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Concordant Studies
ONE GOD AND ONE LORD
(Part Two)
THE SCRIPTURES REVEAL that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the
living God (Matt.16:16). Since our Lord is Gods Christ (i.e., Anointed)
and Son, it follows that He is not God. All would acknowledge that the fact that
Solomon was Davids son, proves that Solomon was not David. Yet due to the
blinding power of tradition, few are able to see that, just as surely, the fact that Jesus
is the Son of God, likewise proves that He is not God.
Instead of simply affirming that
Christ is the Son of God, orthodoxy has instead claimed that while it is true that Christ
is Gods Son, it is also true that He is God Himself. Thus it is claimed that Christ
is fully Man and fully God.
Yet since such a proposition is
self-contradictory, it is not only false but also incoherent. Even so, from the days of
the early church councils, the teaching of the deity of Christ has been deemed
essential truth. Accordingly, the advocates of this teaching have made countless arguments
in its defense.
Since the Scriptures expressly
declare that Jesus is indeed Gods Christ and Son, the orthodox themselves must
acknowledge that this is so. Yet what they have also affirmed, besides His
being the Christ and the Son of God, is that Jesus is also God Himself. Ironically,
by insisting that Jesus is God, traditionalists have effectually denied the very truths
which they formally affirm, our Lords divine Christhood and Sonship.
The primary stratagem in defense
of the Trinitarian teaching that Jesus is God, the Son, has long been the
artful claim that Christ has two natures. According to one of these
natures, He is human; according to the other, He is God. He is God-Man; that is, He is
both Man and God.
In the fourth ecumenical
council, held in Chalcedon (modern Kadiköy, Turkey) in 451 A.D.,
not only were the earlier creeds of Nicaea (321) and of Constantinople (381; subsequently
known as the Nicene Creed) approved, but Pope Leo Is Tome confirming two
distinct natures in Christ was also approved, over against the teachings of those who
denied this papal dogma. The overall effect [of these and other rulings] was to give
the church a more stable institutional character. 1 Yet however effective this council may have been
in the service of organized religion, it was only one of the many formalized departures
from scriptural truth which have obtained throughout church history.
The unique glory of Christ
Jesus as the Mediator of God and mankind has often been obscured by explanations made in
defense of the deity of Christ. In his book entitled, THE LORD FROM HEAVEN,
Sir Robert Anderson says, With us, therefore, the issue is a definite and simple
one, namely, whether Christ is God or only man. This statement neither defines nor
clarifies the theme, for the evidence is abundant on both sides. Moreover, this
declaration disregards the special place of Christ as the divine Link between God and man.
The Scriptures are emphatic concerning His work of mediation. There is one
God, and one Mediator of God and mankind, a Man, Christ
Jesus . . . (1 Tim.2:5). Those who make Him either Deity
absolute or merely human must do so by avoiding this truth and all the divine explanations
of those relationships by which Christ bridges the chasm between us and God.
All saints believe that,
in some sense, Christ is a Mediator between God and man. Some hold Him to be absolute
Deity, yet are compelled to acknowledge some limitations. Others make Him a mere man, yet
more than all other men. His true place is seldom clearly defined. The solution lies in
the great truth that our Lord is unique, quite unlike any other personage in the universe.
We do not need to effect a compromise between the conflicting views concerning Him, for
both are wrong, though each contains elements of truth. Let us not allow such explanations
to rob us of the Mediator, the Christ we need.
The key to His present
constitution is very simple. He is derived from two distinct sources. His spirit is
directly from God, unlike any other man. His body, however, is purely human. His soul,
which is the consciousness resulting from this combination, is a thing unmatched, capable
of direct communion with the Supreme Spirit, and condescending to the corrupt condition of
mortal men.
The point we wish to press
is this, that the likeness of Christ to God, instead of incorporating Him into the
so-called Godhead, is itself the most satisfying evidence that He is not the
Supreme. Nothing is similar to itself, except in a rhetorical figure. Likeness disappears
in identity. Nor can this be limited to personality, for Christ and God are
alike apart from personality. 2

MYTHICAL CLAIMS
The claim
that Christ has a dual nature is central not only to Trinitarianism but to
Modalism as well. Hence, according to this theory too, Christ is both fully God and
fully man at the same time. 3
Indeed, Modalists suppose that nearly all that militates against their position may be
shown to be false either by claims such as that the Father is a role not a Being, or by
the claim that Christ has two natures. 4
For example, in explaining the
plaintive words, My God! My God! Why didst Thou forsake Me? (Matt. 27:46) the
Modalist insists that we are to understand that this was only Jesus human
nature crying out.
If it should be suggested that
if Jesus is God and since He prayed to God this would entail His praying to Himself, the
Modalists ready reply is that, rather, what transpired was that the human nature of
Jesus prayed to the divine spirit of Jesus that dwelt in Him. Similarly, when Christ died
on the cross, it is affirmed not that Christ (Who, it is claimed, is God) died, but
only that the human body of Christ died, the divine spirit leaving the human body only at
death. 5
Our response to all such
ingenious claims, is that no passage of Scripture either declares or entails any such
thing as the dual nature of Christ, or the proposition that Christ is
fully God and fully man. The dual nature of Christ, then, is not of
faith; it is rather merely an artful contrivance, concocted in the first place in an
attempt to support a false theory. The very idea for which it seeks to stand is irrational
and absurd.
Nature is a singular
concept; it speaks of ones inherent character or basic constitution. Whatever the
particulars of ones nature may be, one who is fully one thing is not fully another.
A mule may be the progeny of a donkey and a mare, but it is fully neither of
these. It is the offspring of its parents; its nature incorporates elements from each; but
its nature is not fully the same as either.
Christ is the Mediator
Who links humanity with its Creator, so that He is neither man nor God in an absolute
sense, yet He is either in a relative one. The combination is not that of two
natures which can never be harmonized, but that of body and spirit, the same
elements which unite perfectly to form the souls of all other men. His humanity consists
in a body derived from Adam through the virgin Mary, His human mother. His deity consists
in a vivifying spirit directly from God. These two fuse freely to make a Man unique
(1 Tim.2:5) and a God unparalleledthe peerless Man and the only begotten God
(John 1:18). 6

THERE IS ONE GOD . . . AND ONE LORD
It is
revealed that There is one God, the Father, out of Whom all
is . . . and one Lord, Jesus Christ, through Whom all is
(1 Cor.8:6). The appositive, the Father, identifies Who the one God is.
The only true God, then, is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ (cf John
17:1-3). Hence we are to be slaving for the living and true God, and to be waiting
for His Son out of the heavens, Whom He rouses from among the dead, Jesus, our Rescuer out
of the coming indignation (1 Thess.1:9,10).
Yet the teaching of Modalism
affirms that Jesus Himself in an ultimate sense is not the Son of the living and true God
but is the living and true God Himself. In support of this teaching, it is claimed that
the Greek word kai has two significations, in most cases, simply that of
conjointness (i.e., and), but in some cases, that of identification (i.e.,
even, in the sense of that is, or which is the same
as). Accordingly, Modalists claim that 1 Corinthians 8:6 should be translated,
There is one God . . . even one Lord, Jesus Christ.
The claim is that sometimes when
kai stands between a noun and a preceeding noun it identifies the latter expression
as being essentially the same as the former. Since Modalists already believe that Christ
is one and the same Being as God, they suppose that this notion that kai sometimes
means the same as gives support to their basic claim.
The fact that in certain
passages which speak of God and Christ together, the Authorized Version sometimes renders kai
as even, further confuses the issue while, at least to some, seeming to give
credence to Modalism. It should be noted, however, that even in such cases the AV only
renders kai as even in reference to God as Father; it does
not translate kai in such a way so as to identify God as actually being Christ
Jesus (e.g., 2 Corinthians 1:3, God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ;
where the CV is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, cp
Eph.1:3; 1 Pet.1:3). 7
It does not follow that because
a prima facie-reasonable translation can be made by saying, as in 2 Corinthians 1:3,
God, even [kai] the Father . . . that the purpose of kai
in such a passage is to identify God as being the same Being as the Father. While
it is true that God is the same Being as the Father, the fact that these two expressions
often appear together, joined by kai (and), is no proof that this is
so. The point of the kai is that the Deity is both our Placer and our
Father. Similarly, He is both our Saviour and our Lord, even as, under God, Christ
is both of these to us as well.
Even so, many Modalists imagine
that the various greetings in Pauls epistles should be translated along these lines:
Grace to you and peace from God, our Father, even the Lord Jesus Christ
(e.g., 2 Cor.1:2), the sense being that God, our Father is one and the
same Being as the Lord Jesus Christ. It should be noted that Modalists do not
claim that the phrase grace and peace should be rendered grace, even
peace, as if grace and peace were the same, yet they turn about and claim that the
phrase God, our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ should read God, our
Father, even the Lord Jesus Christ, as if these Two were the same Being.
It simply is not true that the
reason why Paul conjoins God, our Father with the Lord Jesus
Christ is for the purpose of identifying the former Being as one and the same as the
latter. Indeed, since God is the God and Father of Christ, it is simply impossible
for Him to also be Christ Himself. This consideration alone debars any claim that kai
may be rendered even in the various greetings found in Pauls epistles
from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
The simple fact is that kai
corresponds to our and, and does not mean even. Indeed,
ordinarily, in cases where one word or phrase is to be identified with another, the Greek
particle perwhich does correspond to the English identificational
evenis used, not the connective kai. For example, Now at
the festival he released to them one prisoner, even whom they requested (Mark
15:6). Similarly, Thou dost give them blood to drink, even what they are
deserving! (Rev.16:6).
There are countless definitive
passages in which kai appears, in which its only meaning, and, is
obvious and the idea of even is absurd. When Peter said, Silver and
[kai] gold I do not possess (Acts 3:6), are we to understand the thought
intended to be that gold, actually, is the same as silver? Similarly, when we read,
Paul and Silvanus and Timothy to the ecclesia of the
Thessalonians . . . . (1 Thess.1:1), should this be,
Paul, even Silvanus, even Timothy . . . .?
Was Silvanus the same as Paul? Was Timothy the same as Paul as well, though once removed,
through Silvanus?

THE GREAT GOD AND OUR SAVIOUR
While in the
Concordant Version, even is used in a number of passages to translate kai
(i.e., AND), almost none of these are the and of
parallelization, but that of ascendency (e.g., Jude 23) or of argument (2 Cor. 4:16).
Further, it is not that a certain word or phrase preceded by another word or phrase and
joined by kai could not possibly be set in parallel, but that such a usage is
exceedingly rare. 8
In fact, we know of only one such passage, Titus 2:13: anticipating that happy
expectation, even [kai] the advent of the glory of the great God and our
Saviour, Jesus Christ.
Modalists sometimes claim that
the Concordant translation itself here militates against the Concordant teaching. Such
claims, however, are untrue and without merit, however persuasively they may be set forth,
and however ready some may be to accept them.
The simple answer to why the
Concordant Version translates kai as even in Titus 2:13, is that the
Version can by no means always maintain strict literality, and must often employ variants
in the interests of idiom and good diction. Since, in the Greek, this passage involves an
ellipsis, in consideration of the ordinary reader, our translators deemed it expedient to
render the passage as it appears in the Version. Thus they avoided the awkwardness which
the more literal rendering would have entailed, besides supplying an entire phrase, not in
the Greek, yet one which would have been needed in translation: anticipating that
happy expectation, and the advent of the glory of the great God and our Saviour,
Jesus Christ [is that happy expectation].
It is not that kai itself
ever signifies the idea of even. It is rather, as in Titus 2:13, that when two
clauses joined by kai are used as parallels (as sometimes in Hebrew poetry, where
one idea is expressed in two different ways), idiomatic translation requires the use of
even.
Modalists, however, reasoning
that if it is proper thus to set that happy expectation in parallel to the
advent of the glory of Christ, it is proper as well, within this same verse, to identify
the phrase the great God with the following phrase, our Saviour, Jesus
Christ. Thus Modalists claim that this verse in its entirety should read,
anticipating that happy expectation, even the advent of the glory of the
great God, even our Saviour, Jesus Christ.
It is true that the great
God, here, is indeed our Saviour, Jesus Christ. But it is not true that
Jesus Christ is herein identified as God, in the ordinary sense of this
expression, whether by means of the conjunction kai or otherwise. That Christ is
the great God referred to here, does not make Him the supreme God, the Deity Himself.
Modalists reason as if it
follows, since through the use of the word kai our happy expectation is declared to
be the advent of Christs glory, that through the use of the word kai as well,
the words the great Placer mean the supreme Placer, and that the
supreme Placer or God is said to be Jesus Christ! The fact, however, that the kai
of parallelization, however rare, is itself a legitimate usage, is no indication that it
is present in any certain construction. Since, for the many reasons we have presented, we
may be certain that Christ is not God and God is not Christ, we may be
certain as well that it is only an empty claim that any such usage of kai is
present either in Titus 2:13 in the phrase the great God and our Saviour,
Jesus Christ, or in any of the various phrases within the Pauline greetings in which
God is conjoined with Christ.

GOD AND CHRIST
In Titus 1:4,
the Concordant Version, as is ordinarily the case, translates kai as
and (Grace and peace from God, the Father, and Christ Jesus, our
Saviour). One would suppose that such a rendering is hardly to be faulted.
Nonetheless, some adamantly claim that this translation is inconsistent and
wrong. Such ones insist that this verse should read, Grace and peace
from God, the Father, even Christ Jesus, our Saviour.
In Titus 1:4, however, there is
no reason to suppose Paul wants to explain in different words what he says in the first
clause. In this case, he adds a new thought by saying grace and peace also come from
Christ Jesus our Saviour. This thought is not explicit but implicit, the intended idea
grace and peace from in the second clause being so obvious that it need not
even be expressed: Grace and peace from God, the Father, and [grace and
peace from] Christ Jesus, our Saviour.
Figures of speech, including the
figure termed ellipsis, ordinarily arise from fervor of expression. Ellipsis is also
employed simply to avoid redundancy. Ellipsis is only truly present when the terse
language of the text itself in its literal reading is either unclear or incomplete. In
passages containing ellipses such as Titus 1:4 or 1 Corinthians 1:3 (Grace to
you and peace from God, our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ), the ellipsis
in the second clause, is obviously supplied from the text of the first clause. The simple
and natural sense of such a verse is, Grace to you and peace from God, our Father, and
[grace to you and peace from] the Lord Jesus Christ.
Ellipses never transform the
sense of a text or add foreign considerations to it. Instead, omitted phrases necessary to
the sense (i.e., ellipses), repeat what is said, or clarify or complete what is said. Their
content is not open to speculation. To the contrary, it is in the light of what has
been explicitly stated, that the substance of the implicit elliptical thought, becomes
logically evident.
Therefore, in the case of
passages such as 1 Corinthians 1:3, 8:6, and Titus 1:4, it is quite wrong to claim
that in such constructions the connective kai which joins the two clauses carries
the sense of even, used identificationally. Any such claims are simply
mistaken; and, if made in the interests of Modalism, are not harmless but injurious
claims.
It is true that Paul heralded
according to the injunction of God, our Saviour (Titus 1:3), and, that in his
introduction to this epistle, he includes a word of grace and peace from Christ Jesus
our Saviour (Titus 1:4). It is true as well that, in an ultimate sense, there
is only one Saviour, God (termed Yahweh Elohim in the Hebrew Scriptures), even as that
there is a sense in which Christ is the true God, Yahweh Elohim. It hardly follows from
these facts, however, that Christ is identificationally God. Nor does it follow that Titus
1:3,4 proves such a proposition to be so, or that verse 4 should be rendered, Grace
and peace from God, the Father, even Christ Jesus, our Saviour.
It would certainly accord more
with the rest of Scripture, as well as with Titus 3:4-6 where our God and Saviour is said
to pour out His blessings through Jesus Christ our Saviour, to see God our Saviour
as the Source of our salvation and Jesus Christ our Saviour as the Channel. While Christ,
then, relatively speaking, is our God (our Placer) and Saviour, absolutely
speaking, He is not our God and Saviour.

COMMON MODALIST FALLACIES
Modalism,
besides claiming that the Father is not God Himself but only a divine role, goes on
to claim that, conversely, Jesus is God. Indeed, this latter claim is
Modalisms primary contention. Modalists, accordingly, even go so far as to claim
that where we read of the Father, even the God and Father of
Christ, this is actually Jesus presenting Himself in such a role. Similar claims are
made as well concerning the Son, and, by many, concerning the Holy Spirit as well. The
idea is that since it is Jesus Who is actually God Himself, and since by
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, we are to understand
merely divine roles, inasmuch as these roles are roles of God and Jesus is God, they are
therefore roles of Jesus!
This claim, however, is based
upon the false premises that the Father is not God Himself but only a divine role, and
that Jesus is God Himself. Since the premises are mistaken, the conclusion is wrong.
In order to cover a few
remaining points, I wish to present the following dialog between a hypothetical (yet quite
typical) Modalist and myself:
Modalists
Claim: God dwells within Christ, Who is God Himself. Christ is God robed in a body of
flesh.
My Reply: It is
gloriously true that God dwells within Christ, which speaks of His special and
abiding presence within His Anointed. But it does not follow from this, nor is it true on
other grounds, that Christ is God Himself, or is God Himself in a particular form
(robed in a body of flesh). Indeed, if Christ is a Being
within Whom God dwells, then Christ cannot be God, since if He were there would be two
Beings Who are God. But if by Christ you mean simply a body of flesh, physical
substance, then Christ is not a being but a Thing. Yet if Christ
is a Thing (simply a body, not a Person) within Which God dwells, then He (or rather, It),
is not a Being. This, however, cannot be so, for since Christ (not merely
Christs body) has the characteristics of a Being, He therefore is a
Being.
Modalists
Claim: God generated Himself within Christ.
My Reply: If Christ
Himself, as I affirm, in opposition to Modalism, is a Being Who is begotten of (or
generated by) another Being, God, a Being Who, as a result of generating Christ did not
Himself cease to exist, then Christ is not God but is, as the Scriptures plainly declare,
Gods Son. Yet if, as is claimed by Modalism, you wish to affirm that in generating
Christ, God also generated Himself within Christ, where He now dwells,
this is simply to claim anew your previous claim, which I have already proved to be false.
Modalists
Claim: Christ has two natures; He is fully man and fully God.
My Reply: To
say that Christ has two natures or is a Being comprised of both God and man,
is to say that Christ is a Being comprised of two Beings. Such an assertion cannot be
true, since the nature of ones being is a singular concept.
A beings nature may be comprised of many particulars or entities essential to
itself, but together they comprise only one nature. One being cannot consist of two
beings, for one being, is one being, not two. It cannot consist of more than it is.
It is as mistaken to say that even if other beings cannot have two natures Christ can have
two natures, as it would be to say that if God should make a triangle it can have four
sides.
Modalists
Claim: Jesus Christ, He alone is Yahweh Elohim, the God of Israel, the one God
revealed in the Hebrew Scriptures, apart from Whom there is none else.
My Reply: Of course
Jesus Christ, He alone is Yahweh Elohim, the God of Israel, the one God revealed in
the Hebrew Scriptures, apart from Whom there is none else. But it does not follow
from this that Christ is identificationally Yahweh Elohim, that thus He is
the one God of the Hebrew Scriptures.
Modalists
Claim: If Jesus Christ is not the one God of Scripture, then there is Another Who is
the one God instead. But this is contradictory to what you already have claimed to
believe, that Jesus Christ is the one God. You worship not one God but two, and do not
really believe that there is one God but two Gods. You teach that there are two Gods; that
is idolatry, and you are an idolater.
My Reply: Your argument
involves the fallacy of equivocation, and is therefore invalid. Hence your bold claim as
well that we are idolaters, is quite unfounded. That is, since we do not affirm that, in
addition to the sense in which the Father is God, Christ as well is God in this same
sense, it is pointless for you to appeal to what in itself is true, the fact that there is
some sense in which we believe that there are many gods
(1 Cor.8:5), and, in certain respects, believe that the title God applies
to Christ.
When we use an expression in one
sense in one place and in another sense in another place, and yet you argue as if we used
it in the same sense in both places, you are committing a fallacy of equivocation by
failing to note what we actually have done, while arguing as if we did what we did
not do. Anyone who is convinced by such a claim is guilty of this fallacy, and has been
convicted not by truth but merely by a specious argument. The entire notion is simply an
illogical inference, not a corollary, and is therefore completely invalid.
The fallacy of equivocation is
involved as well in the false conclusion, commonly entertained both by Modalists and
Trinitarians, that if there is one Being Who is unoriginated and supreme to Whom the title
God applies, since this title applies to Christ (e.g., Heb.1:8; Titus 2:13;
1 John 5:20), He is therefore unoriginated and supreme.

GRACE FOR REALIZATION
Through
artful inventions and fallacious argumentation, every false proposition may readily be
proved and justified, indefinitely. In such cases, it is not so much
conclusive proof to the contrary that is needed, but grace to accept conclusive
proof to the contrary.
Hence, in the end, our prayer on
behalf of all becomes simply a request that God would grant to each one an awareness that
the only true God, is the One Whom the Lord Jesus Christ Himself addressed as
Holy Father (John 17:11). In praying to His Father, Christ declared, Now
it is eonian life that they may know Thee, the only true God, and Him Whom
Thou dost commission, Jesus Christ (John 17:3).
The only true God is the
God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory (Eph.1:17). Hence, for us
there is one God, the Father, out of Whom all is . . . and
one Lord, Jesus Christ, through Whom all is (1 Cor.8:6). Though indeed,
not in all is there this knowledge (1 Cor.8:7), may this knowledge be in
us so that we may rejoice in our Lord and glorify our God in truth.
James Coram
1. Council of Chalcedon, THE NEW
ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA, 15th edition, vol.2, p.711.
2. A. E. Knoch, Unsearchable
Riches, vol.74, pp.147,148.
3. David K. Bernard: THE ONENESS OF GOD,
Word Aflame Press, Hazelwood, Missouri, 1983, p.88.
4. For the Modalist, either the
multiple attributes and roles of God or the dual nature of Jesus Christ, are the
explanation of (i.e., the means which he employs to set aside) all that would otherwise
debar his position; ibid., cf p.135.
5. ibid., cf pp.146-234, especially
pp.170-198. The author considers a wide range of texts which, to non-Modalists, plainly
preclude Modalism. The essence of his justification of Modalism in the face of all such
passages of Scripture is simply that Jesus had two natureshuman and divine,
flesh and Spirit, Son and Father (p.198) . . . . The New
Testament . . . teach[es] the dual nature of Jesus Christ and this is
the key to understanding the Godhead. Once we get the revelation of who Jesus really
isnamely, the God of the Old Testament robed in fleshall the Scriptures fall
into place (p.232).
6. A. E. Knoch, Unsearchable
Riches, vol.21, p.222.
7. Additional texts in which the AV
translates kai as even in reference to God as Father are
1 Corinthians 15:24, James 3:9, and 1 Thessalonians 3:13.
8. One may not claim the presence of such
a literary device whenever one wishes to do so, simply because, considered in the
abstract, such a usage, however unlikely, may be possible, or because such a claim may
lend support to a certain, discrete teaching. The judgment that any such literary device
is actually present should only be made on the weight of compelling, objective evidence,
directly related to the passage in question.
Forward to Part Three

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