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Bro. Turner:
Did
Paul know Jesus while the Son of God was in the flesh (2 Cor.
5:16)?
Reply:
Maybe,
but that passage may not say what some think I am saying. Paul
says, "Wherefore we henceforth know no man after the flesh:
even though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now we know
him so no more" (A.S.). Very obviously this is not referring
to "knowing" a man when we meet him on the street, i.e.,
recognizing and identifying him by name. Paul says he now knows no
man (not even Timothy or Barnabas) in whatever way
"after the flesh" indicates.
Studies
in Chronology will show Paul was converted about six years after
the resurrection, which means he could have seen Jesus walk
the streets of Jerusalem. "Last of all... he appeared to me
also" (1 Cor. 15:8), refers to the resurrected Lord, and does
not negate seeing Him earlier. But the point of 2 Cor. 5:16 is
very different from this kind of seeing and knowing. Study context
with me.
Verses
14-15 say the love Christ has for
us is a constraining influence, moving us to look at things
differently that before. We judge if One died for all, then
were all dead, including Paul. The fleshly lusts and way of life
which condemned us, and cost the life of God's Son, must no longer
rule the new man (v.17).
Some
were judging Paul by fleshly standards. "His bodily presence
is weak,
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and his speech of no account," they said (10:10). Paul detailed his
accomplishments under protest, feeling foolish (2 Cor. 11:), or,
as he says in our text, "that ye may have wherewith to answer
them that glory in appearance, and not in heart" (v. 12). But
he did not approve of judging by outward show, or "after the
flesh." Now — look at verse 16.
"Henceforth"
— I once measured men by fleshly standards, but no more. We
"know no man after the flesh" — we do not so judge
men. I once judged Jesus Christ by worldly standards — outward
appearance — a lowly man from Nazareth. "Even though we
have known" (or have judged) "Christ after the
flesh" (or, by fleshly standards) in times past, "yet
now" (and from now on) "we know Him so no more" (we
will no more so judge Christ — or any other).
KNOWING
NO MAN AFTER THE FLESH means I must not judge by social rank,
riches, clothes, etc.; must not reject because of poverty, color,
nationality, and the like. Realizing I was lost, without hope in
the world; and though so unworthy, Christ loved me and died for
me; now I see only those who are following Christ, and those who
are not. The first I love, and treat as brethren — rejoicing in
our mutual hope. The last I love, and reach out for them with the
good news of salvation in Christ.
"He
who knows no man after flesh has, e.g., in the case of the Jew,
entirely lost sight of his Jewish origin, — in that of the rich
man, of his riches, — in that of the learned, of his learning,
— in that of the slave, of his servitude, etc.; Cf. Gal.
3:28." (A comment by Alford.)
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