Table of Contents
Is there a time when Jesus became man?
There was never a time when he became God, for God is eternal. But Jesus has not always been man. The fantastic miracle is that this eternal God became man through the incarnation approximately 2,000 years ago. That’s what the Incarnation was: God the Son becoming man.
What does the Bible say about Jesus being a man?
Verse 18 shows how Jesus is able to come to your aid when you are tempted. To review, in chapter 1 the author demonstrated to his readers, who were tempted to leave Christ and go back to Judaism, how Jesus is God’s final word to us. As the Son of God, He is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of His nature.
How did Jesus change from a boy to a man?
Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man. ( Luke 2:52) How fascinating would it be to know what life was like for the boy Jesus? Did he plainly outpace his peers in learning? Did his sinlessness infuriate fallen siblings? How skilled was he as a worker?
Why did Jesus Christ become a real man?
When He came into the world, Christ associated with His contemporaries and did not hold Himself aloof. Thus He manifested to all that He was a real Man. One obvious distinction marked our Lord’s humanity; His perfection and sinlessness. As a Man He was made under the law, yet He never violated the law.
How is Jesus both God and man at the same time?
Jesus is not half-human and half-divine. Rather, He is Theanthropos, the God-man. The Lord Jesus Christ is one eternally divine Person who will forever possess two distinct yet inseparable natures: one divine and one human. Recommended Resource: The Moody Handbook of Theology by Paul Enns
What did Jesus mean by ” live by God’s time “?
Jesus was drawing a contrast between how He lived in view of God’s time versus how His brothers lived their lives. I want to develop the thought: Since life is short and eternity is forever, live by God’s time, not by man’s time.
What does the Bible say about God’s time?
Jesus lived by God’s time: He submitted fully to God’s plan for His life. Throughout John’s Gospel, there is the repeated theme of Jesus’ “hour,” which refers to the cross (2:4; 7:30; 8:20; 12:23, 27; 13:1; 16:32; 17:1; see Luke 22:53). But here (7:6, 8) John uses the Greek word that refers to an opportune time.
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