Mark D. Roberts

Mark D. Roberts

Jesus and the Perplexing Son of Man

posted by Mark D. Roberts

In my last post, I noted that Jesus rarely referred to himself as the Son of God. Yet he frequently spoke of himself as the Son of Man. This title, rarely used by Christians today when we speak of Jesus, was by far Jesus’ preferred title for himself. It shows up over seventy times in the gospels, almost always on the lips of Jesus himself.

It’s ironic that Jesus’ favorite self-designation gets so little play among Christians today. It’s also understandable because relatively few believers in Jesus really understand what he meant when he used the phrase “Son of Man.” In fact, none of those who followed the earthly Jesus understood what he meant either, at least not prior to his death and resurrection.

Consider the following scene from the Gospel of John. In the final hours of his ministry, Jesus said, “The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified. . . . And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself” (John 12:23, 32). The crowd was perplexed, asking: “How can you say that the Son of Man must be lifted up? Who is this Son of Man?” (John 12:34). After repeatedly hearing Jesus speak about himself as the Son of Man, the people were still confused. They weren’t even sure what in the world he was talking about. Even more surprisingly, Jesus’ closest followers failed to comprehend his mission as the Son of Man. Peter, James, and John joined the crowds in their puzzlement (Mark 8:27-33; 10:35-45). So if you’re uncertain about all of this “Son of Man” stuff, you’ve got good company. (Photo: Emerson Hall of Harvard University. The inscription of the wall is from Psalm 8: “What is man that thou are mindful of him?”)

emerson-harvard-5.jpg

What does the expression “Son of Man” actually mean when it is applied to Jesus? We tend to think of it as an affirmation of his humanity. And in one sense, it it. The phrase “son of man” was, at base, an expression that meant “human being” both in Hebrew and in Aramaic, the spoken language of Jesus and his followers. On the most obvious level, one who said “I am a son of man” was simply saying “I am a human being.” You see this in the classic line from Psalm 8, for example:

            What is man,
               that thou art mindful of him?
                   and the son of man, that thou visitest him?
                                  (Psalm 8:4, KJV)

The King James Version follows the Hebrew quite literally here. More recent translations render the sense of the verse in contemporary English, as in the following example:

            What are mortals that you should think of us?
                   mere humans that you should care for us?             (Psalm 8:4, NLT)

Armed with the knowledge that the basic meaning of “son of man” is “human being,” we turn to the sayings of Jesus in the gospels. There we find anything but what we might expect. Jesus talks about one he calls “the Son of Man,” yet his descriptions of the Son of Man suggest that this figure is not an ordinary human being. Consider these two excerpts from the Gospel of Matthew:

When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, then he will sit on the throne of his glory. All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats (Matt 25:31-32).

Then the sign of the Son of Man will appear in heaven, and then all the tribes of the earth will mourn, and they will see ‘the Son of Man coming on the clouds of heaven’ with power and great glory (Matt 24:30).

So, according to Jesus, the glorious Son of Man will someday be enthroned in heaven, in the midst of an angelic host. At that time he will exercise the power of judgment over all nations. This is no ordinary human being! Though his title points to his humanity, he functions in a role generally reserved for the Lord alone.

Where did Jesus get this stuff? Why did he use the expression “Son of Man” in such a striking way? In my next post I’ll examine the Jewish background behind Jesus’ usage of “Son of Man,” showing both Jesus’ continuity with Jewish tradition and his astounding break from that tradition.



Previous Posts

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In this series on the death of Jesus, I have presented four different perspectives on why Jesus had to die: Roman, Jewish, Jesus’, and Early Christian. I believe that each of these points of view has merit, and that we cannot fully understand the necessity of Jesus’ death without taking them all

posted 2:47:39am Apr. 11, 2011 | read full post »

Sunday Inspiration from the High Calling
Can We Find God in the City? Psalm 48:1-14 Go, inspect the city of Jerusalem. Walk around and count the many towers. Take note of the fortified walls, and tour all the citadels, that you may describe them to future generations. For that is what God is like. He is our God forever and ever,

posted 2:05:51am Apr. 10, 2011 | read full post »

Why Did Jesus Have to Die? The Perspective of the First Christians, Part 3
An Act and Symbol of Love Perhaps one of the most startling of the early Christian interpretations of the cross was that it was all about love. It’s easy in our day, when crosses are religious symbols, attractive ornaments, and trendy jewelry to associate the cross with love. But, in the first

posted 2:41:47am Apr. 08, 2011 | read full post »

Why Did Jesus Have to Die? The Perspective of the First Christians, Part 2
The Means of Reconciliation In my last post, I examined one of the very earliest Christian statements of the purpose of Jesus’ death. According to the tradition encapsulated in 1 Corinthians 15, Jesus died “for our sins in accordance with the scriptures” (15:3). Yet this text doesn’t expl

posted 2:30:03am Apr. 07, 2011 | read full post »

Why Did Jesus Have to Die? The Perspective of the First Christians, Part 1
The Earliest Christian Reflection We have relatively little direct information about what the very first believers in Jesus thought about his death and its meaning. Acts of the Apostles gives us a small window into this period of time, but not much more. The earliest of the New Testament writings

posted 2:43:41am Apr. 06, 2011 | read full post »

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GaryMac

posted November 1, 2010 at 4:36 am


It is easy to see the man part. People even worship this god of flesh. But the reality of the Christ is that Gods Spirit was in that man and even came to that man in Matt 3;16 when he was about thirty years old, only then was heaven opened to that man. Jesus was made of a woman born under the law just as we all are. What isn’t so easy to see in a man is the God part. Jesus said in Luke 17:21 Behold the kingdom of God is within you. And in John 17 said be one with God as he was one with God. As long as people worship a man as their god, they will never see the God that was in that man because it is supposed to be the same God in you who was in Christ Jesus, same Mind, Spirit.
God is Spirit and resides in man He is not a man. Once you see the God that was in that man then you become like him in every way, only then does the term son of man become clear because we are that same son of man, son of God that Jesus was, same Father who is God that resides within the son of man. It is Christ in you, Gods anointing in YOU, Gods anointed one, who is the Christ. You are supposed to be that same person of Christ that Jesus was. Son of Man, son of God.
Gary



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Mark D. Roberts

posted November 1, 2010 at 12:58 pm


Thanks, Gary, for sharing your insights with us.



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Darlene Burke

posted November 5, 2010 at 11:03 am


I’m to old to earn a Theology Degree, but is there an intense Learis bible study that can be taken online?



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paul

posted November 5, 2010 at 12:27 pm


What a horrible interpretation…You didn’t even read the Hebrew….
I read it all the time…Heresy is the Trinity!



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Mark D. Roberts

posted November 5, 2010 at 2:10 pm


Darlene: Sorry, I don’t know about this.
Paul: You’d be welcome to offer your interpretation from the Hebrew. I welcome a diversity of views here.



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John

posted November 6, 2010 at 3:45 am


Can’t you just say that Jesus was born of woman, was human in every way and was the Son of all men but became God during the last three years of his life?



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Manuel

posted November 6, 2010 at 5:14 am


In His depiction of Himself as the son of man, as most of us know, He appoinntes Himself as a man, like every other human. But as we all know, thoug He was human like us in every way, being tempted as we were, He never succumbed to sin. This is the hope we have-that one day we will be perfectly like Him. He now sits at the rigt hand of the father, glorified. One day, our hope will be we will be changed from mortal to immortality. That is what He showed us…



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Gary Mac

posted November 6, 2010 at 6:30 am


Manuel, Christ in you is the hope of glory, and in Christ there is no sin, it is outside Christ that you are a sinner. It is impossible to be in Christ and be in sin 1 John 3:9 confirms this. The problem with a sinner is he doesnt know the one who is suposed to be in Him is the one without sin. Christ simply means to be anointed of God,the anointed one, Christ in you. it is you who is suposed to be that anointed person of God, Gods anointed one. God sent Jesus to show you the way to be as he was. To say one is a sinner is to deny the one comes to you and takes away that sin. In this flesh yes is sin but in Christ who is gods SPirit in us there is no sin. The problem is, you cant relate to the one who is without sin, all you can relate to is one who is a sinner, the flesh man which is contrary to evrything Christ comes to give us, Gods SPirit in YOU is the Christ, Christ in YOU, anointed of God. The righetiousness of God not the sin of God.



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Adeleke Adewunmi

posted November 6, 2010 at 6:49 am


The Son of God became the Son of Man so that the sons of men could become the sons of God. It was His death and resurrection that offered we human beings to opportunity to be called the sons of God. God gave Him as a ransom for the just demand for the sins of the world.
I don’t want to argue about what you said but you could have simplified this by making it a one-post instead of making us to look forward to another.
It was said that a woman caught in the very act of adultery should be stoned, Jesus made them to realize that all have sinned and no one has the right to stone another for a sin he might be more involved in secretly than the person caught in the ‘very act’.



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christian

posted November 6, 2010 at 7:45 am


Jesus christ was the son of man who came to suffer and be sacrificed as a ransom for the sins of many.This means ,that as a human being he would be killed and die just like mortal flesh.However, since he is also an epitome of divinity, he would also resurrect, and as son of man be in God’s throne in heaven seated at the right hand of the father.There he is our advocate, as well as saviour.
He fulfilled that both aspects of the phrase,’son of man’.Human as well as non human roles in one personality.This obviously singles him out from other equally powerful prophets like elijah , Moses, Daniel etc.



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Ellie Dee

posted November 6, 2010 at 9:02 am


Its my understanding Jesus would never claim that title, it was for others to see and proclaim. Jesus was still man up until his body was cruxified, died and was absorbed into the Oneness of His Father.



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BBANKS

posted November 6, 2010 at 2:20 pm


The Second in the Godhead became Jesus (the Son of man). He was the ONLY human ever born of a woman, qualified to pay our [eternal death] penalty (He did that once and for all on the cross).
The theme of Matthew 25 is: The [continuation of the Olivet Discourse]—the parable of the ten virgins, the talents AND the JUDGMENT OF THE GENTILE NATIONS…in the future.
After the world is tested (seven years of tribulation),the judgment of the Nations will take place (on this earth) when the Son of Man returns (the second coming) with His angels and His bride at His side.
“And cast ye the unprofitable servant into outer darkness: there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.’ Matthew 25:30
“When the Son of man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory:” Matthew 25:31



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PastorB

posted November 6, 2010 at 3:43 pm


This is very interesting, and I think he’s right most Christians don’t know what Jesus meant when He refered to Himself as the “Son of Man”. That phrase actually has a deep profound meaning, but I’m going to try to put it plainly. Each time Jesus said that, He was reminding the powers of darkness (satan) of the fact that He was the last Adam and that He was a success in regard to Gods plan of redeeming the fallen Adam (man). The word Adam in Hebrew means ‘man’ or ‘mankind’, the word Adam in the Greek language means ‘red earth’. So basically Jesus was letting the devil know that He was what Adam should have been and that through Him we (mankind) in Him are also a success. Jesus is every bit of man (Adam) as He is God. Thank God for Jesus!!!



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Mark D. Roberts

posted November 6, 2010 at 4:06 pm


Interesting comments. Thanks to all for adding your thoughts.



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SAMears

posted November 6, 2010 at 4:08 pm


I am very excited to see this discussion. The term “Son of Man” is found is Isiah and other places and is generally believed to refer to the Messiah in the Old Testament. It really is one of the most wonderful names of God in the Bible, yet we use it too rarely. Thank you for this wonderful discussion.



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Angela D

posted November 6, 2010 at 9:26 pm


You say “this was no ordinary human being”. Jesus, as you noted, told us repeatedly that he is human—just like we are. The difference is that Jesus knew that He and God are One (“I and the Father are One”). Also, Jesus’ actions were in accord with his knowing that he (and everyone) is One in God.
He has told us that “everything you see me do, you also can do….” Jesus has shown us the way to do everything that he does: see the Truth that We and God are One (“you and I are one in the Father”). There is NOTHING but God—nothing else exists. When our humanness (thoughts, words, deeds, etc.) expresses this understanding on our part, then as Jesus says, we will do “even greater things” than we saw Jesus do.
If Jesus was able to perform miracles, etc. by virtue of being someone or something that we are not, then of what use would that be. (Of course, we would expect a god to do miracles.) But Jesus told us that WE are able to do the same works. Jesus showed us what to do; he came to show us the Way, the Truth, the Light, not to do things FOR us, but to show us what to do. When we are ENLIGHTENED with the TRUTH, and follow the WAY that Jesus demonstrated, then we will do all that Jesus did and even greater works.



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jay

posted November 7, 2010 at 7:07 am


why was ezekiel referred to as the son of man? was this an honorable thing? was there something signifcant about this?



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Mark D. Roberts

posted November 7, 2010 at 8:12 am


Jay: The Hebrew expression “son of man” meant “human being.” So when the heavenly voice calls Ezekiel “son of man,” it’s like saying, “man.” The phrase emphasizes Ezekiel’s relative insignificance or weakness compared to God.



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Christie

posted November 7, 2010 at 10:53 am


I am so looking forward to the next post on this subject. This has been a subject that needs more explaination! Thanks



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Robert Bookman

posted November 8, 2010 at 7:36 am


There is rich meaning built into the title “Son of Man.” I am anxious to read your next posting on this title. Hopefully the wait will not be long.



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Nathan

posted November 8, 2010 at 3:31 pm


An interesting parallel to the dichotomous meaning of the term ‘son of man’ (or, referring to Christ ‘Son of Man’), as it spans from the Old Testament to the New, is the term ‘sons of God’. I’d delve into lengthy discourse on this subject, but wouldn’t want to steal the fun of that seemingly forgotten skill of ‘looking things up on your own’… or, as the academic put it, ‘research’. I learn stuff gooder when I looks it up meself.



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marilyn mathis

posted November 10, 2010 at 4:19 pm


what an awesome analogy and i myself have wondered what was meant by “son of man” because it seemed to me that he was identifying with the humannes of man or something extraterrestial. Thank you so much and am looking forward to your next text.



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masimba

posted November 15, 2010 at 7:52 am


my understanding of the term “on of man” is somewhat different from the way our precious brother has put it accross. yes, I agree though with the analogue that it also means a mere man. Jesus was 100% man and yet also 100% God living in that 100% man. Think of the days of sodom when Elohim appeared to Abraham in the plains of Mamre. Jesus reffered to that incident in John 6 or 8 like so; “Abraham rejoiced to see my day…….” Elohim came to Abraham in a 100% human body and had a barba-Q. then Luke 17:30, Jesus said as it was in the days of sodom (God showed himself in a body of flesh and told sarah about her laughing up her sleeve when the promise of Isaac was revisted for confirmation/manifestation), so shall it be in the day that the Son of man is being revealed. The bible speaks of Ezekiel as a Son of man (Son of man prophesy upon these bones) Ez 37. in psalms david is saying what is the son of man that thou vistest him; God visits prophets. If there is a prophet among you, I the Lord will visit him in dreamns and visions, but it is not so with moses…..Book of numbers.
So therefore, I believe Son of man refers to jesus as a prophet. Deut 18:15-18 the Lord your God will raise up a prophet like unto me…who so ever will not hearken unto that prophet will be cut off from among his people. Jesus at the well of samaria told the woman all the secret things of her life and she remarked “Sir, I perceive that you are prophet, and we know that when the Messiah comes (as a prohet)he will tell us all these things. Jesus said, “I that speaks with you am he….” The prophet Messiah or Son of man messiah. Son of man refers therefore to the Messiah in a prophetic ministry. Son of man is a prophet and Jesus was reminding the Jews all the time that He was the very Prophet promised to them in Deut 18. When the Jews sent messengers to john they wanted to know if John was That Prophet (Messiah).



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bethel pastor

posted April 14, 2011 at 3:37 am


It’s been said that God does nothing in the affairs of men except they pray. Prayer is the catalyst for worldwide transformation. Prayer incites the angels, restrains darkness, and releases nations into their destiny.



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