Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Thou, Being a Man, Makest Thyself God

 

“Thou, Being a Man, Makest Thyself God”: A Christological Provocation in Intertextual and Interfaith Perspective

By Dr. Maxwell Shimba
Shimba Theological Institute


Abstract

John 10:33 records the Jewish charge against Jesus: “You, being a man, make yourself God.” This article argues that Jesus’ divinity is not a later ecclesiastical invention but embedded within the fabric of the New Testament witness itself, rooted in Old Testament imagery, confirmed by apostolic testimony, and interpreted robustly by patristic tradition. Furthermore, this study confronts Islamic exegetical traditions that deny Christ’s divinity, using both Qur’anic references and classical tafsīr to demonstrate how even Islamic discourse inadvertently confirms the unique Christological claims of the New Testament. The thesis advanced here is unapologetically provocative: Jesus is God, not metaphorically, but ontologically—by doing what only God can do.


Introduction: The Blasphemy That Defines Orthodoxy

The accusation of blasphemy in John 10 functions as a theological watershed. The Jews recognize in Jesus not merely a moral teacher but one who “makes Himself God” (John 10:33). The paradox is striking: the charge that condemned Him becomes the confession that defines Christianity. As Augustine insists, “If He were only man, He would be a liar; but since He is God and man, He is the Truth.”¹

By contrast, Islamic theology—while revering Jesus (ʿĪsā al-Masīḥ) as prophet and Messiah—rejects His divinity outright. The Qur’an declares, “They do blaspheme who say: Allah is Christ the son of Mary” (Q 5:72). Yet this very rejection presupposes that Christians, from the earliest centuries, confessed Christ as divine. The intertextual tension between Gospel and Qur’an thus exposes a fundamental theological fault line.


Johannine Intertextuality: Works That Only God Can Do

John’s Gospel repeatedly frames Jesus’ identity through divine works:

  • Healing the blind (John 9) echoes Isaiah’s eschatological prophecy that YHWH alone will “open the eyes of the blind” (Isa. 35:5).

  • Raising Lazarus (John 11) invokes Ezekiel’s valley of dry bones (Ezek. 37), a resurrection act attributed solely to God’s Spirit.

  • Forgiving sins (cf. Mark 2:7; Luke 5:21) presupposes prerogatives of God alone.

Thus, Jesus’ works are not “good deeds” but divine acts—performative theology in which the Logos incarnate manifests the Father’s authority. Athanasius, in De Incarnatione, interprets this as ontological proof: “For He was not man and then became God, but He was God, and then became man, and that to deify us.”²


Apostolic Witness: Incarnation as Polemic Against Antichrist

The First Epistle of John explicitly polemicizes against any denial of the incarnation:

“Every spirit that does not confess Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is not of God; this is the spirit of antichrist” (1 John 4:3).

This anticipates later Islamic and Gnostic denials of Christ’s full divinity.³ Irenaeus in Against Heresies directly linked such denials to satanic deception, contrasting them with the apostolic proclamation of the Logos’ fleshly manifestation.⁴ Thus, Johannine theology fuses Christology with soteriology: only God can save, and He does so by entering human history in Christ.


Pauline Christology: Resurrection as Divine Vindication

Pauline texts likewise integrate high Christology. In 1 Corinthians 15:19, Paul warns that if Christ is not truly divine and resurrected, “we are of all men most miserable.” For Paul, the resurrection is divine vindication—Christ “was declared Son of God in power according to the Spirit of holiness by His resurrection from the dead” (Rom. 1:4). Tertullian argues in Adversus Praxean that this proves Christ’s consubstantiality with the Father, since no mere creature could conquer death itself.⁵


Patristic and Islamic Parallels: A Clash of Interpretations

Early Christian Fathers embraced the scandal of divinity. Augustine saw Christ’s claim in John 10 as “the humility of God” rather than blasphemy.⁶ By contrast, classical Islamic commentators attempted to neutralize Christian claims.

  • Al-Ṭabarī (d. 923), commenting on Q 4:171, insists that Jesus was only a prophet, rejecting divine sonship as shirk (associationism).⁷

  • Ibn Kathīr (d. 1373) similarly stresses that miracles attributed to Jesus (e.g., healing the blind, raising the dead) were by Allah’s permission, not His own authority.⁸

  • Al-Qurṭubī (d. 1273) frames Christian confession of Christ’s divinity as theological corruption, a deviation from the prophetic line.⁹

Yet ironically, these commentaries confirm the radical uniqueness of Jesus: no other prophet is debated in Islamic tradition as persistently for supposed “divine” claims. The polemic itself testifies to Christ’s unparalleled identity.


Revelation and the First Love of Christ

In Revelation 2:4–5, the Risen Christ warns the Ephesian church: “You have left your first love.” Patristic commentators like Andrew of Caesarea interpret this as a loss of Christological devotion.¹⁰ Similarly, Revelation 19:10 reminds believers to worship God alone, yet identifies “the testimony of Jesus” as the spirit of prophecy, implying that Christ is the hermeneutical key to all revelation.


Conclusion: The Provocation of Christ’s Divinity

The Jewish accusation—“You, being a man, make yourself God”—is, paradoxically, the truest confession of Christian faith. Jesus makes Himself God not by presumption but by revealing Himself through divine acts: granting life, forgiving sins, conquering death. The patristic tradition affirms this as ontological reality; Islamic tafsīr denies it yet cannot escape grappling with the uniqueness of Jesus.

Thus, Christ’s divinity remains the most provocative claim in religious history: blasphemy to Jews, heresy to Muslims, but the cornerstone of Christian orthodoxy. To deny it is to embrace the spirit of antichrist; to confess it is to participate in the eternal life of God.


References

  1. Augustine, Tractates on the Gospel of John, Tractate 43, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, Vol. 7, ed. Philip Schaff (Peabody: Hendrickson, 1994).

  2. Athanasius, On the Incarnation, trans. John Behr (Yonkers: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2011).

  3. Bart D. Ehrman, The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993), 121–126.

  4. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book III, in The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus, ed. A. Roberts & J. Donaldson (Peabody: Hendrickson, 1999).

  5. Tertullian, Against Praxeas, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. 3, ed. Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson (Peabody: Hendrickson, 1994).

  6. Augustine, Sermons on Selected Lessons of the New Testament, Sermon 126.

  7. Al-Ṭabarī, Jāmiʿ al-bayān fī taʾwīl āy al-Qurʾān, trans. J. Cooper (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987), on Q 4:171.

  8. Ibn Kathīr, Tafsīr al-Qurʾān al-ʿAẓīm, trans. Trevor Le Gassick (Riyadh: Darussalam, 2000), vol. 2, 459–463.

  9. Al-Qurṭubī, Al-Jāmiʿ li-Aḥkām al-Qurʾān (Cairo: Dār al-Kutub al-Miṣriyya, 1967), vol. 6, 21–23.

  10. Andrew of Caesarea, Commentary on the Apocalypse, trans. Eugenia Scarvelis Constantinou (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 2011).

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