From the classified section of The Jerusalem Herald, Nisan 1, AD 27:
Why did God need to fill this position
of Redeemer? Because He had to “fire” the original general
manager of His creation for gross impropriety and malfeasance. When
God delegated the oversight of Creation to a man with free will, He
anticipated the possibility of that man’s failure, and formulated
a plan to solve the problem. The plan was for another man to rectify
the catastrophic situation. Why another man, when He had such poor success
with the first one? Why did He not just march down here and take care
of things Himself? Many Christians believe that is exactly what God
did—that He became a man in order to redeem mankind. But since
man was in such a sorry state that he could not redeem himself, was
the only alternative for God Himself to do the job? We think there are
a number of problems with this theory. The First Adam Exploring the biblical background of the
need for a Redeemer is crucial to understanding both the integrity of
the Bible and the identity of Jesus. Before we subject this remarkable
man from Galilee to a needless onslaught of theological speculation,
we must carefully analyze the biblical relationship between the “first
Adam” and the “Last Adam.” Even modern biblical scholars
are recognizing that this parallel between the two “Adams”
was a key element of apostolic Christianity, and is probably the earliest
and richest biblical insight concerning the identity of this unique
man named Jesus Christ. [4] We, too, have come to the conclusion that
this relationship is the key to understanding and appreciating Jesus’
identity, and that it establishes the first boundary marker in our survey
of this subject.
What was God’s solution to the problem
of sin and death? The only solution legally available: another Adam!
In fact, if we had to sum up the whole Bible in five seconds, we could
say: “It is the story of two men and their effect on mankind.
The first man wrecked everything; the second man is fixing it.”
The plan of redemption summed up in Genesis
3:15 is from then on unfolded throughout the rest of Scripture. Another
“Adam,” who could exist only by means of birth, had to come
and live a life of perfect obedience to God, all the way to a torturous
death on the Cross. As we have pointed out earlier, some say that the
redemption of mankind could have been accomplished only by God becoming
a man and laying down His life, and this is known by the non-biblical
term, “the Incarnation.” [15]
The answer to this very common teaching is so important that we must
repeat it here. Such a “man” could not be a true man, as
Adam was. As we are seeing, Scripture makes it plain that the Redeemer
had to be a man so that he could die for the sins of all mankind (Heb.
2:9,14; Rom. 5:17). Is it really plausible that God, who is the Author
and very essence of life, could die? Justice required that a representative
of the race of those who sinned be the one to die to atone for that
sin. This is the irrefutable logic of Romans 5:12-17, to which we will
refer many times in discussing who Jesus is. [16] |