According to the creation story, when Adam and Eve ate the fruit, they
essentially ceased being the wonderful, God-centered, God-dependent human
beings the Creator intended them to be. They became less than fully human.
Instead, they began using everything and everyone in the world as surrogate
gods, trying to get from people, deeds, and things what only God can give for
free.
The solution to this problem is Jesus
Christ. Just as Jesus uncovers the truth of the real nature of God, over
against the serpent’s lie about God, Jesus uncovers the truth about what it
means to be fully human. He reveals the truth about us. In revealing the true
God, Christ reveals the true human.
When Christ uncovered the God of
unsurpassable love, he uncovered humanity as the object of God’s unsurpassable
love.
This is one of the reasons “the Word became
flesh” (John 1:14). In the words of the Chalcedonian creed, the Son of God is
“fully God and fully man.” God reveals humanity in the very act of revealing
deity. Jesus is said to be the image of God both as perfect human and as the
perfect expression of God (1 Cor 15:49; 2 Cor 3:18; 4:4; Col 1:15). Christ is
both God before us as well as us before God.
Just as all we need to know about God is
found in Christ, so too all we need to know about humanity is found in Jesus
Christ.
Jesus is who God always intended humanity
to be and who humanity truly is—if only we will yield to God’s Spirit and
relinquish the illusions of the serpent’s lies about who God is and who we are.
What Christ reveals about humanity is just as unexpected as what he reveals
about God.
Nothing about Christ fits easily with our
ordinary, fallen preconceptions, for they are polluted with the serpent’s lie.
Let’s briefly consider two basic things
that Christ uncovers:
1. By dying on the cross for us, Christ
revealed the depth of human sinfulness. Christ reveals that our false humanity
is overcome by illness. The seriousness of an illness can be assessed by how
radical the cure is that is required to overcome it. Only when we look at the
cross, God’s cure for our sin, can we see the full gravity of our condition. If
God had to go to the furthest extreme imaginable to save us—the cross—then our
situation must have indeed been desperate.
2. The same act that exposes our
hopelessness before God uncovers our hopefulness in God. The cross reveals the
unsurpassable worth we, in our humanity, are mercifully given by God. The very
act that exposes the horror of human rejection of God reveals the beauty of
God’s acceptance of humanity. In the act of exposing the sickness of humanity,
God brings the cure.
In bearing our sin on the cross, Christ
revealed the truth about God—that is his unfathomable love—and the truth about
us—that our sin is damnable and that we are nonetheless loved, forgiven, and
reconciled to God. Through this, we become recipients of and participants in
God’s eternal, perfect love. “In Christ,” what it means to be human is
redefined. —Adapted from Repenting of Religion, pages 149-155 Greg Boyd
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