Friday, January 11, 2013

Jesus and the need for Two Natures

Suppose you were swimming in the river one afternoon.  As you entered the water, the current becomes stronger than you expected and you are quickly pulled under the water and swept down stream.  You struggle to catch your breath between your head bobbing up and down in the water.  Suddenly you feel a hand grab your arm and pull you towards the bank.  As you reach the side, you recognize that the man saving you has one foot on the bank and one foot in the river, he is simultaneously in and out of the water, holding your arm and pulling you out of the water.

This scenario is kind of like Jesus.  The river is unrepentant human life, pulling every person down stream to eternal death.  The bank is godliness and eternal salvation.  The man grabbing your arm is Jesus.  Being fully man, He had one foot in the river of human life.  But being fully God, He also had one foot firmly in perfection.  It is this fact of His nature which makes salvation possible at all.

Only a man can submit and repent from sin.  But because of man's sinful nature, this is the very action that man is incapable of making.  On the other hand, God never has to submit because He is omnipotent and He never has to repent because He is morally perfect, yet it is only God who has the ability to repent.  Therefore, the only way man can repent is if God actually empowers the repentance.

Enter Jesus.  Jesus, being both God and man, is the bridge that connects the finite sinfulness of man to the infinite perfection of God.  Jesus was sinful because of His God-ness, but it was His human nature that made His experience applicable to humans through faith.  Jesus, by way of His very nature, overcomes the chasm of human sin.  Jesus laid down His attributes and suffered a horrendous death to bridge this gap.  We should always keep this in our hearts as it is the definition of grace.

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