Reading: "The Names of God" by Edward Mack ISBE
Reading: "The Names of God" by Edward Mack ISBE
Reading: "The Names of God" by Edward Mack ISBE
NAMES OF GOD
I. INTRODUCTION
2. Classification.
1. 'Elohim
2. 'El
3. 'Eloah
5. Yahweh (Yahweh)
6. Tsur (Rock)
7. Ka`dhosh
8. Shaddai
1. 'Abhir
2. 'El-'Elohe-Yisra'el
3. `Elyon
4. Gibbor
5. 'El-ro'i
6. Tsaddiq
7. Qanna'
8. Yahweh Tsebha'oth
1. God
2. Lord
3. Descriptive and Figurative Names
LITERATURE
NAMES OF GOD
I. Introduction:
To an extent beyond the appreciation of modern and western minds the people of Biblical
times and lands valued the name of the person. They always gave to it symbolical or character
meaning.
While our modern names are almost exclusively designatory, and intended merely for
identification, the Biblical names were also descriptive, and often prophetic. Religious
significance nearly always inhered in the name, a parent relating his child to the Deity, or
declaring its consecration to the Deity, by joining the name of the Deity with the service which
the child should render, or perhaps commemorating in a name the favor of God in the gracious
gift of the child, e.g. Nathaniel ("gift of God"); Samuel ("heard of God"); Adonijah ("Yahweh is
my Lord"), etc. It seems to us strange that at its birth, the life and character of a child should be
forecast by its parents in a name; and this unique custom has been regarded by an
unsympathetic criticism as evidence of the origin of such names and their attendant narratives
long subsequent to the completed life itself; such names, for example, as Abraham, Sarah, etc.
But that this was actually done, and that it was regarded as a matter of course, is proved by the
name given to Our Lord at His birth: "...you shall call his name Jesus; for he will save his
people from their sins" (Mt 1:21). It is not unlikely that the giving of a character name
represented the parents' purpose and fidelity in the child's training, resulting necessarily in
giving to the child's life that very direction, which the name indicated. A child's name, therefore,
became both a prayer and a consecration, and its realization in character became often a
necessary psychological effect. Great honor or dishonor was attached to a name. The Old
Testament writings contain many and varied instances of this. Sometimes contempt for certain
reprobate men would be most expressively indicated by a change of name, e.g. the change of
Esh-baal, "man of Baal," to Ish-bosheth, "man of shame" (2 Samuel 2:8), and the omission of
Yahweh from the name of the apostate king, Ahaz (2 Kings 15:38). The name of the last king
of Judah was most expressively changed by Nebuchadnezzar from Mattaniah to Zedekiah, to
assure his fidelity to his overlord who made him king (2 Kings 24:17).
Since the Scriptures of the Old Testament and New Testament are essentially for purposes of
revelation, and since the Hebrews laid such store by names, we should confidently expect
them to make the Divine name a medium of revelation of the first importance. People
accustomed by long usage to significant character indications in their own names, necessarily
would regard the names of the Deity as expressive of His nature. The very phrase "name of
Yahweh," or "His name," as applied to the Deity in Biblical usage, is most interesting and
suggestive, sometimes expressing comprehensively His revelation in nature (Psalm 8:1;
compare Psalm 138:2); or marking the place of His worship, where men will call upon His
name (Deuteronomy 12:5); or used as a synonym of His various attributes, e.g. faithfulness
(Isaiah 48:9), grace (Psalm 23:3), His honor (Psalm 79:9), etc. "Accordingly, since the name of
God denotes this God Himself as He is revealed, and as He desires to be known by His
creatures, when it is said that God will make a name for Himself by His mighty deeds, or that
the new world of the future shall be unto Him for a name, we can easily understand that the
name of God is often synonymous with the glory of God, and that the expressions for both are
combined in the utmost variety of ways, or used alternately" (Schultz, Old Testament Theology,
English translation, I, 124-25; compare Psalm 72:19; Isaiah 63:14; also Davidson, Old
Testament Theology, 37-38).
2. Classification:
From the important place which the Divine name occupies in revelation, we would expect
frequency of occurrence and diversity of form; and this is just that which we find to be true. The
many forms or varieties of the name will be considered under the following heads:
(3) Names of God in the New Testament. Naturally and in course of time attributive names
tend to crystallize through frequent use and devotional regard into personal names; e.g. the
attributive adjective qadhosh, "holy," becomes the personal, transcendental name for Deity in
Job and Isaiah.
1. 'Elohim:
The first form of the Divine name in the Bible is 'Elohim, ordinarily translated "God" (Genesis
1:1). This is the most frequently used name in the Old Testament, as its equivalent theos, is in
the New Testament, occurring in Genesis alone approximately 200 times. It is one of a group
of kindred words, to which belong also 'El and 'Eloah. (1) Its form is plural, but the construction
is uniformly singular, i.e. it governs a singular verb or adjective, unless used of pagan divinities
(Psalm 96:5; 97:7). It is characteristic of Hebrew that extension, magnitude and dignity, as well
as actual multiplicity, are expressed by the plural. It is not reasonable, therefore, to assume
that plurality of form indicates primitive Semitic polytheism. On the contrary, historic Hebrew is
unquestionably and uniformly monotheistic.
It is the reasonable conclusion that the meaning is "might" or "power"; that it is common to
Semitic language; that the form is plural to express majesty or "all-mightiness," and that it is a
generic, rather than a specific personal, name for Deity, as is indicated by its application to
those who represent the Deity (Judges 5:8; Psalm 82:1) or who are in His presence (1 Samuel
28:13).
2. 'Eloah:
The singular form of the preceding name, 'Eloah, is confined in its use almost exclusively to
poetry, or to poetic expression, being characteristic of the Book of Job, occurring more often in
that book than in all other parts of the Old Testament. It is, in fact, found in Job oftener than the
elsewhere more ordinary plural 'Elohim. Its meaning is "to be strong."
3. 'El:
In the group of Semitic languages, the most common word for Deity is El ('el), represented by
the Babylonian ilu and the Arabic 'Allah. It is found throughout the Old Testament, but more
often in Job and Psalms than in all the other books. It occurs seldom in the historical books,
and not at all in Leviticus. The same variety of derivations is attributed to it as to ELOHIM most
probable of which is 'ul, "to be strong." It occurs in many of the more ancient names; and, like
['Elohim], it is used of pagan gods. It is frequently combined with nouns or adjectives to
express the Divine name with reference to particular attributes or phases of His being, as 'El
`Elyon, 'El-Ro'i, etc. (see below under III, "Attributive Names").
An attributive name is 'Adhon, 'Adhonay, the latter formed from the former, being the construct
plural, 'adhone, with the 1st person ending -ay, which has been lengthened to ay and so
retained as characteristic of the proper name and distinguishing it from the possessive "my
Lord." the King James Version does not distinguish, but renders both as possessive, "my Lord"
(Judges 6:15; 13:8), and as personal name (Psalm 2:4); the Revised Version (British and
American) also, in Psalm 16:2, is in doubt, giving "my Lord," possessive, in text and "the Lord"
in the margin. 'Adhonay, as a name of Deity, emphasizes His sovereignty (Psalm 2:4; Isaiah
7:7), and corresponds closely to Kurios of the New Testament. It is frequently combined with
Yahweh (Genesis 15:8; Isaiah 7:7, etc.) and with 'Elohim (Psalm 86:12). Its most significant
service in Massoretic Text is the use of its vowels to point the unpronounceable
tetragrammaton YHWH, indicating that the word "'Adhonay" should be spoken aloud instead of
"Yah-weh." This combination of vowels and consonants gives the transliteration "Yahweh,"
adopted by the American Standard Revised Version, while the other English Versions of the
Bible, since Coverdale, represents the combination by the capitals LORD. Septuagint
represents it by Kurios.
5. Yahweh (Yahweh):
The name most distinctive of God as the God of Israel is (Yahweh, a combination of the
tetragrammaton (YHWH) with the vowels of 'Adhonay, transliterated as Yehowah, but read
aloud by the Hebrews 'adhonay). While both derivation and meaning are lost to us in the
uncertainties of its origin, the following inferences seem to be justified by the facts:
(1) It was not first made known at the call of Moses (although this was the first mention of it in
Scripture) (Ex 3:13-16; 6:2-8), but was at that time given a larger revelation and interpretation.
God, to be known to Israel henceforth under the name "Yahweh" and in its fuller significance,
was the One sending Moses to deliver Israel; "If I come to the people of Israel and say to them,
'The God of your fathers has sent me to you,' and they ask me, 'What is his name?' what shall I
say unto them?" God said to Moses, "I AM WHO I AM" .... say .... I AM has sent me to you."
(Exodus 3:13,14). The name is assumed as known in the narrative of Genesis; it also occurs in
pre-Mosaic names (Exodus 6:20; 1 Chronicles 2:25; 7:8).
(2) The derivation is from the archaic chawah, "to be," better "to become," in Biblical Hebrew
hayah; this archaic use of w for y appears also in derivatives of the similar chayah, "to live,"
e.g. chawwah in Genesis 3:20.
(3) It is the personal name of God, as distinguished from such generic or essential names as
'El, 'Elohim, Shaddai, etc. Characteristic of the Old Testament is its insistence on the possible
knowledge of God as a person; and Yahweh is His name as a person. It is illogical, certainly,
that the later Hebrews should have shrunk from its pronunciation, in view of the
appropriateness of the name and of the Old Testament insistence on the personality of God,
who as a person has this name. the American Standard Revised Version quite correctly adopts
the transliteration "Yahweh" to emphasize its significance and purpose as a personal name of
God revealed.
6. Tsur (Rock):
Five times in the "Song" of Moses (Deuteronomy 32:4,15,18,30,31) the word tsur, "Rock," is
used as a title of God. It occurs also in the Psalms, Isaiah and poetical passages of other
books, and also in proper names, Elizur, Zuriel, etc. Once in the King James Version (Isaiah
44:8) it is translated "God," but "Rock" in the American Standard Revised Version and the
American Revised Version, margin. It is customary for both Old Testament and New
Testament writers to use descriptive names of God: "rock," "fortress," "shield," "light," "bread,"
etc., and is in harmony with all the rich figurativeness of the Scriptures; the use of the article in
many of the cases cited further corroborates the view that the word is intended to be a
descriptive title, not the name of a Nature-deity. It presents the idea of God as steadfast: "The
appellation of God as tsur, `rock,' `safe retreat,' in Deuteronomy refers to this" (Oehler, Old
Testament Theology). It often occurs, in a most striking figure, with the personal suffix as "my
rock," "their rock," to express confidence (Psalm 28:1).
7. Kadhosh:
The name (qadhosh, "holy") is found frequently in Isaiah and Psalms, and occasionally in the
other prophets. It is characteristic of Isaiah, being found 32 times in that book. It occurs often in
the phrase qedhosh yisra'el, "Holy One of Israel." The derivation and meaning remain in doubt,
but the customary and most probable derivation is from qadhash, "to be separate," which best
explains its use both of man and of the Deity. When used of God it signifies: (1) His
transcendence, His separateness above all other beings; (2) His peculiar relation to His people
Israel unto whom He separated Himself, as He did not unto other nations. In the former sense
Isaiah used it of His sole deity (40:25), in the latter of His peculiar and unchanging covenant-
relation to Israel (43:3; 48:17), strikingly, expressed in the phrase "Holy One of Israel."
Qadhosh was rather attributive than personal, but became personal in the use of such absolute
theists as Job and Isaiah. It expresses essential Deity, rather than personal revelation.
8. Shaddai:
In the patriarchal literature, and in Job particularly, where it is put into the mouths of the
patriarchs, this name appears sometimes in the compound 'el shaddai, sometimes alone.
While its root meaning also is uncertain, the suggested derivation from shadhadh, "to destroy,"
"to terrify," seems most probable, signifying the God who is manifested by the terribleness of
His mighty acts. Its use in patriarchal days marks an advance over looser Semitic conceptions
to the stricter monotheistic idea of almightiness, and is in accord with the early consciousness
of Deity in race or individual as a God of awe, or even terror. Its monotheistic character is in
harmony with its use in the Abrahamic times, and is further corroborated by its parallel in
Septuagint and New Testament, pantokrator, "all-powerful."
It is often difficult to distinguish between the personal and the attributive names of God, the two
divisions necessarily shading into each other. Some of the preceding are really attributive,
made personal by usage. The following are the most prominent descriptive or attributive
names.
1. 'Abhir:
This name ('abhir), translated in English Versions of the Bible "Mighty One," is always
combined with Israel or Jacob; its root is 'abhar, "to be strong" from which is derived the word
'ebher, "pinion," used of the strong wing of the eagle (Isaiah 40:31), figuratively of God in
Deuteronomy 32:11. It occurs in Jacob's blessing (Genesis 49:24), in a prayer for the
sanctuary (Psalm 132:2,5), and in Isaiah (1:24; 49:26; 60:16), to express the assurance of the
Divine strength on behalf of the oppressed in Israel (Isaiah 1:24), or on behalf of Israel against
his oppressors; it is interesting to note that this name was first used by Jacob himself.
2. 'El-'Elohe-Israel:
The name 'El is combined with a number of descriptive adjectives to represent God in His
various attributes; and these by usage have become names or titles of God like the remarkable
phrase 'EL-'ELOHE-ISRAEL (Genesis 33:20), which means "God, the God of Israel" or "mighty
is the God of Israel."
3. `Elyon:
This name (`elyon, "highest") is a derivative of `alah, "to go up." It is used of persons or things
to indicate their elevation or exaltation: of Israel, favored above other nations (Deuteronomy
26:19), of the aqueduct of "the upper pool" (Isaiah 7:3), etc. This indicates that its meaning
when applied to God is the "Exalted One," who is lifted far above all gods and men. It occurs
alone (Deuteronomy 32:8; Psalm 18:13), or in combination with other names of God, most
frequently with El (Genesis 14:18; Psalm 78:35), but also with Yahweh (Psalm 7:17; 97:9), or
with Elohim (Psalm 56:2 the King James Version; Psalm 78:56). Its early use in Genesis 14:18
points to a high conception of Deity, an unquestioned monotheism in the beginnings of Hebrew
history.
4. Gibbor:
The ancient Hebrews were in constant struggle for their land and their liberties, a struggle most
intense and patriotic in the heroic days of Saul and David, and in which there was developed a
band of men whose great deeds entitled them to the honorable title "mighty men" of valor
(gibborim). These were the knights of David's "Round Table." In like manner the Hebrew
thought of his God as fighting for him, and easily then this title was applied to God as the
"Mighty God of war", occurring in David's psalm of the Ark's Triumphant Entry (Psalm 24:8), in
the allegory of the Messiah-King (Psalm 45:3), either alone or combined with El (Isaiah 9:6;
Jeremiah 32:18), and sometimes with Yahweh (Isaiah 42:13).
5. 'El-Ro'i:
When Hagar was fleeing from Sarah's persecutions, Yahweh spoke to her in the wilderness of
Shur, words of promise and encouragement. Whereupon "she called the name of the LORD
who spoke to her,' You are (El Roi) a God of seeing" (Genesis 16:13). In the text the word ro'i,
derivation of ra'ah, "to see," is translated "that sees," literally, "of sight." This is the only
occurrence of this title in the Old Testament.
6. Tsaddiq:
One of the covenant attributes of God, His righteousness, is spoken of so often that it passes
from adjective to substantive, from attribute to name, and He is called "Righteous" (tsaddiq), or
"the Righteous One." The word is never transliterated but always translated in English Versions
of the Bible, although it might just as properly be considered a Divine name as `Elyon or
Qadhosh. The root tsadhaq, "to be straight" or "right," signifies fidelity to a standard, and is
used of God's fidelity to His own nature and to His covenant-promise (Isaiah 41:10; 42:6;
compare Hosea 2:19); it occurs alone (Psalm 34:17), with El (Deuteronomy 32:4), with Elohim
(Ezra 9:15; Psalm 7:9; 116:5), but most frequently with Yahweh (Psalm 129:4, etc.). In Exodus
9:27 Pharaoh, in acknowledging his sin against Yahweh, calls Him `Yahweh the Righteous,'
using the article. The suggestive combination, "Yahweh our Righteousness," is the name given
to David's "righteous Branch" in Jeremiah 23:6 and properly should be taken as a proper noun-
-the name of the Messiah-King.
7. Kanna:
Frequently in the Pentateuch, most often in the 3 versions of the Commandments (Exodus
20:5; 34:14; Deuteronomy 5:9), God is given the title "Jealous" (qanna'), most specifically in
the phrase "Yahweh, whose name is Jealous" in Exodus 34:14. This word, however, did not
bear the evil meaning now associated with it in our usage, but rather signified "righteous zeal,"
Yahweh's zeal for His own name or glory and for His people (compare Isaiah 9:7, "the zeal of
Yahweh," qin'ah; also Zechariah 1:14; 8:2).
8. Yahweh Tsebha'-oth:
Connected with the personal and covenant name Yahweh, there is found frequently the word
Sabaoth (tsebha'oth, "hosts"). Invariably in the Old Testament it is translated "hosts" (Isaiah
1:9; Psalm 46:7,11, etc.), but in the New Testament it is transliterated twice, both in the Greek
and English (Romans 9:29; James 5:4). The passage in Romans is a quotation from Isaiah 1:9.
Origin and meaning are uncertain. It is used of heavenly bodies and earthly forces (Genesis
2:1); of the army of Israel (2 Samuel 8:16); of the Heavenly beings (Psalm 103:21; 148:2;
Daniel 4:35). It is probable that the title is intended to include all created agencies and beings,
of which Yahweh is maker and leader.
When God appeared to Moses at Sinai, commissioning him to deliver Israel; Moses, being well
aware of the difficulty of impressing the people, asked by what name of God he should speak
to them: "...they ask me, 'What is his name?'" Then "God said unto Moses, 'I AM WHO I AM ....
say .... I AM has sent me to you'" (Exodus 3:14). The name of the Deity given here is similar to
Yahweh except that the form is not 3rd person future, as in the usual form, but the 1st person
('ehyeh), since God is here speaking of Himself. The optional reading in the American Revised
Version margin is much to be preferred: "I WILL BE THAT I WILL BE," indicating His covenant
pledge to be with and for Israel in all the ages to follow.
The variety of names which characterizes the Old Testament is lacking in the New Testament,
where we are all but limited to two names, each of which corresponds to several in the Old
Testament. The most frequent is the name "God" (Theos) occurring over 1,000 times, and
corresponding to El, Elohim, etc., of the Old Testament.
1. God:
2. Lord:
Five times "Lord" is a translation of despotes in Luke 2:29; Acts 4:24; 2 Peter 2:1 the King
James Version; Jude 1:4; Revelation 6:10 the King James Version. In each case there is
evident emphasis on sovereignty and correspondence to the 'Adhon of the Old Testament. The
most common Greek word for Lord is Kurios, representing both Yahweh and 'Adhonai of the
Old Testament, and occurring upwards of 600 times. Its use for Yahweh was in the spirit of
both the Hebrew scribes, who pointed the consonants of the covenant name with the vowels of
Adonai, the title of dominion, and of the Septuagint, which rendered this combination as Kurios.
Consequently quotations from the Old Testament in which Yahweh occurs are rendered by
Kurios. It is applied to Christ equally with the Father and the Spirit, showing that the Messianic
hopes conveyed by the name Yahweh were for New Testament writers fulfilled in Jesus Christ;
and that in Him the long hoped for appearance of Yahweh was realized.
As in the Old Testament, so in the New Testament various attributive, descriptive or figurative
names are found, often corresponding to those in the Old Testament. Some of these are: The
"Highest" or "Most High" (hupsistos), found in this sense only in Luke 1:32,35,76; 2:14, etc.,
and equivalent to 'Elyon (see III, 3, above); "Almighty," (pantokrator) in 2 Corinthians 6:18;
Revelation 1:8, etc., corresponding to Shaddai (see II, 8 above); "Father," as in the Lord's
Prayer, and elsewhere (Matthew 6:9; 11:25; John 17:25; 2 Corinthians 6:18); "King" (1 Timothy
1:17); "King of kings" (1 Timothy 6:15); "King of kings," "Lord of lords" (Revelation 17:14;
19:16); "Potentate" (1 Timothy 6:15); "Master" (Kurios, Ephesians 6:9; 2 Peter 2:1; Revelation
6:10); "Shepherd," "Bishop" (1 Peter 2:25).
LITERATURE.
Animism is the belief that non-human entities, including animals, plants, and often inanimate
objects or phenomena, possess a spiritual essence. In the language of the philosophy of
religion, animism is one of the lowest (and perhaps the earliest) forms of religion. It believes
that these entities interact and speak with people, and receive pleasure or displeasure from
human actions, and the belief in their existence often leads to active reverence and worship.
According to this view, the world is full of disembodied spirits, regarded as similar to man's
soul, and any or all of these may be treated as gods.
(2) Fetishism:
Fetishism is used in a more particular sense of the belief that spirits take up their residence,
either temporarily or permanently, in some object and this object, as endowed with higher
power, is then worshipped.
(3) Idolatry:
Idolatry is a term of still more definite significance. It means that the object selected is the
permanent habitation or symbol of the deity; and, generally, it is marked by some degree of
human workmanship which enables it the more adequately to represent the deity. People then
address their worship to objects, whether fetishes or idols, as being the homes or images of
their god. It is a common idea that the spirit has a form similar to the visible object in which it
dwells. Paul reflected the pagan idea accurately when he said, "...we ought not to think that the
divine being is like gold or silver or stone, an image formed by the art and imagination of man"
(Acts 17:29).
(4) Polytheism:
The belief in many gods, and the worship of them, is an attitude of soul compatible with
Animism, Fetishism, and Idolatry, or it may be independent of them all. The term "polytheism"
is more usually employed to designate the worship of a limited number of well-defined deities,
whether regarded as pure disembodied spirits, or as residing in the greater objects of nature,
such as planets or mountains, or as symbolized by images "formed by the art and imagination
of man" (Acts 17:29). In ancient Greece or modern India, for example, the great gods are well
defined, named and numerable, and it is clearly understood that, though they may be
symbolized by images, they dwell apart in a spiritual realm above the rest of the world.
(5) Henotheism:
There is a tendency, both in individuals and in communities, even where many gods are
believed to exist, to set one god above the others, and consequently to confine worship to that
god alone. This tendency can be seen in the cultures of Babylonia, Egypt, India, China, or
Greece, for example. This attitude of mind has been called Henotheism--the worship of one
god combined with the belief in the existence of many.
(6) Pantheism:
Pantheism is the belief that the universe or nature as the totality of everything is identical with
divinity, or that everything composes an all-encompassing, transcendent god. Pantheists
therefore do not believe in a personal or anthropomorphic (having human form or human
attributes) god. Eastern religions are often considered to be pantheistically inclined.
(7) Deism:
Deism is the belief that reason and observation of the natural world are sufficient to determine
the existence of a Creator, accompanied by the rejection of revelation and authority as a
source of religious knowledge. Deism gained prominence in the 17th and 18th centuries during
the Age of Enlightenment especially among intellectuals raised as Christians who believed in
one god, but found fault with organized religion and did not believe in supernatural events like
miracles, the inerrancy of scriptures and the Trinity. Pantheism and deism, though they have
had considerable popularity as philosophical theories, have proved unstable and impossible as
religions, for they have invariably reverted to some kind of polytheism and idolatry.
Introduction
The Old Testament revelation of God is progressive and develops as one reads the narrative.
Certain well-marked stages of the development can be easily recognized. The age of the
Exodus, as centering around the personality of Moses, witnessed an important development in
Hebrew religion. The most ancient traditions declare (perhaps not unanimously) that God was
then first known to Israel under the personal name Yahweh (Yahweh (YHWH) is the correct
form of the word, Yahweh being a composite of the consonants of Yahweh and the vowels of
'adhonai, or lord). The Hebrew people came to regard Him as their Deliverer from Egypt, as
their war God who assured them the conquest of Canaan, and He, therefore, became their
King, who ruled over their destinies in their new heritage. But the settlement of Yahweh in
Canaan, like that of His people, was challenged by the native peoples and their gods. We see
the war against Yahweh carried into His own camp, and Baal-worship attempting to set itself
up within Israel. His prophets therefore assert the sole right of Yahweh to the worship of His
people, and the great prophets base that right upon His transcendence. Thus they at once
reveal new depths of His nature, and set His uniqueness and supremacy on higher grounds.
During the exile and afterward, Israel's outlook is effected by contact with the greater world.
Three fairly well-defined periods thus emerge, corresponding to three stages in the
development of the Old Testament idea of God:
the pre-prophetic period governed by the Mosaic conception, the prophetic period during which
ethical monotheism is firmly established, and the post-exilic period with the rise of abstract
monotheism. The most characteristic ideas of each period may be described within their
period; but it should not be assumed that they are absent from other periods; and, in particular,
it should not be supposed that ideas, and the life they represent, did not exist before they
emerged in the clear witness of history.
Religious experience must always have had an inward and subjective aspect, but it is a long
and difficult process to translate the objective language of ordinary life for the uses of
subjective experience. "Men look outward before they look inward." Hence, we find that men
express their consciousness of God in the earliest periods in language borrowed from the
visible and objective world. It does not follow that they thought of God in a sensuous way,
because they speak of Him in the language of the senses, which alone was available for them.
On the other hand, thought is never entirely independent of language, and the degree in which
men using sensuous language may think of spiritual facts varies with different persons.
The face or countenance (panim) of God is a natural expression for His presence. The place
where God is seen is called Peniel, the face of God (Genesis 32:30). The face of Yahweh is
His people's blessing (Numbers 6:25). With His face (the English Standard Version and the
Revised Version (British and American) "presence") He brought Israel out of Egypt, and His
face goes with them to Canaan (Exodus 33:14). To be alienated from God is to be hid from His
face (Genesis 4:14), or God hides His face (Deuteronomy 31:17,18; 32:20). In contrast with
this idea it is said elsewhere that man cannot see the face of God and live (Exodus 33:20;
compare Deuteronomy 5:24; Judges 6:22; 13:22). In these later passages, "face" stands for
the entire being of God, as distinguished from what man may know of Him. This phrase and its
cognates enshrine also that fear of God, which shrinks from His majesty even while
approaching Him, which enters into all worship.
The voice (qol) and word (dabhar) of God are forms under which His communicating with man
is conceived from the earliest days to the latest. The idea ranges from that of inarticulate
utterance (1 Kings 19:12) to the declaration of the entire law of conduct (Deuteronomy 5:22-
24), to the message of the prophets (Isaiah 2:1; Jeremiah 1:2), and the personification of the
whole counsel and action of God (Psalms 105:19; 147:18,19; Hosea 6:5; Isaiah 40:8).
The angel (mal'akh) of God or of Yahweh is a frequent mode of God's manifestation of Himself
in human form, and for occasional purposes. Its exact relation to God, or its likeness to man, is
nowhere fixed. In many passages, it is assumed that God and His angel are the same being,
and the names are used synonymously (as in Genesis 16:7; 22:15,16; Exodus 3:2,4; Judges
2:4,5); in other passages the idea blurs into varying degrees of differentiation (Genesis
18; 24:40; Exodus 23:21; 33:2,3; Judges 13:8,9). But everywhere, it fully represents God as
speaking or acting for the time being; and it is to be distinguished from the subordinate and
intermediate beings known as angels. Its identification with the Messiah and the Logos is only
true in the sense that these later terms are more definite expressions of the idea of revelation,
which the angel represented.
The spirit (ruach) of God in the earlier period is a form of His activity, as it moves warrior and
prophet to act and to speak (Judges 6:34; 13:25; 1 Samuel 10:10), and it is in the prophetic
period that it becomes the organ of the communication of God's thoughts to men.
The name (shem) of God is the most comprehensive and frequent expression in the Old
Testament for His self-manifestation, for His person as it may be known to men. The name is
something visible or audible which represents God to men, and which, therefore, may be said
to do His deeds, and to stand in His place, in relation to men. God reveals Himself by making
known or proclaiming His name (Exodus 6:3; 33:19; 34:5,6). His servants derive their authority
from His name (Exodus 3:13,15; 1 Samuel 17:45). To worship God is to call upon His name
(Genesis 12:8;13:4; 21:33; 26:25; 1 Kings 18:24-26), to fear it (Deuteronomy 28:58), to praise it
(2 Samuel 22:50; Psalms 7:17; 54:6), to glorify it (Psalms 86:9). It is wickedness to take God's
name in vain (Exodus 20:7), or to profane and blaspheme it (Leviticus 18:21; 24:16). God's
dwelling-place is the place where He chooses "to cause his name to dwell" (2 Samuel
7:13; 1 Kings 3:2; 5:3,1; 8:16-19;18:32; Deuteronomy 12:11,21). God's name defends His
people (Psalms 20:1; Isaiah 30:27). For His name's sake He will not forsake them (1 Samuel
12:22). God is known by different names, as expressing various forms of His self-manifestation
(Genesis 16:13; 17:1; Exodus 3:6; 34:6). The name even confers its revelation-value upon the
angel (Exodus 23:20-23). All God's names are, therefore, significant for the revelation of His
being.
In addition to these more or less fixed forms, God also appears in a variety of exceptional or
occasional forms. In Numbers 12:6-8, it is said that Moses, unlike others, used to see the form
(temunah) of Yahweh. Fire smoke and cloud are frequent forms or symbols of God's presence
(e.g. Genesis 15:17; Exodus 3:2-4; 19:18; 24:17), and notably "the pillar of cloud by day, and
the pillar of fire by night" (Exodus 13:21). According to later ideas, the cloud rested upon the
tabernacle (Exodus 40:34), and in it God appeared upon the ark (Leviticus 16:2). Extraordinary
occurrences or miracles are, in the early period, frequent signs of the power of God (Exodus
7;1 Kings 17).
All the names of God were originally significant of His character, but the derivations, and
therefore the original meanings, of several have been lost, and new meanings have been
sought for them.
(1) Generic:
One of the oldest and most widely distributed terms for Deity known to the human race is 'El,
with its derivations 'Elim, 'Elohim, and 'Eloah. It is a generic term, including every member of
the class deity. It may even denote a position of honor and authority among men. Moses was
'Elohim to Pharaoh (Exodus 7:1) and to Aaron (Exodus 4:16; compare Judges 5:8; 1 Samuel
2:25; Exodus 21:5,6; 22:7; Psalms 58:11; 82:1). It is, therefore, a general term expressing
majesty and authority, and it only came to be used as a proper name for Israel's God in the
later period of abstract monotheism when the old proper name Yahweh was held to be too
sacred to be uttered. By far the most frequent form used by Old Testament writers is the plural
'Elohim, but they use it regularly with singular verbs and adjectives to denote a singular idea.
Several explanations have been offered of this usage of a plural term to denote a singular idea-
-that it expresses the fullness and manifoldness of the Divine nature, or that it is a plural of
majesty used in the manner of royal persons, or that it is an early intimation of the Trinity
(Genesis 1:26; 3:22; and Isaiah 6:8).
(2) Attributive:
To distinguish the God of Israel as supreme from others of the class 'Elohim, certain qualifying
appellations are often added. 'El `Elyon designates the God of Israel as the highest, the most
high, among the 'Elohim (Genesis 14:18-20); so do Yahweh `Elyon (Psalms 7:17) and `Elyon
alone, often in Psalms and in Isaiah 14:14.
'El Shaddai, or Shaddai alone, is a similar term which on the strength of some tradition is
translated "God Almighty." According to Exodus 6:3 it was the usual name for God in
patriarchal times.
Another way of designating God was by His relation to His worshippers, as the God of
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob (Genesis 24:12; Exodus 3:6), of Shem (Genesis 9:26), of the
Hebrews (Exodus 3:18), and of Israel (Genesis 33:20).
Other names used to express the power and majesty of God are tsur, "Rock" (Deuteronomy
32:18; Isaiah 30:29), 'abhir, "the Strong One" (Genesis 49:24; Isaiah 1:24;Psalms 132:2);
melekh, "King"; 'adhon, "lord," and 'adhonai, "my lord" (Exodus 23:17; Isaiah
10:16,33; Genesis 18:27; Isaiah 6:1). Also ba`al, "proprietor" or "master," may be inferred as a
designation once in use, from its appearance in such Hebrew proper names as Jerubbaal and
Ishbaal. The last three names describe God as a Master to whom man stands in the relation of
a servant, and they tended to fall into disuse as the necessity arose to differentiate the worship
of Yahweh from that of the gods of surrounding nations.
This is the personal proper name of Israel's God, even as Chemosh was that of the god of
Moab, and Dagon that of the god of the Philistines. The original meaning and derivation of the
word are unknown. The Hebrews themselves connected the word with hayah, "to be."
In Exodus 3:14 Yahweh is explained as equivalent to 'ehyeh, which is a short form of 'ehyeh
'asher 'ehyeh, translated in the Revised Version (British and American) "I am that I am." This
has been supposed to mean "self-existence," and to represent God as the Absolute. The
imperfect 'ehyeh could also be translated, "I will be what I will be," a Semitic idiom meaning, "I
will be all that is necessary as the occasion will arise," a familiar Old Testament idea
(compare Isaiah 7:4,9; Psalms 23).
This name was in use from the earliest historical times till after the exile. It is found in the most
ancient literature. According to Exodus 3:13, and especially 6:2,3, it was first introduced by
Moses, and was the medium of a new revelation of the God of their fathers to the children of
Israel. But in parts of Genesis it is represented as being in use from the earliest times. We
have to be content to say that Yahweh was the God of Israel from time immemorial and to us
He is known only as the God of Israel.
Hebrew theology consists essentially of the doctrine of Yahweh and its implications. The
teachers and leaders of the people at all times worship and enjoin the worship of Yahweh
alone. In every national and tribal crisis, in all times of danger and of war, it is Yahweh and
Yahweh alone who is invoked to give victory and deliverance. This is more evident in what is,
without doubt, very early literature, even than in later writings (e.g. Judges 5; Deuteronomy
33; 1 Samuel 4-6). The isolation of the desert was more favorable to the integrity of Yahweh's
sole worship than the neighborhood of powerful peoples who worshipped many other gods.
The early worship of Yahweh did not exclude acknowledging that other nations had other gods.
The other nations believed in the existence of Yahweh (1 Samuel 4:8; 2 Kings 17:27), so Israel
did not deny the reality of other gods (Judges 11:24; Numbers 21:29; Micah 4:5). This limitation
involved two others:
Yahweh is the God of Israel only; with them alone He makes a covenant (Genesis
15:18; Exodus 6:4,5; 2 Kings 17:34,35), and their worship only He seeks (Deuteronomy 4:32-
37;32:9; Amos 3:2). Therefore, He works, and can be worshipped only within a certain
geographical area. He may have been associated with His original home in Sinai long after the
settlement in Canaan (Judges 5:4; Deuteronomy 33:2; 1 Kings 19:8,9), but gradually His home
and that of His people became identical (1 Samuel 26:19; Hosea 9:3; Isaiah 14:2,25). Even
after the deportation of the ten tribes, Canaan remains Yahweh's land (2 Kings 17:24-28).
Even while they shared the common Semitic belief in the reality of other gods, Yahweh alone
had for them the value of God.
It is necessary to distinguish between the teaching of the religious leaders and the belief and
practice of the people generally. The presence of a higher religion never wholly excludes
superstitious practices. Necromancy was practiced early and late (1 Samuel 28:7; Isaiah
8:19;Deuteronomy 18:10), and sorcery and witchcraft were not unknown, but all were
condemned by the LORD (Leviticus 19:31; 20:6).
Yet the worship of Yahweh maintained and developed its monotheistic principle only by
overcoming several hostile tendencies. The Baal-worship of the Canaanites and the cults of
other neighboring tribes proved a strong attraction to the mass of Israelites (Judges
2:13; 3:7; 8:33;10:10; 1 Samuel 8:8; 12:10; 1 Kings 11:5,33; Hosea 2:5,17; Ezekiel 20; Exodus
20:5; 22:20;34:16,17). Under the conditions of life in Canaan, the sole worship of Yahweh was
in danger of modification by three tendencies, coordination, assimilation, and disintegration.
(i) Coordination:
When the people had settled down in peaceful relations with their neighbors, and began to
have commercial and diplomatic transactions with them, it was inevitable that they should
render their neighbor's gods some degree of reverence and worship. Courtesy and friendship
demanded as much (compare 2 Kings 5:18). When Solomon had contracted many foreign
alliances by marriage, he was also bound to admit foreign worship into Jerusalem (1 Kings
11:5). But Ahab was the first king who tried to set up the worship of Baal, side by side with that
of Yahweh, as the national religion (1 Kings 18:19). Elijah's stand and Jehu's revolution gave
its death blow to Baal-worship and vindicated the sole right of Yahweh to Israel's allegiance.
The prophet was defending the old religion and Ahab was the innovator; but the conflict and its
issue brought the monotheistic principle to a new and higher level (1 Kings 18:21,39).
(ii) Assimilation:
But to repudiate the name of Baal was not necessarily to be rid of the influence of Baal-
worship. The ideas of the heathen religions survived in a more subtle way in the worship of
Yahweh Himself. The change from the nomad life of the desert to the agricultural conditions of
Canaan involved some change in religion. Yahweh, the God of flocks and wars, had to be
recognized as the God of the vintage and the harvest. That this development occurred is
manifest in the character of the great religious festivals. "Three times thou shalt keep a feast
unto me in the year. The feast of unleavened bread shalt thou keep .... and the feast of
harvest, the first-fruits of thy labors, which thou sowest in the field: and the feast of ingathering,
at the end of the year, when thou gatherest in thy labors out of the field" (Exodus 23:14-16).
The second and the third obviously, and the first probably, were agricultural feasts, which could
have no meaning in the desert. Israel and Yahweh together took possession of Canaan. To
doubt that would be to admit the claims of the Baal-worship; but to assert it also involved some
danger, because it was to assert certain similarities between Yahweh and the Baalim. The
danger was that Israel should regard Yahweh, like the Baals of the country, as a Nature-god,
and, by local necessity, a national god, who gave His people the produce of the land and,
protected them from their enemies, and in return received frown them such gifts and sacrifices
as corresponded to His nature. The bulls raised by Jeroboam (1 Kings 12:26) were symbols of
Yahweh, and in Judah the Canaanite worship was imitated down to the time of Asa (1 Kings
14:22-24; 15:12,13). Against this tendency above all, the great prophets of the 8th century
contended. Israel worshipped Yahweh as if He were one of the Baalim, and Hosea calls it
Baal-worship (Hosea 2:8,12,13; compare Amos 2:8; Isaiah 1:10-15).
(iii) Disintegration:
And where Yahweh was conceived as one of the Baalim or Masters of the land, He became,
like them, subject to disintegration into a number of local deities. This was probably the worst
grievance of Jeroboam's sin in the eyes of the "Deuteronomic" historian. In setting up separate
sanctuaries, he divided the worship, and, in effect, the godhead of Yahweh. The localization
and naturalization of Yahweh, as well as His assimilation to the Baals, all went together, so that
we read that even in Judah the number of gods was according to its cities (Jeremiah
2:28; 11:13). The vindication of Yahweh's moral supremacy and spiritual unity demanded,
among other things, the unification of His worship in Jerusalem (2 Kings 23).
In one respect the religion of Yahweh successfully resisted the influence of the heathen cults.
At no time was Yahweh associated with a goddess. Although the corrupt sensual practices that
formed a large part of heathen worship also entered into Israel's worship (see ASHERAH), it
never penetrated so far as to modify in this respect the idea of Yahweh.
Human sacrifice never found place in the worship of Yahweh. One outstanding instance is that
of Jephthah's daughter due to a tragic vow made by Jephthah and is certainly regarded as
exceptional (Judges 11:30-40). There is the story of God's command to Abraham to sacrifice
Isaac, which is God's testing of Abraham (Genesis 22). Later Ahaz' sacrifice of his son is
condemned as an "abomination of the nations" (2 Kings 16:3). The sacrifice of children is
emphatically condemned by the prophets as a late and foreign innovation which Yahweh had
not commanded (Jeremiah 7:31; Ezekiel 16:20). Other cases, such as the execution of the
chiefs of Shittim (Numbers 25:4), and of Saul's sons "before Yahweh" (2 Samuel 21:9), and the
cherem or ban, by which whole communities were devoted to destruction (Judges
21:10; 1 Samuel 15), while they show a very inadequate idea of the sacredness of human life,
are not sacrifices, nor were they demanded by Yahweh's worship.
The nature and character of Yahweh are manifested in His activities. The Old Testament
makes no statements about the essence of God; we are left to infer it from His action in Nature
and history and from His dealing with man.
In this period, His activity is predominantly martial. As Israel's Deliverer from Egypt, "Yahweh is
a man of war" (Exodus 15:3). An ancient account of Israel's journey to Canaan is called "the
book of the Wars of Yahweh" (Numbers 21:14). By conquest in war He gave His people their
land (Judges 5; 2 Samuel 5:24; Deuteronomy 33:27). He is, therefore, more concerned with
men and nations, with the moral, than with the physical world.
Even His activity in nature is first connected with His martial character. Earth, stars and rivers
come to His battle (Judges 5:4,20,21). The forces of nature do the bidding of Israel's Deliverer
from Egypt (Exodus 8-10; 14:21). He causes sun and moon to stand while He delivers up the
Amorites (Joshua 10:12). Later, He employs the forces of nature to chastise His people for
infidelity and sin (2 Samuel 24:15; 1 Kings 17:1). Amos declares that His moral rule extends to
other nations and that it determines their destinies. In harmony with this idea, great
catastrophes like the Deluge (Genesis 7) and the overthrow of the Cities of the Plain (Genesis
19) are ascribed to His moral will. In the same pragmatic manner the oldest creation narrative
describes Him creating man, and as much of the world as He needed (Genesis 2), but as yet
the idea of a universal cause had not emerged, because the idea of a universe had not been
formed. He acts as one of great, but limited, power and knowledge (Genesis 11:5-8; 18:20).
The more universal conception of Genesis 1 belongs to the same stratum of thought as
Second Isaiah. At every stage of the Old Testament the metaphysical perfections of Yahweh
follow as an inference from His ethical preeminence.
The most distinctive characteristic of Yahweh, which made Him and His religion unique, was
the moral factor. In saying that Yahweh was a moral God, it is meant that He acted by free
choice, in conformity with ends which He set to Himself, and which He also imposed upon His
worshippers as their law of conduct.
(a) Personality:
The most essential condition of a moral nature is found in God's vivid personality, which at
every stage of His self-revelation shines forth with an intensity that might be called aggressive.
Yahweh's jealousy (Exodus 20:5; Deuteronomy 5:9; 6:15), His wrath and anger (Exodus 32:10-
12;Deuteronomy 7:4) and His inviolable holiness (Exodus 19:21,22; 1 Samuel 6:19; 2 Samuel
6:7) appear sometimes to be irrational and immoral; but they are the assertion of His individual
nature, of His self-consciousness as He distinguishes Himself from all else, in the moral
language of the time, and are the conditions of His having any moral nature whatsoever.
Likewise, He dwells in a place and moves from it (Judges 5:5); men may see Him in visible
form (Exodus 24:10; Numbers 12:8); He is always represented as having parts like those of the
human body, arms, hands, feet, mouth, eyes and ears. By such sensuous and figurative
language alone was it possible for a personal God to make Himself known to men.
The content of Yahweh's moral nature as revealed in the Old Testament developed with the
growth of moral ideas. Though His activity is most prominently martial, it is most permanently
judicial, and is exercised through judges, priests and prophets. Torah and mishpaT, "law" and
"judgment," from the time of Moses onward, stand, the one for a body of customs that should
determine men's relations to one another, and the other for the decision of individual cases in
accordance with those customs, and both were regarded as issuing from Yahweh. The people
came to Moses "to inquire of God" when they had a matter in dispute, and he "judged between
a man and his neighbor, and made them know the statutes of God, and his laws" (Exodus
18:15,16). The judges appear mostly as leaders in war; but it is clear, as their name indicates,
that they also gave judgments as between the people (Judges 3:10; 4:4; 10:2,3; 1 Samuel
7:16). The earliest literary prophets assume the existence of a law which priest and prophet
had neglected to administer rightly (Hosea 4:6; 8:1,12; Amos 2:4). This implied that Yahweh
was thought of as acting by a consistent moral principle, which He also imposed on His people.
Their morality may have varied much at different periods, but there is no reason to doubt that
the Decalogue, and the moral teaching it involved, emanated substantially from Moses. Moses
taught them that Yahweh was also a God of justice and purity. The moral teaching of the Old
Testament effected the transition from the national and collective to the individual and personal
relation with Yahweh.
The first line of advance in the teaching of the prophets was to expand and deepen the moral
demands of Yahweh. They were conscious that they were only developing elements already
latent in the character and law of Yahweh.
Two conditions called forth and determined the message of the 8th-century prophets--the
degradation of morality and religion at home and the growing danger to Israel and Judah from
the all-victorious Assyrian. With one voice the prophets declare and condemn the moral and
social iniquity of Israel and Judah (Hosea 4:1; Amos 4:1; Isaiah 1:21-23). The worship of
Yahweh had been assimilated to the heathen religions around (Amos 2:8; Hosea 3:1; Isaiah
30:22). A time of prosperity had produced luxury, license and an easy security, depending
upon the external bonds and ceremonies of religion. In the threatening attitude of Assyria, the
prophets see the complement of Israel's unfaithfulness and sin, this the cause and that the
instruments of Yahweh's anger (Isaiah 10:5,6).
(1) Righteousness:
These circumstances forced into first prominence the righteousness of Yahweh. It was an
original attribute that had appeared even in His most martial acts (Judges 5:4; 1 Samuel 12:7).
But the prophet's interpretation of Israel's history revealed its content on a larger scale.
Yahweh was not like the gods of the heathen, bound to the purposes and fortunes of His
people. Their relation was not a natural bond, but a covenant of grace which He freely
bestowed upon them, and He demanded as its condition, loyalty to Himself and obedience to
His law. Impending calamities were not, as the naturalistic conception implied, due to the
impotence of Yahweh against the Assyrian gods (Isaiah 31:1), but the judgment of God,
whereby He applied impartially to the conduct of His people a standard of righteousness, which
He both had in Himself and declared in judgment upon them. The prophets did not at first so
much transform the idea of righteousness, as assert its application as between the people and
Yahweh. But in doing that they also rejected the external views of its realization. It consists not
in unlimited gifts or in the costliest oblations. "What doth Yahweh require of thee, but to do
justly, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with thy God?" (Micah 6:8). And it tends to
become of universal application. Yahweh will deal as a righteous judge with all nations,
including Israel, and Israel as the covenant people bears the greater responsibility (Amos 1-3).
And a righteous judge that metes out even justice to all nations will deal similarly with
individuals. The ministry of the prophets produced a vivid consciousness of the personal and
individual relation of men to God. The prophets themselves were men impelled by an inner and
individual call of God, often against their inclination, to proclaim an unpopular message (Amos
7:14,15; Isaiah 6;Jeremiah 1:6-9; Ezekiel 3:14). Jeremiah and Ezekiel in terms denounced the
old idea of collective responsibility (Jeremiah 31:29; Ezekiel 18). Thus in the prophets'
application of the idea of righteousness to their time, two of the limitations adhering to the idea
of God, at least in popular religion hitherto, were transcended. Yahweh's rule is not limited to
Israel, nor concerned only with the nation as a collective whole, but He deals impartially with
every individual and nation alike. Other limitations also disappear. His anger and wrath, that
once appeared irrational and unjust, now become the intensity of His righteousness. Nor is it
merely forensic and retributive righteousness. It is rather a moral end, a chief good, which He
may realize by loving-kindness and mercy and forgiveness as much as by punishment. Hebrew
thought knows no opposition between God's righteousness and His goodness, between justice
and mercy. The covenant of righteousness is like the relation of husband to wife, of father to
child, one of loving-kindness and everlasting love (Hosea 3:1; 11:4; Isaiah 1:18; 30:18; Micah
7:18; Isaiah 43:4; 54:8; Jeremiah 31:3,34; 9:24). The stirring events which showed Yahweh's
independence of Israel revealed the fullness of grace that was always latent in His relation to
His people (Genesis 33:11; 2 Samuel 24:14). It was enshrined in the Decalogue (Exodus 20:6),
and proclaimed with incomparable grandeur in what may be the most ancient Mosaic tradition:
"Yah, Yahweh, a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abundant in lovingkindness
and truth; keeping lovingkindness for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin"
(Exodus 34:6,7).
(2) Holiness:
The holiness of Yahweh in the Prophets came to have a meaning closely akin to His
righteousness. As an idea more distinctly religious and more exclusively applied to God, it was
subject to greater changes of meaning with the development or degradation of religion. It was
applied to anything withdrawn from common use to the service of religion--utensils, places,
seasons, animals and men. Whether or not the root-idea of the word was "separateness," there
is no doubt that it is applied to Yahweh in the Old Testament to express his separateness from
men and his sublimity above them. It was not always a moral quality in Yahweh; for He might
be unapproachable because of His mere power and terror (1 Samuel 6:20; Isaiah 8:13). But in
the Prophets, and especially in Isaiah, it acquires a distinctly moral meaning. In his vision
Isaiah hears Yahweh proclaimed as "holy, holy, holy," and he is filled with the sense of his own
sin and of that of Israel (Isaiah 6; compare Isaiah 1:4; Amos 2:7). But even here the term
conveys more than moral perfection. Yahweh is already "the high and lofty One that inhabiteth
eternity, whose name is Holy" (Isaiah 57:15). It expresses the full Divinity of Yahweh in His
uniqueness and self-existence (1 Samuel 2:2; Amos 4:2; Hosea 11:9). It would therefore seem
to stand in antithesis to righteousness, as expressing those qualities of God, metaphysical and
moral, by which He is distinguished and separated from men, while righteousness involves
those moral activities and relations which man may share with God. But in the Prophets, God's
entire being is moral and His whole activity is righteous. The meanings of the terms, though not
identical, coincide; God's holiness is realized in righteousness. "God the Holy One is sanctified
in righteousness" (Isaiah 5:16). So Isaiah's peculiar phrase, "the Holy One of Israel," brings
God in His most exalted being into a relation of knowledge and moral reciprocity with Israel.
(3) Universality:
(4) Unity:
The unity of God was the leading idea of Josiah's reformation. Jerusalem was cleansed of
every accretion of Baal-worship and of other heathen religions that had established themselves
by the side of the worship of Yahweh (2 Kings 23:4-8,10-14). The semi-heathen worship of
Yahweh in many local shrines, which tended to disintegrate His unity, was swept away
(2 Kings 23:8,9). The reform was extended to the Northern Kingdom (2 Kings 23:15-20), so
that Jerusalem should be the sole habitation of Yahweh on earth, and His worship there alone
should be the symbol of unity to the whole Hebrew race.
But the monotheistic doctrine is first fully and consciously stated in Second Isaiah. There is no
God but Yahweh: other gods are merely graven images, and their worshippers commit the
absurdity of worshipping the work of their own hands (Isaiah 42:8; 44:8-20). Yahweh manifests
His deity in His absolute sovereignty of the world, both of nature and history. The prophet had
seen the rise and fall of Assyria, the coming of Cyrus, the deportation and return of Judah's
exiles, as incidents in the training of Israel for her world-mission to be "a light of the Gentiles"
and Yahweh's "salvation unto the end of the earth" (Isaiah 42:1-7; 49:1-6). Israel's world-
mission, and the ordering of historical movements to the grand final purpose of universal
salvation (Isaiah 45:23), is the philosophy of history complementary to the doctrine of God's
unity and universal sovereignty.
A further inference is that He is Creator and Lord of the physical universe. Israel's call and
mission is from Yahweh who "created the heavens, and stretched them forth; he that spread
abroad the earth and that which cometh out of it; he that giveth breath unto the people upon it,
and spirit to them that walk therein" (Isaiah 42:5; compare Isaiah
40:12,26; 44:24; 45:18; Genesis 1). All the essential factors of Monotheism are here at last
exhibited, not in abstract metaphysical terms, but as practical motives of religious life. His
counsel and action are His own (Isaiah 40:13) Nothing is hid from Him; and the future like the
past is known to Him (Isaiah 40:27; 42:9; 44:8; 48:6). Notwithstanding His special association
with the temple in Jerusalem, He is "the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity"; the heaven
is His throne, and no house or place can contain Him (Isaiah 57:15; 66:1). No force of history
or nature can withstand His purpose (Isaiah 41:17-20;42:13; 43:13). He is "the First and the
Last," an "Everlasting God" (Isaiah 40:28; 41:4; 48:12). Nothing can be likened to Him or
compared with Him (Isaiah 46:5). As the heavens are higher than the earth, so His thoughts
and ways transcend those of men (Isaiah 55:8,9). Eyes, mouth, ears, nostrils, hands, arms and
face are His; He is a man of war (Isaiah 42:13; 63:1); He cries like a travailing woman (Isaiah
42:14), and feeds His flock like a shepherd (Isaiah 40:11). Thus, alone could the prophet
express His full concrete Divinity.
His compassion and love are expressed in a variety of ways that lead up directly to the New
Testament doctrine of Divine Fatherhood. He folds Israel in His arms as a shepherd his lambs
(Isaiah 40:11). Her scattered children are His sons and daughters whom He redeems and
restores (Isaiah 43:5-7). In wrath for a moment He hides His face, but His mercy and kindness
are everlasting (Isaiah 54:8). Greater than a mother's tenderness is Yahweh's love for Israel
(Isaiah 49:15; 66:13). The spirituality and personality of God are most adequately expressed in
the living human language of the prophet.
Monotheism appears in this period as established beyond question, and in the double sense
that Yahweh the God of Israel is one Being, and that beside Him there is no other God. He
alone is God of all the earth, and all other beings stand at an infinite distance from Him
(Psalms 18:31;24:1; 115:3). The generic name God is frequently applied to Him, and the
tendency appears to avoid the particular and proper name Yahweh (see especially Psalms 73-
89; Job; Ecclesiastes).
Although we do not yet find anything like a dogmatic account of God's attributes, the larger
outlook upon the universe and the deeper reflection upon man's individual experience have
produced more comprehensive and far-reaching ideas of God's being and activity. (a) Faith
rests upon His eternity and unchangeablehess (Psalms 90:1,2; 102:27). His omniscience and
omnipresence are expressed with every possible fullness (Psalms 139; Job 26:6). His almighty
power is at once the confidence of piety, and the rebuke of blasphemy or frowardness (Psalms
74:12-17; 104 et passim; Job 36; 37 et passim; Ecclesiasticus 16:17). (b) His most exalted and
comprehensive attribute is His holiness; by it He swears as by Himself (Psalms 89:35); it
expresses His majesty (Ps 99:3,19) and His supreme power (Psalms 60:6). (c) His
righteousness marks all His acts in relation to Israel and the nations around her (Psalms
119:137-144; 129:4). (d) That both holiness and righteousness were conceived as moral
qualities is reflected in the profound sense of sin which the pious knew (Psalms 51) and
revealed in the moral demands associated with them; truth, honesty and fidelity are the
qualities of those who shall dwell in God's holy hill (Psalms 15); purity, diligence, kindliness,
honesty, humility and wisdom are the marks of the righteous man (Proverbs 10-11). (e) In Job
and Proverbs wisdom stands forth as the preeminent quality of the ideal man, combining in
itself all moral and intellectual excellences, and wisdom comes from God (Proverbs 2:6); it is a
quality of His nature (Proverbs 8:22) and a mode of His activity (Proverbs 3:19; Psalms
104:24). In the Hellenistic circles of Alexandria, wisdom was transformed into a philosophical
conception, which is at once the principle of God's sell-revelation and of His creative activity.
Philo identifies it with His master-conception, the Logos. Both Logos and Wisdom mean for
Him the reason and mind of God, His image impressed upon the universe, His agent of
creation and providence, the mediator through which He communicates Himself to man and
the world, and His law imposed upon both the moral and physical universe. In the Book of
Wisdom it is represented as proceeding from God, "a breath of the power of God, and a clear
effulgence of the glory of the Almighty .... an unspotted mirror of the working of God, and an
image of his goodness" (7:25,26). In man, it is the author of knowledge, virtue and piety, and in
the world it has been the guide and arbiter of its destiny from the beginning (chapters 10-12).
(f) But in the more purely Hebrew literature of this period, the moral attribute of God that comes
into greatest prominence is His beneficence. Goodness and mercy, faithfulness and loving-
kindness, forgiveness and redemption are His willing gifts to Israel. "Like as a father pitieth his
children, so Yahweh pitieth them that fear him" (Psalms 103:13; 145:8;103:8; Ecclesiasticus
2:11). To say that God is loving and like a father goes far on the way to the doctrine that He is
Love and Father, but not the whole way; for as yet His mercy and grace are manifested only in
individual acts, and they are not the natural and necessary outflow of His nature. All these
ideas of God meant less for the Jewish than for the Christian mind, because they were yet held
subject to several limitations.
(b) Localization:
In the metaphysical attributes, the chief limitation was the idea that God's dwelling-place on
earth was on Mt. Zion in Jerusalem. He was no longer confined within Palestine; His throne is
in heaven (Psalms 11:4; 103:19), and His glory above the heavens (Psalms 113:4); but
That these are no figures of speech is manifested in the yearning of the pious for the temple,
and their despair in separation from it (Psalm 42; 43; compare 122).
(c) Favoritism:
This involved a moral limitation, the sense of God's favoritism toward Israel, which sometimes
developed into an easy self-righteousness that had no moral basis. God's action in the world
was determined by His favor toward Israel, and His loving acts were confined within the
bounds of a narrow nationalism. Other nations are wicked and sinners, adversaries and
oppressors, upon whom God is called to execute savage vengeance (Psalms 109; 137:7-9).
Yet Israel did not wholly forget that it was the servant of Yahweh to proclaim His name among
the nations (Psalms 96:2,3). Yahweh is good to all, and His tender mercies are over all His
works (Psalms 145:9; Ecclesiasticus 18:13; compare Psalms 104:14; Zechariah 14:16, and the
Book of Jonah, which is a rebuke to Jewish particularism).
God's holiness in the hands of the priests tended to become a material and formal quality,
which fulfilled itself in established ceremonial, and His righteousness in the hands of the
scribes tended to become an external law whose demands were satisfied by a mechanical
obedience of works. This external conception of righteousness reacted upon the conception of
God's government of the world. From the earliest times the Hebrew mind had associated
suffering with the punishment of sin, and blessedness with the reward of virtue. In the post-
exilic age the relation came to be thought of as one of strict correspondence between
righteousness and reward and between sin and punishment. Righteousness, both in man and
God, was not so much a moral state as a measurable sum of acts, in the one case, of
obedience, and in the other, of reward or retribution. Conversely, every calamity and evil that
befell men came to be regarded as the direct and equivalent penalty of a sin they had
committed. The Book of Job is a somewhat inconclusive protest against this prevalent view.
These were the tendencies that ultimately matured into the narrow externalism of the scribes
and Pharisees of our Lord's time, which had substituted for the personal knowledge and
service of God a system of mechanical acts of worship and conduct.
(4) Tendencies to Abstractness:
Behind these defective ideas of God's attributes stood a more radical defect of the whole
religious conception. The purification of the religion of Israel from polytheism and idolatry, the
affirmation of the unity of God and of His spirituality, required His complete separation from the
manifoldness of visible existence. It was the only way, until the more adequate idea of a
personal or spiritual unity, that embraced the manifold in itself, was developed. But it was an
unstable conception, which tended on the one hand to empty the unity of all reality, and on the
other to replace it by a new multiplicity which was not a unity. Both tendencies appear in post-
exilic Judaism.
(a) Transcendence:
The first effect of distinguishing too sharply between God and all created being was to set Him
above and apart from all the world. This tendency had already appeared in Ezekiel, whose
visions were rather symbols of God's presence than actual experiences of God. In Daniel even
the visions appear only in dreams. The growth of the Canon of sacred literature as the final
record of the law of God, and the rise of the scribes as its professional interpreters, signified
that God need not, and would not, speak face to face with man again; and the stricter
organization of the priesthood and its sacrificial acts in Jerusalem tended to shut men generally
out from access to God, and to reduce worship into a mechanical performance. A symptom of
this fact was the disuse of the personal name Yahweh and the substitution for it of more
general and abstract terms like God and Lord.
(b) Skepticism:
Not only an exaggerated awe, but also an element of skepticism, entered into the disuse of the
proper name, a sense of the inadequacy of any name. In the Wisdom literature, God's
incomprehensibility and remoteness appear for the first time as a conscious search after Him
and a difficulty to find Him (Job 16:18-21; 23:3,8,9; Proverbs 30:2-4). Even the doctrine of
immortality developed with the sense of God's present remoteness and the hope of His future
nearness (Psalms 17:15; Job 19:25). But Jewish theology was no cold Epicureanism or
rationalistic Deism. Men's religious experiences apprehended God more intimately than their
theology professed.
(c) Immanence:
They affirmed His immanence both in nature (Psalms 104; The Wisdom of Solomon 8:1;
12:1,2) and in man's inner experience (Proverbs 15:3,11;1 Chronicles 28:9; 29:17,18). Yet that
transcendence was the dominating thought is manifest, most of all, in the formulation of a
number of mediating conceptions, which, while they connected God and the world, also
revealed the gulf that separated them.
The whole of the New Testament presupposes and rests upon the Old Testament. Jesus'
disciples inherited the idea of God revealed in the Old Testament, as it was passed down
through Jewish religion. So much was it to them and their contemporaries a matter of course,
that it never occurred to them to proclaim or enforce the idea of God. Nor did they consciously
feel the need of amending or changing it. Their point of departure was always the teaching of
the prophets and Psalms, and their conscious endeavor in presenting God to men was to fulfill
the Law and the Prophets (Matthew 5:17). God is known in the New Testament as One,
supreme, living, personal and spiritual, holy, righteous and merciful. His power and knowledge
are all-sufficient, and He is not limited in time or place. Nor can it be said that any distinctly new
attributes are ascribed to God in the New Testament. Yet there is a difference. The conception
and all its factors are placed in a new relation to man and the universe, whereby their meaning
is transformed, enhanced and enriched. He is the God of all the earth, who is no respecter of
persons or nations. Two new elements entered men's religious thought and gradually lifted its
whole content to a new level--Jesus Christ's experience and manifestation of the divine
Fatherhood, and the conviction that Christ Himself was and is God and the full and final
revelation of God.
2. Gentile Influence:
Greek thought may also have influenced New Testament thought, but in a comparatively
insignificant and subordinate way. Its content was not taken over bodily as was that of Hebrew
thought, and it did not influence the fountain head of New Testament ideas. It did not color the
mind and teaching of Jesus Christ. It affected the form rather than matter of New Testament
teaching. It appears in the clear-cut distinction between flesh and spirit, mind and body, which
emerges in Paul's Epistles, and so it helped to define more accurately the spirituality of God.
Philosophy never appears in the New Testament on its own account, but only as subservient to
Christian experience. In the New Testament as in the Old Testament, the existence of God is
taken for granted as the universal basis of all life and thought. Only in three passages of
Paul's, addressed to heathen audiences, do we find anything approaching a natural theology,
and these are concerned rather with defining the nature of God, than with proving His
existence. When the people of Lystra would have worshipped Paul and Barnabas as heathen
gods, the apostle protests that God is not like men, and bases His majesty upon His
creatorship of all things (Acts 14:15). He urges the same argument at Athens, and appeals for
its confirmation to the evidences of man's need of God which he had found in Athens itself
(Acts 17:23-31). The same natural witness of the soul, face to face with the universe, is again
in Romans made the ground of universal responsibility to God. No formal proof of God's
existence is offered in the New Testament. Nor are the metaphysical attributes of God, His
infinity, omnipotence and omniscience, as defined in systematic theology, at all set forth in the
New Testament. The ground for these deductions is provided in the religious experience that
finds God in Christ all-sufficient.
4. Fatherhood of God:
The fundamental and central idea about God in New Testament teaching is His Fatherhood,
and it determines all that follows. In the Old Testament the idea appears frequently, and has a
richer content. Not only is God the creator and preserver of Israel, but He deals with her as a
father with his child. "Like as a father pitieth his children, so Yahweh pitieth them that fear Him"
(Psalms 103:13; compare Deuteronomy 1:31; Jeremiah 3:4,19; 31:20; Isaiah 63:16; Hosea
11:1; Malachi 3:17). Even His chastisements are "as a man chasteneth his son" (Deuteronomy
8:5; Isaiah 64:8). The same idea is expressed under the figure of a mother's tender care
(Isaiah 49:15; 66:13; Psalms 27:10), and it is embedded in the covenant relation. But in the Old
Testament the idea does not occupy the central and determinative position it has in the New
Testament, and it is always limited to Israel.
Jesus Christ knows the Father as no one else does, and is related to Him in a unique manner.
The idea is central in His teaching, because the fact is fundamental in His experience. On His
first personal appearance in history He declares that He must be about His Father's business
(Luke 2:49), and at the last He commends His spirit into His Father's hands. Throughout His
life, His filial consciousness is perfect and unbroken. "I and the Father are one" (John 10:30).
As He knows the Father, so the Father knows and acknowledges Him. At the opening of His
ministry, and again at its climax in the transfiguration, the Father bears witness to His perfect
sonship (Mark 1:11; 9:7). It was a relation of mutual love and confidence, unalloyed and
infinite. "The Father loveth the Son, and hath given all things into his hand" (John 3:35; 5:20).
The Father sent the Son into the world, and entrusted Him with his message and power
(Matthew 11:27). He gave Him those who believed in Him, to receive His word (John
6:37,44,45; 17:6,8). He does the works and speaks the words of the Father who sent Him
(John 5:36; 8:18,29; 14:24). His dependence upon the Father, and His trust in Him are equally
complete (John 11:41; 12:27; 17). In this perfect union of Christ. with God, unclouded by sin,
unbroken by infidelity, God first became for a human life on earth all that He could and would
become. Christ's filial consciousness was in fact and experience the full and final revelation of
God. "No one knoweth the Son, save the Father; neither doth any know the Father, save the
Son, and he to whomsoever the Son willeth to reveal him" (Matthew 11:27). Not only can we
see in Christ what perfect sonship is, but in His filial consciousness the Father Himself is so
completely reflected that we may know the perfect Father also. "He that hath seen me hath
seen the Father" (John 14:9; compare John 8:19). No, it is more than a reflection:
so completely is the mind and will of Christ identified with that of the Father, that they
interpenetrate, and the words and works of the Father shine out through Christ. "The words
that I say unto you I speak not from myself: but the Father abiding in me doeth his works.
Believe me that I am in the Father, and the Father in me" (John 14:10,11). As the Father, so is
the Son, for men to honor or to hate (John 5:23; 15:23). In the last day, when He comes to
execute the judgment which the Father has entrusted to Him, He shall come in the glory of the
Father (Matthew 16:27; Mark 8:38; Luke 9:26). In all this Jesus is aware that His relation to the
Father is unique. What in Him is original and realized, in others can only be an ideal to be
gradually realized by His communication. "I am the way, and the truth, and the life: no one
cometh unto the Father, but by me" (John 14:6). He is, therefore, rightly called the "only
begotten son" (John 3:16), and His contemporaries believed that He made Himself equal to
God (John 5:18).
(b) To Believers:
Through Christ, His disciples and hearers, too, may know God as their Father. He speaks of
"your Father," "your heavenly Father." To them as individuals, it means a personal relation; He
is "thy Father" (Matthew 6:4,18). Their whole conduct should be determined by the
consciousness of the Father's intimate presence (Matthew 6:1,4). To do His will is the ideal of
life (Matthew 7:21;12:50). More explicitly, it is to act as He does, to love and forgive as He
loves and forgives (Matthew 5:45); and, finally, to be perfect as He is perfect (Matthew 5:48).
Thus do men become sons of their Father who is in heaven. Their peace and safety lay in their
knowledge of His constant and all-sufficient care (Matthew 6:26,32). The ultimate goal of men's
relation to Christ is that through Him they should come to a relation with the Father like His
relation both to the Father and to them, wherein Father, Son, and believers form a social unity
(John 14:21; 17:23; compareJohn 17:21).
While God's fatherhood is thus realized and revealed, originally and fully in Christ, derivatively
and partially in believers, it also has significance for all men. Every man is born a child of God
and heir of His kingdom (Luke 18:16). During childhood, aIl men are objects of His fatherly love
and care (Matthew 18:10), and it is not His will that one of them should perish (Matthew 18:14).
Even if they become His enemies, He still bestows His beneficence upon the evil and the
unjust (Matthew 5:44,45; Luke 6:35). The prodigal son may become unworthy to be called a
son, but the father always remains a father. Men may become so far unfaithful that in them the
fatherhood is no longer manifest and that their inner spirits own not God, but the devil, as their
father (John 8:42-44). So their filial relation to God may be broken, but His nature and attitude
are not changed. He is the Father absolutely, and as Father is He perfect (Matthew 5:48). The
essential and universal Divine Fatherhood finds its eternal and continual object in the only
begotten Son who is in the bosom of the Father. As a relation with men, it is qualified by their
attitude to God; while some by faithlessness make it of no avail, others by obedience become
in the reality of their experience sons of their Father in heaven.
Primarily He is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ (Romans 15:6; 2 Corinthians 1:3).
As such He is the source of every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ (Ephesians
1:3). Through Christ we have access unto the Father (Ephesians 2:18).
He is, therefore, God our Father (Romans 1:7; 1 Corinthians 1:3). Believers are sons of God
through faith in Christ Jesus (Galatians 3:26). "For as many as are led by the Spirit of God,
these are sons of God" (Romans 8:14). These receive the spirit of adoption whereby they cry,
Abba, Father (Romans 8:15; Galatians 4:6). The figure of adoption has sometimes been
understood as implying the denial of man's natural sonship and God's essential Fatherhood,
but that would be pressing the figure beyond Paul's purpose.
The apostles' teaching, like Christ's, is that man in sin cannot possess the filial consciousness
or know God as Father; but God, in His attitude to man, is always and essentially Father. In the
sense of creaturehood and dependence, man in any condition is a son of God (Acts 17:28).
And to speak of any other natural sonship which is not also morally realized is meaningless.
From God's standpoint, man even in his sin is a possible son, in the personal and moral sense;
and the whole process and power of his awakening to the realization of his sonship issues from
the fatherly love of God, who sent His Son and gave the Spirit (Romans 5:5,8). He is "the
Father" absolutely, "one God and Father of all, who is over all, and through all, and in all. But
unto each one of us was the grace given according to the measure of the gift of Christ"
(Ephesians 4:6,7).
5. God is King:
After the Divine Fatherhood, the kingdom of God (Mark and Luke) or of heaven (Matthew) is
the next ruling conception in the teaching of Jesus. As the doctrine of the Fatherhood sets forth
the individual relation of men to God, that of the kingdom defines their collective and social
condition, as determined by the rule of the Father.
Christ adopted and transformed the Old Testament idea of Yahweh's rule into an inner and
spiritual principle of His gospel, without, however, quite detaching it from the external and
apocalyptic thought of His time. He adopts the Jewish idea in so far as it involves the enforcing
of God's rule; and in the immediate future He anticipates such a reorganization of social
conditions in the manifestation of God's reign over men and nature, as will ultimately amount to
a regeneration of all things in accordance with the will of God (Mark 9:1; 13:30; Matthew
16:28;19:28). But He eliminated the particularism and favoritism toward the Jews, as well as
the non-moral, easy optimism as to their destiny in the kingdom, which was obtained in
contemporary thought. The blessings of the kingdom are moral and spiritual in their nature, and
the conditions of entrance into it are moral too (Matthew 8:11; 21:31,43; 23:37,38; Luke 13:29).
They are humility, hunger and thirst after righteousness, and the love of mercy, purity and
peace (Matthew 5:3-10;18:1,3; compare Matthew 20:26-28; 25:34; 7:21; John 3:3; Luke
17:20,21). The king of such a kingdom is, therefore, righteous, loving and gracious toward all
men; He governs by the inner communion of spirit with spirit and by the loving coordination of
the will of His subjects with his own will.
(a) God:
Generally in Mark and Luke, and sometimes in Matthew, it is called the kingdom of God. In
several parables, the Father takes the place of king, and it is the Father that gives the kingdom
(Luke 12:32). God the Father is therefore the King, and we are entitled to argue from Jesus'
teaching concerning the kingdom to His idea of God. The will of God is the law of the kingdom,
and the ideal of the kingdom is, therefore, the character of God.
(b) Christ:
But in some passages Christ reveals the consciousness of his own Kingship. He approves
Peter's confession of his Messiahship, which involves Kingship (Matthew 16:16). He speaks of
a time in the immediate future when men shall see "the Son of man coming in his kingdom"
(Matthew 16:28). As judge of all men, He designates Himself king (Matthew 25:34; Luke
19:38). He accepts the title king from Pilate (Matthew 27:11,12; Mark 15:2; Luke 23:3; John
18:37), and claims a kingdom which is not of this world (John 18:36). His disciples look to Him
for the restoration of the kingdom (Acts 1:6). His kingdom, like that of God, is inner, moral and
spiritual.
But there can be only one moral kingdom, and only one supreme authority in the spiritual
realm. The coordination of the two kingships must be found in their relation to the Fatherhood.
The two ideas are not antithetical or even independent. They may have been separate and
even opposed as Christ found them, but He used them as two points of apperception in the
minds of His hearers, by which He communicated to them His one idea of God, as the Father
who ruled a spiritual kingdom by love and righteousness, and ordered nature and history to
fulfill His purpose of grace. Men's prayer should be that the Father's kingdom may come
(Matthew 6:9,10). They enter the kingdom by doing the Father's will (Matthew 7:21). It is their
Father's good pleasure to give them the kingdom (Luke 12:32). The Fatherhood is primary, but
it carries with it authority, government, law and order, care and provision, to set up and
organize a kingdom reflecting a Father's love and expressing His will.
And as Christ is the revealer and mediator of the Fatherhood, He also is the messenger and
bearer of the kingdom. In his person, preaching and works, the kingdom is present to men
(Matthew 4:17,23; 12:28), and as its king He claims men's allegiance and obedience (Matthew
11:28,29). His sonship constitutes His relation to the kingdom. As son He obeys the Father,
depends upon Him, represents Him to men, and is one with Him. And in virtue of this relation,
He is the messenger of the kingdom and its principle, and at the same time He shares with the
Father its authority and Kingship.
In the apostolic writings, the emphasis upon the elements of kingship, authority, law and
righteousness is greater than in the gospels. The kingdom is related to God (Colossians
4:11;1 Thessalonians 2:12; 2 Thessalonians 1:5), and to Christ (Colossians 1:13; 2 Timothy
4:1,18;2 Peter 1:11), and to both together (Ephesians 5:5; compare 1 Corinthians 15:24). The
phrase "the kingdom of the Son of his love" sums up the idea of the joint kingship, based upon
the relation of Father and Son.
6. Moral Attributes:
The nature and character of God are summed up in the twofold relation of Father and King in
which He stands to men, and any abstract statements that may be made about Him, any
attributes that may be ascribed to Him, are deductions from His royal Fatherhood.
(1) Personality:
That a father and king is a person needs not to be argued, and it is almost needless to say that
a person is a spirit. Christ relates directly the spirituality of God to His Fatherhood. "The true
worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and truth: for such doth the Father seek to be his
worshippers. God is Spirit" (John 4:23,14 margin). Figurative expressions denoting the same
truth are the Johannine phrases, `God is life' (1John 5:20), and "God is light" (1John 1:5).
(2) Love:
Love is the most characteristic attribute of Fatherhood. It is the abstract term that most fully
expresses the concrete character of God as Father. In John's theology, it is used to sum up all
God's perfections in one general formula. God is love, and where no love is, there can be no
knowledge of God and no realization of Him (1John 4:8,16). With one exception (Luke 11:42),
the phrase "the love of God" appears in the teaching of Jesus only as it is represented in the
Fourth Gospel. There it expresses the bond of union and communion, issuing from God, that
holds together the whole spiritual society, God, Christ and believers (John 10; 14:21). Christ's
mission was that of revelation, rather than of interpretation, and what in person and act He
represents before men as the living Father, the apostles describe as almighty and universal
love. They saw and realized this love first in the Son, and especially in His sacrificial death. It is
"the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Romans 8:39). "God commendeth his own
love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us" (Romans 5:8;
compare Ephesians 2:4). Love was fully made known in Christ's death (1John 3:16). The
whole process of the incarnation and death of Christ was also a sacrifice of God's and the one
supreme manifestation of His nature as love (1John 4:9,10; compare John 3:16). The love of
God is His fatherly relation to Christ extended to men through Christ. By the Father's love
bestowed upon us, we are called children of God (1John 3:1). Love is not only an emotion of
tenderness and beneficence which bestows on men the greatest gifts, but a relation to God
which constitutes their entire law of life. It imposes upon men the highest moral demands, and
communicates to them the moral energy by which alone they can be met. It is law and grace
combined. The love of God is perfected only in those who keep the word of Jesus Christ the
Righteous (1John 2:5). "For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments" (1John
5:3). It is manifested especially in brotherly love (1John 4:12,20). It cannot dwell with
worldliness (1John 2:15) or callous selfishness (1John 3:17). Man derives it from God as he is
made the son of God, begotten of Him (1John 4:7).
Righteousness and holiness were familiar ideas to Jesus and His disciples, as elements in the
Divine character. They were current in the thought of their time, and they stood foremost in the
Old Testament conception. They were therefore adopted in their entirety in the New
Testament, but they stand in a different context. They are coordinated with and even
subordinated to, the idea of love. As kingship stands to fatherhood, so righteousness and
holiness stand to love.
(a) Once we find the phrase "Holy Father" spoken by Jesus (John 17:11; compare 1 Peter
1:15,16). But generally the idea of holiness is associated with God in His activity through the
Holy Spirit, which renews, enlightens, purifies and cleanses the lives of men. Every vestige of
artificial, ceremonial, non-moral meaning disappears from the idea of holiness in the New
Testament. The sense of separation remains only as separation from sin. So Christ as high
priest is "holy, guileless, undefiled, separated from sinners" (Hebrews 7:26). Where it dwells,
no uncleanness must be (1 Corinthians 6:19). Holiness is not a legal or abstract morality, but a
life made pure and noble by the love of God shed abroad in men's hearts (Romans 5:5). "The
kingdom of God is .... righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit" (Romans 14:17).
(b) Righteousness as a quality of character is practically identical with holiness in the New
Testament. It is opposed to sin (Romans 6:13,10) and iniquity (2 Corinthians 6:14). It is
coupled with goodness and truth as the fruit of the light (Ephesians 5:9; compare 1 Timothy
6:11;2 Timothy 2:22). It implies a rule or standard of conduct, which in effect is one with the life
of love and holiness. It is brought home to men by the conviction of the Holy Spirit (John 16:8).
In its origin it is the righteousness of God (Matthew 6:33; compare John 17:25). In Paul's
theology, "the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ unto all them that believe"
(Romans 3:22) is the act of God, out of free grace, declaring and treating the sinner as
righteous, that he thereby may become righteous, even as "we love, because he first loved us"
(1John 4:19). The whole character of God, then, whether we call it love, holiness or
righteousness, is revealed in His work of salvation, wherein He goes forth to men in love and
mercy, that they may be made citizens of His kingdom, heirs of His righteousness, and
participators in His love.
7. Metaphysical Attributes:
The abstract being of God and His metaphysical attributes are implied, but not defined, in the
New Testament. His infinity, omnipotence and omniscience are not enunciated in terms, but
they are postulated in the whole scheme of salvation which He is carrying to completion. He is
Lord of heaven and earth (Matthew 11:25). The forces of nature are at His command (Matthew
5:45;6:30). He can answer every prayer and satisfy every need (Matthew 7:7-12). All things are
possible to Him (Mark 10:27; 14:36). He created all things (Ephesians 3:9). All earthly powers
are derived from Him (Romans 13:1). By His power, He raised Christ from the dead and
subjected to Him "all rule, and authority, and power, and dominion" in heaven and on earth
(Ephesians 1:20,21; compare Matthew 28:18). Every power and condition of existence are
subordinated to the might of His love unto His saints (Romans 8:38,39). Neither time nor place
can limit Him:
He is the eternal God (Romans 16:26). His knowledge is as infinite as His power; He knows
what the Son and the angels know not (Mark 13:32). He knows the hearts of men (Luke 16:15)
and all their needs (Matthew 6:8,32). His knowledge is especially manifested in His wisdom by
which He works out His purpose of salvation, "the manifold wisdom of God, according to the
eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Ephesians 3:10,11). The
teaching of the New Testament implies that all perfections of power, condition and being
cohere in God, and are revealed in His love. They are not developed or established on
metaphysical grounds, but they flow out of His perfect fatherhood. Earthly fathers do what good
they can for their children, but the Heavenly Father does all things for the best for His children--
"to them that love God all things work together for good"--because He is restricted by no limits
of power, will or wisdom (Matthew 7:11; Romans 8:28).
It is both assumed through the New Testament and stated categorically that God is one (Mark
12:29; Romans 3:30; Ephesians 4:6). No truth had sunk more deeply into the Hebrew mind by
this time than the unity of God.
Moreover, the Holy Spirit is a third term that represents a Divine person in the experience,
thought and language of Christ and His disciples. In the Johannine account of Christ's
teaching, it is probable that the Holy Spirit is identified with the risen Lord Himself (John
14:16,17; compareJohn 14:18), and Paul seems also to identify them in at least one passage:
"the Lord is the Spirit" (2 Corinthians 3:17). But in other places the three names are ranged
side by side as representing three distinct persons (Matthew 28:19; 2 Corinthians
13:14; Ephesians 4:4-6).
But how does the unity of God cohere with the Divine status of the Son and the distinct
subsistence of the Holy Spirit? Jesus Christ affirmed a unity between Himself and the Father
(John 10:30), a unity, too, which might be realized in a wider sphere, where the Father, the Son
and believers should form one society (John 17:21,23), but He reveals no category which
would construe the unity of the Godhead in a manifoldness of manifestation. The experience of
the first Christians as a rule found Christ so entirely sufficient to all their religious needs, so
filled with all the fullness of God, that the tremendous problem which had arisen for thought did
not trouble them. Paul expresses his conception of the relation of Christ to God under the
figure of the image. Christ "is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation"
(Colossians 1:15;2 Corinthians 4:4). Another writer employs a similar metaphor. Christ is "the
radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature" (Hebrews 1:3). But these
figures do not carry us beyond the fact, abundantly evident elsewhere, that Christ in all things
represented God because He participated in His being. In the prologue to the Fourth Gospel,
the doctrine of the Word is developed for the same purpose. The eternal Reason of God who
was ever with Him, and of Him, issues forth as revealed thought, or spoken word, in the person
of Jesus Christ, who therefore is the eternal Word of God incarnate. So far and no farther the
New Testament goes. Jesus Christ is God revealed; we know nothing of God, but that which is
manifest in Him. His love, holiness, righteousness and purpose of grace, ordering and guiding
all things to realize the ends of His fatherly love, all this we know in and through Jesus Christ.
The Holy Spirit takes of Christ's and declares it to men (John 16:14). The problems of the
coordination of the One with the Three, of personality with the plurality of consciousness, of the
Infinite with the finite, and of the Eternal God with the Word made flesh, were left over for the
church to solve. The Holy Spirit was given to teach it all things and guide it into all the truth
(John 16:13). "And lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world" (Matthew 28:20).
LITERATURE.
Harris The Philosophical Basis of Theism; God the Creator and Lord of All; Flint, Theism; Orr,
The Christian View of God and the World; E. Caird, The Evolution of Religion; James Ward,
The Realm of Ends; Fairbairn, The Philosophy of the Christian Religion; W.N. Clarke, The
Christian Doctrine of God; Adeney, The Christian Conception of God; Rocholl, Der Christliche
Gottesbegriff ; O. Holtzmann, Der Christliche Gottesglaube, seine Vorgeschichte und
Urgeschichte; G. Wobbernim, Der Christliche Gottesglaube in seinem Verhaltnis zur heutigen
Philosophie und Naturwissenschaft; Kostlin, article "Gott" in See Hauck-Herzog,
Realencyklopadie fur protestantische Theologie und Kirche; R. S. Candlish, Crawford and
Scott-Lidgett, books on The Fatherhood of God:
Old Testament Theologies by Oehler, Schultz and Davidson; New Testament Theologies by
Schmid, B. Weiss, Beyschlag, Holtzmann and Stevens; Wendt, The Teaching of Jesus;
sections in systems of Christian Doctrine by Schleiermacher, Darner, Nitzsch, Martensen,
Thomasius, Hodge, etc.