Exploring Urantia Book Christology

Exploring Urantia Book Christology

Christianity in the first few centuries of the Christian era was characterized by many divergent beliefs about who or what Jesus actually was. Diverse communities of believers with dynamic and sometimes visionary leadership were evolving throughout the Mediterranean world and beyond. Significant conflicts between these groups shaped what became orthodoxy. Some of the primary beliefs are listed below. Which one(s) most closely reflect the Christology of The Urantia Book?

 

Early Beliefs About the Nature of Christ

 

1. Adoptionists: A human Jesus was adopted by God at the time of his baptism and made his son. His human and divine natures existed separately.

2. Apollinarians: Christ had a single divine nature. He did not have a human mind but rather had a human body and emotions with a divine mind.

3. Arians: God the Son and God the Father are not fully equal. If the Son was "begotten" it means that he post-dates the Father and is therefore neither equal nor coeternal with the Father.

4. Basilides: Christ came to liberate the forces of light from the material realm of ignorance and evil. Christ was the mind of God which descended upon Jesus at his baptism.

5. Chalcedonian: Two natures, human and divine, are united in the one person (or personality) of Jesus. (This is the position that became the orthodoxy of the mainstream church after the Council of Chalcedon in 451.)

6. Docetists: Christ had no real human nature. His image was only an illusory shape, a manifestation of a purely divine being. His sufferings on the cross were illusory.

7. Diothelites: Jesus had two natures and two wills.

8. Ebionites: Early Jewish-Christian movement following Jesus as a human being. He had no divine nature.

9. Eutyches: Jesus' human nature was deified and subsumed into the single divine essence of Christ. He was a fusion of human and divine natures but no longer had a specifically human identity.

10. Gnostics: Christ was a divine being come to redeem believers from the evil and contaminated material world. Christ's true identity or nature was always divine and, while on earth, he occupied a supernatural body quite distinct from humanity.

11. Manicheans: The cosmos consists of an absolute and eternal war between forces of light and darkness. Christ was a liberator come to redeem the elements of light trapped in the material world. He was thus a purely supernatural or divine being and any human or material elements must be illusory. (Originating in the third century, this movement became an independent world religion.)

12. Marcion: Jesus Christ was the son of the good God of the New Testament who sent him to earth to save the world from the old spiritual regime of the flawed God of the Old Testament.

13. Miaphysites: The person of Jesus had a divine nature and a human nature, equally present as one single being.

14. Monophysites: Christ was altogether divine and not human, even though he had a human body. He was God incarnate.

15. Monotheletes: Christ had two natures but a single divine will—no human will.

16. Nestorians: Christ had two separate natures sometimes interpreted as two (what we would call) personalities ("prosopic duality")--human and divine, but not in a true union. Mary could thus be called the Mother of Christ, but not the Mother of God.

17. Paul of Samosata: A man, Jesus, became divine at the time of his baptism.

18. Sabellius: Christ had a human body but no real human nature. He was identical to God in his nature. Christ was one with the Father to the extent that it was the Father who suffered on the cross.

19. Valentinus: The divine Christ came to redeem the evil world but had no true human nature; his body was always supernatural rather than truly human.

20. Word/Flesh Christology: The Logos became flesh so the Logos was the principle guiding Christ's flesh or body. Christ lived as a representative of humanity as a whole rather than a fully developed human individual in his own right.

21. Word/Man Christology: The Logos became human in the form of the man Jesus Christ. Christ was not just a generic representative of humanity, but a fully individual human being.

  

Urantia Religions

Urantia Religions

The many religions of Urantia are all good to the extent that they bring man to God and bring the realization of the Father to man. It is a fallacy for any group of religionists to conceive of their creed as The Truth; such attitudes bespeak more of theological arrogance than of certainty of faith. There is not a Urantia religion that could not profitably study and assimilate the best of the truths contained in every other faith, for all contain truth. Religionists would do better to borrow the best in their neighbors' living spiritual faith rather than to denounce the worst in their lingering superstitions and outworn rituals.