God who spoke to people in the Old
Testament is Jesus Christ
- By Erik Jones
Many consider the God
they read about in the Old Testament to be harsh and vindictive.
This view may be based
on simply reading some of the well-known stories of the Old Testament. God
expelled Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden and destroyed the earth with a
flood. He sent plagues on ancient Egypt and directed Israel to conquer Canaan
through war. And He punished Israel and Judah through captivity by foreign
nations. Many interpret these as the actions of a stern God of retribution and
justice.
On the other hand,
many see the New Testament as quite different. It tells about Jesus Christ, the
Son of God, who taught love toward others, showed mercy, healed multitudes of
people, held children in His arms and gave His life as a sacrifice without
resistance.
Comparing these
examples, many have concluded that the Father was the God of the Old
Testament—the God of justice and punishment. Jesus, the Son, was the God
revealed in the New Testament—the God of love and mercy. Some even believe
Jesus came to stand in the gap between us and the Father—essentially delivering
us from His Father’s restrictive law!
But the truth of the
Bible is much different.
It couldn’t have been the Father!
John revealed a
surprising truth in John 1:18: “No one has seen God at any time. The only
begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, He has declared Him” (emphasis
added throughout). Jesus also said, “And the Father Himself, who sent Me, has
testified of Me. You have neither heard His voice at any time, nor seen His
form” (John 5:37).
These two scriptures
teach us an important fact: The Father has not directly spoken to or been seen
by any human being at any time.
But if we look through
the Old Testament, we see many occasions when God worked directly with human
beings. (Consider, for example, Genesis 2:16-17; 6:13-14; 12:1; 17:1; Exodus
3:4-6; 33:11, 22-23; Numbers 12:6-8; Deuteronomy 4:33; Jeremiah 1:4-10).
We see that a divine
being in the Old Testament dealt directly with people; but according to Jesus,
this divine being could not have been God the Father.
Jesus said that He
came to “reveal” the Father (Matthew 11:27). By claiming to be the Son of God
(John 10:36), Jesus contradicted one of the Jew’s most treasured doctrines—that
God is composed of strictly one divine being. They did not understand that God
is actually a family—composed of the Father and the Son (John 1:18; Romans 1:4;
Philippians 2:6-11).
If the One who
revealed Himself to the patriarchs and Israel in the Old Testament was not the
Father—then who was He?
Jesus Christ’s preexistence
A careful study of the
Bible shows clearly that the God who interacted with humans in the Old
Testament was the One who became Jesus Christ.
The Bible reveals that
before Jesus was born to Mary, He was the One John called “the Word” (John 1:1,
14). This title perfectly describes His function before being born as a human
being. “Word” in John 1:1 is a translation of the Greek word Logos, meaning “a
word” or “something said” (Strong’s Greek Dictionary). The definition includes
both the thought and the spoken word.
The use of Logos to
describe Jesus before His human birth gives us insight into His Old Testament
identity. The Word was, essentially, the being in the God family who served as
the spokesman. He has always been responsible for communicating the will of the
Father to human beings—during Old Testament and New Testament times. When God’s
voice or revelation was given, it was through the Word—who became Jesus
Christ—or an angel. The Father has never spoken directly with human beings.
Jesus
Christ made His identity very clear—sometimes even to His physical detriment!
In John 8 Jesus said He knew Abraham (verse 56). Since Abraham had lived and
died nearly 2,000 years before, this statement offended the Jews Jesus was
talking to. They considered it blasphemy that a mere man (as they viewed Him)
“not yet fifty years old” had the audacity to claim He had known their
patriarch Abraham (verse 57).
But
Jesus’ response was even more shocking to them: “Most assuredly, I say to you,
before Abraham was, I
AM” (verse 58).
Yes, Jesus Christ
claimed that He predated Abraham. But, in saying this, Jesus also gave a
not-so-subtle clue about His identity that wasn’t lost on the angry Jews who
surrounded Him. He referred to Himself as “I AM.” This was actually a divine
title of God! When God had appeared to Moses from the burning bush, God had
identified Himself as “I AM WHO I AM” and “I AM” (Exodus 3:14).
By
identifying Himself as “I AM,” Jesus claimed that He had eternally existed.
Christ identified Himself as the God of Abraham and Moses, and the One who led
Israel out of Egypt (which is also affirmed by the apostle Paul in 1
Corinthians 10:1-4).
Christ was Creator
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