dc.contributor.advisor |
Wood, J. M.
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dc.contributor.author |
Mwale, Emanuel
|
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dc.date.accessioned |
2021-07-13T09:18:19Z |
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dc.date.available |
2021-07-13T09:18:19Z |
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dc.date.issued |
2019-12 |
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dc.identifier.uri |
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/27660 |
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dc.description |
Bibliography: leaves 653-669 |
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dc.description.abstract |
Before God created human beings, He devised a plan to save them in case they sinned. In this plan, the second Person of the Godhead would become human. Thus, the incarnation of the second Person of the Godhead was solely for the purpose of saving fallen, sinful human beings. There would have been no incarnation if human beings had not sinned. Thus, the nature of the mission that necessitated the incarnation determined what kind of human nature Jesus was to assume.
It was sin that necessitated the incarnation – sin as a tendency and sin as an act of disobedience. In His incarnational life and later through His death on Calvary’s cross, Jesus needed to deal with this dual problem of sin. In order for Him to achieve this, He needed to identify Himself with the fallen humanity in such a way that He would qualify to be the substitute for the fallen humanity. In His role as fallen humanity’s substitute, He would die vicariously and at the same time have sin as a tendency rendered impotent. Jesus needed to assume a human nature that would qualify Him to be an understanding and sympathetic High Priest. He needed to assume a nature that would qualify Him to be an example in overcoming temptation and suffering.
Thus, in this study, after comparing and critically evaluating the Christological views of Jack Sequeira, Millard J. Erickson and Norman R. Gulley, I propose that Jesus assumed a unique post-fall (postlapsarian) human nature. He assumed the very nature that all human beings since humankind’s fall have, with its tendency or leaning towards sin. However, unlike other human beings, who are sinners by nature and need a saviour, Jesus was not a sinner. I contend that Jesus was unique because, first and foremost, He was conceived in Mary’s womb by the power of the Holy Spirit and was filled with the Holy Spirit throughout His earthly life. Second; He was the God-Man; and third, He lived a sinless life.
This study contributes to literature on Christology, and uniquely to Christological dialogue between Evangelical and Seventh-day Adventist theologians. |
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dc.format.extent |
1 online resource (xxxiii, 675 leaves) |
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dc.language.iso |
en |
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dc.subject |
Adoptionism |
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dc.subject |
Alleles |
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dc.subject |
Anhypostatic Christology |
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dc.subject |
Anthropotokos |
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dc.subject |
Alternative Christology |
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dc.subject |
Apollinarianism |
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dc.subject |
Apthartodocetism |
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dc.subject |
Arianism |
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dc.subject |
Augustinian model |
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dc.subject |
Autosomal chromosomes |
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dc.subject |
Autosomal inheritance |
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dc.subject |
Born-again Christology |
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dc.subject |
Chalcedonian creed |
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dc.subject |
Christology from above |
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dc.subject |
Christotokos |
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dc.subject |
Chromosomes |
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dc.subject |
Chromosomal abnormalities |
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dc.subject |
Cloning |
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dc.subject |
Co-dominance |
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dc.subject |
Communicatio idiomatum |
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dc.subject |
Complementary base pairing |
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dc.subject |
Cri-du-chat syndrome |
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dc.subject |
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) |
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dc.subject |
Diploid cell |
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dc.subject |
Docetism |
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dc.subject |
Dominant gene |
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dc.subject |
Down syndrome |
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dc.subject |
Dynamic incarnation |
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dc.subject |
Dynamic monarchianism |
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dc.subject |
Eastern Orthodox Christology |
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dc.subject |
Ebionitism |
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dc.subject |
Embryogenesis |
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dc.subject |
Eutychianism |
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dc.subject |
Evangelical Christology |
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dc.subject |
Existential Christology |
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dc.subject |
Functional Christology |
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dc.subject |
Genes |
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dc.subject |
Gene mutation |
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dc.subject |
Gene expression |
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dc.subject |
Genome |
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dc.subject |
Genotype |
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dc.subject |
Gnosticism |
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dc.subject |
Hamartiology |
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dc.subject |
Haploid cell |
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dc.subject |
Heterozygous |
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dc.subject |
History of Jesus’ Christology |
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dc.subject |
Homoiousios Theology |
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dc.subject |
Homozygous |
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dc.subject |
Human cloning |
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dc.subject |
Immaculate conception |
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dc.subject |
Incarnation |
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dc.subject |
Incarnational life |
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dc.subject |
Inheritance |
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dc.subject |
Karyotype |
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dc.subject |
Kenoticism |
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dc.subject |
Klinefelter syndrome |
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dc.subject |
Logos-flesh Christology |
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dc.subject |
Meiosis |
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dc.subject |
Mitosis |
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dc.subject |
Modalistic monarchianism |
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dc.subject |
Monarchianism |
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dc.subject |
Monophysitism |
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dc.subject |
Mutation |
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dc.subject |
Nestorianism |
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dc.subject |
Nicene Creed |
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dc.subject |
One-nature Christology |
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dc.subject |
Ontological Christology |
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dc.subject |
Organogenesis |
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dc.subject |
Patripassianism |
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dc.subject |
Phenotype |
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dc.subject |
Polygenic inheritance |
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dc.subject |
Post lapsarian view/model |
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dc.subject |
Prelapsarian view/model |
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dc.subject |
Recessive gene |
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dc.subject |
Roman Catholic Christology |
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dc.subject |
Sabellianism |
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dc.subject |
Seventh-day Adventist Christology |
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dc.subject |
Sex chromosomes |
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dc.subject |
Sex-linked inheritance |
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dc.subject |
Speculative Christology |
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dc.subject |
Theotokos |
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dc.subject |
Turner syndrome |
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dc.subject |
Two-natures Christology |
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dc.subject |
Unique post-fall Christology |
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dc.subject |
Socinianism |
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dc.subject |
Soteriology |
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dc.subject |
Theotokos |
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dc.subject |
Turner syndrome |
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dc.subject |
Two-natures Christology |
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dc.subject |
Unique post-fall Christology |
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dc.subject |
Virginal conception |
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dc.subject.ddc |
231.4 |
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dc.subject.lcsh |
Seventh-Day Adventists -- Doctrines |
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dc.subject.lcsh |
Salvation -- Seventh-Day Adventists |
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dc.subject.lcsh |
God (Christianity) -- History of doctrines |
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dc.subject.lcsh |
Free will and determination -- Religious aspects |
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dc.subject.lcsh |
Fall of man -- History of doctrines |
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dc.subject.lcsh |
Jesus Christ -- History of doctrines |
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dc.subject.lcsh |
Sequerra, Jack |
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dc.subject.lcsh |
Erickson, Millard J. |
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dc.subject.lcsh |
Gulley, Norman R. |
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dc.title |
Jesus Christ’s humanity in the contexts of the pre-fall and post-fall natures of humanity: a comparative and critical evaluative study of the views of Jack Sequeira, Millard J. Erickson and Norman R. Gulley |
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dc.type |
Thesis |
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dc.description.department |
Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology |
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dc.description.degree |
D. Phil. (Systematic Theology) |
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