OF THE DISTINCT
PERSONALITY,
AND DEITY OF
THE FATHER
John Gill
Though what has been already
observed, clearly shows there is a distinction of Persons in the Godhead, and
wherein that distinction lies; yet other things may be added,
which will serve to illustrate and confirm it; and which will be produced, not
as making it, but as making it more clearly to appear. A person is by some {1}
defined,
``An individual that subsists,
is living, intelligent, is not sustained by another, nor is a
part of another; ''
and which is true of each of
the three Persons, Father, Son, and Spirit. I shall begin with the personality
of the Father; the word "Person" is expressly used of him in #Heb 1:3
where Christ his Son, by whom he made the worlds, is called, "the express image of his person": the word upostasiv, here used, is
translated "substance" in #Heb 11:1 and some would have it so
rendered here; and some of the Latin writers did use the word "substantia,
substance": but then they understood it, and made use of it, just in the
same sense as we do the word person; but finding it to be an ambiguous word,
and that it tended to lead men to imagine there were three distinct divine Beings, they left it off, and chose the word person, as
less exceptionable; the Greek writers, and some even before the council of
Nice, took the word here used, in the same sense as we do, for
"subsistence", or person {2}; and so it is here rendered by many
learned men, as Valla, Vatablus, Erasmus, Calvin, Beza, Piscator, Paneus, and
others; in which translation we may safely acquiesce.
The definition of a person
agrees with the Father of Christ, as before observed. The Father of Christ is an
individual, and so distinguishable from the divine nature he is possessed of,
in common with the Son and Spirit; he subsists of himself, he does not owe his
being to another, nor is he upheld in it by another; nor is he possessed only of a part, but of the whole Deity; he is the living Father, has
life in himself, and not from another, #Joh 5:26 6:57 and is intelligent, knows
himself, his Son and Spirit, and all things, #Mt 11:27.
The personality of the Father
may be concluded from those personal actions which are
ascribed to him; for besides begetting the Son, which is what distinguishes him
from the other two persons, there are other acts which illustrate and confirm
the distinction made, though they do not make it; as,
1. The creation of all things
is ascribed to him; he is said, as the Father of Christ, to make
the worlds by him his Son, and to create all things by him; not as an
instrument, but as a co-efficient cause, #Heb 1:2 Eph 3:9.
2. The works of providence, as
upholding and sustaining all creatures in their being, supplying them with all
things necessary, governing the world, ordering and disposing
of all persons and things in it, are attributed to him, in distinction from his
Son, though in conjunction with him, "my Father worketh hitherto, and I
work", #Joh 5:17.
3. The mission of his Son into
the world to be the Saviour of men, shows his distinct personality
from him, which is often said of him; now he that sends, and he that is sent,
cannot be the same person, but must be distinct; indeed the Spirit of God is
said also to send Christ, as well as the Father, #Isa 48:16 but then, though
the Son is sent by both, and the Spirit is sent both by the Father and the Son,
yet the Father is never said to be sent by either; he is always the sender, and
never the sent.
4. The several distinct acts
of grace towards the elect in Christ, will serve to evince the distinct
personality of the Father. Men are said to be elect according to the foreknowledge
of God the Father, #1Pe 1:2 and are said to be chosen by him in Christ unto
salvation, through sanctification of the Spirit, and therefore must be distinct from Christ, in whom, and to whose salvation they are
chosen; and from the Spirit, through whose sanctification they are chosen to
the obtaining of the glory of Christ, #Eph 1:4 2Th 2:13,14 planning the scheme
of man's salvation by Christ; reconciling, or forming the scheme of
reconciliation in Christ; consulting in the council of peace with him about it,
are personal acts, and distinguish him from Christ; making a
covenant with his Son on account of elect men, putting their persons into his
hands, blessing them with all spiritual blessings in him, and giving grace to
them in him before the world was; as they are personal acts, so they show him
to be distinct from his Son, with whom he covenanted, and whom he entrusted
with the said persons and things: his drawing them by the powerful influences
of his grace in time, to come to Christ and believe in him,
#Joh 6:44 promising and giving the Spirit as a convincer, comforter,
enlightener, and strengthener, with many other things, serve to illustrate and
confirm his distinct personality. Now we call the Father the first person, not
that he is so in order of time or causality, and as if he was "fons
Deitatis", the fountain of Deity, as some good men have wrongly called him; for rather the Deity is the fountain of the divine
persons, from whence they arise together, and in which they subsist, and in which
they have no superiority and preeminence of one another; but as it is necessary
to speak of them in some order, it seems most proper to place the Father first,
whence we call him the first person, and then the Son, and then the Spirit; in
which order they are usually put in scripture; though to
show there is a perfect equality between them, this order is sometimes
inverted.
That the Father of Christ, as
he is a person, so a divine person, will not be doubted; nor is his Deity
called in question; and yet it may be proper to say something of it, and establish it; which may be done, not only by observing that
he is expressly and distinctly called God, #Ro 15:6 Ga 1:1 Php 2:11 but this
may be proved,
1. From his divine
perfections: God necessarily exists, owes his being to no other, subsists of
himself, and is independent of any; such is the Father of Christ, he "has life in himself" and of himself, and does not derive it
from another, #Joh 5:26. God is from everlasting to everlasting, without
beginning and end; so is the Father of Christ, he is he "which is, and
which was, and which is to come", #Re 1:4. God is immense and omnipresent,
cannot be circumscribed by space, he fills heaven and earth, and is contained
in neither; such is the Father of Christ, of whom he often speaks
as in heaven, and yet with him on earth, and with all his people, at all times,
and in all ages, #Joh 14:23 16:32. God is omniscient, knows all persons and
things; and so does the Father of Christ, he knows the Son in such sense as no
other does, and knows that which neither the angels nor the Son, as man, know,
even the day and hour of judgment, #Mt 11:27 Mr 13:32 #Ac 1:7 2Co 11:31. God is
omnipotent, he can do all things; and so can the Father of
Christ, "Abba, Father", says Christ, "all things are possible
unto thee", #Mr 14:36 Mt 19:26 Joh 10:29. Once more, God is immutable, not
subject to any change and variation; God, the Father of Christ, is the Father
of lights, with whom there is no variableness nor shadow of turning, #Jas 1:17
he is unchangeable in his purposes and promises made in Christ, and in his love which is in Christ Jesus the Lord. In short, there is no
perfection in Deity but what God, the Father of Christ, is possessed of.
2. His Deity will appear from
the works which are ascribed to him, and which none but God could do; such as
making the heaven, the earth and sea, and all that in them
are; and who as the maker of them is addressed by the apostle, #Ac 4:24-27 and
hence by Christ called Father, Lord of heaven and earth, #Mt 11:25 and the
works of providence, before observed, are ascribed to him, as supporting the
world by his power, governing it by his wisdom, and supplying it by his
goodness, which none but God could do: see #Mt 6:26,32. And his mighty acts of
grace in quickening sinners dead in sins, in doing which
the same power is put forth as in raising Christ from the dead, #Eph 2:1 1:19
and in forgiving the sins of men, which none but God can do, #Mr 2:7 and for
which Christ prayed to his Father on the behalf of his enemies, #Lu 23:34 to
which may be added the resurrection of the dead, which is purely a divine work,
and requires almighty power. The resurrection of Christ is most
frequently ascribed to him, and he will raise the dead at the last day, #1Co
6:14. From these and from many other divine works, may the Deity of the Father
be concluded, as well as,
3. From the worship due to
him, and given to him. None but God is and ought to be the
object of religious worship and adoration; "Thou shalt worship the Lord
thy God, and him only shalt thou serve", #Mt 4:10 now true worshippers of
God "worship the Father in spirit and in truth, for the Father seeketh
such to worship him", #Joh 4:23 and the Father of Christ is frequently
represented as the object of faith, hope, and love; to whom prayer is to be
made, and to whom prayer was made both by Christ and his
apostles; how often are grace and peace wished for from him in the several
epistles? and he stands first in the form of baptism, which is a solemn act of
divine and religious worship.
{1} Vid. Wendelin. Christ.
Theolog. l. 1. c. 2. p. 93, 94.
{2} See my
Doctrine of the Trinity, p. 93.