The Full Redemption of Humanity through the Full Incarnation of Christ
Landon OrrPHIL9550 – Philosophical Theology
Dr. EvansNovember 15, 2013
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Redemption is a beautiful thing. Humanity, in the midst of sin, finds itself saved by the
loving sacrifice of their creator God. Jesus Christ came as man, in order to set man free, to
redeem them out of a state of enmity. In order to understand the fullness of redemption, one
must understand the fullness of the incarnation. To accomplish this, humanity is defined and the
need for a substitutionary sacrifice is established. Created in the image of God, an act of
disobedience caused sin to enter the world and distort human nature. Humanity no longer has a
perfect image of God and finds sin affecting every aspect of their humanity. In order to eradicate
this sin, the Son of God had to assume total humanity. The incarnate Son of God, Jesus Christ,
became a full man, displaying human rationality, emotion, spirituality, and physicality. The Son
assumed these aspects in order to see them fully redeemed. Redemption, a present and future
act, has an effect on believers now, through the Spirit, and later, through glorification. As
believers look forward to glorified redemption, they cannot forget the now, neglecting aspects of
humanity for which Christ came to die. To neglect one of these aspects is to belittle the full
incarnation of Christ. Through the incarnation, the Son of God was born as a full human being
for the purpose of the redemption of the whole man, motivating believers to not neglect any part
of their human nature, working to see its present redemption achieved.
Humanity and the Need for Incarnation
In order to discuss the Son of God’s assumption of total humanity, one needs to define
what it means to be human. Humanity, the pinnacle of God’s creation, is a created being set
apart by God to fulfill a unique role in the created world. Unlike any other creature, God
bestows humanity with his image, the imago dei, and commands them to have dominion over
and subdue his earthly creation (Gen 1:26, 28). While some think of the imago dei in many
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different ways, the imago dei is not limited to a human mind, soul, or human relations, but
encompasses every aspect of humanity, including their physical existence.
Theologians have developed three views to aid in understanding ways to understand the
imago dei. These views are the substantive view, the relational view, and the functional view.1
Proponents of the substantive view isolate a particular part of humanity, like the ability to reason
or the ability to be spiritual, and define the imago dei by these abilities. The abilities isolated are
unique to humanity, and it is reasonable to conclude that any aspect of human nature that does
not apply to other creatures is a result of the imago dei. The functional view defines the imago
dei as the task of ruling over creation. Humanity’s assignment to have dominion over creation is
a task that God gave to no other creature. Humanity represents God on earth. Just as a king
places a statue of himself in a distant town he rules over to remind his subjects of his authority,
God places his image in his world to remind creation of his authority. Humanity is this image of
God on earth. The third view, the relational view, ties the imago dei to an association between
gender and the trinity. Male and female, God created humans to have interpersonal, intergender
relationships with each other, just as the Godhead has interpersonal relationships between the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. While gender is not specific to humanity, the capability for
intimacy within those interpersonal relationships is uniquely possible only for the Godhead and
humanity, allowing for perceived and not real instances of intimacy within the animal kingdom.
Of these three views, there is not one that is absolute. Instead, the imago dei is an
interweaving of these three views together. As God’s image bearers, humanity is made in God’s
likeness (Gen 1:26). Similar to how a parent passes their likeness to their children, God’s passes
his characteristics down and imbeds them in humanity. Is God reasonable, moral, and spiritual?
1 Wayne Grudem, Systemmatic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrin,. ( Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 1994), 443
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Yes. Humanity then would also be reasonable, moral, and spiritual. Is God relational among
himself? When taking into account the trinity, yes, and therefore, humanity too would be
relational among itself. Does God have authority over creation? Yes. Created in his likeness,
God’s image bearers would also display some aspect of authority over creation.
The interweaving of these views together produces an image that God places within the
entire human being. Even a human’s physical body is part of the imago dei. While God Himself
does not have a physical body, there are characteristics of God that humanity can only represent
through their body. Just as God can see, hear, and speak, the human body allows a person to see,
hear, and speak. The physical human brain enables human intellect. Humanity’s worship and
praise of God primarily takes place through movement of the human body.2 God created the
body to be the vehicle through which His image would exist on earth.
To take away the body, is to take away humanity. While living, humans cannot exist
without a physical, fleshly body. Additionally, God never intended for humanity to exist absent
from the body. Humans have a physical body now, and after final resurrection, they will have a
physical body for eternity. A result of sin, only death temporarily removes the human body.
Waiting for God to reunite them with their body, the dead long for their resurrection, knowing
that they are not fully human without their bodies. In relation to the incarnation, it is important
to understand that the Son of God did not assume humanity only to redeem the non-physical, but
to redeem the physical parts of humanity as well.
Why the incarnation? Why did the Son of God have to subject himself and become
human? The Son became incarnate man to counter the result of Adam’s disobedience in the
Garden of Eden. The incarnation was necessary in order to eliminate the sin that unnaturally
entered the world after the Fall. Was a total incarnation necessary? Could not the Son of God
2 Grudem, 449.
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have come as part human in order to redeem only the parts of humanity in need of redemption or
are worthwhile of redemption? To answer this question, one must understand the breadth of the
effect of sin. When sin entered creation, an entirely good world was deeply deformed and
distorted. Sin deeply deformed and distorted, but did not destroy, an entirely good humanity.
After the introduction of sin into the world, God found his image bearers in a state of depravity;
a state of depravity that had an effect on every part of their being from which they desperately
needed to be rescued.
John Calvin defines depravity as a “hereditary, sinful corruption of human nature that
encompasses all aspects of the person.”3 According to this definition, all of humanity finds itself
under the influence of sin. Though not lost, sin touches the imago dei in such a way that it
distorts all aspects of humanity. The aspects commonly attributed to the image of God - reason,
morality, spirituality, relationships, authority, and the body - are deeply influenced by sin. There
is no aspect of humanity with which sin does not interfere. Unlike what various gnostic or
ascetic heresies teach, sinful, human nature is not isolated in certain parts of the human, like the
body, leaving other aspects of humanity, like the mind or the soul, unblemished. When Paul
writes about waging war with the flesh (Rom 7:15), one cannot interpret it as if Christ saved
Paul’s pure soul only to leave him longing for the day when he would be able to throw out his
sinful body entirely. There is not an inch of humanity that sin does not influence, leaving
humans to wage continual war against the sinful nature of their mind, spirit, and body.
This total depravity does not mean that it is impossible for a human to make right
decisions or be partially good while they live on earth, even apart from new life in Christ. God
has bestowed on the earth a common grace that enables fallen man with the ability to make right
3 John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, ( Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 1997), 2.1.8.
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choices and perform right actions. Though blinded by their sin, there still exists within man
natural gifts from God that allow them to catch glimmers of truth.4 Through common grace, a
human can be morally good, can think correctly, can have good relationships, and can honor
their body, but this common grace will not remove the imprint of sin entirely from their life.
Common grace allows the temporary conquest of sin, but does not allow its total eradication
from human existence. In order to eradicate sin, humanity needs a special, salvific grace.
Total depravity requires the full incarnation of the Son of God to provide the salvific
grace that the world needs to see sin finally and completely conquered. This salvific grace
requires that the Son of God be incarnate as a total human being. Hebrews 2:17 says that Jesus
“had to be made like his brothers in every respect, so that he might become a merciful and
faithful high priest in the service of God, to make propitiation for the sins of the people.”
Because sin affects every part of a human being, the Son of God had to take on every part as
well. The purpose of the incarnation was to set humanity free from sin in all of the many ways
that it effected creation. Humanity needed the incarnation to restore humanity back to the proper
image of God. It is only through the incarnation that death brought on by sin is reversed and life
restored.
After the fall, man did not lose the imago dei, but rather now possesses an unnatural
image. Man, recipient of the imago dei, found sin distorting that image. In order for the
restoration of this image, the Son of God came in man’s sinful image. This does not mean that
Christ had to come as a sinner in order to redeem sinful man, but rather that Christ had to come
in the form of sinful man in order to save that man from himself. By living an obedient life in
4 Herman Bavinck, Calvin and Common Grace, Kindle Electronic Edition, Loc 244 of 395.
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the image of sinful man, Christ was able to restore man’s image back into the creational image of
God.
It is only after Christ lived as the creational image of God that he was able to act as the
substitute and mediator for humanity. As God coming in man’s image, the Son was able to
bridge the gap between God and man. This reconnects a relational bridge between humanity and
its creator, allowing mankind to have a right relationship with God. With this mediation in
place, the Son could then act as a substitute sacrifice for mankind and willingly offer himself to
pay the penalty for humanity’s sins. This substitute would only have worked if Christ was
incarnate as fully man and fully God.
The Nature of the Incarnation
The Great Commandment found in Matthew 22:37 is the central command of Christ’s
earthly ministry. Christ instructs that the commandment of the most importance is to love the
Lord God with all one’s heart, soul, and mind. In this instruction, Jesus refers to Deuteronomy
6:5 in which Moses commands God’s people to love the Lord with all one’s heart, soul, and
strength. Placed together, these four areas of love have important significance for humanity. In
essence, these areas cover over all aspects of humanity. The heart represents an emotional or
relational aspect of humanity, the soul represents a spiritual aspect, the mind represents a rational
aspect, and strength represents a physical aspect. If humanity were able to fulfill this one
commandment, and fulfill it completely, they would defeat sin. Jesus Christ, in order to atone
for humanity’s sin, as mentioned earlier, was required to take up every aspect of humanity
revealed in the Great Commandment. Scripture shows evidence of the fullness of the incarnation
by witnessing to how Jesus fulfilled this requirement. The assumption of reason, emotion, and
spirituality has rarely been attested within the history of Christianity. However, the physical
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body is an aspect of humanity that many have tried to deny the Son represented in the
incarnation.
The first aspect of humanity that Christ assumed was the human mind. Luke chapter 2
provides the most evidence for this assumption. Luke 2:40 says, “The boy grew up and became
strong, filled with wisdom, and God’s grace was on Him.” As Jesus Christ grew, his mental
capacities developed and he became wise. Verse 52 of the same chapter says that Jesus
“increased in wisdom and stature.” Again, these verses suggest that Christ’s physical growth
accompanied his growing wisdom.
Placed between these verses in Luke is the account of Mary and Joseph losing Jesus in
Jerusalem and finding him three days later conversing with the teachers in the temple. These
teachers, Luke tells his readers, “were astonished at His understanding and His answers” (Luke
2:47). Jesus’s human mental capacities were present and well used. While yes, his awareness
that he was God might have enhanced his understanding, this may not have been the primary
point that Luke wanted his readers to see. The wisdom with which Jesus astonished the teachers
was, as mentioned earlier, a wisdom directly correlated with the growing of his own physical
stature. Christ’s divine wisdom would already have been complete and unable to grow any
further. It must be the wisdom of Christ’s human nature that is being developed.5 It stands to
reason that Christ grew in wisdom the same way any other human would grow in wisdom: aided
by the indwelling and illumination of the Holy Spirit, Christ poured over scripture by reading
and studying. If Christ was not born with an automatic understanding of scripture, which a
growing wisdom suggests, then he diligently used his human mental capacities to their fullest
5 Bruce Ware, The Man Christ Jesus: Theological Reflections of the Humanity of Christ, (Wheaton, Illinois, 2013), loc 706 of 2407.
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capabilities, as is evidenced by his overwhelming understanding and knowledge of scripture
throughout the gospels.
Not only did Christ take on the human mind, but he took on human emotion as well.
Again, as the gospels are surveyed there are a many instances where the gospel writers give
account of raw human emotions portrayed in the person of Christ. While God himself does have
some of these same emotions that Christ displays, the emotions displayed by Christ in scripture
are not to be attributed to his deity, but rather to his humanity. Combined with the indwelling of
the Holy Spirit, his human mind allowed him to have perfect rational emotions. He was able to
emote without sin not because he was God, but because his human mind had a perfect
understanding of God and sin.
One of the most common human emotions displayed by Christ in the gospels is love.
Christ’s emotion of love is the foundational emotion from which all of his other emotions
extend.6 His compassion, anger, mercy, and desires are built upon his love. When Christ is
moved to feed the hungry crowds, he is compassionately moved by his love for those people who
he saw to be lost and helpless (Mark 6:34). When Christ saw the devastating effect of sin on the
people, he felt pity for them because he loved them. When Christ watched Lazarus’s family
grieve over his death, Christ’s love moved him and he wept on their behalf, even though he was
fully aware of Lazarus’s pending resurrection (John 11:35).
Anger is another human emotion attributed to Jesus in the gospels. Anger, which is most
often sinful for fallen humans, was righteous for Christ because it was not fuel by selfish desires
such as lust, jealousy, or pride, but was ignited by Christ’s love for God and for others. In Mark
3:5, Christ becomes angry with the scribes and Pharisees when they, hardened by their religious
6 B.B Warfield, The Emotional Life of Our Lord, Kindle Electronic Edition, loc 80 of 517.
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beliefs, do not show a disabled man compassion on the Sabbath, but rather use the man in an
attempt to test Jesus’s loyalty to their legalistic system. Christ’s anger rose against these
Pharisees, whose hardened hearts prevented them from showing simple compassion to a man
who needed it.
Jesus’s cleansing of the temple is an example of anger provoked by his love for God.
Seeing the moneychanger’s greedy enterprise showing disrespect for his Father’s holy house,
Jesus lashed out in anger. John’s gospel informs the reader that in this moment Jesus’s disciples
remembered that scripture clearly spoke of the zeal for the Father’s house consuming the
Messiah (John 2:17; Ps 69:9), and they could only reflect on this as they saw their leader taking a
whip and driving out man and beast. Any other man acting in Christ’s stead would have sinned
in this type of anger, but because Christ’s love for God motivated his actions, they were both
justified and proper.
Christ also felt sorrow throughout his life. One such instance takes place in the garden of
Gethsemane as Jesus prays out to God while he waits for the time of his arrest. In Matthew’s
Gospel, Jesus takes three of his disciples aside and confides in them that he is “swallowed up in
sorrow” (Matt 26:38). Overcome with emotion concerning the events that he knew were to
come, he rightly experienced the human emotion of sorrow, just as his disciples would have if
they too understood the events that were about to unfold. In his sorrow, his human body sweated
drops of blood (Luke 22:44), a real, physical response to real human emotion. Jesus’ ability to
feel and express human emotion is only the second aspect of humanity that Christ takes on.
The third aspect of humanity that Christ takes on is the human soul. When Christ became
man, his deity did not take the place of the soul that embodied his flesh but instead assumed a
human soul. Though he was God, he had a uniquely human spirituality that allowed him to have
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communion with his father. The gospel accounts of Christ’s prayer life give evidence for his
human spirituality.
Within the trinity, prayer would not have been needed for communication between the
Father and the Son. With perfectly synced wills7, the Son would not need to spend time
communicating with the Father in petition or supplication; the Son would automatically know
the Father and the Father would automatically know the Son. This is not the case with humanity.
Prayer is a specific action used to bring to God all of humanities requests, and is a tool given to
humanity in order to fulfill the spiritual desires of their being. As a man, Christ approached his
Father in prayer so that he might understand his Father’s will. A life of prayer led Christ to
understand God’s will for His life, and his final prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane is a prayer
of petition, asking God to aid his human will in one last difficult act of obedience.8 It was
Christ’s human spirituality, total faith and trust in the father, coupled with a right understanding
and right emotional response, that allowed him to become obedient even to death on the cross
(Phil 2:8).
The final aspect of humanity that Christ takes on differs from the first three in that it is
not an attribute of God Reason, emotion, and spirituality are aspects of humanity attributed to
the imago dei. They are aspects of humanity precisely because they were first aspects of God.
God is ultimately reasonable, God is ultimately emotional, and God is ultimately spiritual. To
think of the divine Son of God becoming a man with these attributes is not difficult, nor does it
pose any foreseeable threat to Christ’s divinity. It is only when looking at the fourth aspect of
humanity, its physical body, that a problem poses itself. Physicality is not an attribute of God.
7 Thomas F Torrance, The Christian Doctrine of God: One Being, Three Persons, (New York, NY: T&T Clark, 1996), 175.8
Grudem, 534.
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God is spirit (John 4:24). To make any sort of physical representation of God is idolatry, and
strictly forbidden in many places in Scripture (Exodus 20:5-8).
To make matters more complicated, the human body has not been portrayed in the best of
light throughout history. In many minds, the human body and its functions have been thought of
as inherently sinful. This was the view of several early church fathers including Augustine and
Tertullian,9 as well as other Christian groups including the Anabaptists. The view that the human
body is bad opens the door to many heresies that downplay or cast aside the necessity of a
physical nature of Christ10. Gnosticism, Docetism, and Asceticism, are just a few examples of
these. Ironically enough, it is these same early church fathers who provided the best defenses
against these heresies in support of the physical nature of Jesus Christ. Their arguments against
these heresies show the importance of embracing the physical nature of the Son of God’s
incarnation. In addition to these arguments, if we approach scripture looking for evidence of the
physical nature of Christ we are overwhelmed with evidence.
In two of the gospels, there are accounts of Jesus’s physical birth. (Matt 1:18-25, Luke
2:1-7) If Christ was not physically human, then he could have found an alternative way to come
into the world other than through the womb of a woman. When Satan tempted Christ in the
wilderness, Satan appealed to Christ’s hunger, a very physical response, as an incentive to sin
(Luke 4:1-4). In addition to being hungry in the wilderness, Jesus became thirsty on the Cross
(John 19:28-23). If Jesus were not physically human, he would not experience hunger and thirst,
because he would not need food and water to survive. While on the cross, soldiers pierced
Christ’s side and his physical body bled (John 19:34). If Christ was not physically human, he
9 Herman Bavinck, In the Beginning: Foundations of Creation Theology, John Bolt, editor, John Vriend, Translator, (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books, 1999).
10 Thomas F. Torrance, Incarnation: The Person and Life of Christ, Robert T. Walker, Editor, (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2008), 199.
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would not bleed. As Christ hung on the cross, he breathed his last breath and died. If Christ was
not physically human, he would not be able to experience human death.
There is also evidence that his resurrected body, though different than before, is still
physical in nature. Yes, the gospels suggest that there was something different about his
resurrected body (Luke 24:27), but any strangeness perceived by the disciples could be because
they had never before seen an uncorrupted, incorruptible body.11 The problem then rests not in
the fact that Jesus Christ was a man, for Scripture overwhelmingly proves this, but that the Son
of God, Christ’s deity, also became man. It is the assumption of human flesh that causes the
most problems in the thought of believers.
Human rationality, emotion, and spirituality can be imagined in a state absent from sin by
dwelling on the rationality, emotion, and spirituality of God. Human physicality, prior to Jesus
Christ, could only be conceived in the form of sinful human nature. After the Fall, no physical
being in God’s earthly creation can exist without sin. The inexistence of a human body without
sin allows humans to associate sin with the physical being. This leads to the thought that the
body is essentially sinful. If the body is essentially sinful, the incarnation of the Son of God into
such a body becomes complicated.
There are several approaches to solving this problem. The first approach is to separate
the humanity and deity of Christ, as was the solution of the heresies previously referenced.
Certainly, adopting heresy is not the best approach to solving theological issues. A second
approach would be to suggest that somehow the Son came in the form of a pre-existent, neutral
human body. This approach is taken up by the Anabaptists, who, in order to save their savior
from the assumption of fallen humanity, say that Jesus Christ did not take his human flesh from
11 N.T. Wright, Surprised by Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church, (New York, NY: Harper Collins Publishers, 2008), 160.
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his mother Mary, but instead brought into the womb his own perfected humanity.12 Did Christ
then live a life without sickness or disease? Was he not subject to any of the other conditions of
humanity caused by sin’s effect on nature?
A third approach, and one that needs more attention, is that in the incarnation the Son of
God did indeed adopt fallen humanity. He came as one of the condemned to defeat his own
condemnation and offer to pay the penalty for the condemnation of others. This is the view of
several recent theologians including Karl Barth, Wolfhart Pannenberg, and Thomas Torrance. It
is Torrance’s explanation of this idea that will be interacted with more fully.
According to Torrance, the Son of Man did not come in some sort of neutral human flesh,
but instead came in the same human flesh that held the rest of humanity captive, in a state of
enmity with God. 13 Quoting Gregory Nazianzen, Torrance states that “the unassumed is the
unredeemed.” If Christ had not assumed fallen humanity then fallen humanity could not be
redeemed.14 For Christ to redeem man, Chris had to be incarnate just as man truly exists. While
humanity is ontologically good, the man God created is not a “real” man as the world knows him
today. A “real” man exists in sin. Without the assumption of a fallen, sinful humanity, it would
be incorrect to say that Christ took on “real” human flesh.
There is a problem with this understanding of the incarnation. If Christ came as a one
man substitute for all of humanity, he would have to be superior to all other human beings.
Taking into account the eye for eye logic of the Old Testament, one man’s substitutionary
sacrifice would only be enough to pay for one other man, not an entire race. In addition, if Jesus
12 Herman Bavinck, Our Reasonable Faith, (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1956), 325.
13 Torrance, Incarnation, 61.14
Torrance, Incarnation, 62.
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came as a fallen man, then his death would not be a substitutionary sacrifice at all, but would
instead be the just killing of a man condemned to death. The willing death of an enemy for
another enemy does not provide the loving sacrifice redemption needed. Redemption needed the
willing death of a loved one for his enemies.
Torrance provides an answer for this problem by stating that in the assumption of fallen
flesh the Word of God “sanctified and hallowed it.”15 Jesus Christ’s human flesh, while fallen,
was redeemed in the process of the Word of God assuming it. This redemption allowed Christ to
complete what was impossible to every other human being. Only with redeemed flesh was
Christ was able to live a perfect, sinless life. It is with this in mind that the Apostle Paul could
truly say, “God made him who had no sin to be sin for us” (2 Cor 5:21).
The three approaches discussed above are solutions to the problem of Christ taking on
essentially sinful human flesh. But what if human flesh was not in and of itself essentially
sinful? What if the human body and its functions were essentially good, only marred by a
hereditary, sinful condition? Following Calvin’s definition of depravity, hereditary corruption,
that is exactly what sin is. If Christ was born without depravity, then Christ could still humble
himself in order to take on human flesh that is effected by sin, but not take on a sin nature
himself. Like every human being, Christ could still be subject to disease, death, sinful people,
and temptation, but he would lack the hereditary depravity that made it impossible for him to live
a sinless life in the midst of it. Without depravity, Christ could live the exact same life lived by
man but not fall victim to sin. While depravity prevents other humans from perfection, for Jesus
Christ, the absence of depravity makes perfection attainable.
This would mean that Jesus Christ would have to be born without original sin. This is
precisely why the Holy Spirit, apart from male participation, conceived Jesus Christ in Mary.
15 Torrance, Incarnation, 63.
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Original sin is the hereditary disease that leads to human depravity. Just as Adam was
responsible for the first sin, man passes down original sin to his offspring. Jesus Christ was born
without a fallen male father, and therefore, he did not inherit a depraved nature. It is his lack of
depravity that makes total redemption possible.
The Total Redemption of Humanity
Did the Son of God become incarnate for the sole purpose of redeeming humanity? No.
Through the incarnation, the whole of creation is redeemed in Christ. This is known as cosmic
redemption.16 When Christ became part of God’s creation, he provided the redemption that
creation longed for as it groaned with moans too deep for words (Rom 8:22). Often, this idea of
cosmic redemption is lost among an individualistic society that puts an inappropriate stress on
Christ dying to save the individual. According to Leslie Newbiggen, Christians “privatize this
mighty work of grace and talk as if the whole cosmic drama of salvation culminates in the words
‘For me; for me.’”17 When the redemptive work of Christ is reduced from cosmic redemption to
individual redemption, then it is not difficult to reduce it further, removing certain aspects of
humanity from redemption as well. If redemption is viewed properly as cosmic, then it becomes
necessary for the whole of man to be redeemed, including his mind, emotions, spirituality, and
body.
Upon the death and resurrection of Christ, humanity was redeemed, this redemption will
lead to an ultimate restoration of the entire human person. With the penalty of sin paid for, the
human mind, soul, heart, and body, can long for a day when it will no longer be bound by sin.
Redemption is a two-fold act. When the Spirit works and a person places their faith in Christ,
16 Thomas F. Torrance, Atonement: The Person and Work of Christ, Robert T. Walker, Editor, (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2009), 169.
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Michael W. Goheen and Craig G. Bartholomew, Living at the Crossroads: An Iintroduction to Christian Worldview, (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2008), 56.
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they immediately experience redemption. The Spirit allows them to understand and reason more
correctly about God. Emotions that are attributed to sinful natures are replaced by emotions that
can only be attributed to Christ working in the believer. Christians have a mediator who aids
them in their pursuit of God and they are able to worship the true God rather than man made
idols. Christians begin a process of sanctification that leads to the defeat of sinful passions,
which formerly controlled their bodies.
In addition to this immediate redemption, Christians also look forward to an ultimate
redemption, when their humanity is freed from sin entirely. The human mind is free to pursue
God without hindrance, and is able to spend eternity doing so. Human emotions are freed from
the sinful selfishness that causes incorrect emotional responses, and instead are able to emote as
God intended for them to emote. The human soul is joined with God, worshipping Him without
abandon. The human body still exists physically, but without any of the ill effects of sin. The
incarnation of Christ serves to provide both an immediate and future redemption of God’s
children, and this incarnation covers all aspects of human existence.
This sense of immediate and ultimate redemption is known as the “already-not yet”
Kingdom of God. Christians today live in a gap between the New Kingdom’s inauguration and
its final consummation.18 Humans are made new in Christ, but they are still sinners. They are
both sanctified, and in the process of being sanctified (1 Cor 1:2). Through Christ’s death and
resurrection, the total incarnation of Christ proves to have significance on the human being in
both the “already” and the “not yet”
The Holy Spirit plays an important role in the process of “already” redemption. Though
redemption is made actual through the incarnation of Christ, without the Holy Spirit, humanity
would not find itself partaking in the restorative nature of redemption until final glorification. It
18 Goheen, 59
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will be seen that in all aspects of humanity, the Spirit plays a necessary role in restoring the
“already” individual. It is because of this total indwelling of the Spirit in total humanity that
Christians are able to experience a total redemption of their self while still awaiting a final,
complete redemption.
Before redemption, the mind is totally devastated by sin. It is only through the Spirit’s
work that a believer is able to know God well, and to understand the things of God correctly.19
While general revelation, paired with common grace, makes it possible to know of God before
redemption, it is redemption that allows the believer to understand special revelation, and to
know of the saving work of God in Christ. This allows the believer to approach Scripture with
the belief that they can walk away with a correct understanding and interpretation. However,
until sin is purged from the human mind there will still be the ability to err in one’s
understanding and interpretation. Though the Spirit guides the believer, a full, absolutely correct
understanding of God will not happen until after glorification and redemption are fulfilled.
In the act of glorification, sin will be purged from the mind of God’s children and an
eternity will be spent learning about God. Humanity will use its mind properly, to find pleasure
in continually learning about the infinite creator. New Heavens and New Earth will reveal things
about God that were previously unknown, and the human mind will be able to process all of it
without any fault. The Psalmist will rejoice in his request being fulfilled. He will dwell in the
house of the Lord all of his life, gazing upon the beauty of God, and he will inquire in His temple
(Psalm 27:4). Humanity will find true, pure joy in this endeavor because in addition to the
redemption of their human mind, their human emotions are fully redeemed as well.
Prior to redemption, human emotions are held captive by a selfish sinfulness which drives
the human being to such emotions as lust, hate, strife, jealousy, unrighteous anger, selfish
19 Torrance, Atonement
18
ambition, dissension, envy, and the like (Gal 5:19). Because of the incarnation, with the
indwelling of the spirit these emotions no longer rule over the human heart but are replaced by
the emotions of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, and gentleness (Gal 5:23-24).
The believer is not totally freed from moments of sinful, emotional breakdowns, but they are
encouraged by the Holy Spirit through the process of sanctification to see these wrong emotions
replaced by those emotions that are right. Through Christ, humanity can strive to love God, and
love their neighbor, unselfishly.
Yet again, a Christian can look forward to a greater emotional hope. Glorification will
replace the sanctification process and redemption will restore human emotions to its pure state.
Humans will know of a pure love, pure joy, and pure peace that they can only know through the
total eradication of sin from their humanity. They certainly will feel, but their feelings will be
based on the true image of God in which they were created. They will feel just as God feels, and
will understand His emotional response to Himself and will share in his pure joy. Finally able to
approach God, humanity will find its longings to know perfect love, peace, and joy fulfilled.20
With a redeemed mind and a redeemed heart, Christians also find their soul redeemed
and they are given the capacity to spiritually pursue after God. Just as the Spirit allows the
believer to begin to know God correctly, the Spirit also allows the believer to begin to love God
correctly. It is through Christ’s incarnation that final mediation is made. The veil was torn and
humanity allowed to freely approach God through Jesus Christ (Matt 27:51). For believers,
Christ’s death brought with it positional righteousness. They are justified, taking Christ’s
righteousness on themselves as their very own. While believers still struggle with sin, they are
no longer dead to their sin, but are instead alive in Christ, a new creation (Col 3:10).
20 Grudem, 1164.
19
With the consummation of the Kingdom of God these Christian will be glorified. They
will be made ultimately right with God, so that they are righteous in and of themselves. During
their sinful, earthly existence, God gradually transforms believers spiritually, but in their eternal
existence that spiritual transformation is complete. They no longer will need the Spirit to pray
for them as they ought (Romans 8:26). They no longer need to pray for the Father to reveal his
will to them. They will no longer need a mediator to step between them and their Creator God.
(Heb 4:14) They will finally find ultimate spiritual satisfaction by fulfilling their creational task,
having dominion over creation.21 They will live on earth as the pure image of God, and will do
so with physical bodies.
The full incarnation of the Son of God as Jesus Christ in a physical body means that
human flesh will experience redemption as well. It is through the redemption of the flesh that
Christ’s followers see true redemption and restoration. Paul’s words, “for I do not understand
my own actions,” (Rom 7:15) is the cry of every believer who lives in a fallen body. The body is
not to be considered a prison, from which escape is necessary. A Christian should rejoice in the
redemption of their bodies, seeing their whole being finally set free from sin’s grasp.
Of earthly creation, humanity alone sees sin affect their reason, emotions, and spirituality.
However, all of physical creation experiences sin’s effect. The human body experiences sin two-
fold, though the sinful nature of the human and also through sins effect on creation. Death,
disease, and deformity affect all of living creation. As creation groans under the weight of sin,
human bodies groan with it, not only to escape from the physical sins of the individual, but also
to escape from sins effect on creation (Romans 8:22-23). While final redemption of the body
will take place in the “not-yet”, in the “already” Christians are able to begin the process of seeing
their bodies made new.
21 Wright, 161.
20
Bodily redemption begins in the “already” in the same manner as the other aspects of
humanity. The Spirit of God empowers the believer to conquer their sinful cravings and desires.
The Apostle Paul, in Colossians 3:5-15, contrasts the things that are earthly, that is, the things
that are tied to our sinful bodies, and the things that are of God. Earthly, physical sins such as
sexual immorality, fits of rage, slander, obscene talk are to be put to death and in their place
Christians are to put on compassionate hearts, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience.
Living in Christ, while encouraging one another, enables the believer see their physical body
sanctified. All sorts of physical sins - promiscuity, licentiousness, addiction, drunkenness,
gluttony, and self-mutilation - are subject to being stripped away, in a redemptive process that
will continue into the final consummation.
The human body will shout for joy when creation is finally redeemed, for the human
body has the most to look forward to in the consummation of the Kingdom. There are aspects of
bodily redemption that cannot happen in the “already” but will only occur in the “not-yet.”
These transformations are to be looked forward to because it is through them that humanity will
finally understand the blessing that God gave humanity in their body. In the Kingdom, believers
will find themselves living in a physical world with a resurrected, physical body, a body that has
passed beyond death and is no longer subject to sickness, decay, and death. According to NT
Wright, “none of these destructive forces will have any power over the new body.”22 The “very
good”( Gen 1:31) physical creation will be purified and made whole again. All the physical
pleasures of this world will follow humanity into the new creation, where humanity, blessed with
a perfect human body, will work in service of the Lord in dominion over his creation, just as
Adam was originally tasked in the Garden of Eden.23
22 Wright, 160. 23
Ibid., 161
21
The “Already” Life of the Redeemed Believer
In light of this “already” redemption, one must ask the question, how should one live? Is
a Christian to live in the present, accepting their struggles as facts of life, or should a Christian
live as if they are already in the Kingdom of God, fully redeemed before the Lord? How should
a believer approach their own humanity? In light of the total incarnation of Christ and the total
redemption of humanity, the Christian needs to live their life in pursuit of a total surrender of
their humanity to the will of God. If a Christian lives as if the incarnate Son has not redeemed
every part of their humanity then they are effectively denying the redeeming sacrifice Jesus
Christ made on the Cross. The Christian must seek to love the Lord their God with all their
heart, mind, soul, and strength by submitting their intellect, emotions, spirituality, and body
before him.
Unfortunately, loving God in any of these areas easily fall under the influence of sinful
pride. There is therefore, a middle ground between total neglect and unyielding obsession that
must be navigated as the redeemed believer works towards their sanctification. Christians must
walk the line between intellectual ignorance and arrogant intellectual superiority, emotional
muteness and ecstatic release, spiritual deafness and platonic emphasis, and bodily neglect and
vain infatuation. Following Jesus’s incarnate life as an example, Christians have a model from
which to live their life in a way that loves God in every aspect of their humanity.
Christians, then, should use their minds in ways that honor the Lord. Willing, intellectual
ignorance should not be embraced by the Christian community, nor should arrogant, intellectual
superiority. Those who see no value to the use of their mind are willingly accepting ignorance,
and willingly setting aside an important part of their humanity for which Christ died. Christ was
in no way willingly ignorant. Having already discussed his assumed human reason, it was
22
shown that Christ was diligent in his study of God and the use of his mind. People were awed by
his understanding, even at a young age. However, it is important to contrast Christ’s use of
wisdom with the arrogant intellectual authority that was displayed by the Scribes and the
Pharisees. These intellectual leaders found pride and self-worth in their mental abilities and
were so offended by the thought of someone usurping them that they sought to have Christ put to
death. Christians must avoid the pharisaical self-worth that is tied to their intellect. Like Christ,
they are to use their mind diligently, but always for the glory of God. Sinful problems arise
when intellect is used to raise up oneself in lieu of raising up one’s savior.
Christians also should avoid stiff, emotional muteness. They should feel, and they should
feel continually, but they should not let their emotions control their being. When a person
becomes overcome by their emotions, they are experiencing ecstatic release. Again, Scripture is
quite clear that Christ was emotional, but all of his emotions were properly motivated by a love
for God and never overtook him in a way where he acted sinfully. Christ felt compassion, but he
did not let his compassion prevent him from telling the truth. Christ felt anger, but his anger did
not lead him to murderous fits of rage. Christ felt sorrow, but his sorrow did not lead him into
fits of depression. The Christian living in the “already” world must embrace those emotions that
come from Christ and cast off those emotions that are fueled by their sinful desires.
“Already” Christians also have a tendency to fall into spiritual deafness. Through the
redeeming justification of Christ, these Christian are not spiritually blind, but they find
themselves isolated from God, no longer listening to his spiritual leadership. They are neglecting
their spirituality, not seeking after God in the midst of a sinful world. This is not the pattern of
Jesus Christ in the Gospels. Jesus prayed often, and sought out the will of His Father often.
Christians must strive to do this as well. However, an emphasis cannot be put onto the spiritual
23
aspect of humanity so much that Christians adopt a platonic emphasis of the spirit of a person
over their physical body. Christians must constantly remind themselves that there is more to
Christian living that spiritual wellness. If their spirit was the only eternal aspect of their
humanity they could cast aside their body, but since their body will be with them forever they
must not neglect it.
Did Jesus give Christians an example of how to treat their physical body? Some would
say that a calculation of the distance Christ traveled on foot would be evidence of his physical
fitness level.24 While on the surface this might sound appealing, in a society where walking was
a primary means of transportation, this is not really an example of Christ caring for his body. If
anything, the example Christ gave in this category is not nearly as explicit in scripture as the
other categories. Christians cannot neglect their bodies nor can they become so vain that they
elevate their own bodies over all other aspects of their humanity.
Does Jesus give evidence that the human body is worth caring for? Yes. First, he came
incarnate in a physical human body with the intent of seeing the human body redeemed. Second,
two times he fed a large crowd of people when their bodies became hungry. He knew their
bodies had a physical need, and instead of ignoring that need, he provided for it. Third, he
healed many physical disabilities. During his earthly ministry, he restored sight to the blind,
hearing to the deaf, made lame men walk and various other miracles. If Christ did not value the
body, there would be no reason to perform these miracles. The evidence is that Christ loved the
human body, and Christians living in the “already” time should as well.
A Christian who is intellectually ignorant, emotionally mute, spiritually deaf, or
neglectful of their body has forsaken the redemption offered by Christ through the incarnation.
24 Jay Dennis, Jesus Habits, (Nashville, Tennessee: Broadman and Holman Publishers, 2005), 180.
24
So also is the Christian who is arrogantly intellectual, ecstatically controlled, platonic in
emphasis, and has vain infatuations. The Christian should live life, striving to keep from falling
into any of these categories. Thankfully, between the Holy Spirit and the Christian community a
believer has all the resources they need to navigate these sometimes murky waters.
Conclusion
God made humanity, the pinnacle of his creation, in his image and likeness. When
humanity fell in disobedience, sin deformed this image through and through. The only resolution
was for God to send a mediator, someone like humanity but superior to humanity, to pay the
penalty for sin. The Son of God, incarnate as Jesus Christ, provided this needed mediation. He
came as a full human, taking on humanity’s mind, heart, soul, and body. By assuming all of
these human forms, Christ brings redemption to every part of the human being. A two-fold
redemption, humanity sees its nature partially restored in the present and looks forward to the
full restoration of the future. Motivated by this sacrifice, Christians look forward to the coming
Kingdom of God by living a whole complete life, working to see current redemption in all areas
of their life.
25
Works Cited
Bavink, Herman. Calvin and Common Grace. Kindle Electronic Edition.
Bavinck, Herman. In the Beginning: Foundations of Creation Theology. Bolt, John, Ed.Vriend, John, Trans. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books, 1999.
Bavink, Herman. Our Reasonable Faith. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1956.
Calvin, John. Institutes of the Christian Religion. Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 1997.
Dennis, Jay. Jesus Habits. Nashville, Tennessee: Broadman and Holman Publishers, 2005.
Goheen, Michael W. and Craig G. Bartholomew. Living at the Crossroads: An Iintroduction to Christian Worldview. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2008
Grudem, Wayne. Systemmatic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 1994
Torrance, Thomas F. Atonement: The Person and Work of Christ. Walker, Robert T. Ed. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2009.
Torrance, Thomas F. Incarnation: The Person and Life of Christ. Walker, Robert T. Ed. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2008.
Torrance, Thomas F. The Christian Doctrine of God: One Being, Three Persons. New York, NY: T&T Clark, 1996.
Ware, Bruce. The Man Christ Jesus: Theological Reflections of the Humanity of Christ. Wheaton, Illinois, 2013
Warfield, B.B. The Emotional Life of Our Lord. Kindle Electronic Edition.
Wright, N.T. Surprised by Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church. New York, NY: Harper Collins Publishers, 2008.
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