In Part 1 we saw that God has revealed himself generally and specially, culminating in Christ. For Hilary of Poitiers, the Resurrection of Christ “transfigured everything.”
As an example, Hilary notes that in his encounter with the resurrected Jesus the apostle Thomas confessed “My Lord and my God!” His understanding of Jesus was “transfigured.” He wasn’t just standing in the presence of a godly human being but was standing before God Himself.
Dr. Wilken writes that “The terms used by Thomas, Lord and God, are significant, and they allow Hilary to drive his point home. ‘Lord’ and ‘God’ are the terms that occur in the Sh’ma, yet here they are used not of God the creator of the world and king of the universe, but of Christ. Because of the Resurrection Thomas recognized that the one he knew, who had lived among them, was not just an extraordinary human being but the living God. ‘No one except God is able to rise from death to life by its own power,’ writes Hilary. But his argument runs deeper. He wishes to say not only that the Resurrection reveals something about Christ to his disciples, namely, that he is God; his more penetrating observation is that the Resurrection caused them to think about God differently. Once Jesus was raised, writes Hilary, Thomas ‘understood the whole mystery of faith,” for ‘now,‘ that is, in light of the Resurrection, Thomas was able to confess Christ as God ‘without abandoning his devotion to the one God.’ After the Resurrection he could continue to recite the Sh’ma because he had begun to conceive of the oneness of God differently. Thomas’ confession ‘my Lord and my God’ was not the ‘acknowledgement of a second God, nor a betrayal of the unity of the divine nature’: it was a recognition that God was not a ‘solitary God’ or a ‘lonely God.’ God is one, says Hilary, but not alone.”
God’s ordered self-disclosure, known as the economy, “allowed human beings a glimpse of the inner life of God. This fundamental insight drove Christian thinking about God. In a striking comment on Colossians 1:19, ‘In [Christ] all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell,’ Origen of Alexandria had said that through God’s revelation in Christ we became ‘spectators’ of the ‘depth of God.'” “… But it was Hilary… who expressed most succinctly why the historical events of Christ’s life, in particular the Resurrection, had altered the conditions under which reason worked. Thinking about God could no longer be carried on independently of what had taken place in the evangelical history. What others had left unspoken he stated explicitly: after Christ’s Resurrection God’s unity had to be conceived differently. Though one, Hilary affirmed, God was not a solitary being and in some mysterious way the life of one God was communal.” [Wilken, Spirit of Early Christian Thought, pp. 91-93]
Some thoughts on application:
— Do I read the Scriptures asking God to reveal Himself anew, reading God’s Word with “receptivity, in openness to what is revealed and the willingness to accept what is given?”
— When confronted by the risen Christ one does not say, “How interesting,” but “My Lord and my God!” Am I ever caught up in worship from the wonder of the mystery of the Resurrection, or do I merely think “how interesting”?
— Lent begins next week (March 5, 2014). During this preparation for Easter, ask the Holy Spirit to expand your mind and your heart as you contemplate the Incarnation and Resurrection of the Son of God:
“Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Therefore God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.” (Phil 2:5-11)
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