John 1 and the Trinity

The introduction to John 1 is often used by trinitarians as a prooftext that supports their view of the godhead, and that refutes the views of various cults. It’s true that the cults have difficulty with this passage, but it’s also true that trinitarians should consider it a problem passage for their view, rather than a support.

The full argument in this regard is discussed in the article, Jesus the Firstborn of Creation, so I won’t elaborate too much here. But the essential point is that trinitarians change the meaning of “God” (theos) from “God the Father” to “the divine essence shared by all the persons” in the span of a single sentence. They need “God” in John 1 to refer to God the Father, to distinguish his personhood from that of God the Word/Son. But applying that definition consistently to the whole verse forces it to break the trinitarian formulation of the Godhead, which claims that the Son is not the Father. Consider the following injection of their more preferred terminology of Father and Son:

In the beginning was the Son, and the Son was with the Father, and the Son was the Father. (Jhn 1:1)

Trinitarian theology uses this verse to show a difference between the Father and the Son in the first part, and they accomplish this by interpreting “God” as God the Father, who was with (and therefore distinct from) the Son. But the second half of the verse equates the two, forcing trinitarians to equivocate on the definition of “God” to now refer to the divine essence shared by all the persons of the Godhead, rather than the Father. The Word was with “the Father” (theos) and the Word was “divine” (theos).

Because the cults also suffer from John 1, they don’t generally force trinitarians to be consistent in their interpretation of this verse. But it truly should be seen as a problem passage for the trinity, rather than a support.

John 1 and the Pattern

Because Patternists do believe in a plurality of persons in the godhead, we wouldn’t be challenged by John 1 even if the trinitarian rendering were accurate. But our recognition of a preincarnate hypostatic union allows John 1 to be interpreted according to the nature of Christ rather than the nature of God, since the hypostatic union fits the merging and separating of persons more naturally than plurality within the godhead. Consider the following rendering:

In the beginning was Christ, and Christ was with God, and Christ was God.

When we view the term “Christ” here to refer to a union of Jesus’ divine and human natures, it’s appropriate to speak of Jesus in the incarnation as being both distinct from God, and God himself. We see this in many places in the gospels, some of which I’ve listed in article linked above.

The problem of course is that God became man long after creation, only 2,000 years ago. But if we show that the union of God and creature can be pushed back to the point of creation, then John 1 can be speaking of a preincarnate hypostatic union, rather than plurality of persons within the Godhead. To accomplish this, patternists appeal to Jesus’ old testament appearances through the Angel of the LORD, who was both with Yahweh God, and who was Yahweh God.

John 1 and Creation

As elegant as the Angel of the LORD is in explaining the Word of John 1, Trinitarians have a response to this kind of reasoning, taken from historic interactions with Arianism. Like Pattern Christology, Arius claimed that the Son is a created being, but he did this without appealing to a hypostatic union of divine and creaturely natures. Thus Arianism turned Jesus into a demigod, rather than a union of God and man, and is rightly refuted by trinitarians.

However, as part of this refutation, some trinitarians will argue that if the Word of John 1 created all things, then the Word himself cannot be a created being. So if patternists make the “Word” of this passage refer to Jesus’ preincarnate created nature, the Angel of the Lord, then along with Arianism this means that something created had to create “all things,” which would be a self-contradicting statement.

“All means all, and that’s all that all means.”

This of course is a very wooden use of the term “all” in scripture. All does not always mean all, in the sense that there are no exceptions to the general universality implied. We do this “all” the time in English, and New Testament Greek offers plenty of its own examples. Consider this sampling of non-universal uses of “all” from John’s gospel alone:

  • “And they came to John and said to him, “Rabbi, he who was with you across the Jordan, to whom you bore witness–look, he is baptizing, and all are going to him.” (Jhn 3:26) Here the sense of “all” is clearly meant to refer to a general trend rather than a universal set of all people. John’s disciples who were speaking were clearly exceptions, and most likely there were other scatterings of people who did not go out to Jesus.
  • “Come, see a man who told me all that I ever did. Can this be the Christ?” (Jhn 4:29) The conversation we have recorded between Jesus and the woman at the well does not contain every activity ever done by the woman, nor is it likely that the full conversation did either. The point of concern seems to be all of the men she had ever been with, or all of the significant points of shame in her life. In any case, the phrase “all I ever did” is limited in its meaning by the context of her words.
  • “[Peter] said to him, ‘Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you.’ Jesus said to him, ‘Feed my sheep.'” (Jhn 21:17) Here Peter acknowledges Jesus’ divine omniscience, but fails to acknowledge the limits and exceptions to this omniscience which came with his union to a human nature (e.g. Mar 13:32). Here we have a strong sense of the term “all,” but with known exceptions.
  • “The Father loves the Son and has given all things into his hand.” (Jhn 3:35) This too is a strong, highly universal use of the term “all.” Yet even Jesus’ authority has an exception, one that Paul calls out in his own explicit refutation of a wooden overapplication of “all.” We will look at this in detail in the next section.

In light of these examples, is it reasonable to infer from John 1 that Jesus’ creation of all things necessarily rules out his own prior creation? Or is it possible that there is an exception to this general statement, strong as it is?

Notably, patternists do not even need an exception for the alternative view of John 1 to work. Given Jesus’ divine nature, it is entirely appropriate to speak of Jesus creating himself as the firstborn of creation, in the same way that Jesus is credited as resurrecting himself (John 2:19). Because Jesus is truly God and truly a creature, the strong statement in John 1 can be taken without any exception by simply appealing to Jesus’ self-creation of his angelic nature.

Nevertheless, to push back against an excessively wooden use of language, let’s take a look at the appropriateness of refusing exceptions to a strong and universal use of the word “all.”

Paul’s Push-Back Against an Overapplication of “All”

It’s amazing to realize that Paul actually, explicitly dealt with this very issue of misusing the word “all” in his first letter to the Corinthians. Usually we go to Paul for deep insights into theology and the Old Testament, but apparently the wooden use of biblical language was as much of an issue in his day as it is in our own, such that he had to address it in his writings. He argues,

For “God has put all things in subjection under his feet.” But when it says, “all things are put in subjection,” it is plain that he is excepted who put all things in subjection under him. When all things are subjected to him, then the Son himself will also be subjected to him who put all things in subjection under him, that God may be all in all. (1Co 15:27-28)

In his argument for the supremacy of Christ over all creation, Paul initially uses an imprecise shorthand for the concept by simply stating that “all things” were placed under him. But recognizing that some people might include God in “all things,” he nuances his use of “all” to say that of course God is the exception. Jesus is the king who God appointed over all things to be his vice-regent (Psa 2). Therefore God retains the highest authority, and Jesus rules under him, from his throne in Heaven.

So is it fair to expect human language to always list out and defend exceptions like this, when they are not germane to the point being made by the author? No, of course not. The same nuanced statement of Paul is made in John without nuance or exception (Jhn 3:31, 35). As readers, we are expected to use our brains to apply a passage according to the evident purpose of the author, even when the language isn’t flawlessly precise. Simple computers often require such arcane precision, but humans are elegant, context-sensitive communicators who build our knowledge about a thing by synthesizing data from a number of sources, in this case various passages of scripture. We interpret scripture by taking the whole body of what God has communicated to us, and bringing it to bear on a particular passage.

So when John 1 says that all things were created through the Word, and nothing was created apart from him, are we required to say that he himself cannot be an exception to this statement? If we have other reasons from other scriptures to say that Jesus had a prior, created nature at the beginning of the world, then even a strong, universal statement like this can be implicitly nuanced in the same way that Paul explicitly nuanced his strong statement in 1 Corinthians.

Conclusions

As argued above, Pattern Christology is entirely unimpeded by a full-blown trinitarian rendering of John 1. We believe in a plurality of persons in the godhead (two rather than three), and that one of them is properly called the Word/Logos. So even if the trinitarian rendering could be correct, our view would stand regardless.

However, while John 1 is often used as a prooftext for the Trinity, upon close examination it requires trinitarians to change the meaning of “God” from one half of a verse to the other. Patternists observe that the passage would be better seen as referencing the incarnation of God in Christ, because a form of the incarnation may be evidently seen in the Old Testament through the Angel of the LORD, prior to his incarnation as a human. John 1 may be better interpreted as the Angel of the LORD being with Yahweh, and the Angel of the LORD being Yahweh himself, the firstborn of creation. It is entirely valid use of language to say that the incarnate Christ created all things, including his own created nature, so this should be seen as the preferred interpretation of John 1, instead of the trinitarian view that it describes plurality within the uncreated godhead.

In any case, Pattern Christology is entirely compatible with both views, so John 1 is no threat to the Pattern. Rather, it should be seen as either a problem passage for the Trinity, or a passage that is irrelevant to the nature of God discussion.

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Pattern Christology

Jesus has two natures — an uncreated divine nature, and a created human nature.

Jesus is truly God, meaning that his divine nature predates the existence of the universe, and has all of the attributes of monotheistic, biblical divinity (omniscience, omnipotence etc.). He is not a lesser, created god, but rather exists eternally before and outside of time as the one true God.

Jesus is truly man, meaning that his human nature is truly descended from Adam. From the moment of conception onward, he has (and forever will have) a human body comprised of matter and energy, and a human soul with its own distinct intellect and will. He is not a mirage or apparition; he truly lived a real, human life among us, while simultaneously possessing and displaying his divinity through miraculous works and words of life.

Like the title “son of man,” the title “son of God” describes Jesus’ created, human nature. Adam, Jesus, and the Christian are all described as sons of God because we are in the form/image/likeness of God. Both divine and human activities are ascribed to Jesus through both titles, because of their contextual meaning (Jesus is a particular son of man who is divine; Jesus is a particular son of God who is divine). But the title “son of God” fundamentally describes his human nature and human relationship to God.

A few scriptures describe Jesus as having a father/son relationship with God prior to his incarnation as a man. If Jesus’ sonship is through his humanity, then this presents a challenge to pattern christology, because his human relationship with God predates his existence as a man.

Trinitarians turn to Jesus’ divinity to explain this preincarnate sonship. Patternists, on the other hand, maintain that he was the son of God through a “preincarnate hypostatic union” known as the angel of the Lord. Prior to the incarnation, Jesus was truly God, and truly angelic (or at least a true creature). This allows the person of the son to exist from the moment that God first created light, without compromising his true divinity.

Like trinitarians, patternists believe that Jesus has two natures that together form a single person. Unlike trinitarians, we also affirm that each nature is distinctly personal, and that Jesus can behave as a single unified person, or as two distinct persons (often identified as the Father and the Son). Scripture shows us that Jesus has a human mind and human will that are distinct from his divine mind and divine will. This implies that Jesus’ human and divine natures are distinctly personal.

Pattern christology therefore agrees with both orthodox christology (belief in a single person), and nestorianism (belief in two distinct persons). This is not a contradiction, because scripture supports the idea of two (or more) persons becoming and behaving as one person.

God dwells in Jesus as a human temple, similar to how he dwells in a Christian, but with a few differences. First, Jesus is described as God incarnate, and we are not. Second, God dwells in Christ through the divine person of the Word, whereas he dwells in the Christian through the divine person of the Holy Spirit.

These two temples correspond to the two persons in the godhead. God is a composite union of two persons who are one, the Word and the Spirit. The term “Father” is used to denote the godhead as a whole, the composite union of Word and Spirit. Thus it is accurate to say that the Father (God) dwells in Christ through the Word, and the Father (God) dwells in the Christian through the Spirit.

Pattern Theology

There is one God, who exists as two persons. The Word is truly God; the Holy Spirit is truly God; and they are distinct from one another. Together, they form the composite person of God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.

This union of two divine persons who are one provides us with a pattern that explains many things in creation, including marriage and the human body.

Why did God create the heavens and the earth? Why not just the earth? The Word and Spirit were both active in creation, and God made a fitting environment to enthrone each person of the godhead — heaven and earth, dust and stars.