THE INCARNATION
“In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
The same was in the beginning with God. All things
were made by Him; and without Him was not any thing
made that hath been made. In Him was life;
and the life was the light of men. And the
light shineth in the darkness; and the darkness apprehended
it not. There came a man, sent from God,
whose name was John. The same came for witness,
that he might bear witness of the light, that all
might believe through him. He was not the
light, but came that he might bear witness of
the light. There was the true light, even the
light which lighteth every man, coming into the
world. He was in the world, and the world
was made by Him, and the world knew Him not. He
came unto His own, and they that were His own received
Him not. But as many as received Him, to
them gave He the right to become children of God,
even to them that believe on His name: which were
born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh,
nor of the will of man, but of God. And the
Word became flesh, and dwelt among us (and we
beheld His glory, glory as of the only begotten from
the Father), full of grace and truth. John
beareth witness of Him, and crieth, saying, This
was He of whom I said, He that cometh after me is
preferred before me: for He was before me.
For of His fulness we all received, and grace
for grace. For the law was given by Moses; grace
and truth came by Jesus Christ. No man hath
seen God at any time; the only begotten Son, which
is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared
Him.” JOHN -18.
In this brief introduction to his
Gospel John summarises its contents, and presents
an abstract of the history he is about to relate in
detail. That the Eternal Word, in whom was the
life of all things, became flesh and was manifested
among men; that some ignored while others recognised
Him, that some received while others rejected Him, this
is what John desires to exhibit at large in his Gospel,
and this is what he summarily states in this compact
and pregnant introductory passage. He briefly
describes a Being whom he names “The Word;”
he explains the connection of this Being with God
and with created things; he tells how He came to the
world and dwelt among men, and he remarks upon the
reception He met with. What is summed up in these
propositions is unfolded in the Gospel. It narrates
in detail the history of the manifestation of the Incarnate
Word, and of the faith and unbelief which this manifestation
evoked.
John at once introduces us to a Being
whom he speaks of as “The Word.”
He uses the term without apology, as if already it
were familiar to his readers; and yet he adds a brief
description of it, as if possibly they might attach
to it ideas incompatible with his own. He uses
it without apology, because in point of fact it already
had circulation both among Greek and Jewish thinkers.
In the Old Testament we meet with a Being called “The
Angel of the Lord,” who is at once closely related,
if not equivalent, to Jéhovah, and at the same time
manifested to men. Thus when the Angel of the
Lord had appeared to Jacob and wrestled with him,
Jacob called the name of the place Peniel, for, said
he, “I have seen God face to face." In the
apocryphal books of the Old Testament the Wisdom and
the Word of God are poetically personified, and occupy
the same relation to God on the one hand, and to man
on the other, which was filled by the Angel of the
Lord. And in the time of Christ “the Word
of the Lord” had become the current designation
by which Jewish teachers denoted the manifested Jéhovah.
In explaining the Scriptures, to make them more intelligible
to the people, it was customary to substitute for
the name of the infinitely exalted Jéhovah the name
of Jehovah’s manifestation, “the Word
of the Lord.”
Beyond Jewish circles of thought the
expression would also be readily understood.
For not among the Jews only, but everywhere, men have
keenly felt the difficulty of arriving at any certain
and definite knowledge of the Eternal One. The
most rudimentary definition of God, by declaring Him
to be a Spirit, at once and for ever dissipates the
hope that we can ever see Him, as we see one another,
with the bodily eye. This depresses and disturbs
the soul. Other objects which invite our thought
and feeling we easily apprehend, and our intercourse
with them is level to our faculties. It is, indeed,
the unseen and intangible spirit of our friends which
we value, not the outward appearance. But we scarcely
separate the two; and as we reach and know and enjoy
our friends through the bodily features with which
we are familiar, and the words that strike upon our
ear, we instinctively long for intercourse with God
and knowledge of Him as familiar and convincing.
We put out our hand, but we cannot touch Him.
Nowhere in this world can we see Him more than we see
Him here and now. If we pass to other worlds,
there, too, He is concealed from our sight, inhabiting
no body, occupying no place. Job is not alone
in his painful and baffling search after God.
Thousands continually cry with him, “Behold,
I go forward, but He is not there; and backward, but
I cannot perceive Him: on the left hand, where
He doth work, but I cannot behold Him: He hideth
Himself on the right hand, that I cannot see Him.”
In various ways, accordingly, men
have striven to alleviate the difficulty of mentally
apprehending an invisible, infinite, incomprehensible
God. One theory, struck out by the pressure of
the difficulty, and frequently advanced, was not altogether
incompatible with the ideas suggested by John in this
prologue. This theory was accustomed, although
with no great definiteness or security, to bridge
the chasm between the Eternal God and His works in
time by interposing some middle being or beings which
might mediate between the known and the unknown.
This link between God and His creatures, which deemed
to make God and His relation to material things more
intelligible, was sometimes spoken of as “The
Word of God.” This seemed an appropriate
name by which to designate that through which God made
Himself known, and by which He came into relations
with things and persons not Himself. Vague indeed
was the conception formed even of this intermediary
Being. But of this term “the Word,”
and of the ideas that centred in it, John took advantage
to proclaim Him who is the manifestation of the Eternal,
the Image of the Invisible.
The title itself is full of significance.
The word of a man is that by which he utters himself,
by which he puts himself in communication with other
persons and deals with them. By his word he makes
his thought and feeling known, and by his word he
issues commands and gives effect to his will.
His word is distinct from his thought, and yet cannot
exist separate from it. Proceeding from the thought
and will, from that which is inmost in us and most
ourselves, it carries upon itself the imprint of the
character and purpose of him who utters it. It
is the organ of intelligence and will. It is
not mere noise, it is sound instinct with mind, and
articulated by intelligent purpose. By a man’s
word you could perfectly know him, even though you
were blind and could never see him. Sight or
touch could give you but little fuller information
regarding his character if you had listened to his
word. His word is his character in expression.
Similarly, the Word of God is God’s
power, intelligence, and will in expression; not dormant
and potential only, but in active exercise. God’s
Word is His will going forth with creative energy,
and communicating life from God, the Source of life
and being. “Without Him was not any thing
made that was made.” He was prior to all
created things and Himself with God, and God.
He is God coming into relation with other things,
revealing Himself, manifesting Himself, communicating
Himself. The world is not itself God; things created
are not God, but the intelligence and will that brought
them into being, and which now sustain and regulate
them, these are God. And between the works we
see and the God who is past finding out, there is
the Word, One who from eternity has been with God,
the medium of the first utterance of God’s mind
and the first forthputting of His power; as close to
the inmost nature of God, and as truly uttering that
nature, as our word is close to and utters our thought,
capable of being used by no one besides, but by
ourselves only.
It is apparent, then, why John chooses
this title to designate Christ in His pre-existent
life. No other title brings out so clearly the
identification of Christ with God, and the function
of Christ to reveal God. It was a term which
made the transition easy from Jewish Monotheism to
Christian Trinitarianism. Being already used by
the strictest Monotheists to denote a spiritual intermediary
between God and the world, it is chosen by John as
the appropriate title of Him through whom all revelation
of God in the past has been mediated, and who has at
length finished revelation in the person of Jesus Christ.
The term itself does not explicitly affirm personality;
but what it helps us to understand is, that this same
Being, the Word, who manifested and uttered God in
creation, reveals Him now in humanity. John wishes
to bring the incarnation and the new spiritual world
it produced into line with the creation and God’s
original purpose therein. He wishes to show us
that this greatest manifestation of God is not an abrupt
departure from previous methods, but is the culminating
expression of methods and principles which have ever
governed the activity of God. Jesus Christ, who
reveals the Father now in human nature, is the same
Agent as has ever been expressing and giving effect
to the Father’s will in the creation and government
of all things. The same Word who now utters God
in and through human nature, has ever been uttering
Him in all His works.
All that God has done is to be found
in the universe, partly visible and partly known to
us. There God may be found, because there He has
uttered Himself. But science tells us that in
this universe there has been a gradual development
from lower to higher, from imperfect towards perfect
worlds; and it tells us that man is the last result
of this process. In man the creature at last
becomes intelligent, self-conscious, endowed with
will, capable to some extent of meeting and understanding
its Creator. Man is the last and fullest expression
of God’s thought, for in man and man’s
history God finds room for the utterance not merely
of His wisdom and power, but of what is most profoundly
spiritual and moral in His nature. In man God
finds a creature who can sympathise with His purposes,
who can respond to His love, who can give exercise
to the whole fulness of God.
But in saying that “the Word
become flesh” John says much more than that
God through the Word created man, and found thus a
more perfect means of revealing Himself. The
Word created the visible world, but He did not become
the visible world. The Word created all men, but
He did not become the human race, but one Man, Christ
Jesus. No doubt it is true that all men in their
measure reveal God, and it is conceivable that some
individual should fully illustrate all that God meant
to reveal by human nature. It is conceivable
that God should so sway a man’s will and purify
his character that the human will should be from first
to last in perfect harmony with the Divine, and that
the human character should exhibit the character of
God. An ideal man might have been created, God’s
ideal of man might have been realized, and still we
should have had no incarnation. For a perfect
man is not all we have in Christ. A perfect man
is one thing, the Word Incarnate is another. In
the one the personality, the “I” that
uses the human nature, is human; in the other, the
personality, the “I,” is Divine.
By becoming flesh the Word submitted
to certain limitations, perhaps impossible for us
to define. While in the flesh He could reveal
only what human nature was competent to reveal.
But as the human nature had been created in the likeness
of the Divine, and as, therefore, “good”
and “evil” meant the same to man as to
God, the limitation would not be felt in the region
of character.
The process of the Incarnation John
describes very simply: “The Word became
flesh, and dwelt among us.” The Word did
not become flesh in the sense that He was turned into
flesh, ceasing to be what He had previously been,
as a boy who becomes a man ceases to be a boy.
In addition to what He already was He assumed human
nature, at once enlarging His experience and limiting
His present manifestations of Divinity to what was
congruous to human nature and earthly circumstance.
The Jews were familiar with the idea of God “dwelling”
with His people. At the birth of their nation,
while they were still dwelling in tents outside the
land of promise, God had His tent among the shifting
tents of the people, sharing all the vicissitudes
of their wandering life, abiding with them even in
their thirty-eight years’ exclusion from their
land, and thus sharing even their punishment.
By the word John here uses he links the body of Christ
to the ancient dwelling of God round which the tents
of Israel had clustered. God now dwelt among men
in the humanity of Jesus Christ. The tabernacle
was human, the indwelling Person was Divine.
In Christ is realized the actual presence of God among
His people, the actual entrance into and personal participation
in human history, which was hinted at in the tabernacle
and the temple.
In the Incarnation, then, we have
God’s response to man’s craving to find,
to see, to know Him. Men, indeed, commonly look
past Christ and away from Him, as if in Him God could
not be satisfactorily seen; they discontentedly long
for some other revelation of the unseen Spirit.
But surely this is to mistake. To suppose that
God might make Himself more obvious, more distinctly
apparent to us, than He has done, is to mistake what
God is and how we can know Him. What are the highest
attributes of Divinity, the most Divine characteristics
of God? Are they great power, vast size, dazzling
physical glory that overpowers the sense; or are they
infinite goodness, holiness that cannot be tempted,
love that accommodates itself to all the needs of
all creatures? Surely the latter, the spiritual
and moral qualities, are the more Divine. The
resistless might of natural forces shows us little
of God till we have elsewhere learned to know Him;
the power that upholds the planets in their orbits
speaks but of physical force, and tells us nothing
of any holy, loving Being. There is no moral
quality, no character, impressed upon these works
of God, mighty though they be. Nothing but an
impersonal power meets us in them; a power which may
awe and crush us, but which we cannot adore, worship,
and love. In a word, God cannot reveal Himself
to us by any overwhelming display of His nearness or
His power. Though the whole universe fell in
ruins around us, or though we saw a new world spring
into being before our eyes, we might still suppose
that the power by which this was effected was impersonal,
and could hold no fellowship with us.
Only, then, through what is personal,
only through what is like ourselves, only through
what is moral, can God reveal Himself to us. Not
by marvellous displays of power that suddenly awe us,
but by goodness that the human conscience can apprehend
and gradually admire, does God reveal Himself to us.
If we doubt God’s existence, if we doubt whether
there is a Spirit of goodness upholding all things,
wielding all things, and triumphant in all things,
let us look to Christ. It is in Him we distinctly
see upon our own earth, and in circumstances we can
examine and understand, goodness; goodness
tried by every test conceivable, goodness carried
to its highest pitch, goodness triumphant. This
goodness, though in human forms and circumstances,
is yet the goodness of One who comes among men from
a higher sphere, teaching, forgiving, commanding,
assuring, saving, as One sent to deal with men rather
than springing from them. If this is not God,
what is God? What higher conception of God has
any one ever had? What worthy conception of God
is there that is not satisfied here? What do
we need in God, or suppose to be in God, which we
have not in Christ?
If, then, we still feel as if we had
not sufficient assurance of God, it is because we
look for the wrong thing, or seek where we can never
find. Let us understand that God can best be
known as God through His moral qualities, through
His love, His tenderness, His regard for right; and
we shall perceive that the most suitable revelation
is one in which these qualities are manifested.
But to apprehend these qualities as they appear in
actual history we must have some sense for and love
of them. They that are pure in heart, they shall
see God; they who love righteousness, who seek with
lowliness for purity and goodness, they will find
in Christ a God they can see and trust.
The lessons of the Incarnation are
obvious. First, from it we are to take our idea
of God. Sometimes we feel as if in attributing
to God all good we were dealing merely with fancies
of our own which could not be justified by fact.
In the Incarnation we see what God has actually done.
Here we have, not a fancy, not a hope, not a vague
expectation, not a promise, but accomplished fact,
as solid and unchangeable as our own past life.
This God whom we have often shunned, and felt to be
in our way and an obstacle, whom we have suspected
of tyranny and thought little of injuring and disobeying,
has through compassion and sympathy with us broken
through all impossibilities, and contrived to take
the sinner’s place. He, the ever blessed
God, accountable for no evil and sole cause of all
good, accepted the whole of our condition, lived as
a creature, Himself bare our sicknesses, all that
is hardest in life, all that is bitterest and loneliest
in death, in His own experience combining all the
agonies of sinning and suffering men, and all the
ineffable sorrows wherewith God looks upon sin and
suffering. All this He did, not for the sake
of showing us how much better a thing the Divine nature
is than the human, but because His nature impelled
Him to do it; because He could not bear to be solitary
in His blessedness, to know in Himself the joy of
holiness and love while His creatures were missing
this joy and making themselves incapable of all good.
Our first thought of God, then, must
ever be that which the Incarnation suggests:
that the God with whom alone and in all things we have
to do is not One who is alienated from us, or who
has no sympathy with us, or who is absorbed in interests
very different from ours, and to which we must be
sacrificed; but that He is One who sacrifices Himself
for us, who makes all things but justice and right
bend to serve us, who forgives our misapprehensions,
our coldness, our unspeakable folly, and makes common
cause with us in all that concerns our welfare.
As while on earth He endured the contradiction of
sinners, and waited till they came to a better mind,
so does He still, with Divine patience, wait till we
recognise Him as our Friend, and humbly own Him as
our God. He waits till we learn that to be God
is not to be a mighty King enthroned above all the
assaults of His creatures, but that to be God is to
have more love than all besides; to be able to make
greater sacrifices for the good of all; to have an
infinite capacity to humble Himself, to put Himself
out of sight, and to consider our good. This is
the God we have in Christ; our Judge becoming our
atoning Victim, our God becoming our Father, the Infinite
One coming with all His helpfulness into the most
intimate relations with us; is this not a God to whom
we can trust ourselves, and whom we can love and serve?
If this is the real nature of God, if we may always
expect such faithfulness and help from God, if to
be God be to be all this, as full of love in the future
as He has shown Himself in the past, then may not
existence yet be that perfect joy our instincts crave,
and towards which we are slowly and doubtfully finding
our way through all the darkness, and strains, and
shocks that are needed to sift what is spiritual in
us from what is unworthy?
The second lesson the Incarnation
teaches regards our own duty. Everywhere among
the first disciples was this lesson learned and inculcated.
“Let this mind,” says Paul, “be in
you which was also in Christ Jesus.” “Christ
suffered for us,” says Peter, “leaving
us an example.” “If God so loved
us, we ought also to love one another” is the
very spirit of John. Look steadily at the Incarnation,
at the love which made Christ take our place and identify
Himself with us; consider the new breath of life that
this one act has breathed into human life, ennobling
the world and showing us how deep and lovely are the
possibilities that lie in human nature; and new thoughts
of your own conduct will lay hold of your mind.
Come to this great central fire, and your cold, hard
nature will be melted; try in some sort to weigh this
Divine love and accept it as your own, as that which
embraces and cares for and carries you on to all good,
and you will insensibly be imbued with its spirit.
You will feel that no loss could be so great as to
lose the possession and exercise of this love in your
own heart. Great as are the gifts it bestows,
you begin to see that the greatest of them all is
that it transforms you into its own likeness, and teaches
you yourself to love in the same sort. Understanding
our security and our joyful prospect as saved by the
care of God, and as provided for by a love of perfect
intelligence and absolute resource; humbled and softened
and melted by the free spending upon us of so Divine
and complete a grace, our heart overflows with sympathy.
We cannot receive Christ’s love without communicating
it. It imparts a glow to the heart, which must
be felt by all that comes in contact with the heart.
And as Christ’s love became
incarnate, not spending itself in any one great display,
apart from the needs of men, but manifesting itself
in all the routine and incident of a human life; never
wearying through the monotonous toil of His artisan-life,
never provoked into forgetfulness in His boyhood;
so must our love derived from Him be incarnated; not
spent in one display, but animating our whole life
in the flesh, and finding expression for itself in
all that our earthly condition brings us into contact
with. The thoughts we think and the actions we
do are mainly concerned with other people. We
are living in families, or we are related as employer
and employed, or we are thrown together by the hundred
necessities of life; in all these connections we are
to be guided by the spirit which prompted Christ to
become incarnate. Our chance of doing good in
the world depends upon this. Our review of life
at the close will be satisfactory or the reverse in
proportion as we have or have not been in fact animated
by the spirit of the Incarnation. We must learn
to bear one another’s burdens, and the Incarnation
shows us that we can do so only in so far as we identify
ourselves with others and live for them. Christ
helped us by coming down to our condition and living
our life. This is the guide to all help we can
give. If anything can reclaim the lowest class
in our population, it is by men of godly life living
among them; not living among them in comforts unattainable
by them, but living in all points as they live, save
that they live without sin. Christ had no money
to give, no knowledge of science to impart; He lived
a sympathetic and godly life, regardless of Himself.
Few can follow Him, but let us never lose sight of
His method. The poor are not the only class that
need help. It is our dependence on money as the
medium of charity that has begotten that feeling.
It is easy to give money; and so we discharge our
obligation, and feel as if we had done all. It
is not money that even the poorest have most need of;
and it is not money at all, but sympathy, which all
classes need that true sympathy which gives
us insight into their condition, and prompts us to
bear their burdens, whatever these are. There
are many men on earth who are mere hindrances to better
men; who cannot manage their own affairs or play their
own part, but are continually entangled and in difficulties.
They are a drag on society, requiring the help of more
serviceable men, and preventing such men from enjoying
the fruit of their own labour. There are, again,
men who are not of our kind, men whose tastes are
not ours. There are men who seem pursued by misfortune,
and men who by their own sin keep themselves continually
in the mire. There are, in short, various classes
of persons with whom we are day by day tempted to
have no more to do whatever; we are exasperated by
the discomfort they occasion us; the anxiety and vexation
and expenditure of time, feeling, and labour constantly
renewed so long as we are in connection with them.
Why should we be held down by unworthy people?
Why should we have the ease and joy taken out of our
life by the ceaseless demands made upon us by wicked,
careless, incapable, ungrateful people? Why must
we still be patient, still postponing our own interests
to theirs? Simply because this is the method
by which the salvation of the world is actually accomplished;
simply because we ourselves thus tax the patience
of Christ, and because we feel that the love we depend
upon and believe in as the salvation of the world
we must ourselves endeavour to show. Recognising
how Christ has humbled Himself to bear the burden of
shame and misery we have laid upon Him, we cannot refuse
to bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfil
the law of Christ.