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Concordant Studies
THE ONLY TRUE GOD
WE BELIEVE that, ultimately speaking, there is no other God
except One (1 Cor.8:4b). That One, is the Father,
out of Whom all is (1 Cor.8:6). He alone is the Supreme (Lam.3:38;
Dan.4:17); He alone is the Almighty (2 Cor.6:18; Rev.16:14).
In Hebrew, Yahweh is
Gods name; Elohim is (the most common form of) Gods title.
The divine name speaks of the One Who is, was, and is coming (Rev.1:8); the divine title
speaks of the One Who places or subjects, according as He is
intending (1 Cor.12:11b; cf Yet now God [lit., the Placer]
placed the members, each one of them, in the body according as He wills,
1 Cor.12:18; cp 1 Cor.12:27b). Therefore, when we say Yahweh,
we should think: the One Who is, was, and is coming; and, when we say
Elohim or God, we should think: the Placer or
the Subjector.
It is important to recognize
that GOD is not a personal name, an expression
by which one is known, but is a title, added to a personal name, indicative of
ones office. A name speaks of that which one is called; a title speaks of
that which one does, the capacity in which one serves.
While the title GOD, when used relatively, can be used in reference to many
beings, when it is used absolutely, it is only used in reference to one Being, God
Himself. When this title, GOD (or ELOHIM)
is used of the One Whose name is Yahweh, the One Who is All-Sufficient, Who is the
Supreme, the Almighty, of the One Who is the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the only true
God, or otherwise of the One, so termed, Who is spoken of in contrast to or as distinct
from Christ, it is evident that it is used in its absolute sense.
The title GOD
(or ELOHIM), then, neither signifies nor entails either
supremacy or unoriginatedness of being. Nor is it a term indicative of the essential
nature of the being so designated. It is certainly true when this title is used in
reference to the only true God, that it refers to One Who is supreme and
unoriginated, and Whose essential nature is distinct from other beings. But the
fact that these things are true of the One Who is the only true God, is no indication that
any of these things are true of the word GOD,
itself, or of any other beings to whom this same word (GOD)
refers, when used in a relative sense.
It is deeply mistaken, then, to
reason that since the word GOD is sometimes used in
reference to Christ, men, or messengers, that therefore either Christ, men, or messengers,
are unoriginated, supreme, or of the same essential nature as the Almighty.
The word God (or
god), like all titles, concerns itself with office or service. In Greek, its
stem, the- signifies PLACE; hence, the complete form, theos
(GOD), means PLACer. This idea fits all the
contexts in which theos is used. Theos is not only the original Greek word
for the English GOD, but is also the inspired
translation of the Hebrew ELOHIM, in all corresponding
New Testament citations of Old Testament texts which refer to God Himself.
Any references to those lesser
beings to whom the title GOD (placer or
subjector) also applies notwithstanding, then, we say, Nevertheless, there is
only one God. He alone is the Supreme, the Almighty One. He is the God, and Father,
of our Lord Jesus Christ, and He is the only true God (John 17:3).
It is Christ Himself Who insists
that this is so. The adjective alêthês (TRUE) speaks of
[that which is] in accord with the facts. 1 In accord with the actual, literal facts, the God
and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ alone is God. He is the only Placer Who is not Himself
placed by another. He alone is self-existent and self-sufficient. All others to whom this
title is ascribed, including Christ, possess it in a derived sense, not in
accord with the facts absolute, but relatively speaking, or, in some figurative way.
Supremely speaking, there is
only one true God, even though, speaking relatively, and even in a righteous sense,
there are many gods (1 Cor.8:5). For, indeed, there are
those being termed gods, whether in heaven or on earth (1 Cor.8:5; cp
Ex.22:8,9; Psa.82:6). Consequently, we should hardly be surprised that, in certain
passages, Christ also is so termed (cf Titus 2:13; Heb.1:8; 1 John 5:20b).
Except for God Himself, Christ certainly has a right to this title in a way unspeakably
above that of all others, to whom it is also properly applied. Yet conversely, we must
also realize that the ascription of the title God to Christin certain
senses and in various connectionsis no more indication that He is the Deity than
that any others to whom this title is also ascribed are the Deity.

SEEING THE INVISIBLE
The word
Godhead, as in the Authorized Version and others, is a mistranslation of the
nouns theiotês and theotês. Theiotês should be
divinity, for it speaks of the attributes or qualities which pertain
to God (Rom.1:20). The adjectival form, theion, should be rendered
divine (e.g., 2 Pet.1:3,4). The idea which is conveyed in English under
the figure head, forms no part of these Greek expressions. Yet it is this very
term, Godhead, taken either in a pluralistic sense, or in a corporate
sense, which is a pillar of the sacred mystery of the Trinity.
We believe that
there is no other God except One . . . . and that this One
is God, the Father, out of Whom all is (1 Cor.8:4-6). Yet we realize that
the Father, the Most High (Luke 1:32) or Supreme God
(Psa.87:5), speaking relatively, rightly says to the Son, Thy throne, O God [O
Placer], is for the eon of the eon (Heb.1:8). Thus, Christ Himself is the
great God [Placer] and . . . Saviour Whose advent we await
(Titus 2:13).
However, we also believe, and
insist, that Christs Head is God (1 Cor.11:3), the God of
our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory (Eph.1:17). The Father, ultimately
speaking, is the only God (Jude 24,25; cp Rom.16:27;
1 Tim.1:17).
We believe that Christ is the
Effulgence (the Radiant Splendor) of Gods glory (Heb.1:3). Likewise, we
believe that Christ is the Emblem of Gods assumption (Heb.1:3), of the role
God assumes whenever, in the Person of His Son, He manifests Himself before His creatures.
It is the ministry of Christ, Who is a tangible, visible Being, to represent His
God and Father, Who is an intangible, invisible Being, whenever, and in whatever way, the
Deity wishes to manifest Himself. Therefore, where we read that the One Who is spirit, Who
is therefore essentially invisible, Whom, accordingly, no one has ever (literally) seen
(John 1:18), is nevertheless perceived by certain of His creatures, we are to
understand that such perception is either by the agency of Christ, Who is Gods
Image, is visionary (Rev.5:1), or is through the eyes of faith (Matt.5:8).
It is only through the figure of
anthropomorphism (human form) that the Supreme Himself is spoken of as having
bodily members. Literally speaking, God is spirit (John 4:24), invisible (Col.1:15) and
intangible, and so, in Himself, has no form or shape. How, then, does the Scripture speak
of His arms and hands, His mouth, eyes, and face, as if He were a member of the human
race? In all such cases, God condescends to our low estate and speaks to us in human
language. Otherwise we could never understand Him or enter into His thoughts and feelings.
When God impresses us through
His Word, it is as if a man speaks to us with his mouth, so this feature is
ascribed to Him. Since God sees us as a fellow man does with his eyes, organs of
sight are ascribed to the Deity. The human body is the basis of many figures which
contradict flatly the great facts concerning the Deity, if they are taken literally.
Spirit is intangible,
imperceptible, and so is not an object of literal, or sentient, perception. Therefore God
is not a Being of form or shape, these terms only being applicable to beings of corporeal,
tangible existence.

GOD'S CREATIVE ORIGINAL
It is Christ
alone, the Word or Expression of God (John 1:14), Who unfolds the Deity (John 1:18), for
He is the Image of the invisible God (2 Cor.4:4). Christ enjoys the
highest delegated authority in the entire universe. Even as Christ, the
Firstborn from among the dead (Col.1:18), was once actually among the dead, thus
also, Christ, the Firstborn of every creature (Col.1:15), was once actually
created. These passages are parallel, the proper understanding of verse 15 (Christs
being the Firstborn of every creature), not depending upon verse 18 (Christs being
the Firstborn from among the dead) for its own interpretation. But actually, the former
verse sets the precedent for the latter passages proper sense, a sense which,
ostensibly at least, no one doubts (the sense which reveals that Christ was once actually
dead, that is, numbered among the dead).
Therefore the Son of God must
have had a beginning. Consequently, our Lord must be One Who is among Gods
creatures, though One Who is unspeakably higher than any other. His beginning, however,
must have been before that of all others, since all 2 was created in and through Him (Col.1:16,17).
Truly, all is out of God
(Rom.11:36), and all glory, even that which is Christs, is to be ascribed to God:
to [God] be the glory in the ecclesia and in Christ Jesus for all the
generations of the eon of the eons! Amen (Eph.3:21). Christ is Gods
creative Original (Rev.3:14); literally, He is THE ORIGINal OF-THE CREATION
OF-THE God (CONCORDANT GREEK TEXT sublinear), Who, as Christ Himself declared
concerning His Father, is the only true God (John 17:3).
Christ is Gods
creative Original. According to the Greek, He is the Original, the Beginning, or the
Chief, of every creation of God (Rev.3:14). The basic meaning of archê is ORIGIN, and all its forms are to be found under this word in the
Concordance of the Concordant Version. In earliest times, all government was in the
family, and the father, who originated it, was chief. So the stem came to be
applied to the highest of a class, as the archangel, as well as the archetype,
the pattern, or original. But the pattern comes before the product, the original before
the copies. This accords perfectly with the fact that all creation was in Him. Adam
was the original of all mankind; his descendants, and all originated in him. So
Christ is the Original of creation. 3
Metaphorically (in the
sense that this One is [i.e., represents] that One), Christ Himself, as
Gods Image, is the true God, even as He is life eonian
(1 John 5:20b). And, even literally, in Himself, Christ is the great God
(i.e., Placer) and Saviour of Whom Paul speaks in Titus 2:13. Nevertheless, it is Christs
own God, His God and Father, Who is the Supreme and only true God.

THE FORM OF GOD
The entire complement
of the Deity [or, deity, theotês, PLACERship,
the GODness or PLACERship of God] is dwelling bodily in
Christ (Col.2:9). In a bodily way, the entire array of that which pertains to
God is dwelling in Christ. Since the entirety of that which pertains to God
yet cannot be communicated by God in Himself, Who is spirit, is dwelling bodily in
Christ, it follows that Christ Himself is not the Deity.
Similarly, since
Christ alone was inherently [lit., inhering, i.e., existing by right] in
the form of God, He, accordingly, deem[ed] it not pillaging to be equal
with God (Phil.2:6,7).
Since Christ is the Son of God,
He is a Being distinct from God. Christ therefore was not equal to God in an
identification-of-person sense; instead, the appearance of Christ was in a form
which is to be identified as that which is proper to Deity. To all appearances, Christ was
the same as, or equal to, God.
We are not told that Christ is a
Form of God (and, therefore, that Christ is a mere Form, instead of a tangible, actual
Being). Instead, we are told that Gods Anointed, Christ, before He emptied
Himself, was inherently in the form of God (Phil.2:6). Form
refers not to inward essence but merely to external appearance (e.g., 2 Tim.3:5). The
form of God was not a manifestation of what Christ was in Himself, but a representation of
His God. His glory consisted not in actually being the Deity, but in possessing the
visible appearance through which God had chosen to manifest Himself.
The form of God,
does not refer us to that of which God Himself is composed, nor is it an expression
corollarial to the notion that God Himself is a corporeal being. Instead, it refers to the
personal appearance of Christ, in which He inhered and thus deemed it not
pillaging to be equal with God (lit., ANOINTED JESUS WHO IN FORM
OF-GOD belongING . . .). Christ was inherently in the
of-God form; thus He appeared to be the Deity. He Who is the
Image of the invisible God, existed in the form which is proper to Deity, the form in
which God would have Himself made manifest.

THE CHRIST OF GOD
The English
anoint is derived from the Latin inungere (to smear or rub on).
The Greek verb criõ (anoint), is the basis of the noun christos,
which in English is christ. It is to be regretted that we use
christ for the noun of the verb anoint, thus obscuring its meaning from
the ordinary reader. It corresponds to the Hebrew messiah, a title applied to
priests, kings, and prophets after their consecration by means of anointing with oil. Our
Lord Jesus Christ, is the Christ of christs, even as He is King of kings, for He is
anointed by the spirit of God with the oil of exultation beyond His
partners (Heb.1:9), beyond that of all others who also enjoy an anointing of God.
Christ Jesus is not the only one
Who is anointed. We ourselves are christs, for all who have Gods spirit
are christs (anointed ones). Paul told the Corinthians, He
Who . . . anoints [christs] us is God
(2 Cor.1:21). Similarly, those to whom John wrote were anointed as well, for he said,
You have an anointing [Greek: chrisma] (1 John 2:20).
Anointing is always connected
with service. It is the vital badge of office under God. Christs
anointing, preeminently, equipped Him to be the Saviour, the Saviour of the world. As well
as King and Prophet, His anointing made Him a Priest, a Mediator, the one
Mediator of God and mankind (1 Tim.2:5). Thus He is giving Himself a
correspondent Ransom for all (1 Tim.2:6). He offered Himself to God. God
did not offer Himself to Himself. The Offering was for us, to bring us to God.
He did not offer Himself to bring us to Himself. We cannot approach God apart from
Christ and His sacrifice. Yet this does not make Him God, but Gods Anointed, His
Mediator.
The Lord Jesus did not assume
the office of Messiah, until he was about thirty years of age. But at His first public
utterance, in the synagogue at Nazareth, He declared that, The spirit of the
Lord is on Me, on account of which He anoints Me to bring the
evangel . . . (Luke 4:18). Similarly, Peter said to Cornelius that,
after the baptism which John heralds, [came] Jesus from Nazareth, as God anoints
Him with holy spirit and power (Acts 10:37,38). No ceremonial oil was even
used when God anointed His Anointed One.
God is not the Anointed,
but the Anointer. He never needs to be anointed, nor can He be, for He is already
the Almighty, the All-Sufficient One. In Him the spirit is immanent, not imparted.
Anyone who is perfect and
all-powerful in himself hardly needs to be anointed. The mere fact of our Lords
being anointed shows that He was intrinsically lacking in the ability to fulfill His
office. Christs ability is not His own. It is derived from God, through His spirit.
Of Himself, Christ could do nothing (John 5:30; cp John 8:28). Now the
Father, remaining in Me, He is doing His works (John 14:10b).
The expression the deity
of Christ, is simply preposterous, for it is a contradiction of terms. God
cannot be anointed by another. God needs no preparation, no impartation or empowering, for
He is the singular Source of all. Who is able to anoint Him? If Christ were the Supreme
God, He would need no anointing. The possession of anointing by no means signifies Deity,
but rather the opposite. No one who had any accurate idea of the scriptural function of
anointing would ever accept the absurd thought that it was the equivalent of Deity. A
christ, or anointed one, cannot literally be God, although, as Gods Image, the term
may be figuratively applied to His Son. 4

ONE IS GOD HIMSELF
God
is not a term in reference to the Almightys esssential nature, but is an expression
which speaks of His universal governance. It has special reference to the eonian times,
and to the purpose of the eons which He makes in Christ Jesus our Lord (Eph.3:11). That
purpose, when all has finally been subjected (1 Cor.15:27), is for Him to become
All in all (1 Cor.15:28).
It is indeed so that we are
sons of God (Gal.3:26) and are members of His family (Eph.2:19).
Nevertheless, and no matter how fully it may be that believers will partake
of 5
the divine nature (2 Pet.1:4), this will not make them a part of God. There is only One
Who is God; for any other, then, there is neither part nor lot therein.
Some who wish to point out that
believers have a certain equality with Christ (e.g., Rom.8:29b) and are partakers of the
divine nature, however, suppose that such considerations prove that we will someday
be God. Some even claim that Christians are little
gods even today. Those who argue thus, however, take the title GOD as a
term of essential nature or constitution. This is a fundamental error.
It is claimed that those who are
saved will, one day, as a term of genus, belong to the God family. Such claims
are made as if the Scriptures plainly declared them to be so. It is simply incorrect,
however, to affirm that god, when used in the plural, signifies a family of
beings in which each member is of the same constitution or essence as God, the Father.
Historically, the teaching of
becoming God is termed Apotheosis. Some who have affirmed a teaching of
Christian deification, whether among the church fathers or in certain of the
writings of the Eastern Orthodox church, by this have only intended that men are
deified in the sense that the Holy Spirit dwells within Christian believers
and transforms them into the image of God in Christ, eventually endowing them in the
resurrection with immortality and Gods perfect moral character. 6
If by the doctrine of Apotheosis
(or becoming God), however, one intends to affirm that men are, or one day
will become, constitutionally, of the same genus or speciation as God, the Father,
this is unscriptural and is a form of polytheism. This is because such a teaching affirms
a plurality of beings of which each is of the same consitution or essential nature as the
supreme God. Thus, according to such a teaching, there is no supreme Being Who alone is
God Himself. Such a proposition is contrary not only to Scripture, but to monotheism.
Actual Trinitarianism, together
with Modalism and Arianism (the latter is the historic name closest to the Concordant
teaching), are all monotheistic. This is because each of these teachings affirms that
there is one Being Who alone is God Himself. This most fundamental propä1 osition is
denied, however, by Apotheosis, such as is taught by Mormonism and others. Since
monotheism is the teaching of Scripture, polytheism, in whatever form, is contrary to
Scripture and is therefore false.
Since the issues are tightly
drawn, either Trinitarianism, Modalism, or Arianism must be correct, insofar as the
dispute between them is concerned. Is Christ an aspect of the Deity yet not Himself the
Deity (Trinitarianism)? Is Jesus Himself the Deity (Modalism)? Or is it that the Father is
the Deity (Arianism)? We must go on to decide which of these claims is correct. But before
we do so, we can be certain that we are correct in rejecting Apotheosis.
In the ordinary sense of the
word God, the Scripture no more teaches that men one day will become
God than that I will be you or you will be me, or that either one of us will become
either a tree or a fish. This is so, whether by God we have in mind God
Himself, or, by association, ones who are of His constitutional essence.
It follows, then,
that the sense in which it is true that Gods creatures will become His
children and sons, is confined to the place (cf Eph.1:5)
and privileges which they will enjoy; it does not extend to their essential nature.
Therefore, the reasoning that says that since humans beget little humans, God begets
little gods, is simply undiscerning and fallacious.
The fact that this
title, GOD, applies to many others besides God, the
Father, in various connections and senses, is beside the point. It is not that there is no
sense at all in which the title GOD will ever be
applied to us; therefore it is not incorrect to say that there is a sense in which it may
be said that this or that person will one day be termed a god (i.e., a
subjector). These things, however, are not disputed by ourselves, for the word
god says nothing about ones constitution, but only concerns ones
having some role in the subjection of all unto God Himself, that is, unto the supreme
Subjector Himself, the only true God.
James Coram
1. KEYWORD CONCORDANCE, entry true, p.310.
2. It is illogical to reason from the mere
presence of the words all is created through Him (Col.1:16), that since all
is created through Him, that Christ Himself, therefore, is not a created being. In the
all that was created in and through Christ, as with the all which,
in beginning, came into being through the word (or Word; John
1:3), in both cases, the One through Whom all these creative works were achieved,
obviously, already existed Himself. The scope of the all of the context, then,
in both of these passages, is all that came into being from the time when, through Christ,
all these creative works began. From that point onward, all, without exception, was
created in and through Him. Whether Christ, at some antecedent point in time, was Himself
created, is a question which neither Colossians 1:16 nor John 1:3 can answer. Since
neither of these verses are concerned with that issue, it is wrong to offer them as proof
in denial of His creaturehood.
3. A. E. Knoch, The
Pre-existence of Christ, p.4.
4. Portions of this section were adapted
or excerpted from Can the Deity be Anointed? by A. E. Knoch, Unsearchable
Riches, vol.39, pp.103-112.
5. If one partakes of that
which pertains to an apple pie, it hardly follows that one becomes an apple pie, or
a component thereof.
6. Robert Bowman, Christian Research
Journal, Winter/Spring, 1987, p.19; cited in THE AGONY OF DECEIT, Ye Shall Be As
Gods, Walter Martin (Moody Press: Chicago, 1990), p.93.

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