Nuggets from An Urgent Call to a Serious Faith by Dave Hunt - Second Man, Last Adam | thebereancall.org

Dave Hunt

Nuggets from An Urgent Call to a Serious Faith by Dave Hunt – Second Man, Last Adam

The careful language of Scripture calls Christ “the second man” (1 Corinthians:15:47). From Adam until this One, there was no one who deserved to be truly called “man” in the fullness God purposed. As Adam was created by God, so Christ’s body was created in the womb of a virgin: “A body hast thou prepared me” (Hebrews:10:5). Here was man once again as God has intended him to be. Here, too, was “God as man: “He that hath seen me hath seen the Father” (John:14:9).

As the progenitor of a new race of those who have been born again, Christ is also called the last Adam (1 Corinthians:15:45). Those redeemed by His blood (Ephesians:1:7; Colossians:1:14), to whom He has given eternal life as a free gift of His grace, will “never perish” (John:10:28). Never will there be a third Adam or a fourth. What God accomplished in Christ for Adam’s fallen descendants will never fail: “For by one offering [of Himself upon the cross for sin] he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified” (Hebrews:10:14).

How incredible it is that God became a man; and how wonderful are the implications for us for eternity! As we have previously seen, God had to become a man to pay the penalty that His infinite justice required of man for sin: “Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin” (Romans:5:12), so it had to be that “by man came also the resurrection of the dead” (1 Corinthians:15:21).

The God of the Bible created the universe out of nothing. The universe is not God nor an extension of Him, nor is He part of it. Therefore, to speak of God as “She” or to refer to “Mother Earth” or “Mother Nature” or even “Mother/Father God” promotes a grave heresy. A woman nurtures her offspring within her womb and gives birth out of herself, precisely what God does not do. Nor is man, though in God’s image (Genesis:1:26-27), an extension of God or part of God but a separate being entirely.

Obviously, being made “in the image of God” has nothing to do with man’s physical form, for “God is a Spirit” (John:4:24). Man was made in the spiritual and moral image of God. God made man’s body from the “dust of the ground.” Man’s soul and spirit, however, are nonphysical: “And the Lord God …breathed into his [Adam’s] nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul” (Genesis:2:7). Reflecting the triune nature of God (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit), man is also a triune being: body , soul, and spirit. Paul wrote, “I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ” (1 Thessalonians:5:23). God’s Word causes a “dividing asunder of soul and spirit” (Hebrews:4:12). Having made man a triune being in His image, God could become a man in order to redeem His creatures.

Jesus was not popularly acclaimed in Nazareth. He was unrecognized and even hated “with a cause” (John:15:25). Here was God Himself, the Creator, walking among His creatures – and they despised Him. How deep was the alienation between God and man. Few were those who could say, “And the Word was made fleah, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father), full of grace and truth” (John:1:14).