Page:Catholic Encyclopedia, volume 14.djvu/167

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a type of the Messias, was honoured with the title "son of God". But the Messias, the Chosen One, the Elect of God, was par excellence called the Son of God (Ps. ii, 7). Even Wellhausen admits that Ps. ii is Messianic (see Hast., "Diet, of the Bible", IV, 571). The prophecies regarding the Messias became clearer as time went on, and the result is ably summed up by Sanday (ibid.): "The Scriptures of which wc have been speaking mark so many different contributions to the total result, but the result, when it is attained, has the completeness of an organic whole. A Figure w;is created — projected as it were ujion the clouds — which was invested with all the attributes of a person. And the minds of men were turned towards it in an attitude of expectation. It makes no matter that the lines of the Figure are drawn from different originals. They meet at last in a single portraiture. And we should never have known how perfectly they meet if we had not the New Testament picture to compare with that of the Old Testament. The most literal fulfilment of prediction would not be more conclusive proof that all the course of the world and all the threads of history are in one guiding Hand." The Messias besides being the Son of God was to be called Emmanuel (God with us), Wonderful, Counsellor, God the Mighty, the Father of the world to come, Prince of Peace (Is., viii, 8; ix, 6) (see Messi.^s).

In the New Tkst.^ment. — The title "the Son of God" is frequently applied, to Jesus Christ in the Gospels and Epistles. In the latter it is everywhere employed as a short formula for ex^^ressing His Divinity (Sanday I; and this usage throws light on the meaning to "be attaclieil to it in many pa.ssages of the Gospels. The angel announced; "He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the most High . . . the Holy which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God" (Luke, i, 32, 3.5). Nathaniel, at his first meeting, called Him the Son of God (.lohn, i, 49). The devils called Him by the same name, the Jews ironically, and the .Vpostles after He qvielled llie storm. In all these cases its meaning was equi^•alent to the MessiiW, at least. But much more is implied in the confession of St. Peter, the testimony of the Father, and the words of Jesus Christ.

Confession of Si. Peter. — We read in Matt., xvi, 15, 16: "Simon Peter answered and said: Thou art Christ, the Son of the li\'ing God. And Jesus answer- ing, said to him: Bles.sed art thou, .Simon Bar-Jona: because flesh and blood hath not re\'eale<l it to thee, but my Father who is in heaven." The parallel passages have: "Thou art the Christ" (Mark, viii, 29), "The Christ of God" (Luke, ix, 20). There can be no doubt that St. Matthew gives the original form of the expression, and that St. .Mark and St. Luke in giving "the Christ" (the Messias), instead, used it in the sense in which they understood it when they wrote, viz. as equivalent to "the incarnate Son of God" (see Rose, VI). Sanday, writing of St. Peter's confession, says: "the context clearly proves that Matthew had before him some further tradition, possibly that of th(> Logia, but in any case a tradition that has the look of being original " (Hastings, "Diet, of the Bible"). .\s Rose well points out, in the minds of the E%angelists Jesus Christ was the Messias because He was the Son of God, and not the Son of God because He was the Me.ssi:is.

Testimony of the Father. — (1) M the Baptism. — " .\nd Jesus being baptized, forthwith came out of the water: and lo. the heavens were opened to him: and he saw the Spirit of God descending as a dove, and coming upon him. .And behold a voice from heaven, sajnng: This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased" (Matt., iii, 16, 17). "And there came a voice from heaven: Thou art my beloved Son; in thee I am well plea.sed" (Mark, i, 11; Luke, iii, 22).

(2) At the Transfiguration. — "And lo, a voice out


of the cloud, saj-ing: This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased: hear ye him" (Matt., xvii, 5; Mark, ix, 6; Luke, Lx, 35). Though Rose admits that the words spoken at the Baptism need not necessarily mean more than what was suggested by the Old Testament, \-iz. Son of God is equal to the Messias, still, as the same words were used on both occasions, it is likely they had the same meaning in both cases. The Transfiguration took place within a week after St. Peter's confession, and the words were used in the meaning in which the three disciples would then understand them; and at the Baptism it is probable that only Christ, and perhaps the Baptist, heard them, so that it is not necessarj' to interpret them accord- ing to the current opinions of the crowd. Even so cautious a critic as the Anglican Professor Sanday writes on these passages: "And if, on the occasions in question, the Spirit of God did intimate prophet- ically to chosen witnesses, more or fewer, a revelation couched partly in the language of the ancient Scrip- tures, it would by no means follow that the meaning of the revelation was limited to the meaning of the older Scriptures. On the contrarj', it would be hkely enough that the old words would be charged with new meaning — that, indeed the revelation . . . would yet be in substance a new revelation. . . . And we may assume that to His (Christ's) mind the annovmcement 'Thou art my Son' meant not only all that it ever meant to the most enlightened seers of the past, but, yet more, all that the response of His ovra heart told Him that it meant in the present. . . . But it is possible, and we should be justified in supjiosing — not by way of dogmatic assertion but by way of pious beUef — in view of the later history and the progress of subsequent revelation, that the words were intended to suggest a new truth, not hitherto made known, viz. that the Son was Son not only in the sense of the Messianic King, or of an Ideal Peojile, but that the idea of sonship was ful- filled in Him in a way yet more mysterious and yet more es.sential; in other words, that He was Son, not merely in prophetic revelation, but in actual transcendent fact before the foundation of the world" (Hastings, "Diet, of the Bible").

Te.-itimony of Jesus Christ. — (1) The Sjmoptics. — The key to this is contained in His words, after the Resurrection: "I ascend to my Father and to your Father" (John, xx, 17). He always spoke of my Father, never of our Father. He said to the disciples: "Thus then shall 2/0!/ pray: Our Father ", etc. He everj'where draws the clearest possible distinction between the way in which God was His Father and in which He was the Father of all creatures. His expressions clearly pro\e that He claimed to be of the same nature with God; and His claims to Divine Sonship are contained verj' clearly in the Synoptic Gospels, though not as frequently as in St. John.

"Did you not know, that I must be about my father's business?" (Luke, ii, 49); "Not every one that saith to me. Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingilom of heaven: but he that doth the will of my Father who is in heaven, he shall enter into the king- dom of heaven. Many will say to me in that day: Lord, Lord, have not we prophesied in thy name, and ca.st out devils in thy name, and done many miracles in thy name? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me you, that work iniquity" (Matt., vii, 21-23). "Everj'one therefore that shall confess me before men, I will also confess him before my Father who is in heaven" (Matt., x, 32). ".\t that time Jesus an- swered and said: I confess to thee, O Father, I>ord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things from the wise and pruflent, and hast revealed them to little ones. Yea, Father; for so hath it seemed good in thy sight. All things are delivered to me by my Father. And no one knoweth the Son, but