
by John M. Frame
On
Christmas, we celebrate something quite wonderful: God entering our time and
space. The eternal becomes temporal; the infinite becomes finite; the Word that
created all things becomes flesh.
Incarnation
Oh,
the mystery of it all! The one who knows all things (John 16:30, 21:17) must
“grow in wisdom” (Luke 2:52). The all-sufficient one (Acts 17:25) must hunger
and thirst (Matt. 4:2, John 19:28). The creator of all must be homeless (Matt.
8:20). The Lord of life must suffer and die. God in the flesh must endure
estrangement from God the Father (Matt. 27:46).
In
Jesus, God the Son, who knows the end from the beginning (Isa. 46:10), must
watch his eternal plan unfold bit by bit, moment by moment. He grows from
infancy, to childhood, to adulthood, responding to events as they happen. One
time he rejoices; another time he weeps. From day to day, from hour to hour,
the changeless God endures change. But God the Son incarnate is still God,
still transcendent. As he responds to events in time, he also looks down on the
world from above time and space, ruling all the events of nature and history..
Why
did God enter time in Christ? Joseph named his baby Jesus, “because he will
save his people from their sins” (Matt. 1:21). It was the Father’s love (John
3:16) that sent his Son, “that whosoever believes in him shall not perish, but
have eternal life.” The Son of God took on the limitations of time, even death,
so that we who deserve death can have life without limit, forever with God. He
died in our place, that we might never die.
At
the incarnation of Jesus, the angels stand amazed (Luke 2:14, Eph. 3:10, 1 Pet.
1:11-12). And at this event, non-Christian philosophers and religious teachers
look on in bewilderment. In non-Christian systems of thought, it is impossible
for ultimate reality to enter time and space. For the eastern religions, and
for Plato, Aristotle, and the ancient Gnostics, the supreme being is
impersonal, and it would lose its absoluteness if it came in contact with
temporal reality. For other religions and philosophies, the supreme being, if
it exists at all, is the temporal world itself, or an aspect of it. For them,
“god incarnate” could be at most indistinguishable from the rest of the finite
world.
Only
in biblical religion is there a clear affirmation of a personal God distinct
from the world he has made, who is able to come into that world without
compromising himself and without losing himself in the world. As incarnate, he
remains fully God, and he reveals his full deity, clearly, to his creatures,
even amid all the mysteries I mentioned earlier. But this means that only in
Scripture do we learn of a God who loves us so much, so wonderfully, so
powerfully, that he enters time on our behalf and stands strong to win God’s
battle in history against Satan and sin.
Theophany
The
incarnation is wonderful, and absolutely unique. Only once did God become a
man. He remains God and man forever (Col. 2:9, Heb. 7:24). He became man once,
that we might be saved from sin once for all.
But
the incarnation was not the first occasion on which God entered time. Scripture
records other times when God met human beings in history: with Adam and Eve in
the Garden, with Noah, with the patriarchs and Moses, with Isaiah in the
temple, and so on. He appeared to
These
events, that theologians call “theophanies” (“appearances” of God), are not incarnations.
In them, God does not become flesh
forever, to die for sins and rise to glory. But they are similar to the
incarnation of Jesus in some ways. Certainly, they are mysterious. As in Jesus,
God in theophany enters a historical process, a series of events. He becomes an
actor in his own historical drama.
In Isaiah 6, God
watches and listens to the angels sing his praises. He waits until they are
done. Then he hears Isaiah’s repentance, observes his symbolic cleansing (6-7),
speaks to Isaiah, hears his reply (8) and continues the conversation (9-13).
God acts in time, responding to each event as it comes, doing what is
appropriate at each moment. He changes, in a way: for at one time he listens;
at another he speaks. He changes, though he is unchangeable (James 1:17).
In
Ex. 32,
In
theophany, God, whose eternal plan brings all things to pass (Eph. 1:11),
awaits events that he has foreordained. He accomplishes his will, not
instantaneously, but by a process. He accomplishes his will in time by becoming
an actor in the historical drama of which he himself is the author. He does not
hasten to bring it to an end, as he well might. As in the incarnation, he
responds to events as they happen. Once he speaks of grace and blessing,
another time of judgment. He speaks and acts appropriately as he responds to
each situation. In these ways, the mysteries of theophany are similar to those
of incarnation.
Temporal Omnipresence
But
even incarnation and theophany together do not exhaust the mysterious ways in
which God comes into time. For in a sense, God is always in time, in history. We do not hesitate to speak of God’s omnipresence in space: God is
everywhere. We can never escape from his presence in blessing and judgment
(Psm. 139:7-12, Jonah 1-2, Acts 17:28).
But if God is present in space, he is also present in time. If he is
always here, then he is always now as well.
He
is still with us, now. Jesus said that he would be with us always (Matt. 28:20)
in the Spirit (John 14:15-18). That means that God is still an actor in
history, as well as transcending history. He is with me as I write, watching
one moment pass into the next, responding appropriately to each event, bringing
his sovereign Lordship to bear on every situation as it comes, hearing and
responding to my prayers. But he is also looking down on the world from his
transcendent, timelessly eternal viewpoint. He is both transcendent and
immanent. As transcendent, he brings all things to pass according to his
eternal plan. As immanent, he works in and with all things, moment by moment,
to accomplish his sovereign will.
So
Immanuel, God’s Christmas name, is still appropriate. Jesus’ incarnation,
unique as it is, is in some respects like the way God relates to his world at
all times, in all generations (Psm. 90:1). God is still an actor in our
history, acting, responding, grieving, rejoicing. But he acts in history as the
sovereign Lord of history.
The
“open theist” movement of writers such as Gregory Boyd, William Hasker, Clark
Pinnock, Richard Rice, and John Sanders, believes that if we are to do justice
to the give-and-take between God and his creatures in history, we must reject
God’s sovereign control over history, even his exhaustive knowledge of the
future. Those conclusions do not follow logically, and they are not biblical.
(I shall explore open theism in greater depth in my Doctrine of God, forthcoming from P&R Publishers.) Rather,
these biblical pictures of God’s actions in time should lead us to a heightened view of God’s sovereignty.
Our God is one who can and does accomplish his sovereign will, not only “from
above,” by his eternal decrees, but also “from below,” by making all things
work together for his good purpose (Rom. 8:28). Even God’s apparent defeats in
history are the outworkings of his eternal plan. In the very death of Jesus for
our sins, God was acting in time to bring his sovereign purpose to pass (Acts
2:23).
So Christmas
reveals in a wonderful way that God acts in time as well as above it. It shows
us wonderfully how God relates to us, not only as a mysterious being from
another realm, but as a person in our
own time and place: interacting with us, hearing our prayers, guiding us step
by step, chastising us with fatherly discipline, comforting us with the
wonderful promises of the blessings of Christ. Truly he is Immanuel, the God
who is really with us, who is nonetheless eternally the sovereign Lord of all.