Originally posted by ChristTeen287:
Has Jesus Christ (God the Son) always been both fully man and fully God? It would seem so, since God stands outside of time, but I certainly wouldn't know.
The Christchild Is Born,
ChristTeen287
You are certainly an intelligent one and deserve an intelligent answer.
In the context of - time - Jesus Christ has always been fully God because God-nature is not dependent on time (a thing of human experience in a created world) - while his human nature had a birth, a beginning, in a context of our human expereince of historical time.
And you are exactly ! in the context of eternity (the presence of all time).
That is: that in the resurrection of his human body - time - had no more meaning (as such). That focused event within time (his resurrection) became the �gateway� into eternity for his humanity. In the way of eternity (the presence of all time) that means his humanity was also fully present and fully human from the beginning of time - and at every present moment - to the end of time. All time.
His humanity in its resurrection was (is) present from the foundation of the world. And that is about all we can understand of it because of our habitual tendency to think of all things in a context of - time - so trusting in our senses are we.
In a way, you can picture it like this (and this is the way St. John pictures it) - the foundation of the world - IS - the event of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
In the vocabulary of the church and theology - the foundation or 'beginning of the world' is not a time-thing but rather it is always the foundation (inner reason and pourpose) of the ever present moment which is 'now'.
All historical events of creation that took place before the death/resurrection of Jesus �look forward� to that event that would take place within historical time. All past events coming before it - are patterned on and exist because of that defining event. And all historical events of creation that took or take place after the death/resurrection of Jesus Christ �look back� on that one focused event where time and eternity - touched.
And so we can understand John when he has Christ say of himself that he is �He who IS (present tense) Was (past tense) and Shall Be (future tense)� - all rolled up into one.
By the way, the Hebrew word John uses (the current manuscripts are Koin Greek translations from the original Hebrew) is a name of God often used by the prophets. All that St. John speaks about in the Apocalypse � originally called The Restoration (of All Things) - indicates that all things and all events of history are restored to their proper context by, and within, the central historical event of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The idea that the Apocalypse predicts geo-political events taking place now or in the future - has been condemned by the church as false - because the sole focus and central pivot of that book is - the historical event of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. That resurrection IS the center of all human time.
In a way - you can picture God sitting outside of historical time events - and being able to reach into the past, and the future, as well as the present - and do what he wants. God is not subject to the �rules� of time as we know them. This would tend to imply that the past and the future - are really dependent on and flow from - the present. Let us skip over that.
Therefore the church tells us that all revelation that took place before the historic event of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ - spoke of that death and resurrection - - - and all events after that death and resurrection look back to that event and speak of it. When this is understood then all historical events of creation (past, present and future - meaning even the events which take place today) are only properly known in thier reality and God's true purpose - when held in context to the one historical event of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
So also, the church tells us that with the event of the death and resurrection - all preceeding revelation was fulfilled - meaning not so much that what they predicted came true (meaning they were first and the resurrection second) but rather that the resurrection was FIRST and these propehies were secondary to it.
To our limited human expereince - our skewed view of reality and its events - we would think that the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ followed upon these prophecies - but the reality is that these prophcies FLOWED from it.
As an example: in the time of the Jews before the historical event of Jesus Christ - all their prophetic stuff (including the form of their services etc..) were prophetic (symbolically patterned after, or �copies�) of the original (of the event of Jesus Christ and his death and resurrection). The services of the Temple (based upon the promise to Abraham and the seal of that promise in the events of Genesis relating the sacrifice - death and resurrection - of Isaac.
In the context of human history - these prophetic things (oracles, items surrounding the Temple, historic events that happened to Israel, etc..) which were a progressive revelation OF Jesus Christ and the coming historical event of his death and resurrection, and which were proper to the Jewish church before the event of Christ - all became secondary when Christ himself came, died and resurrected. As secondary as Xerox copies are to the orginal.
When the church says that these prophetic things were �fulfilled in Christ� what it means (in context) is that the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ is - the original - and these other things are copies of that original.
This is also why the church has made the historical event of Jesus Christ - the focus and center of all historical time. In a way, Christ �split time� - he blew time up - he exploded time - he turned our concepts of time up-side-down - when eternity and time touched and mingled in the resurrected humanity of Jesus Christ.
All created events taking place in - time - flow from that one event of his death and resurrection. The Chritian concenpt of historical time is split into �Before Christ� (B.C.) and 'After Christ" (A.D. from the Latin anno=year Dom=Lord indication 'year of the Lord'). Note that the year of Christ's death and resurrection (not his birth) is designated as gound zero and B.C. is counted back from that and A.D. is counted forward from that.
To sum it up in a simple way (it may be too late for that!) - the historical event of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ - is - at the same eternal moment and historical moment - also the foundation, reason, and purpose, and the pattern for all creation in its events.
So while WE humans experience a historical point in which Jesus came to be human (his birth into our expereince of history) his being fully God and fully man (human) - always is, was, and shall be.... imaged (as it were) as spreading out into the past and the future from the one moment of his death and resurrection.
What was intuited to you - is profound and correct. (�always been both fully man and fully God? It would seem so, since God stands outside of time,�) I have only clarified the context for you.
Keep up your prayers in which ever manner you are doing them (do not change the way) let prayer time be a time of attentivness but at the same time mental (spiritual) rest where you drop all anxiety. Live day by day according to your conscience in whatever daily events God places you, that is how you cooperate with Him, and be patient for God to futher enlighten you. Believe that all is well and going just as it should even if you are not aware of it.
Be very brave and very bold. Have courage to believe that God is real and you can attain him.
Later on, you will come to know why certain things have happened to you. God is forming you and you need not know the what and why of it now.
I am not often here at this board, but I trust the angels to remind me to look for your posts the next time I am here.