The Harp of God eBook

Joseph Franklin Rutherford
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 370 pages of information about The Harp of God.

The Harp of God eBook

Joseph Franklin Rutherford
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 370 pages of information about The Harp of God.

[168]Again Jesus prayed to the Father, saying:  “Father, save me from this hour:  but for this cause came I unto this hour.  Father, glorify thy name.  Then came there a voice from heaven, saying, I have both glorified it, and will glorify it again.” (John 12:27,28) Jesus could not have been praying to himself here, but he was praying to Jehovah God, from whom he came.

[169]That the Father is greater than the Son, Christ Jesus, he shows when he says:  “I go away, and come again unto you.  If ye loved me, ye would rejoice, because I said, I go unto the Father:  for my Father is greater than I.”—­John 14:28.

[170]Many others have believed that Jesus, while on the earth, was still a spirit being and that his flesh was merely a covering or house in which that spirit being resided.  Otherwise stated, that he was merely an incarnated creature and not wholly a man.  The incarnation theory is that a spirit being inhabits for a time the human body, or a human body is created for the express purpose of that spirit being’s occupying it for a time.  The incarnation of Jesus is Scripturally erroneous.  Indeed, if he had been merely an incarnated being, he could never have redeemed mankind.  It is not disputed that he could have appeared as a human being; and such is attested to in the instances given in Genesis 18:1,2 and 19:1.

[171]Some insist that Jesus when on earth was both God and man in completeness.  This theory is wrong, however.  We should never formulate a theory concerning God’s plan in direct contradiction to his plain Word.  We should have faith in God and in his Word.  Faith means to have a knowledge of his Word and then to rely upon that Word confidently.  The Bible is the revealed Word of God, given to man for his instruction; and where plain statements of the Bible are given, we should take them at their face value.  Following this course, we find that the plan of God everywhere appears harmonious and beautiful.

[172]The adversary takes advantage of an honest desire on the part of some and leads them into error.  Every conscientious and reverential mind desires to honor God.  For fear they might dishonor him, they are easily led into failure to give proper consideration to plain statements of the Bible.  Some have been induced to believe that should they say that Jesus when on earth was a man and not God, such would be a dishonor to God.  We should not permit ourselves to be beguiled or misled by sophistry or theories, but should follow the plain teachings of the Bible and then reach a conclusion in the light of that revealed Word after a full examination.

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The Harp of God from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.