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From Son of God to Son of Man
WHO WAS JESUS? The conventional view, of course, is that âSon of Godâ is the decisive title for Jesus. It is by this title that Jesus is held to be part of the Trinity: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. It is as the Son of God that he is worshipped as divine; it is as the Son of God that he was deemed to have been given to be sacrificed in order that the world might be redeemed. But things are not quite that simple. First of all, interestingly enough, the term âSon of Godâ is not often used to refer to Jesus in the New Testament. In Paul, the much more common term is âLord.â In the Gospels, Jesus is more likely to be referred to (or actually to refer to himself) by the title âSon of Man.â Most Christians today, if they have thought about it at all, would think that by this title, Son of Man, Jesusâ human nature is being designated, while the title âSon of Godâ refers to his divine nature. This was indeed the interpretation of most of the Fathers of the Church. A new Bible translation called the Common English Bible has gone so far as to translate âSon of Manâ as âthe human one.â In this chapter, I will show that almost the opposite was the case in the Gospel of Mark: âSon of Godâ referred to the king of Israel, the earthly king of Davidâs seat, while âSon of Manâ referred to a heavenly figure and not a human being at all.
The title âSon of Manâ denoted Jesus as a part of God, while the title âSon of Godâ indicated his status as King Messiah. But what is the Messiah and how does it relate to the Christ? Truth be told, they were exactly the same thing, or at any rate the same word. Messiah (in Hebrew pronounced âmashiachâ) means âanointed one,â no more or less, and Christos is simply a Greek translation of that very word, meaning also âanointed one.â As the Gospel of John tells us forthrightly: âHe first findeth his own brother Simon, and saith unto him, We have found the Messias,â which is, being translated, the Christ (John 1:41).*
The Messiah Son of God as Human King
The reason that the king was called the Messiah was because he was literally anointed with oil at the time of his accession to the kingdom. One of the best examples of this enthronement ceremony is to be found in the Book of Samuel:
Then Samuel took the vial of oil, and poured it upon his head, and kissed him, and said, Is it not that YHVH has anointed you to be prince over his inheritance? (1 Samuel 10:1)
Samuel pours a vial of oil over the head of Saul and then explicitly names him King of Israel. This king of Israel has been appointed by God to be the ruler of Israel, to be charismatic, and to represent Israel before God. Through the medium of the prophet Samuel, God himself has anointed Saul with oil to be the king over his inheritance, Israel. The king is therefore referred to in the Hebrew Bible as the Anointed of YHVH or the Mashiach of YHVH. Other Israelite kings who are described as having been anointed with oil on their accession to the kingship include David (1 Samuel 16:3), Solomon (1 Kings 1:34), Jehu (1 Kings 19:16), Joash (2 Kings 11:12), and Jehoahaz (2 Kings 23:30). As pointed out by the dean of Catholic biblical scholars in the United States, Joseph Fitzmyer, SJ, nowhere in the Hebrew Bible does this usage imply anything but the extraordinarily close connection between the King of Israel and the God of Israel. No awaited or future divine king is contemplated in any of these instances.1 The term Mashiach throughout the Hebrew Bible means a historical actually reigning human king of Israel, neither more nor less. The âprinceâ of 1 Samuelâs Saul evolved (not without struggle) into the full-blown monarch of the dynasty of David during the period of the Kings, and the term âAnointed of YHVHâ (Messiah, Christos) is one of his titles.
The point that the Messiah in the Hebrew Bible always refers to an actually ruling historical king is particularly significant when we consider the following verses:
Kings of the earth set themselves up, and rulers conspire together against YHVH and against his anointed one (his Mashiach). . . . âI have installed my king on Zion, my holy hill.â I will recount the decree of YHVH: He said to me, âYou are my son; this day I have begotten you.â (Psalms 2:2, 6â7)
The anointed, earthly king of Israel is adopted by God as his son; the son of God is thus the reigning, living king of Israel. âThis day I have begotten youâ means this day you have been enthroned.2 Militating against any literal sense in which the king was taken as son of God and divine is the âthis day,â which, it seems, may only mean on this the day of your accession to the throne. Another moment in the Psalms where we find the King as the Son of God is in the crucial verses of Psalm 110 (the very verses that also contribute the notion of the exalted Christ seated at the right hand of Power [Mark 14:62]). In this Psalm we read, âIn sacred splendor, from the womb, from dawn, you have the dew wherewith I have begotten you.â This verse is notoriously difficult, and I shanât here go into the complications of its emendations and interpretations, but one thing seems clear: God says to the king here too, âI have begotten you.â3 The bottom line of this demonstration is that early on the term âSon of Godâ was used to refer to the Davidic king without any hints of incarnation of the deity in the king: âI will be to you as a father, and you will be to me as a son.â The king is indeed very intimate with God and a highly sacralized personâbut not God. The kingship is promised to Davidâs seed forever.
Something rather dramatic and tragic happened, however, in the history of the People of Israel. During the sixth century B.C., the kingdom of the Lordâs anointed ones in Jerusalem was destroyed and the Davidic line was lost. As the story is narrated in 2 Kings 25, following a siege in 597 B.C., Nebuchadnezzar had installed Zedekiah as tributary king of Judah. However, Zedekiah revolted against Babylon. Nebuchadnezzar responded by invading Judah and began a siege of Jerusalem in January 589 B.C. In 587 B.C., the eleventh year of Zedekiahâs reign, Nebuchadnezzar broke through Jerusalemâs walls, conquering the city. Zedekiah and his followers attempted to escape but were captured on the plains of Jericho and taken to Riblah. There, after seeing his sons killed, Zedekiah was blinded, bound, and taken captive to Babylon, where he remained a prisoner until his death. After the fall of Jerusalem, the Babylonian general Nebuzaraddan was sent to complete its destruction. Jerusalem was plundered and Solomonâs Temple was destroyed. Most of the elite were taken into captivity in Babylon. The city was razed to the ground. Some Israelite people were permitted to remain to tend to the land.
The peopleâand especially its leadershipâwent into exile in Babylonia, and even when they were allowed to come back, less than a century later, there was no more Davidic kingdom and no glorious king ruling in Jerusalem. The people prayed for such a king to rule over them once again and for a restoration of that earthly glory. It is, however, still an earthly and actual king for whom the people pray throughout the Hebrew Bible, for a restoration of the House of David as it was before the Exile. In this prayer for an absent king, for a new king of the House of David, the seeds, however, are planted of the notion of a promised Redeemer, a new King David whom God would send at the end of days. That notion would come to fruition in the time of the Second Temple.
When Mark in the very beginning of his Gospel writes, âThe Beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God,â the Son of God means the human Messiah, using the old title for the king of the House of David. When, on the other hand, Mark refers to him in the second chapter of the Gospel as the âSon of Man,â he is pointing to the divine nature of the Christ. This seems like a paradox: the name of God being used for Jesusâ human nature, the name of âManâ for his divine nature. How did it come about? This chapter begins to answer the question of how Jesus was understood as God by monotheistic Jews by telling the story of the Son of Man.
The Son of Man as Divine Redeemer
While the expectation of the restoration of the Davidic king was growing, other ideas about redemption were developing in Israel as well. In the seventh chapter of the Book of Daniel, written circa 161 B.C., we find a remarkable apocalyptic story. Apocalypse is a Greek-derived word that means ârevelationâ (the New Testament book that we call Revelation is also known as the Apocalypse). Generally in an apocalypse, the things that are revealed have to do with the end of days, with what will happen at the end of time and end of the world. The Book of Daniel is one of the earliest apocalypses that was ever written. Taking its clues from the prophet Ezekiel, it describes the heavenly visions of the prophet Daniel. The book was written sometime during the second century B.C. And became one of the most influential books for latter-day Jewry, including, perhaps even especially, in its Christian branch.
In this remarkable text, we find the prophet Daniel having a vision in which there are two divine figures, one who is depicted as an old man, an Ancient of Days, sitting on the throne. We have been told, however, that there is more than one throne there, and sure enough a second divine figure, in form âlike a human being,â is brought on the clouds of heaven and invested by the Ancient of Days in a ceremony very much like the passing of the torch from elder king to younger in ancient Near Eastern royal ceremonial and the passing of the torch from older gods to younger ones in their myths: âI saw in the vision of the night, and behold with the clouds of the Heaven there came one like a Son of Man and came to the Ancient of Days and stood before him and brought him close, and to him was given rulership and the glory and the kingdom, and all nations, peoples, and languages will worship him. His rulership is eternal which will not pass, and his kingship will not be destroyed.â
We can begin to see here a notion about redemption that is quite different from the expectation of the restoration of a Davidic king on the throne of Jerusalem. What this text projects is a second divine figure to whom will be given eternal dominion of the entire world, of a restored entire world in which this eternal kingâs guidance and rule will be in accord, completely and finally, with the will of the Ancient of Days as well. Although this Redeemer figure is not called the Messiahâthis name for him will have to wait for later reflections on this Danielic vision, as we shall see belowâit brings us close to at least some of the crucial characteristics of the figure named later the Messiah or the Christ.
What are these characteristics?
He is divine.
He is in human form.
He may very well be portrayed as a younger-appearing divinity than the Ancient of Days.
He will be enthroned on high.
He is given power and dominion, even sovereignty on earth.
All of these are characteristic of Jesus the Christ as he will appear in the Gospels, and they appear in this text more than a century and a half before the birth of Jesus. Moreover, they have been further developed within Jewish traditions between the Book of Daniel and the Gospels. At a certain point these traditions became merged in Jewish minds with the expectation of a return of a Davidic king, and the idea of a divine-human Messiah was born. This figure was then named âSon of Man,â alluding to his origins in the divine figure named âone like a Son of Man/a human beingâ in Daniel. In other words, a simile, a God who looks like a human being (literally Son of Man) has become the name for that God, who is now called âSon of Man,â a reference to his human-appearing divinity. The only plausible explanation of the âSon of Manâ is that of Leo Baeck, the great Jewish theologian and scholar of the last century, who wrote: âWhenever in later works âthat Son of Man,â âthis Son of Man, or âthe Son of Manâ is mentioned, it is the quotation from Daniel that is speaking.â4
This dual background explains much of the complexity of the traditions about Jesus. It is no wonder, then, that when a man came who claimed and appeared in various ways to fit these characteristics, many Jews believed he was precisely the one whom they expected. (Itâs also no wonder that many were more skeptical.)
There are many variations of traditions about this figure in the Gospels themselves and in other early Jewish texts. Some Jews had been expecting this Redeemer to be a human exalted to the state of divinity, while others were expecting a divinity to come down to earth and take on human form; some believers in Jesus believed the Christ had been born as an ordinary human and then exalted to divine status, while others believed him to have been a divinity who came down to earth. Either way, we end up with a doubled godhead and a human-divine combination as the expected Redeemer.* The connections between older pre-Jesus ideas of the Messiah/Christ and those that Jesus would claim for himself are thus very intimate indeed.
Who Is the Son of Man?
Jesus famously refers to himself by that mysterious term âThe Son of Man.â Oceans of ink and forests of trees have given their substance so that humans could continue to argue about where this term came from and what it means.5 Regarding its meaning, some say it refers to Jesusâ human nature, while others say it refers to his divine nature. In the Middle Ages it was taken as a sign of Jesusâ humility but later on was understood as such a potent mark of potentially blasphemous arrogance that many scholars have argued that the âSon of Manâ sayi...