John MacArthur's Position on the Eternal Sonship of Christ |
The MacArthur Bible Commentary (2005) and Eternal Sonship
In 1999 John MacArthur changed his position on the Sonship of Christ—professing
to abandon his incarnation Sonship view in favor of the eternal Sonship
position. One of my concerns at that time was as follows:
I was concerned about the many commentaries and booklets and tapes which set
forth the incarnational Sonship position, sometimes in very strong terms: “The
Bible nowhere speaks of the eternal Sonship of Christ” (etc.). The incarnational
Sonship position is also suggested in MacArthur’s Study Bible notes and in his
school’s doctrinal statement. The problem comes when people read these published
materials and they may not realize that MacArthur no longer holds to the
incarnational Sonship view.
I expressed this concern and on September 3, 1999 I received an e-mail from
Phillip R. Johnson, an associate and key member of Dr. John MacArthur’s staff.
He assured me that this problem would be corrected. Here are his words:
"John has already asked me to oversee the process of making those changes. I will
do so to the best of my ability. John MacArthur’s willingness to recant publicly
on an issue with such a high public profile—even when it involves revising and
retracting printed and taped material—speaks volumes about his humility and his
integrity."
Six years later, in 2005, The MacArthur Bible Commentary was published by
Nelson. It is based, for the most part, on the notes found in the Study Bible. I
had assumed, based on Johnson’s assurances, that the commentary would clearly
set forth the eternal Sonship of Christ. However, for the most part, I found the
same troublesome notes which suggest that Christ’s Sonship is not eternal, but
involved a role that He assumed at the time of the incarnation.
Before examining some of these notes, it should also be pointed out that in the
Preface to The MacArthur Bible Commentary, John MacArthur states the following:
"The core around which the one-volume commentary has been arranged is the
original notes of The MacArthur Study Bible published in 1997. Since then, those
notes have been thoroughly reviewed for accuracy and clarity, with appropriate
revisions and corrections."
If MacArthur really changed his position on the eternal Sonship of Christ, and
if he really has repudiated the incarnational Sonship view (which involves
Christ taking on the role of a Son at the incarnation, a role which He had never
previously assumed), then we would expect The MacArthur Bible Commentary to
present a strong case for Christ’s eternal Sonship for two reasons: 1) Phillip
Johnson assured me that MacArthur’s published works would be revised to reflect
his new position on eternal Sonship; 2) MacArthur, in his Preface, stated that
the notes in the Commentary had all been checked for accuracy and clarity and
revised as needed.
What then do we find? Here are several examples taken from The MacArthur Bible
Commentary:
“We teach that, in the Incarnation, the second person of the Trinity laid aside
His right to the full prerogatives of coexistence with God, assumed the place of
a Son, and took on an existence appropriate to a servant while never divesting
Himself of His divine attributes (Phil. 2:5-8). Page xii, in the chapter
entitled “Key Teachings of the Bible.” [This statement is also part of
MacArthur’s church and school doctrinal statement]
The above quote suggests that Christ “assumed the place of a Son” at the
incarnation, a place which He did not hold prior to the incarnation. It suggests
that Sonship was a role that Christ assumed when He became a man. This is in
contradiction to MacArthur’s own statement made in a document entitled,
Reexamining the Eternal Sonship of Christ (September 1999). At that time he
said,
“I no longer regard Christ’s Sonship as a role He assumed at His
incarnation.” Where does MacArthur really stand? Does he believe that Christ was
eternally the Son or does he believe that He assumed the place of a Son at the
incarnation?
Another problem with the above quote from his Commentary is that MacArthur
equates Sonship with the idea of being a Servant, whereas the Scriptures place
these two ideas in sharp contrast (Galatians 4:7, Hebrews 3:5-6, Matthew
21:33-39). MacArthur once taught that Sonship primarily signified submission,
obedience and subservience and this faulty view is suggested by the above quote.
In Jewish usage the term SON did not generally imply subjection and
subordination, but rather equality and identity of nature.
If MacArthur has really changed His position on Sonship, then why wouldn’t he
want to change his church and school doctrinal statement to reflect such a
change? Instead MacArthur leaves the statement as it was, clearly implying that
Christ assumed the place of a Son at the incarnation, implying that He did not
have or hold that place prior to Bethlehem.
“God’s Son was born in a point of time. He was always God, but He fulfilled His
role as Son in space and time at His incarnation” [see under Hebrews 1:5].
God’s Son eternally existed. His Sonship did not begin at the time of the
incarnation. In 1999 MacArthur renounced his “incarnation Sonship view” and
professed to believe in eternal Sonship. At that time he said, “I no longer
regard Christ’s Sonship as a role He assumed at His incarnation.” Why then did
MacArthur state, in his Commentary, that He “fulfilled His role as Son”?
MacArthur is contradicting himself. What does he really believe? In his Preface
he stated that all of these notes had all been checked for accuracy and clarity
and revised as needed. Was a mistake made in this case? Was this an erroneous
note that somehow failed to get corrected? Has MacArthur unknowingly allowed the
serious error of incarnational Sonship to infect his Commentary?
“While He was eternally the Son in anticipation of His incarnation, it was when
He entered the world in incarnation that He was declared to all the world as the
Son of God and took on the role of submission to the Father” [ See under Romans
1:4].
MacArthur here suggests that Christ did not actually become the Son until the
incarnation. Prior to Bethlehem He was only the Son “in anticipation.” Once
again he teaches that Sonship is merely a “role” which Christ assumed and that
it involves “submission” to the Father [the Bible teaches that Sonship involves
not servitude, but equality with God (see John 5:18), and notice also how
Sonship is contrasted with the idea of servitude in Galatians 4:7, Hebrews
3:5-6, Matthew 21:33-39].
CONCLUSION: In The MacArthur Bible Commentary I could find not a clear,
unequivocal declaration of Christ’s eternal Sonship. Instead I found several
statements which suggest that Christ’s Sonship was a role that He assumed at the
incarnation. This mirrors the erroneous “incarnational Sonship” view that
MacArthur once held. What does he really believe now?
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