Knwoing Christ

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KNOWING CHRIST

KNOWING CHRIST

Mark Jones

Foreword by J. I. Packer

THE BANNER OF TRUTH TRUST


KNOWING CHRIST

THE BANNER OF TRUTH TRUST


3 Murrayfield Road, Edinburgh EH12 6EL, UK
P.O. Box 621, Carlisle, PA 17013, USA

© Mark Jones 2015

isbn
Print: 978 1 84871 630 8
EPUB: 978 1 84871 631 5
Kindle: 978 1 84871 632 2

Typeset in 11/13 pt Adobe Garamond Pro at


The Banner of Truth Trust, Edinburgh

Printed in the USA by


Versa Press, Inc.,
East Peoria, IL

Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are from The Holy
Bible, English Standard Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles,
a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission.
All rights reserved.

iv
To
Katie, Joshua, Thomas, and Matthew

But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord


and Savior Jesus Christ. To him be the glory both
now and to the day of eternity. Amen.
2 Peter 3:18.
Contents

Foreword by J. I. Packer ix
Acknowledgements xi
Introduction xiii
1. Christ’s Declaration 1
2. Christ’s Dignity 9
3. Christ’s Covenant 17
4. Christ’s Incarnation 25
5. Christ’s Divinity 35
6. Christ’s Humanity 43
7. Christ’s Companion 53
8. Christ’s Faith 63
9. Christ’s Emotions 69
10. Christ’s Growth 77
11. Christ’s Reading 85
12. Christ’s Prayers 93
13. Christ’s Sinlessness 101
14. Christ’s Temptations 109
15. Christ’s Humiliation 117
16. Christ’s Transfiguration 127
17. Christ’s Miracles 135
18. Christ’s Sayings 143
19. Christ’s Death 153
20 Christ’s Resurrection 161
21. Christ’s Exaltation 169
22. Christ’s Intercession 177

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KNOWING CHRIST

23. Christ’s People 185


24. Christ’s Wrath 193
25. Christ’s Face 201
26. Christ’s Names 209
27. Christ’s Offices 219
Epilogue 231
End Notes 233
Study Guide 243

viii
Foreword by J. I. Packer

T he Puritans loved the Bible, and dug into it in depth. Also, they
loved the Lord Jesus, who is of course the Bible’s focal figure;
they circled round him, centred on him, studied minutely all that
Scripture had to say about him, and constantly, conscientiously,
exalted him in their preaching, praises, and prayers. Mark Jones, an
established expert on many aspects of Puritan thought, also loves the
Bible and its Christ, and the Puritans as expositors of both; and out
of this triune love he has written a memorable unpacking of the truth
about the Saviour according to the classic Reformed tradition, and
the Puritans supremely. It is a book calculated to enrich our twenty-
first-century souls, and one that it is an honour to introduce.
Just here, however, there lies – or maybe I should say we have, or
perhaps even we are – a problem. To put it pictorially, souls are small
in the modern Western world, and we have less of an appetite for this
kind of nourishment than our spiritual health actually requires. We
would do well to ask ourselves some questions.
Have we ever, up to now, worked our way through any book
that fully displays our Saviour as the brightest lights in the historic
Reformed firmament have viewed him? Here is such a book: are we
interested?
Have we ever formed the holy habit of contemplating Jesus in
solitude, allowing Scripture passage after Scripture passage to show
us his many-sided glory and to draw us out in the many-angled
adoration that is our proper response? This book will help us form
that habit.
Do we cultivate awe in the presence of the one who calls us who
believe his brothers and sisters, and who once took the place of each
of us under the unimaginably horrific reality of divine retribution
for our sins? And do we often make a point of telling ourselves, and
telling him, how lost we would be without him? Or are our minds as

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KNOWING CHRIST

Christians always on other things? The present book will lead us in


the right path.
Do we constantly acknowledge the presence of Christ, who
through the Holy Spirit keeps his promise to be with us always,
whether we cherish his gracious and triumphant companionship or
not? This book will help us to possess our possession at this point.
Thank you, Mark Jones; you serve us well. May we all benefit from
the wealth of enlivening gospel truth and wisdom that you have put
together for us in the pages that follow.

x
Acknowledgments

T hose who have helped with this book, either directly or indi-
rectly, are too many to mention. Some, however, deserve a
special word of thanks. Dr Robert Mckelvey has read through each
chapter and made many helpful suggestions. He is responsible for
any errors that remain in the book! Rev. Garry Vanderveen has also
read through each chapter and offered many helpful suggestions.
He, too, is responsible for any errors in the book. Jim Wright, Kevin
Jones (my father), and Jonathan Tomes also read the book and offered
much good advice.
The Banner of Truth Trust has been wonderful to work with. I am
especially thankful for the work of Pat Daly and Jonathan Watson,
who have also become friends in the process, which is a happy bonus
to the publication of this book.
I also want to thank my congregation at Faith Vancouver
Presbyterian Church for their encouragement as I preached a number
of sermons on ‘Knowing Christ’ during the evening services at Faith.
They convinced me that this book needed to be written.
I want to thank my family. My wife has to deal with me when I
write a book, and that is often a more difficult ‘me’ than usual. And
my children show me why a book of this nature is actually important.
I dedicate this book to Katie, Joshua, Thomas, and Matthew, in the
hope that they will continue to grow in the grace and knowledge of
their Saviour, Jesus Christ.
Finally, the joy of writing this book has far exceeded the work that
I have put into it. Ordinarily, writing books has as many pains as it
does joys. Writing this book has, however, been nothing but delight
upon delight. I only pray that I have written the truth concerning
Jesus Christ, who made this book possible.

xi
Introduction

T hink of some of the greatest biblical figures who ever lived:


the Abraham, Joseph, Moses, Joshua, Ruth, King David, Eli-
jah, Elisha, Jonah, Nebuchadnezzar, Daniel, Mary, John the Baptist,
Peter, and Paul. Or what about the great figures of church history:
Augustine, John Calvin, Jonathan Edwards, and Charles Spurgeon?
Or consider the great political and military heroes of world his-
tory: Alexander the Great, Constantine the Great, Napoleon, and
Winston Churchill. Who are these people, even the greatest saints,
compared with Jesus Christ? They are like a grain of sand compared
with Mount Everest.
What is Samson’s strength compared with that of Jesus, who was
raised in power? What is Solomon’s wisdom compared with that of
the one in whom all the treasures of wisdom are contained? What is
Methuselah’s age compared with the age of the one who inhabits the
places of eternity? What are Paul’s visions of heaven compared with
the sight of the Lord of heaven? What are Elisha’s miracles compared
with the incarnation and resurrection of the God-man?
Christians are commanded to know Jesus. Our faith, through
which we are saved, is also one that grows. We are as justified at the
beginning of our Christian life as we will ever be, but our minds,
which assent to the truths of the gospel, grow in the knowledge of the
gospel and of Jesus Christ (2 Pet. 3:18).
Shortly after becoming a Christian (at around twenty years of
age), I read J. I. Packer’s book Knowing God at a Seattle Mariners’
baseball game. The book was riveting – a great deal more so than the
baseball game. At the time I knew God, but I still did not know him
as I desired. I was, and very much still am, like the man who said to
Jesus, ‘I believe; help my unbelief!’ As I come to know God more, I
realize how little I know of him. Knowing God had, and continues to
have, a great impact on my Christian life. But what about knowing
Christ, the Son of God?

xiii
KNOWING CHRIST

One of the heroes of this book, John Owen, made the point that
any writers claiming to love Jesus sincerely must ‘give testimony in
a peculiar manner unto his divine Person and glory …’ He then
confessed:
I have thought myself on many accounts obliged to cast my mite into
this treasury. And I have chosen so to do, not in a way of controversy
(which formerly I have engaged in), but so as, together with the
vindication of the truth, to promote the strengthening of the faith of
true believers, their edification in the knowledge of it; and to express
the experience which they have, or may have, of the power and reality
of these things.1
In line with his sentiments, this book is not polemical (i.e.
disputational), but it is still theological. It is also (I pray) devotional.
This is a book for God’s people, not the academy. This is a book
designed to give God’s people a glimpse of the person of Christ. In
short, I write that people may know Christ better than they already
do, and so love him more. As an incentive for you to read this book,
consider Owen’s comment that beholding the glory of Christ is
one of the greatest privileges and advancements that believers are
capable of in this world, or that which is to come. It is that whereby
they are first gradually conformed unto it, and then fixed in the
eternal enjoyment of it. For here in this life, beholding his glory, they
are changed or transformed into the likeness of [Christ] (2 Cor. 3:18);
and hereafter they shall be ‘forever like him’, because they ‘shall see
him as he is’ (1 John 3:1–2) … this is the life and reward of our souls.2
In his exposition of the Psalms, Augustine ‘put off the 119th
Psalm’ because, he said, ‘it always exceeded the utmost stretch of
my powers’.3 If this is true for perhaps the greatest mind after the
apostles the church has ever known, imagine the feeling for anyone
writing a book on knowing Christ. Yet the apprehensions – and there
have been many! – have been outweighed by the delights. Such joys
are aroused by the moving words of James Allen Francis (1864–1928)
from a sermon, ‘Arise, Sir Knight’:
He was born in an obscure village, the child of a peasant woman. He
worked in a carpenter shop until He was thirty. Then for three years
He was an itinerant preacher. He never wrote a book. He never held

xiv
Introduction

an office. He never had a family. He never owned a house. He never


went to college. He never travelled more than two hundred miles from
the place where He was born. He never did one of the things that
usually accompany greatness. He had no credentials but Himself. He
was only thirty-three when the tide of public opinion turned against
Him. His friends ran away. He was nailed to a cross between two
thieves. When He was dead, He was laid in a borrowed grave through
the pity of a friend. Twenty centuries have come and gone, and today
He stands as the central figure of the human race. I am far within the
mark when I say that all the armies that ever marched, all the navies
that ever sailed, all the parliaments that ever sat, all the kings that ever
reigned, put together, have not affected the life of man on earth as has
this one solitary life.4
Not many books have been written on knowing Christ. This does
not mean that there is a lack of material on the subject: there is a
great deal of excellent work on the person and work of Christ, and
there always will be until Christ returns. Thus, as I tackle this difficult
yet wondrous task, I write standing on the shoulders of many great
theologians in the history of the church. For example, readers will
quickly note my indebtedness to the Puritans especially, and to a few
of them in particular. Far more skilfully than any other men in church
history thus far, they were able to express rich theology from eminently
pastoral hearts. They were the consummate pastor-theologians. They
sought in their writings to ‘preach’ Christ in a way that minds could
clearly understand and by which hearts would be powerfully moved.
The goal of this book, then, is to look at the person of Christ and
give readers – particularly those in the church – a reason to love him
more. We can only love him more by knowing him better – which
takes us beyond conceptual to relational knowledge. ‘To know’ in
the Bible can very often mean to have a concern about something
that involves the understanding of the mind, the movement of the
will, and the application of the heart. ‘To know’ means ‘to know
with particular interest’ or ‘to set one’s affections upon’. Let us then
approach this study with wide-open hearts longing to know Christ
who first knew us.

xv
i

Christ’s Declaration

And this is eternal life, that they know you the only true God, and Jesus
Christ whom you have sent (John 17:3).

Who is Jesus?
There exists no more important question than the one Jesus asked
his disciples, ‘But who do you say that I am?’ (Matt. 16:15). No query
has been more hotly debated, completely or partially misunderstood,
ignored to one’s peril, and answered correctly to one’s great gain. The
right answer to this question is simple enough to save a child, and
at the same time complex enough to keep theologians busy for all
eternity. If eternal life means knowing Jesus Christ (John 17:3), we
cannot afford to be ignorant about the one who is ‘chiefest among
ten thousand’ (Song of Sol. 5:10, kjv).
Peter confessed Jesus to be ‘the Christ, the Son of the living
God’ (Matt. 16:16). John spoke of Jesus as ‘the Word’ who became
flesh (John 1:14). Paul described Jesus not only as ‘the image of the
invisible God, the firstborn of all creation’ (Col. 1:15), but also as
‘the man Christ Jesus’ (1 Tim. 2:5). Similarly, the author of Hebrews
identified Jesus both as ‘the radiance of the glory of God’ (Heb. 1:3)
and as the one who partook of flesh and blood (Heb. 2:14). After
touching Christ, Thomas memorably claimed Jesus to be his ‘Lord’
and his ‘God’ (John 20:28). In the Old Testament, Isaiah had a vision
of Christ (see John 12:41), following which he called him ‘the King,
the Lord of hosts’ (Isa. 6:5); later, however, he also called this king
the servant of the Lord who had ‘no beauty that we should desire
him’ (Isa. 53:2).
Jesus also said much about himself. In John’s Gospel, home of the
well-known ‘I am’ sayings, Jesus refers to himself as the ‘bread of life’

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KNOWING CHRIST
(John 6:48), ‘the light of the world’ (8:12), ‘the door’ (10:9), ‘the good
shepherd’ (10:11), ‘the resurrection and the life’ (11:25), ‘the way, and
the truth, and the life’ (14:6), and ‘the true vine’ (15:1). In summary,
the Saviour testifies, ‘I am’ (8:58), echoing the self-disclosure of the
eternal God (Exod. 3:14).
Elsewhere, the Scriptures call him teacher (Mark 1:27), prophet
(Matt. 21:11), Son of David (Matt. 9:27), servant (Matt. 12:18), Son
of Man (Matt. 12:8), Lord (Matt. 14:30), Lamb of God (John 1:36),
Holy One of God (John 6:69), the beginning (Col. 1:18), high priest
(Heb. 5:1–10), living one (Rev. 1:18), deliverer (Rom. 11:26), and the
bright morning star (Rev. 22:16).
Considering that the world itself could ‘not contain the books that
would be written’ about all that Jesus did (John 21:25), we confidently
testify that the descriptions and names of Christ above barely scratch
the surface. Indeed, as John tells us, Christ ‘has a name written that
no one knows but himself ’ (Rev. 19:12). There is much about Christ
that we will learn in the future.

Our chief desire


Few people this side of eternity can claim to have known Jesus as the
Apostle Paul did. Yet as a man not outside of Christ but ‘in Christ’,
Paul considered everything as ‘dung’ in comparison with knowing
Jesus. Indeed, as a man sometimes privy to direct revelation from
God, Paul’s great desire on earth was ‘that I may know him’ (Phil.
3:10). This desire of Paul’s was a direct answer to Christ’s prayer for
all his people in John 17:3 – that the Father would give his people
eternal life, which is to know God and his Son, who was sent into the
world to save sinners. There is little doubt that almost all Christians
are content to have won Christ and thus to have received the gift of
eternal life. But how many are equally concerned to know him? How
often we cut Jesus in half, wishing to know that we are saved and
that all is well with our destiny, but forgetting that to be truly saved
means we must truly know him! On the gravestone of the Scottish
Presbyterian Samuel Rutherford (d. 1661), we read of his passion to
know Christ:
True godliness adorned his name,
He did converse with things above,

2
Christ’s Declaration
Acquainted with Emmanuel’s love …
Most constantly he did contend
Until his time was at an end.
Then he won to the full fruition
Of that which he had seen in vision.1
Such words describing him at death correspond well with what he
wrote in life in his Letters:
Put the beauty of ten thousand thousand worlds of paradises, like the
Garden of Eden, in one. Put all trees, all flowers, all smells, all colours,
all tastes, all joys, all sweetness, all loveliness, in one. Oh, what a fair
and excellent thing would that be! And yet it would be less to that fair
and dearest Well-beloved, Christ, than one drop of rain to the whole
seas, rivers, lakes, and fountains of ten thousand earths.2
Put all the pleasures of life such as family, job, recreation, music,
sports, entertainment, cuisine, and technology in one. Oh, what
excellent joys they are! Yet such joys pale in comparison with the
delight of knowing Jesus and basking in communion with his person,
not just his work! Is Christ the ‘drop of rain’ or is he the ‘whole seas,
rivers, lakes, and fountains of ten thousand earths’?

A motivation
All of us share guilt in our sinful refusal to know Christ better. Such
guilt cannot, however, rectify this seemingly universal problem in
the church; we must pursue other solutions, even apart from the
significant fact that our loving Father forgives our lack of love and
knowledge of him and his Son.
One compelling yet not immediately obvious solution involves
turning our thinking for a moment on Christ. Of all the human
desires that he retained as he entered his glorified state in heaven,
few exceed his desire to know his people. Jesus, the Lord of glory,
supremely satisfied in the love of the Father, Holy Spirit, and elect
angels, remains unsatisfied if he cannot know, love, and ultimately be
with his people. How can a good husband enjoy life apart from being
together with his wife?
As Jesus uttered his high-priestly prayer in John 17, he made a
most remarkable statement: ‘Father, I desire that they also, whom
you have given me, may be with me where I am, to see my glory that

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KNOWING CHRIST
you have given me because you loved me before the foundation of
the world’ (17:24).
In his heavenly glory, Christ meditates upon his people. He
desires not only to know us, but also to be with us. We must always
remember that when he calls one of his loved ones home to himself,
he has gained more than we have lost in the death of our loved one.
He desires to be with us because he knows us, and that demands
that one day he will call us home to be with him. Ultimately, this
happens not because of something such as a disease or fatal accident,
but rather because the Father has answered the prayer of his Son.
There is for Christ something lovely, enticing, and satisfying in loving
poor, sinful creatures as we are, who have nothing in us to commend
ourselves, except that we belong to him.
Now, if this much remains true of Christ, are we somehow exempt
from knowing Christ in the confident hope that we will one day be
with him? Consider the words of the psalmist in Psalm 45: aware that
the king desires us in our beauty (45:11), we cannot help but aspire
to know the one who is the ‘most handsome of the sons of men’,
who has grace poured upon his lips, and is anointed with ‘the oil of
gladness beyond [his] companions’ (45:2, 7).
Most of us are constantly faced by the reality that there are many
things we cannot afford in this world. We often mightily resist this
fact, sometimes even by ‘affording’ what we cannot pay for (i.e. going
into debt). There is, however, only one eternally significant thing
that we cannot afford: namely, to remain ignorant of our beautiful
Saviour. We must know Christ, the Son of the living God.
Fortunately for Christians, Jesus, who meditates upon his people,
has taken the initiative by praying to his Father that we might know
him. If we belong to him, we must out of necessity be those who will
know him: ‘I am the good shepherd. I know my own and my own
know me’ (John 10:14).

‘That they may know’


If eternal life means knowing God and his Son, Jesus Christ, then
the child of God must understand what it means to ‘know’ him.
Knowing him is apprehending his person and works as revealed in
the Scriptures. This involves not only an understanding of who he

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Christ’s Declaration
is, but also a fuller knowledge of his mind and will. Our faith and
obedience fix themselves on the person of Christ as we come more
and more to think his thoughts after him and perform his will in
subjection to him.
When asked by one of the religious scribes which was the most
important commandment, Jesus answered: ‘Hear, O Israel: The Lord
our God, the Lord is one. And you shall love the Lord your God
with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind
and with all your strength’ (Mark 12:28–30). Christ essentially quoted
Deuteronomy 6:4–5, thus showing that the requirement for God’s
people has always been the same, and indeed will always be the same,
even into eternity. To love the Lord our God also involves loving the
Lord Jesus Christ. Looking at the requirements of the ‘Shema’ (‘Hear!’,
Deut. 6:4) helps us to understand what it means to know Jesus.
The one who answered that question also happened to be the one
who, unlike any other person since the Fall, knew what it was to love
God perfectly with all of his being. Jesus had as his one duty on earth
to love his Father. While on earth, he did not merely avoid sinning,
but he also recognized the Father’s presence with him and affirmed
that he ‘always’ did what was pleasing to God (John 8:29). In fact,
Jesus kept God’s commandments in order to abide in his Father’s love
(John 15:10). If he had shrunk back even once as the Son, his Father
would have had no pleasure in him (Heb. 10:38).
Just as Christ said to his disciples, ‘If you love me, you will keep
my commandments’ (John 14:15), so the Father could say the same to
Christ. He kept his Father’s commandments because he loved him.
The Shema was Christ’s great confession. His heart, soul, mind, and
strength were in perfect unison as he loved his Father with an intense
faultlessness that should humble us to the very core of our being.
The Scriptures are clear that our heart remains central in loving
God and Christ. We must ‘keep [our] heart with all vigilance, for
from it flow the springs of life’ (Prov. 4:23). Those who are good will
have goodness stored up in their hearts (Luke 6:45). God requires
this purity of heart of those who love and worship Jesus (Psa. 24:4).
Indeed, only these pure ones will see God in the face of Christ (Matt.
5:8; 2 Cor. 3:18; 4:6), whether in this life by faith or in the life to come
by sight (1 John 3:2–3).

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KNOWING CHRIST
We are to love Jesus not only with all our heart, but also with all
our soul (synonymous with ‘spirit’). In our devotion to Christ, our
soul is responsible for our highest spiritual exercises. It is the seat of
our emotional activity. Our Saviour’s obedience was nowhere tested
more than in the Garden of Gethsemane, where his soul was ‘very
sorrowful, even to death’ (Matt. 26:38). The soul expresses the sorrow
and joy that inevitably accompany the life of faith (Psa. 42; 32:2).
Thus, though we cannot press the distinction too far, it appears that
the ‘heart’ relates to the will and the ‘soul’ to the emotions. To know
Christ involves our will and emotions.
To love Jesus with our whole mind involves the seat of our
intellectual life. However, this also means loving him with the right
disposition and attitude that place our intellect in submission to
Christ’s revelation about himself, not only by thinking about him,
but also by subjecting our thinking to his revelation. Moreover,
because of our finiteness (the fact that we are limited), we shall never
reach a point where we have no need to learn more about Jesus. God
gave the ‘servant’ of Isaiah 50:4 (that is, Jesus) ‘the tongue of those
who are taught’. ‘Morning by morning’ God awakened the servant
to teach him. The servant’s love for God meant he applied not only
his heart and soul, but also his mind. If it was necessary for Jesus to
receive instruction so that he could love God with his mind, how
much more is it necessary for us as his people?
Loving Jesus with all our ‘strength’ brings together all of the various
elements discussed so far. Our heart, soul, and mind remain distinct
in the words of Christ, but in reality they should not be over-analysed
to the point that we think of them as three separate parts of who we
are. To love God with all of our strength, then, is to do so with all
of our being, which involves the whole person, both body and soul.
This explains why, in Mark 12:30, Christ uses the word ‘all’ with each
of these four elements. Moreover, all four terms start with the Greek
preposition ex, (from/out of ) thus highlighting that we love God not
only with our whole heart, but also from our whole heart.
Certainly no one disputes that Christ loves his Father with all of
his heart, soul, mind, and strength. However, not all Christians are
persuaded that they are capable of doing the same. Yet, as Augustine
famously noted, God gives what he commands and so commands
whatever he desires.3

6
Christ’s Declaration
In the strength of the Spirit, Christians are able to love their Saviour
with all of their being. The psalmist writes: ‘Give me understanding,
that I may keep your law and observe it with my whole heart’
(119:34). Keeping the law with the ‘whole heart’ may be understood
legally or evangelically. In a legal sense, only Christ loved God with
his whole heart because the law requires perfect conformity, which
we are unable to give. Nonetheless, in an evangelical sense, God,
out of his love and mercy in Christ, enables us to love him with our
whole heart. Our love is undoubtedly imperfect, but God, in his
kindness to his children, accepts a sincere love as the fulfilment of our
duty to love him with our ‘whole heart’. As we read in Romans 8:4,
this occurs ‘in order that the righteous requirement of the law might
be fulfilled in us, who walk … according to the Spirit’.
This should be a great source of encouragement for us. Why?
First, because our hope exists ultimately in Jesus, who fulfilled this
command perfectly in our place. We do not have to stand before God
with only an imperfect love as our hope for entering heaven. Second,
because of our union with Jesus, what is true of him becomes true of
us. God enables us to obey this command and to love him and his
Son, albeit imperfectly, with the totality of our being so that he may
delight in the love he receives from his people.
What a joy to know that Christ knows, loves, and meditates upon
us with all of his heart, soul, mind, and strength! This leaves us in
the glorious position of being able to know, love, and meditate upon
Christ with all of our heart, soul, mind, and strength. In this way,
God is pleased that we want to know more of Christ.

7
2

Christ’s Dignity

He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. For by
him all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible,
whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities – all things were
created through him and for him. And he is before all things, and in him
all things hold together. And he is the head of the body, the church. He is
the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in everything he might be
preeminent (Col. 1:15–18).

For him
Jesus did not come into the world for us: we came into the world for
Jesus. We must not quickly skim over these words. They deserve our
deepest meditation and most prayerful consideration.
Jesus is the reason for God’s creating and redeeming activity. The
decision for the Son to become flesh was not simply God’s response
to his foresight of the Fall. That Jesus should enter the world as the
Redeemer because of man’s sin ends up subjecting Christ to us,
when in fact we must be subject to him in all things. Jesus is not
an accidental identity, some sort of ‘Plan B’ God concocted because
things with Adam would not work out.
The decree for the God-man occurred as part of God’s original
eternal plan and was foundational to his appointment of Christ
as Redeemer and his selection of a people for himself: all things,
including his people, were created for him (Col. 1:16). Redemption,
which we have only through Christ, is still inferior compared with
the worth and glory of his person. After all, ‘He is the image of the
invisible God’ (Col. 1:15). The Puritan Stephen Charnock rightly
claimed that there is ‘something in Christ more excellent and comely
than the office of a Saviour; the greatness of his person is more

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KNOWING CHRIST
excellent than the salvation procured by his death’.1 The glory of his
person outweighs even the glory of his work on our behalf. However,
who he is enabled him to do what no man is capable of: die in the
place of a multitude of sinners. We praise him first for who he is and
then for what he accomplished.
As the glorious one, Christ is the goal of all things. He is the pre-
eminent one who is Lord over all (1 Cor. 8:6). Psalm 8 provides a
perfect example of the subjection of all things, even creation, to the
man Christ Jesus. In the first instance, the psalm refers to David as
Israel’s king and representative of the new humanity (e.g. compare
1 Chron. 17:16 with Psa. 8:4; 1 Chron. 17:20–24 with Psa. 8:1, 9;
and Psa. 21:5 with Psa. 8:5). Written in the context of this history of
redemption, Psalm 8 should also be read with Christ in view.
Related to the perfection of Christ, the goal of man (Psa. 8:4–6), as
anticipated in 1 Corinthians 15:44–49, entails his rising out of a state
that is lower than that of the angels. Now man will judge the angels
(1 Cor. 6:3). In the New Testament, portions of Psalm 8 are quoted
or referred to a number of times. The two key passages are Hebrews
2 and 1 Corinthians 15. The writer of Hebrews argues that Psalm 8
does not yet fully apply to man (see Heb. 2:8). Therefore, Hebrews
2:5–8 does not refer to Christ, but to David as the representative of
the new humanity. This makes the ‘but’ at the beginning of Hebrews
2:9 decisive: ‘But we see him who for a little while was made lower
than the angels, namely Jesus, crowned with glory and honor because
of the suffering of death …’ Where David, as representative of the
new humanity, failed, miserably and absolutely, Christ has succeeded
vicariously for us all, especially in his death as the victorious one.
Similarly, consider 1 Corinthians 15:25–27: ‘For he must reign
until he has put all his enemies under his feet. The last enemy to be
destroyed is death. For “God has put all things in subjection under
his feet.” But when it says, “all things are put in subjection”, it is plain
that he is excepted who put all things in subjection under him.’ In
verse 27, Paul’s use of Psalm 8 points to an explicit focus on Christ. His
exaltation to God’s right hand (Rev. 4–5) reveals the true humanity
of Christ and the fulfilment of this psalm. Though our Lord was for
a little while lower than the angels, he is now again supreme in all
the universe of men and angels (Heb. 1:1–3). The context of Hebrews
1 proves unequivocally that the incarnate Christ is far superior to

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Christ’s Dignity
the angels, both in his messianic divinity (Heb. 1) and in his perfect
humanity (Heb. 2).
The resurrection of Jesus did not function as an isolated occurrence,
as though a man were simply to rise from the dead. His resurrection
ushered in a new creation of which Jesus is described as the ‘firstborn’
or the ‘firstfruits’ from the dead (Rom. 8:29; 1 Cor. 15:20; Col. 1:18).
As the ‘firstborn from the dead’, Christ’s dignity is in view. Jesus
acted as the pioneer, the inaugurator, who opened up the way for
the resurrection of all his people. Without his rising from the dead,
no one will rise. All resurrections to life depend on his resurrection.
Thus in Christ all things hold together (Col. 1:17). Christ rules
creation, the angels, the devil, the elect, the entire humanity – all
things. God’s purpose, tragically unfulfilled in Adam and David,
reaches its consummation and fulfilment in his Son; but that was
always the purpose for the one who ‘is the radiance of the glory of
God and the exact imprint of his nature’ (Heb. 1:3a). Little wonder
that Jesus receives the strongest affection of love from his heavenly
Father and his people. He is supreme in all created reality – the
wonderful Creator and Redeemer (John 3:35–36).

For the Father’s delight


The incarnate Son is the primary object of the Father’s love. The
Father loves all things according to the degree of loveliness in them.
Christ’s attractiveness cannot be compared to that of any created
person. Even before the incarnation, the Father spoke of the prospect
of Jesus the God-man: ‘Behold my servant, whom I uphold, my
chosen, in whom my soul delights’ (Isa. 42:1). After the incarnation,
the Father’s delight was renewed at Christ’s baptism (Matt. 3:17) and
transfiguration (Matt. 17:5).
The Father’s words were spoken, first, for the sake of his Son, in
order that Jesus, during his earthly ministry, should be constantly
assured of his Father’s love. Second, they were uttered for our sakes,
in order that God might impress upon his people his love for his Son.
This seems to be a constant refrain in Christ’s earthly ministry: ‘The
Father loves the Son and has given all things into his hand’ (John
3:35; see also 5:20). Not the Father only but Jesus himself also desires
and prays that believers will know the love the Father has for the Son
(John 17:23, 26).

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KNOWING CHRIST
All of the love that proceeds from the Father to the church must
come through Christ. Christ does not add to the Father’s love for us;
he merely draws it out. However, the Father’s love for the Son does
not simply pass through him, like water through a sieve. There is,
rather, an everlasting flow of divine grace communicated to Jesus that
perpetually flows from his head down onto his body (the church),
because the Father loves Jesus (and thus his people) as the apple of
his eye.

Imitating the Father


Believers should always remember that nothing makes us more like
the Father than our love for his Son. If the Son in his dignity is the
principal object of the Father’s love, surely our souls must delight
similarly in the Chosen One. There is a solemn warning to those (in
the church) regarding their lack of love for Christ: ‘If anyone has no
love for the Lord, let him be accursed’ (1 Cor. 16:22).
God, who always takes the initiative in saving sinners, bestows
upon us many blessings, some of which we may take for granted.
‘Every spiritual blessing’ (Eph. 1:3) includes the ability and desire in
our human nature to fix our love upon God and Christ. In order to
love things and persons unseen, such as the Lord Jesus, we require a
supernatural gift (i.e. faith). Without faith, we cannot please God by
loving his Son. The soul destitute of faith sees ‘no form or majesty’
in Christ. There is ‘no beauty’ in Christ’s person to the faithless (Isa.
53:2). To the faithful, however, love for Christ’s person brings with it
transforming and powerful affections. As John Owen affirms:
This is that person whose loveliness and beauty all the angels of God,
all the holy ones above, do eternally admire and adore … This is he
who is the joy, the delight, the love, the glory of the church below …
This is he who is the Desire of all nations … The mutual intercourse
on this ground of love between Christ and the church, is the life and
soul of the whole creation; for on the account hereof all things consist
in him.2
This is Christ’s dignity: that he should be the peculiar object of the
love of the Father as well as the chief object of the love of the church
and elect angels. All things were created for him.

12
Christ’s Dignity
Upheld by the plan of redemption
The consideration of the beauty of Christ’s person prepares us to
wonder in amazement at the plan of redemption enacted in eternity
between the persons of the Godhead. Imagine if God had asked men
and angels to come up with the plan of redemption. A sinner could
not make restitution to God for his sins, and neither could a mere
sinless man accomplish such for many sinners. Likewise, angels could
not take the place of humans in offering up satisfaction. Before a
holy God, would any suggest that he merely pardon sinners without
satisfaction? We, of course, know how the story goes. Without God’s
disclosure of his plan to redeem sinners, angels and men could have
spent an eternity planning redemption, but ultimately would have
come up short with any remedy to satisfy God’s requirements.
Imagine, though, that their thoughts could have reached so high
as to suggest that the eternal Son of God assume a human nature and
humble himself even to death on a cross (Phil. 2:6–8). Consider the
thought that the Son, eternally loved by the Father, should become a
curse and thus be crushed under the wrath of the Father. Angels and
men would have trembled in terror to propose such a plan if God had
not first disclosed it. As Thomas Goodwin said, ‘so great a plan could
not have been hatched in the womb of any created understanding’.3
The Father might have wished to sacrifice anything for us except
his Son; and the very thought of Jesus upon a cross could easily have
been buried in eternal silence. But once the Father had covenanted
with the Son in eternity to effect such a plan of redemption, the Father
knew that this plan would also involve the glorifying of his servant
(Isa. 49:1–12; 53:12; Phil. 2:11). Upon the Son’s agreement to act as the
mediator of God’s elect, the whole Trinity rejoiced as they consented
to the plan of salvation. These three persons, all undertaking to do
their work, aimed to do one thing: bring glory to the Son of God.
Ironically, the dignity of Christ was upheld through the ignominy
he suffered. In other words, Christ of necessity travelled the path of
humiliation as the incarnate, tempted, suffering, dying Servant in
order to manifest his dignity as our risen, ascended, exalted Redeemer
in glory. It is no wonder, then, that within the context of betrayal
before his death, Jesus could say: ‘Now the Son of Man is glorified
and God is glorified in him’ (John 13:31). It was when he was despised

13
KNOWING CHRIST
and rejected of men that his true majesty and glory were manifested
(Isa. 53).

Why the Son?


Cur Deus homo? Why did God become man? Anselm of Canterbury’s
answer to that question (i.e., to make satisfaction for sin) has been
hugely influential upon Christian thinking for the last thousand
years. More specifically, though, why did the Son of God – rather
than the Father or the Holy Spirit – become man?
The first, and most basic, reason has reference to our doctrine of
the Trinity. The titles by which we distinguish the persons of the
Trinity should be preserved and kept distinct. The Son of God, by
virtue of his eternal title, is more appropriately also suited to be the
Son of Man and the Son of a woman. It would be inappropriate for
there to be two persons within the Trinity who bear the title ‘Son’. If
the Father, for example, had become incarnate, he would then have
been both the Father and the Son of a father (i.e. Joseph).
Second, the position of the Son as the ‘middle person’ in the order
of the three persons (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit) bore the best
resemblance to the work that was to be effected on our behalf in the
plan of redemption. The Son, who is between the Father and the
Spirit, was to be the mediator between God and men.
Third, the Son was most particularly chosen to be mediator because
one of the main reasons for his mediation involves the adoption of
his people into the family of God (Eph. 1:5). The Son conveys sonship
upon his people because of his union with them (Gal. 4:4–5). It is
who he is, not just what he does, that makes us children of God. He
who is the Son, and is not ashamed to call us brothers (Heb. 2:11),
makes us sons of God because of his work as the Son of God.
Finally, the offices of the mediator – namely, prophet, priest,
and king – necessitated that the Son of God take on the work of
mediation. The calling to the office of priest belonged exclusively
to the eldest son in the family. As an intercessory priest the Son is
uniquely able to approach the Father, which is a function grounded
both in ontology (his natural subsistence) and in economy (Christ’s
work of mediation). As a prophet, the Son is especially fit to be
mediator because he is the word and wisdom of the Father (John

14
Christ’s Dignity
1:18; Heb. 1:1). As king, there is none so fit as the heir. No one is better
suited to have a kingdom committed to him than God’s Son.
Thus the plan of redemption depended not in the first place upon
the work that Jesus would perform, but principally upon who he is.
Who he is – the eternal Son of God – provided the basis for what
he would do. The decision of God to create, redeem, and glorify was
ultimately a decision of God to glorify the Son.
God the Father has displayed his eternal wisdom by sending his
eternal, divine Son, who is also appointed and adopted as his messianic
Son (Heb. 1:2–8). Nothing else in all our theology and learning can
compare to this wondrous truth (1 Cor. 1:21–30; cf. Rom. 11:33–36).

Conclusion
There are few places in the Scriptures where the glories of Christ are
more clearly set forth than in Colossians 1. Verses 15–20 ought to be
stamped firmly upon our minds, memorized, etched into our spiritual
DNA, and daily applied. If these words cannot excite us to live for
Christ, put us firmly in our place, cause us to desire to know Jesus
better, and stir preachers to preach the unsearchable riches of Christ,
then we have arrived at the peak of God’s revelation concerning his
Son while failing to see the King in his beauty (Isa. 33:17). And that
is the last place we want to be.
There is, however, an alternative:
I counsel you to think highly of Christ, and of free, free grace, more
than you did before: for I know that Christ is not known amongst
us. I think that I see more of Christ than ever I saw; and yet I see but
little of what may be seen. Oh, that he would draw by the curtains,
and that the King would come out of his gallery and his palace, that
I might see him! Christ’s love is young glory and young heaven; it
would soften hell’s pain to be filled with it … Oh, what price can be
given for him! Angels cannot weigh him. Oh, his weight, his worth,
his sweetness, his over-passing beauty … If ten thousand worlds of
angels were created, they might all tire themselves in wondering at
his beauty … Oh, that I could [come near] to kiss his feet, to hear his
voice, to feel the smell of his ointments! But oh, alas, I have little, little
of him! Yet I long for more.4

15
The Banner of Truth Trust originated in 1957 in London.
The founders believed that much of the best literature of historic
Christianity had been allowed to fall into oblivion and that, under
God, its recovery could well lead not only to a strengthening of the
church, but to true revival.
Inter-denominational in vision, this publishing work is now
international, and our lists include a number of contemporary
authors along with classics from the past. The translation of these
books into many languages is encouraged.
A monthly magazine, The Banner of Truth, is also published. More
information about this and all our publications can be found on our
website or by contacting either of the offices below.

T HE BA N NER OF TRU T H TRUST


3 Murrayfield Road PO Box 621, Carlisle,
Edinburgh, EH12 6EL Pennsylvania 17013,
U.K. U.S.A.
www.banneroftruth.org

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