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J. Oswald Sanders - The Incomparable Christ

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Author J. Oswald Sanders, a lawyer turned 20th century missionary statesman, follows Jesus from His pre-existence to His earthly life and coming Second Advent. Throughout he upholds Jesus as the powerful and perfect Savior of the world, arguing against any who would diminish His uniqueness.

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J O SWALD S ANDERS THE I NCOMPARABLE C HRIST F OREWORD BY - photo 1

Picture 2 J. O SWALD S ANDERS Picture 3

THE
I NCOMPARABLE
C HRIST

F OREWORD BY Picture 4 J. I. P ACKER
MOODY CLASSICS

MOODY PUBLISHERS
CHICAGO

Formerly issued as
CHRIST INCOMPARABLE
J. O SWALD S ANDERS 1952
Revised and enlarged edition 1971
Current edition 2009

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without permission in writing from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the King James Version.

Scripture quotations marked RSV are from the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright 1946, 1952, and 1971 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Interior Design: Smartt Guys design
Cover Design: Kirk DouPonce/Dog Eared Design
Photo Credit: Scala/Art Resource, NY
Butoni, Pompeo (17081787) The Death of Saint Joseph
Duomo, Arezzo, Italy

Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data

Sanders, J. Oswald (John Oswald), 1902
The Incomparable Christ

Rev. ed. of: Christ incomparable. 1952.
1. Jesus ChristPerson and offices. I. Title.

BT202.S22 1982 232 82-8183

ISBN: 978-0-8024-5660-1

We hope you enjoy this book from Moody Publishers. Our goal is to provide high-quality, thought-provoking books and products that connect truth to your real needs and challenges. For more information on other books and products written and produced from a biblical perspective, go to www.moodypublishers.com or write to:

Moody Publishers
820 N. LaSalle Boulevard
Chicago, IL 60610

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Printed in the United States of America

The Incomparable Christ - image 5
Picture 6
Foreword
by J. I. Packer

Picture 7

T O MOST W ESTERN MINDS today, dogma seems to signify simply a personal view rigidly held, narrow in focus, unfruitful to entertain, and uninteresting to encounter. What a comedown for a great Christian word! For in the past dogma denoted a consensus of the whole church, acting through its leaders, regarding central Christian truthbiblical and apostolic teaching, that is, with regard to God.

Dogma, thus understood, was recognized as testimony to drama: that is, to divine action. The drama in this case is Gods complex but unitary program for creating a new humanity, the church, in and through Jesus Christ. Out of this two basic dogmas emerge. The program reveals God as three persons, eternally living an interrelated and unified life of mutual love, and now working together as a team in space-time history for the salvation of sinful human beings and the reconstitution of this spoiled planet. This truth is safeguarded by the dogma of the Trinity. Within the program, the high spot, the climax, the acme, the pinnacle, the center point, and the hinge on which, first to last, the efficacy of the project turns, is the fact that, as John Betjeman put it, God was man in Palestinethe reality, that is, of the earthly life, death, resurrection, ascension, present reign and future return of the divine Son, whose human name is Jesus, and whose role is that of Messiah, the anointed Savior-King, the one mediator between man and God. This truth is safeguarded by the dogma of the Incarnation. Here, then, are the dazzling, dramatic, and destiny-determining truths that are enshrined in the twin dogmas that Christians need to learn to unpack.

These declarations of the tri-personality of God and of the person and place of Jesus Christ periodically become battlegrounds. As in the first Christian centuries, so in the past two hundred years, many have doubted whether either is fully in line with the New Testament. It is true that the technical terms Trinity and incarnation are not found in the New Testament, but, as present-day scholarly study makes clearer and clearer, the realities for which these terms stand are certainly there, and are so in a very fundamental way. Sugar stirred into a cup of coffee is there in solution, and the sweetness of the taste is impossible to miss. So, too, when the thought-forms and narrative flow of the gospels and Acts, and the explicit theologizing of the epistles and Revelation, are properly examined, it is impossible to miss the fact that the three-in-oneness of God, and the divinity of the man Jesus, are foundational to and formative of the testimony that is being borne. Trinitarian and incarnational perspectives are tacitly but unmistakably present, and once you see them you can never overlook them again.

Two amazing things confront us here. The first is the objective, factual reality of the personally divine yet entirely human life that our incarnate Savior lived. What the gospels show us can be summed up like this: Without forfeiting or reducing either His divine identity or His divine powers, in full and exact obedience to the Fathers will throughout, and through the enabling agency of the Holy Spirit at every turn, the second person of the Godhead, the Son of God who is God the Son, became a fetus growing in Marys womb; was born and nursed like any other baby; passed through infancy, boyhood, and adolescence into manhood; knew from the first moment of his self-awareness as a newborn that He was the Fathers Son, who would always know and must always do what the Father directed, and did so unfailingly; blended meekness with majesty, seriousness with joyousness, satirical humor with sensitive gentleness, forthrightness against sin with vulnerable love to sinners in a unique perfection of character; modeled wisdom and humility, self-control and integrity, independence in face of men and prayerful dependence on his Father, in a way and to a degree never seen or imagined before; and finally endured six hours of supreme agony on the cross, giving His life a ransom for many, bearing away the sin of the world, undergoing the Godforsakeness that we sinners deserved. Then His resurrection displayed His divinity and demonstrated His victory to His disciples, who from then on linked Him with the Father in their worship and prayers.

The second amazing thing is the perspectival quality of the gospel narratives themselvessomething that academics, poring over the details, do not always notice. In all four gospels we walk with Jesus disciples, watching Him through their eyes and sharing their experience of learning from Him and being mentored by Him. The skill with which each evangelist composing what was clearly a carefully planned discipling document with a pre-set word length, selected and linked up his chosen units of narration and instruction so as to set forth a coherent view, both personal and thematic, of Jesus Christ the crucified, risen, reigning Savior, is simply stunning. Stunning, too, is the recurring impact with which, again and again, Jesus, as it were, steps out of the gospel text to overwhelm us, its readers and hearers, as the rightful Lord of our lives. What is working here is the alchemy of the Holy Spirit, whereby through meditating on the story being told and imagining ourselves there as part of it, we are made aware of the Lord present with us now, saying to us in effect, I am here, to be with you today and every day as your teacher, rescuer, life-giver, ruler and guide. As I discipled My followers in the days of My flesh, so now I am discipling you: learn, then, and practice the lesson that the passage you were reading teaches you. It is idle to deny, and perverse to disregard, the fact that this happens.

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