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It seems to be incredibly important to numerous "brands" of Christianity that Jesus be God. So much so, that traditions that reject the deity of Christ are often dismissed as heretical by orthodox Christians.

Why is this so important? Why couldn't the Messiah just be a man?

The most common reason I here is that the sacrifice had to be perfect. The Messiah had to be God because only God is perfect.

And yet (some? all?) Catholics believe that Mary was also perfect. Why couldn't she be the sacrifice? If God could make a regular human being perfect without them being God, isn't the Christ's deity superfluous?

Is there a deeper reason that Jesus had to be God that is compatible with the sinlessness of Mary?

EDIT: In an effort to clarify...

I'm just wondering why the Messiah had to be God. Some people say it's because he had to be perfect. But if the Catholics are right (if Mary was sinless) then God could have just created the savior sinless (without him being God.), so I'm wondering if there's a deeper reason that the Messiah had to be God

Thomas Shields
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    Is this a "was Mary sinless?" question or a "did Jesus have to be sinless?" question? – Hammer May 06 '12 at 17:22
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    @Hammer neither. I'm simply asking why Jesus had to be God, and, assuming Mary was sinless, especially why did Jesus have to be God if he could just be a sinless human. – Thomas Shields May 06 '12 at 17:33
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    @Hammer It's as if God was following a certain rule. The question seems to seek which unbreakable rule that was. Am I right Thomas? – Nok May 06 '12 at 19:05
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    I'm just wondering why Jesus had to be God. Some people say it's because he had to be perfect. But if the Catholics are right (if Mary was sinless) then God could have just created Jesus sinless (without him being God.), so I'm wondering if there's a deeper reason that Jesus had to be God. – Thomas Shields May 06 '12 at 19:30
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    I think a more accurate title for your question is "Why does the Messiah have to be God" and why can he not be only human? – LoveTheFaith May 06 '12 at 20:26
  • @LoveTheFaith perhaps, except that the Bible says Jesus was the Messiah, so it comes out to the same thing. – Thomas Shields May 06 '12 at 20:28
  • @DoubtingThomas , the thing is, "why does Jesus have to be God" doesn't make sense. Similar question - Why does God have to be love? It's a question that has a simple answer - That's his nature. That's how he is. – LoveTheFaith May 06 '12 at 20:34
  • @LoveTheFaith ah, good point. I'll make the edit. – Thomas Shields May 06 '12 at 20:42
  • The Witnesses, of course, say that Jesus was a sinless perfect man, in perfect balance on the scales of justice to the perfect man Adam. – TRiG Aug 13 '12 at 12:16
  • The messiah doesn't have to be God. I think those two factors - the fact that Jesus is believed to be God and the fact that Jesus is believed to be the Messiah - just happen to coincide. – Double U Oct 26 '13 at 20:26
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    It seems to me, that if he was sinless, then he wouldn't have lied: Matthew 16: 15 He said to them, “And who do you say that I am?” 16 Simon Peter answered, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” 17 And Jesus answered him, “You are blessed, Simon son of Jonah, because flesh and blood did not reveal this to you, but my Father in heaven!” My Father in heaven... – Byzantine Oct 26 '13 at 20:56
  • If you were to ask Eastern Orthodox Christians, the answer would be that God could not heal that which he did not subsume; God became man so that man might become [like] God. But therein lies the subjective problem with this post - any other faith tradition may disagree. So this is primarily opinion-based. – Dan Jan 02 '17 at 20:37
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    @Dan Catholics and Protestants would readily affirm the Cappadocian Fathers too! But non-Trinitarians would not, so your point still stands. – curiousdannii Jan 02 '17 at 23:53
  • @curiousdannii Catholics yes, making any general statement about "Protestants" is like trying to nail Jello to the wall. :P – Dan Jan 03 '17 at 01:58
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    @Dan Not really - if they're not Nicene and even Chalcedonian Trinitarians then they're not true Protestants. Of course many have lost their roots and have left the bounds of orthodoxy. – curiousdannii Jan 03 '17 at 02:36
  • See No true Scotsman logical fallacy ("... then they're not true Protestants"). See also Who is a Christian for this site? – Dan Jan 03 '17 at 02:56
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    @Dan That's not an example of the no true Scotsman fallacy; come to the Upper Room and I'll explain further. I agree with you and Curiousdannii that the question is too broad. – Mr. Bultitude Jan 03 '17 at 18:59

6 Answers6

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I think that there are two main reasons why the Messiah had to be God.

One, which you alluded to in your question, is that he had to be sinless in order to be the perfect sacrifice for sins. I don't hold that Mary was sinless (Romans 3:10), and I believe that only God could have been sinless. So in my opinion, that is a valid line of reasoning for the necessity of the Messiah to be God.

The second reason, is that the Messiah needed to be God for the same reason that he needed to be man. Hebrews tells us why Jesus had to become man:

Hebrews 2:17-18 (NIV)
17  For this reason he had to be made like them, fully human in every way, in order that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in service to God, and that he might make atonement for the sins of the people. 18  Because he himself suffered when he was tempted, he is able to help those who are being tempted.

Hebrews 4:14-15 (NIV)
14  Therefore, since we have a great high priest who has ascended into heaven, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold firmly to the faith we profess. 15  For we do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are —yet he did not sin.

The Messiah needed to save mankind, and in order to do so, he needs to act as a high priest, an intermediary between God and man. These verses show us that Jesus needed to become man in order to empathetically mediate for man. I suggest that he also needed to be God, in order to mediate to God. Jesus acts as a bridge between God and man, by having both natures.

Because Jesus is in nature God, we have a perfect high priest in the heavenly tabernacle. This provides for us an anchor behind the veil (Hebrews 6:19), which is far superior to any merely human priest. Hebrews 7 explicitly states the flaws in having human priests, and why a priest with the eternal nature of God is far superior:

Hebrews 7:23-25 (NIV)
23  Now there have been many of those priests, since death prevented them from continuing in office; 24  but because Jesus lives forever, he has a permanent priesthood. 25  Therefore he is able to save completely those who come to God through him, because he always lives to intercede for them.

This is contrasting the disadvantages of human priests with the advantages of having God as our high priest. The writer of Hebrews then goes on to list some characteristics of such a high priest that meets our needs:

Hebrews 7:26 (NIV)
26  Such a high priest truly meets our need—one who is holy, blameless, pure, set apart from sinners, exalted above the heavens.

In order to intercede for us to God, the writer of Hebrews tells us that this high priest needed to have many characteristics that we would only associate with God: holy, blameless, pure, set apart from sinners, exalted above the heavens.

Even if we accepted the sinlessness of Mary, I don't think anyone would attribute to her these necessary characteristics of an effective heavenly high priest (except perhaps pure and blameless).

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An interesting opinion I heard on this (and incidentally the reason I asked the question, though I hoped for and got better answers) had to do with the infinitude of God.

Since God is infinite, sinning against him is an "infinite" sin (for those who believe in "trivial" sins, assume i'm talking about a lifetime of sin from someone). For God to be just, infinite sin requires infinite payment. That's why we say it's fair for God to punish people infinitely in Hell for only a finite amount of sin.

Now, the sacrifice would be taking the place of, not one, but millions (presumably, who knows how many will be saved) of people, all who have lived their entire lives sinning against an infinite God.

So not only did Christ need to be sinless to be a representative, he needed to be a viable candidate. A human representative would have to actually go through Hell for infinity, and then do it again, and again - suffering hell for infinity for each and every sinner. Since this is impossible, we would need one representative for each of us - and each representative would have to be perfect, and would suffer in Hell forever.

Instead, God sent his Son, incarnated him as man. The Godman, as Eric said, could both represent man, and was both sinless and infinite. As a result, he could suffer the infinitude of Hell for each one of us. The punishment was no less terrible! If anything, it was worse! But for the so many hours he was on the cross (or the three days he was in the tomb; depending on how you see it) the eternal son of God become man suffered infinite punishment for sin against himself.

And that, I think, is why the Christ had to be God.

Thomas Shields
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  • But if we have 1000 (people) multiply by infinity (payment), the result is still only infinity isn't it? – Pacerier Aug 03 '14 at 00:08
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I was planning on an answer almost as Eric's which will now carry no weight so I'd focus on possible consequences if man had played Jesus' role.

First of all I do not think we could compare man's 'perfection' (Mary or anybody else) to that of God.

"There was a man in the land of Uz, whose name was Job; and that man was perfect and upright, and one that feared God, and eschewed evil." (Job 1:1).

Does this mean Job was sinless throughout his life? This is what our bible says about him, how much more a doctrine created by a 'brand' of christianity, a belief that man thinks reflects what is in the bible.

As righteous as man could be, he could not understand FULLY the plans of God. We know what God's main purpose is but we do not understand all his ways, methods and even time of accomplishments. Let's get back to Job for instance. He faced harsh times but...

"In all this Job sinned not, nor charged God foolishly." (Job 1:22).

No doubt about his faithfulness to God but he began to degrade his significance under the eyes of God. Though he did not charge God foolishly, there were wild and deeper complaints that pushed God to remind him of who he (God) is.

"Then the LORD answered Job out of the whirlwind, and said, Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge? Gird up now thy loins like a man; for I will demand of thee, and answer thou me." (Job 38:1-3).

After a long, strong reply from God, Job confesses:

"Who is he that hideth counsel without knowledge? therefore have I uttered that I understood not; things too wonderful for me, which I knew not." (Job 42:3).

When we know that His ways are not our ways, it tells us that our worldly desires (by default) cannot allow God's will to totally be done on earth, even when it is our prayer. Even Moses, whom I consider as one of the most active and closest prophets of God, sometimes lacked boldness, and failed to carry out 'simple orders', not to mention Jonah.

Can we compare these to Christ (God)? When the time for all the physical torture to begin, Jesus felt the heaviness,

"And being in an agony he prayed more earnestly: and his sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground." (Luke 22:44).

yet He asked His will to be done.

"He went away again the second time, and prayed, saying, O my Father, if this cup may not pass away from me, except I drink it, thy will be done. " (Matthew 26:42).

His death was not a one time killing by bomb blast which others (martyrs) will claim to die in for their course. It isn't a gunshot that will limit the period of pain before death. This One is spat upon, whipped, crowned with thorns, among others, finally hanged by nails on a cross and left to die.

For humans, the thought and expectations alone, knowing that all these will happen are torture enough to make us NEED an escape from such fate. We may be tempted to argue with God: Why at all must I suffer all these before I die, why not death by the sword in the garden after Peter reacts? And a whole lot, simply because even when we believe in Him, we cannot comprehend fully and allow God's will to be done without questions. Only He could.

Nok
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According to Isaiah, the Messiah was a man- namely Cyrus. (Isaiah 45:1) Thus, if we are to read the text literally, the Messiah was in fact man.

The salvific purpose of the Messiah was also temporal. As the Jews understood it, he would bring freedom to the captives, raise the poor from their situation, and generally turn the order upside down.

What only God could do was redeem people from the pit and the grave.

While I'm not sure that the Messiah had to be God, the fact that Jesus was the son of God is attested to in the Scriptures. The nature of Jesus, of course, is that he is fully God and fully man.

As Isaiah 49 says, it is "too little a thing that my son should merely save Israel."

That move - from Messiah to the eternal plan effected in His Sonship is where I believe the necessity of the Divine comes into play.

Affable Geek
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    Is it commonly accepted that Isaiah spoke of Cyrus as the Messiah? I've never heard that. –  May 06 '12 at 23:05
  • People seem to misunderstand my questions a lot... (alternatively, I'm bad at asking them), but this is interesting. Essentially, what you're saying is that since only God could redeem people from their sins, God had to be involved in every part of the process? (or something like that) – Thomas Shields May 07 '12 at 00:06
  • @JustinY It's not "commonly accepted," rather it is the exact words of Isaiah 45:1. "This is what the Lord says to his Messiah, to Cyrus" – Affable Geek May 07 '12 at 00:42
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    @doubting Thomas. Yup :) – Affable Geek May 07 '12 at 00:43
  • @AffableGeek Interesting. What translation? All the translations I look at say "annointed." I know that's what Messiah means; I'm just curious which actually translated it as such. This also begs the question, was Isaiah calling Cyrus the Messiah or a messiah? –  May 07 '12 at 02:28
  • So, I actually did that translation, precisely changing 'annointed' to Messiah. – Affable Geek May 07 '12 at 12:21
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    Why the downvote? – Affable Geek May 07 '12 at 12:21
  • Couldn't the Lord be speaking to his Messiah and to Cyrus in Isaiah 45:1? Two separate individuals? – Gilbert Le Blanc May 07 '12 at 13:38
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    So, my Hebrew is rusty, but my suspicion is that both are in the same accusative case, meaning it should be read as a single object (to my annointed Cyrus == to my annointed, Cyrus == to my annointed, to Cyrus) – Affable Geek May 07 '12 at 16:25
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    Let's just say that this is not a theory widely held by either Christians or Jews. There are many people in the Old Testament who are referred to as "annointed" -- Aaron and his sons (Ex 40:15), Saul (1 Sam 10:1), David (1 Sam 16:6), the prophets (Ps 105:15), all of Jerusalem (Ezek 16:9), etc. There is a difference between being "anointed" and being "The Anointed". It's like the difference between saying "Bob is our representative", which could be any sort of representative for any purpose, and saying "Bob is our Representative", as in, a specific government office. – Jay May 08 '12 at 03:46
  • @Justin Y: No. Isaiah spoke of him as "a messiah (anointed one)," not "the messiah." No big deal there. I don't see what relevance Cyrus has in this discussion. –  Dec 22 '12 at 23:57
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The premise of the question is incorrect. The Messiah does not have to be God. Have a look at this Wikipedia article for a long list of messianic claimants:

Jewish Messiah claimants

All of these figures were thought by some to be the messiah at one time. But none of them were spoken of in the kinds of terms used about Jesus of Nazareth. That doesn't in itself "prove" something about Jesus. It does show that a claim to be Messiah is not equivalent to a claim to be any sort of deity.

So the real question isn't why the messiah had to be God (as he didn't), but why Jesus was thought of as the Son of God and not simply as the Messiah.

Along with that, note that most of the messianic movements in the first century dispersed when their leader was killed. The same happened to the Jesus movement, but that movement obviously did not disperse when its leader was killed. (Why? Well, as a Christian, it should be obvious what my theory is.)

Kyralessa
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    The fact that the Jews generally did not believe that the Messiah had to be God does not prove that the Messiah did not have to be God. There are lots of things that many, even most, people have believed at one time or another that have proven to be false. – Jay May 08 '12 at 03:51
  • You'll need to explain what you mean by "have to be", then. "Messiah" is not a divine title in and of itself. Perhaps you mean "according to God's plan, the Messiah had to be God" or some such. But I think that's a somewhat different question. – Kyralessa May 08 '12 at 21:38
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    I think a better question would be this: "If the Messiah did not have to be God, why was Jesus nonetheless considered to be God?" We tend to approach it the wrong way around, and start with Jesus as God, and the apostles wondering whether he was the Messiah. But they followed him because they thought he was the Messiah. Not because they thought he was "God", which would have been a very peculiar thing for the average first-century Jew to think. The question is, why did they come to regard him as God, despite the strong Jewish impetus against doing so? – Kyralessa May 08 '12 at 21:41
  • The word "messiah" of itself does not mean "God". The word "president" of itself does not mean "US citizen". Nevertheless to be U.S. president, one must be a U.S. citizen. Likewise, there are many things that a person had to be and do to be "the Messiah". It is not unreasonable to say that one of these requirements was that the person be God, whether or not people at the time understood this. – Jay May 10 '12 at 04:37
  • I'm not aware of anything in the Bible that says "the disciples concluded that Jesus was the Messiah, and therefore that he must be God". And, believing that a person was God would be a very peculiar thing for anyone in any time to think. That's why the story continues to interest people 2000 years later. If, as many people believe, Jesus was simply a good man who said that people should be nice to each other, no one would remember him today any more than we remember the millions of other nice people who have lived throughout history. – Jay May 10 '12 at 04:45
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Mostly I'd ditto Eric's answer.

Let me add: COULD God have carried out his plan with a human being whom God specially created or ordained to be sinless, or special in whatever ways required? I don't know. You could ask all sorts of hypotheticals like that. Could God have saved humanity without sending Jesus at all? Could he have created a universe in which murder was not a sin? How about one where there was no such thing as electricity, or the color blue? Some such hypotheticals are easy to imagine, others not so much.

The Bible says that Jesus was God. Whether he "had to be" for salvation to be possible ... Could God have come up with some other plan? I don't know.

Jay
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