There is a debate among Evangelicals over Jesus’ life on
earth during His humiliation in regards to temptations. Those who believe Jesus
could have sinned if He would have succumbed to the so-called temptations to
sin hold the “peccability” position. Those who believe that the God-Man was
incapable of sinning hold to the “impeccability” view. Why do I hold to the “impeccability”
view in this debate? For me this issue is rather simple. After Jesus was born
of the Virgin Mary He had two natures. He was 100% God and 100% man. He was not
born with a sin nature like Adam obtained at the fall (when he failed the
covenantal test for himself and his descendants). The miracle of the virgin
conception kept Jesus from being born with legal guilt and a disposition to sin
like we have. We have both a sinful nature and a sinful environment. We sin by
nature and by choice because we are slaves of sin from our natural birth. Once
these sins become habits, they become even stronger masters. So it is impossible
for us to fully grasp even what it was like to not ever have a strong drive
towards sin.
Adam was also created innocent and without sin. It was not
until he chose for himself and the human race as the covenant representative to
rebel against God that he became a sinner. We are sons of Adam and daughters of
Eve. Thus, we sin because we are already sinners.
However, on the issue of the nature of the God-Man Jesus there
is a very different story. Jesus’ human nature was innocent, perfect, and
without any disposition towards sin. He was born outside of Adam’s line by the
Holy Spirit enacted virgin conception. Jesus' divine nature has always been
incapable of sin or being tempted by sin (Jam 1:13). God despises sin and it is
completely contrary to His nature. This applies equally to the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit.
Jesus is God. God cannot sin. Jesus was formally tested by
the devil as the second Adam, the covenant representative of all who would
surrender to Him, repenting, and believing. These tests were directed towards
Jesus’ perfect, innocent and sinless human nature. But that nature was and is
also connected to the divine nature in the God-Man Jesus the Messiah (the Greek
term is translated as Christ).
Is Jesus God? Yes. Can God sin? No. Can the God-Man sin? No!
Why were these tests recorded in the Bible then? Jesus was
modeling how to choose the right path when tested, tried, or tempted by relying
on the Holy Spirit. This was recorded to teach us (sinners) lessons about
fighting temptation. It was not so we would have such a high view of man that
we would lower our view of God the Son who is LORD of all. Our salvation was
purchased by His death on the cross. His entire life of living a holy life in
our place is reckoned to replace the believer’s sin record in heaven. Jesus
perfectly fulfilled all the requirements of the law of God in our place.
Some Bible students forget when they are talking about the
God-Man Jesus that He is not like us in many, many ways. Sin for a perfect
being is so disgusting and so revolting that it has to be masked with deception
to become an enticement. Remember the Garden of Eden? When that perfect being
is also fully God, this is not an option. No being can deceive the omniscient Son
of God.
Pelagius denied original sin (legal guilt) and his view exalted
men to the point that they could choose to never sin and enter heaven by works.
Some modern day individuals have followed his beliefs and have embraced some
forms of free-will-theism. They also exalt fallen man and thus lower their
views of the God-Man, Jesus. They are more concerned about what is
"fair" according to the humanistic world view rather than what is
"just" in God's eyes. These views work like a see-saw. If you have a
high view of man, you will always have a low view of Jesus and His divine
nature. If you have a high view of Jesus you will always distrust man's ability
to do good by his fallen and depraved nature. Like with a see-saw, when one
side is down, the other side is up.
For the death of Jesus to pay in full for the sins of
billions of sinners it had to be the death of a perfect man who was and is also
God the Son. Only an infinite person's suffering, punishment, and death could
pay in full for the wickedness of so many sinners. The emphasis in the New Testament
is on Jesus' deity and crucifixion, not on his so-called “temptations.”
The Greek word used in the passages that some English
versions translate as “temptation” also means "trial" or
"difficulty." For instance, the word in Heb 2:18 most often translated
as “tempt” is the Greek term peiradzo which has the primary meaning: “to
try to learn the nature or character of someone or something by submitting such
to thorough and extensive testing - 'to test, to examine, to put to the test,
examination, testing'” (Louw-Nida Lexicon). Thus, the translators have to
decide from the context which meaning of peiradzo
is most appropriate. The term could be translated "trial" or
"testing" every time it is used in a text that is discussing Jesus.
Some theologians argue that it should be only translated as “trial” or testing”
each time it is used in reference to the God-Man. A test or a trial is different from a temptation. A temptation
requires a weakness in the person being enticed in order for it to be
successful. A perfect person can be tested without any weakness.
Consider this illustration about testing. If a straight
"A" student is given an easy test, does anyone assume she will fail
it? Is it not a real test because everyone believes she can answer what is 10 +
12? Yet, it is a real test if given by her instructor and it is passed if the
right answer is given, no matter how easy the test is. There is no universal
law that all tests must be hard for every individual. Those that get all worked
up about the trials or so-called “temptations” being "real" are not
thinking very deeply or carefully. When Jesus wept outside of Lazarus’s tomb he
was enduring a trial that we will also face. He fully understands our emotions.
But Jesus was never tempted to tell a second lie to cover up a former lie that
He had told, because He never told a lie in the first place.
Here is another but not so pretty illustration. You buy two
bottles of great water at Starbucks. You drink one on the way home. You have
the other bottle in your hand. When you get home, your dog runs into the
bathroom and starts drinking out of the toilet. Why are you not also tempted to
join the dog in drinking from the toilet? This is because you are not thirsty,
you have great water in your hand, and you know the consequences of the dog’s
action—sickness. So it is not a temptation to you because you have greater
knowledge and a superior nature to the dog. Likewise, sin so utterly repulsed
the perfect Son of God—even in His perfect, holy, wise and sinless human nature
so that it could never entice Him.
Most peccability adherents also deny that mankind is
radically and pervasively (totally) depraved. They do not believe that when
Adam fell into sin, it affected every faculty and atom of the man. So when they
start with a conditional depravity view—that man's reason and/or will are not
fallen, other wrong views will follow. They will next deny the texts that teach
the inability of every person to move towards God without God first giving new
life and they end up exalting man way above what is biblical ( John 3:3, 5, 8;
Rom 8:7; 1 Cor 2:14; Eph 2:1-5; 1 John 5:1). What follows is that they also end
up with too low a view on God the Son. When this is mixed with humanistic
reasoning on “fairness” and “equality,” it sinks even deeper into confusion and
bad doctrine.
Wayne Grudem writes: “(1) If Jesus’ human nature had existed
by itself, independent of his divine nature, then it would have been a human
nature just like that which God gave Adam and Eve. It would have been free from
sin but nonetheless able to sin.
Therefore, if Jesus’ human nature had existed by itself, there was the abstract
or theoretical possibility that Jesus could have sinned, just as Adam and Eve’s
human natures were able to sin. (2) But Jesus’ human nature never existed apart
from union with his divine nature. From
the moment of his conception, he existed as truly God and truly man as well.
Both his human nature and his divine nature existed united in one person. (3)
Although there were some things (such as being hungry or thirsty or weak) that
Jesus experienced in his human nature alone and were not experienced by his
divine nature (see below), nonetheless, an act of sin would have been a moral
act that would apparently have involved the whole person of Christ. Therefore,
if he had sinned, it would have involved both his human and divine natures. (4)
But if Jesus as a person had sinned, involving both his human and divine
natures in sin, then God himself would have sinned, and he would have ceased to
be God. Yet that is clearly impossible because of the infinite holiness of
God’s nature. (5) Therefore, if we are asking if it was actually possible for Jesus to have sinned, it seems that we must
conclude that it was not possible. The union of his human and divine natures in
one person prevented it” (Wayne Grudem, Systematic
Theology, 538-39).
Therefore, because of my high view of the holy triune Godhead
and that this holiness (transcendence and purity) applies to each person equally:
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, just as do as all of the other divine attributes
(sovereignty, immutability, omniscience, etc.); I am forced to take the
impeccability side in this debate. I don’t believe anybody at the bema seat of Christ will be rebuked for
having too high a view of God. But I do fear that many will be admonished for
having too low a view of God. I don’t want to be member of the low view group on that
day.
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