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Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

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Page 1: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father

General audience of September 2, 1987

Page 2: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

In the preceding catechesis we paid particular attention to those statements in which Christ,

speaking of himself, used the expression,

"I Am." The context in which these words

appear, especially in John's Gospel, encourages us to conclude that in

using such a phrase, Jesus referred to the name by which the God of the Old Testament designated himself to Moses when God entrusted to

Moses the mission to which he had been called:

"I Am who I Am...tell the sons of Israel,

'I Am has sent me to you'" (Ex 3:14).

Page 3: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

Jesus spoke of himself in a similar vein during

the discussion concerning Abraham:

"Before Abraham was, I Am" (Jn 8:58).

This expression allows us to conclude that the

Son of Man gave witness to his divine

pre-existence,

and this is not an isolated statement.

Page 4: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

More than once Jesus spoke of the mystery of his

person. The most synthetic of these

comments about himself would seem to be,

"I came from the Father and have come into the

world and now I leave the world to go to the Father"

(Jn 16:28).

These words were addressed by Jesus to the apostles in his farewell

discourse on the eve of the paschal events.

Page 5: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

These words clearly say that before he came into the world

Christ "was"

with the Father as a Son. They indicate, as a

consequence, his pre-existence in God.

Jesus unambiguously stated that his earthly existence

cannot be separated from his pre-existence in God.

Without that, his personal reality cannot be correctly

understood.

Page 6: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

There are many similar expressions.

When Jesus referred to his coming into the

world from the Father, his words usually

denoted his divine pre-existence.

This is especially clear in the Gospel of John.

In the presence of Pilate Jesus stated:

"I was born for this; I came into the world

for this, to bear witness to the

truth" (Jn 18:37).

Page 7: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

Perhaps it is not without significance that Pilate

later asked him:

"Where are you from?" (Jn 19:9).

Earlier in the text we had read:

"My testimony is still valid because I know where I came from and where I

am going" (Jn 8:14).

Page 8: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

In that nocturnal conversation with

Nicodemus, the question,

"where are you from?"

receives a special response:

"No one has gone up to heaven

except the one who came down from

heaven" (Jn 3:13).

Page 9: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

This "coming down" from heaven,

from the Father, indicates the divine pre-

existence of Christ in relation to his "departure" as well: "What if you see the Son of Man ascend to where he was

before?" Jesus asked in the context of the Eucharistic discourse in

the neighborhood of Capernaum

(cf. Jn 6:2).

Page 10: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

Divine pre-existenceThe entire earthly existence of

Jesus as Messiah originates from that

"before" and is united with it as a

fundamental dimension which testifies to the Son as "one" with

the Father. In this context, how eloquent are the words of the priestly prayer in

the upper room, "I have glorified you on earth and finished the work that you

gave me to do. Now, Father, it is time for you to glorify me with that glory I had

with you before the world began" (Jn 17:4-5).

Page 11: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

Similarly, the Synoptic Gospels speak in many instances of the coming of the Son of Man for the

salvation of the world (cf. e.g., Lk 19:10; Mk 10:45; Mt 20:28).

Nevertheless, the texts noted by St. John speak unequivocally about

the pre-existence of Christ.The prologue of St. John's Gospel contains the most

comprehensive synthesis of this truth. It can be affirmed that in the text the truth of the divine pre-existence of the Son of Man is given a

more explicit delineation that, in a certain sense, is more definitive.

Page 12: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was God.

He was with God in the beginning. Through him all things came to be;

not one thing had its being but through him.

All that came to be had its life in him

and that life was the light of men, a light

that shines in the darkness, a light

that the darkness could not overpower"

(Jn 1:1-5).

Page 13: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

In these statements, the evangelist confirms that which Jesus declared about himself:

"I came from the Father and have come into the world" (Jn 16:28),

or when he prayed to his Father to glorify him with the glory that he had with him before the world began

(cf. Jn 17:5).

Page 14: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

At the same time there is a strict correlation between the pre-existence of the Son in

the Father with the revelation of the trinitarian mystery of

God. The Son is the eternal Word,

he is "God from God"; he is of the same substance of

the Father (as is expressed by the Council of Nicaea

in the creed).

That council's formula reflects exactly the prologue

of John. "The Word was with God and the Word was God."

Page 15: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

To acknowledge the pre-existence of Christ in the Father is tantamount to

recognizing the divinity.

Eternity appertains to the substance of the divinity,

just as it likewise pertains to the substance of the

Father.

It is this that is referred to when discussing the

eternal pre-existence in the Father.

Page 16: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

In revealing the truth concerning the Word, the

prologue of John constitutes the definitive complement of what the Old Testament had

already said regarding wisdom.

For example we read: "From eternity in the

beginning he created me and for eternity I shall remain"

(Sir 24:9);

"My creator made me pitch my tent and he said to me,

'Pitch your tent in Jacob'" (Sir 24:8).

Page 17: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

The wisdom referred to in the Old Testament is a creature

that at the same time has attributes that enthrone it

above all creation. "Although alone she can do all;

herself unchanging she makes all things new"

(Wis 7:27).

The truth about the Word contained in the prologue of John reconfirms, in a certain

sense, the revelation concerning the wisdom

evident in the Old Testament.

Page 18: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

At the same time it surpasses it in a definitive manner.

The Word is not merely, "with God" but "is God."

Coming into this world, the Word

"came into his own domain," since "the world had its being

through him" (cf. Jn 1:10-11).

He came "unto his own," because

"he is the true light that enlightens every man"

(cf. Jn 1:9). The self-revelation of God in Jesus Christ consists in this

coming into the world by the Word,

who is the eternal Son.

Page 19: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

"The Word was made flesh and he lived among us and we saw his glory, the glory that is his as the only Son of the Father,

full of grace and truth" (Jn 1:14).

Let us repeat it once more

—the prologue of John is the eternal echo of the words uttered by Jesus:

"I have come from the Father and come into the world"

(Jn 16:28).

Page 20: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

It also echoes his sentiments when he prayed to his eternal Father to glorify him with that glory he had

before the creation of the world (cf. Jn 17:5).

The evangelist is contemplating the Old Testament revelation concerning wisdom and simultaneously

visualizes the entire paschal event

—that departure through the cross and resurrection in which the truth about Christ,

Son of Man and true God,

is rendered crystal clear to those who were eyewitnesses of those events.

Page 21: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

In strict relationship with the revelation of the

Word, that is, with the divine pre-existence of Christ, one also finds

confirmation of the truth about Emmanuel.

This word—which literally signifies

"God with us"—expresses a particular and personal presence of God

in the world.

Page 22: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

Christ's "I Am" manifests exactly such a presence,

as pre-announced by Isaiah (cf. 7:14),

which the Gospel of Matthew

(cf. Mt. 1:23)

repeats following the prophet, and is confirmed in

the prologue of John: "The Word was made flesh

and came to dwell among us"

(Jn 1:14).

Page 23: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

The language of the evangelists is indeed

multiform but the truth expressed is identical.

In the Synoptic Gospels Jesus pronounces his

"I am with you" in moments of special

tension (such as Mt 14:17; Mk 6:50; Jn 6:20),

when he calmed the tempest, as also in the perspective of

the Church's apostolic mission:

"Behold I am with you all days even to the end of the

world" (Mt 28:20).

Page 24: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

Christ's statement, "I have come from the Father

and have come into the world" (Jn 16:28)

contains a salvific and soteriological significance.

All the evangelists manifest this phenomenon.

The prologue of John expresses it in these words:

"To all who did accept him (the Word), he gave power to become

children of God," that is, the possibility of being

generated by God (cf. Jn 1:12-13).

 

Page 25: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

This is the central truth of all Christian

soteriology that finds an organic unity with the revealed reality of

the God-Man.

God became man so that man could truly

participate in the life of God

—so that, indeed, in a certain sense,

he could become God.

Page 26: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

"Through the immense love he bore,

he became what we are, thereby affording us the opportunity of becoming

what he is" (cf. Adv. Haer., V. Praef. PG 7, 1120).

The Fathers of the Church had a clear consciousness of

this fact. It is sufficient to recall

St. Irenaeus who, in his exhortations to

imitate Christ, the only sure teacher,

declared:

Page 27: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987
Page 28: Jesus Christ, the Eternal Word of God the Father General audience of September 2, 1987

This truth opens up for us unlimited

horizons among which we locate and pinpoint the

concrete expression of our

Christian life, in the light of

faith in Christ, Son of God,

the Word of the Father.