Theologia Podcast

Son of God
These verses teach us how the Son can exercise divine judgment and generate resurrection life by his powerful word. It is because, like God, he has life-in-himself. God is self-existent; he is always ‘the living God’. Mere human beings are derived creatures; our life comes from God, and he can remove it as easily as he gave it. But to the Son, and to the Son alone, God has imparted life-in-himself.
 
This cannot mean that the Son gained this authority only after the incarnation. The Prologue has already asserted of the pre-incarnate Word, ‘In him was life’ (1:4). The impartation of life-in-himself to the Son must be an act belonging to eternity, of a piece with the eternal Father/Son relationship, which is itself of a piece with the relationship between the Word and God, a relationship that existed ‘in the beginning’ (1:1). That is why the Son himself can be proclaimed as ‘the eternal life, which was with the Father and has appeared to us’ (1 Jn. 1:2).
 
Son of Man
In this context, three strands come together. Jesus is the eschatological Son of Man who receives from the Father the prerogatives of Deity (Psalm 2), a kingdom that entails total dominion. At the same time, he belongs to humanity and has lived a human life. It is the combination of these features that makes him uniquely qualified to judge. Third, judgment in the Fourth Gospel is often linked with revelation (3:19, 8:16; 12:31; 16:8, 11). Judgment descends because men love darkness rather than light. Now ‘the Son of Man’ has already been used in revelatory contexts in this Gospel (1:51; 3:14–15). The entailment of rejected revelation is judgment.


1.     The Great Marvel (vs. 19-23)
2.     The Great Promise (vs 24)
3.     The Great Culmination (vs 25-29)

What is Theologia Podcast?

A podcast highlighting sermons from Covenant Redeemer Baptist Church, and providing Biblical answers from a Reformed Baptist perspective on a wide range of questions, ranging from salvation and sanctification to the church, the Bible, culture, sexual ethics, creation, and the purpose of man.