of theology a concise Sacramentum mundi ISBN 978 0 86012 006 3 Ramm Bernard L 1993 Christology at the Center An Evangelical Christology Ecumenic and Historic Regent College Publishing ISBN 9781573830089 Rausch Thomas P 2003 Who is Jesus an introduction to Christology Liturgical Press ISBN 978 0 8146 5078 3 Schwarz Hans Christology Grand Rapids Eerdmans Publishing 1998 ISBN 0 8028 4463 4 Talbert Charles H 2011 The Development of Christology during the First Hundred Years and Other Essays on Early Christian Christology Supplements to Novum Testamentum 140 BRILL Taylor Vincent 1956 The Cross of Christ Macmillan amp Co Weaver J Denny 2001 The Nonviolent Atonement Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Witherington Ben 2009 Christology Paul s christology in Hawthorne Gerald F Martin Ralph P Reid Daniel G eds Dictionary of Paul and His Letters A Compendium of Contemporary Biblical Scholarship InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 7491 0 Web sources a b c d e f g Matt Stefon Hans J Hillerbrand Christology Encyclopedia Britannica The Work of Jesus Christ Summary a b Lecture 8 The Work of Jesus Christ Summary a b c d e Catholic encyclopedia Christology thinkapologetics com http thinkapologetics blogspot com 2009 05 jesus functional or ontological html m 1 Jesus A Functional or Ontological Christology Collins English Dictionary Complete amp Unabridged 11th Edition atonement retrieved 3 October 2012 2 often capital Christian theol a the reconciliation of man with God through the life sufferings and sacrificial death of Christ b the sufferings and death of Christ a b Larry Hurtado The Origin of Divine Christology a b c d Ehrman Bart D 14 February 2013 Incarnation Christology Angels and Paul The Bart Ehrman Blog Retrieved 2 May 2018 Bart Ehrman 6 February 2013 The Earliest Christology Larry Hurtado 10 July 2015 Early High Christology A Paradigm Shift New Perspective a b c Bouma Jeremy 27 March 2014 The Early High Christology Club and Bart Ehrman An Excerpt from How God Became Jesus Zondervan Academic Blog HarperCollins Christian Publishing Retrieved 2 May 2018 The Fifth Ecumenical Council Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America Retrieved 5 March 2015 The Sixth Ecumenical Council Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America Retrieved 5 March 2015 The Seventh Ecumenical Council Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America Retrieved 5 March 2015 Jaroslav Jan Pelikan The debate over Christology in modern Christian thought Mariology Is Christology in Vittorio Messori The Mary Hypothesis Rome 2005 11 Archived 5 August 2008 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading EditOverviewKarkkainen Veli Matti 2016 Christology A Global Introduction Baker Academic ISBN missing Reeves Michael 2015 Rejoicing in Christ IVP ISBN 978 0830840229 Early high ChristologyMoehlman Conrad Henry 1960 How Jesus Became God An Historical Study of the Life of Jesus to the Age of Constantine Philosophical Library Rubenstein Richard E 1999 When Jesus Became God The Epic Fight over Christ s Divinity in the Last Days of Rome Harcourt Brace amp Co Hurtado Larry W 2003 Lord Jesus Christ Devotion to Jesus in Earliest Christianity Eerdmans ISBN 978 0802860705 OCLC 51623141 Hurtado Larry W 2005 How on Earth did Jesus Become a God Historical Questions about Earliest Devotion to Jesus Eerdmans ISBN 978 0802828613 OCLC 61461917 Bauckham Richard 2008 Jesus and the God of Israel God Crucified and Other Studies on the New Testament s Christology of Divine Identity ISBN missing Ehrman Bart D 2014 How Jesus became God The Exaltation of a Jewish Preacher from Galilee Harper Collins Bird Michael F Evans Craig A Gathercole Simon Hill Charles E Tilling Chris 2014 How God Became Jesus The Real Origins of Belief in Jesus Divine Nature A Response to Bart Ehrman Zondervan ISBN missing Loke Andrew Ter Ern 2017 The Origin of Divine Christology Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107199262 Bird Michael F 2017 Jesus the Eternal Son Answering Adoptionist Christology Wim B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN missing AtonementPugh Ben 2015 Atonement Theories A Way through the Maze James Clarke amp Co ISBN missing External links EditEncyclopaedia Britannica Christology full access article Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Christology amp oldid 1148994224, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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