The Knowledge of God
In the seventeenth chapter of
John we have what is called the true Lord’s prayer,
the high priestly prayer of our Lord. This is in a transition position between
the upper room discourse which actually ended with the
statements at the end of chapter sixteen.
By this time they had come to the garden of Gethsemane and this is Jesus’ prayer for Himself in the first
five verses, then from verses 6 down through verse 19 He is praying for His
disciples, and from 20-26 He is praying for the church.
When we look at this we have
Jesus Christ, Jesus of Nazareth who claims to be Messiah, called the Son of
God, coming before the Father, and he utilises His title “Thy Son,” and he
concludes in verse 5 with the request that the Father glorify Him “with the
which I had with thee before the world was.” As we stop and think about that
there is one thing to say and to teach about what Jesus is praying for
specifically. But we need to back up a little bit and realise that Jesus is praying
to the Father. That means that he is performing an act of dependence upon the
Father. What does that say about the essential relationship of the second
person of the Trinity to the first person of the Trinity? Is this just a
temporary dependence that takes place during the period of the incarnation or
is this somehow reflective of the eternal relationship between the Son and the
Father? That He is eternally dependent upon the Father and subordinate to the
Father in some sense? We have to define that sense. Was Jesus subordinate in
all aspects of His being, including the essence of His being? If so then He is
less than God. How does this work itself out?
Some people get the idea that
this is just a lot of abstract theology. But where we are going is that if we
do not handle this biblically and correctly then what we end up with is come
concepts that are going to radically shift society, culture, marriage, the role
of men and women, and indeed it even impacts on political theory and
governmental theory. This underlies all of that. This is the ideological
foundation from which all these other applications derive. If we don’t deal
with this correctly or understand or have some grasp of it then what happens is
that we are out here trying to apply certain principles but we don’t understand
the rationale that under girds them. So when we get in certain contexts and
certain situations it creates a tension and a problem because we are just
trying to do something and we don’t understand the whys and wherefores that under
gird why we are trying to do that. We have to pay out the argument piece by
piece, brick by brick, because we can’t just jump to the third floor without
understanding what the first and second floors talk about.
As we come to this prayer
Jesus is recognising to the Father that His hour has come. This is the time of
His suffering, the time of the crucifixion where He goes to the cross to pay
the penalty for mankind, to die as a spiritual substitute for our sins. So as
we look at this He says, “Father, the hour has come; glorify Your Son, that the
Son may glorify You.” So the first observation here is
that the concept of His timing, His hour, His crucifixion, is related in the
context specifically to the Father-Son relationship within the Trinity, and we
have to take some time to understand just exactly what that is. This prayer
demonstrates the dependency of Jesus Christ and we have to ask several
questions.
In what sense is Jesus Christ
subordinate to God the Father? Is it an internal sense or is it in time? Does
it have to do with His time of incarnation or does it have to do with His
position of relationship to the Father in eternity past. We need to ask and
understand if this subordination is one of role and function or a subordination
of essence? Then we need to ask” How is it, how are we to describe, what
vocabulary are we to utilise to understand the relationship between God the
Father and God the Son in all eternity? Vocabulary is important because we
cannot think beyond our vocabulary. Vocabulary is the tool of thought.
2
Corinthians 10:4 NASB “for the weapons of our warfare are not of the
flesh, but divinely powerful for the destruction of fortresses.” What are these fortresses? [5] “We are destroying
speculations and every lofty thing raised up against
the knowledge of God, and {we are} taking every thought captive to the
obedience of Christ.” “Lofty thing” is a rather vague term, it could refer to
anything, and we have to look at the context. The “lofty things” are raised up
against what? Knowledge. Therefore we have to assume
that lofty thing is kind against kind, so we are talking about every lofty
concept, thinking, idea. The whole concept of warfare
that is explained in vv. 4, 5 is talking about warfare in the realm of thought.
The Christian life is based upon thinking, it is not
based upon emotion, upon gathering together as believers and talking to one
another and having social interaction. It is so critically based on thought,
learning how to think correctly about reality. And if we think about it, what
is more significant than to focus on the ultimate reality in the universe,
which is God. Throughout all eternity nothing existed except the Trinity and
their mutual love for one another and their mutual interaction. The Father, Son
and Holy Spirit had eternal relationship. What is more foundational for us to
understand than the ultimate reality of the universe which is how God the
Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit relate to one another, because that
becomes the paradigm, the example, the foundation for being able to understand
how every other relationship in the created order functions.
The importance of the knowledge of God
- No doctrine is more significant, more
foundational and more crucial to our lives than knowing God. Proverbs 9:10 NASB “The fear of the LORD is the
beginning of wisdom, And the knowledge of the
Holy One is understanding.” It is the fool that has said there is no God.
So if we want to guarantee a life of foolishness and a life of mental
collapse then we ignore God. But if we really want to know how things are,
if we really want to understand reality as it is, then God is the one who
defines that, so that which is the beginning point is knowing God.
Proverbs 1:29 NASB
“Because they hated knowledge And did not choose
the fear of the LORD.” Proverbs 1:7 NASB “The fear of the LORD is the
beginning of knowledge; Fools despise wisdom and instruction.” Proverbs
2:5 NASB “Then you will discern the fear of the LORD And discover the knowledge of God.” So the knowledge of
God is foundational to all other knowledge. Not only has God revealed
Himself to us non-verbally through creation, He has also revealed Himself
to us verbally. He has given us propositional revelation. That means that
the Scriptures are given in clear statements. Ephesians 1:17 NASB
“that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give to
you a spirit [mental attitude] of wisdom and of revelation in the
knowledge of Him.” Philippians 1:9 NASB “And this I pray, that
your love may abound still more and more in real knowledge and all
discernment.” Colossians 1:10 NASB “so that you will walk in a manner worthy of the
Lord, to please {Him} in all respects, bearing fruit in every good work
and increasing in the knowledge of God.” Peter reminds us that this is the
essence and the means of our spiritual growth. 2 Peter 1:2, 3 NASB
“Grace and peace be multiplied to you in the knowledge of God and of Jesus
our Lord; seeing that His divine power has granted to us
everything pertaining to life and godliness, through the true knowledge of Him who called us by His own
glory and excellence.” Growth is related to knowledge.
- A warning. Don’t fall into the trap of
rationalisation that we really can’t know God. So many people think that
the best that we can hope for in studying God is just some sort of vague,
nebulous appreciation for God. That, if we think about it, embodies a
blasphemy against God. That is really saying you can’t know God. If God is
the ultimate reality we ought to realise that the most important thng for us is to think precisely about who he is and
to understand Him. We can’t love who we don’t know.
- Nothing is more practical than for us to push the
boundaries of our thinking to understand God at a greater level.
- The Trinity is the ultimate and eternal reality.
- It demands the intricacies of the knowledge of
Greek and Hebrew. We just can’t get through some passages if we don’t have
a knowledge of the original languages.
- In terms of its importance, ultimately our very
salvation hangs in the balance. This doctrine is so crucial that to not
understand it really impacts the very core of Jesus’ work on the cross.
Jesus’ work on the cross is based on the person of Christ. Who He is
determines what He can do. So if we tweak out certain aspects of His
person then we have problems with His work.
The doctrine of the Trinity
- God exists in three equal persons. When Jesus
prays to the Father He is not praying to Himself.
When Jesus is baptised by John the Baptist we hear the Father speak in
Heaven, the Spirit descends on the Son in the form of a dive, and Jesus is
incarnate in the water. Those are three distinct entities and yet they
have one identical essence that is so closely united that they are said to
be one. How we understand that is very important. They have the same
identical essence, they are co-equal and co-eternal.
- The Bible clearly teaches that there are distinct
persons in the Godhead. The technical term for this is that there is a
plurality in the Godhead, that there is more than one. This is indicated
in the Hebrew name for God, elohim, the “im” ending is plural and it is more than just a plural
of majesty, as some want to say. In Genesis 1:26 God said: “Let us make man in our image.” The
first person plural, us and our, indicate plurality. Isaiah 6:3: “Holy,
holy, holy” implies a Trinitarian relationship; it is not explicit, it is
implicit. Two Lords are mentioned in Genesis 19:24 and Hosea 1:7, another
indication of plurality. Hosea 1:7 NASB “But I will have
compassion on the house of Judah and deliver them by the LORD their
God …”
- In another verse Yahweh is distinguished from the Holy Spirit, Isaiah 59:21 NASB
“As for Me, this is My covenant with them,” says the LORD: ‘My Spirit
which is upon you, and My words which I have put in your mouth shall not
depart from your mouth, nor from the mouth of your offspring, nor from the
mouth of your offspring’s offspring,’ says the LORD, ‘from
now and forever’.” Cf. Isaiah 63:10. Also Matthew 28:19 (note that ‘name’
as used there refers to essence); 2 Corinthians 13:14. By way of
observation we need to realise that if Jesus Christ has the attributes of
deity, and the Father has the attributes of deity, and the Holy Spirit has
the attributes of deity, this clearly shows that they have all the same
elements of deity; they are one. The unity of God is also clearly stated
in the New Testament. 1 Corinthians 8:4 NASB “Therefore
concerning the eating of things sacrificed to idols, we know that there is
no such thing as an idol in the world, and that there is no God but one.”
- The three persons in the Godhead have distinct
relationships. The way that this has been developed in church history is
that the Father is neither begotten, nor does He proceed. The Son is
eternally begotten from the Father. The question is: is that an expression
for time or is that an expression for eternity? See John 1:18; 3:16, 18. The Holy Spirit is said to proceed from the Father and the
Son. Further it is stated: The Father eternally generates or begets the Son, and the Father eternally spirates
the Holy Spirit. So there is a distinct relationship between Father, Son
and Holy Spirit, and this terminology expresses what that relationship is.
Though they have these distinct relationships none is inferior to another.
- Each member of the Trinity has equal authority
towards creation. This is found in the fact that the Father is the supreme
authority in 1 Corinthians 8:6; the Son is said to be completely equal to
the Father, which means He is equally in authority over the creation, John
5:21-23, and then the Spirit is also equal to them in Matthew 12:31.