THE TRILEMMA
LORD, LIAR OR
LUNATIC?
Chapter
21
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esus' distinct claims of being God eliminate the popular ploy of skeptics Who regard Him as just a good moral man or a prophet who said a lot Of profound things. So often that conclusion is passed off as the only one acceptable to scholars or as the obvious result of the intellectual process. The trouble is, many people nod their heads in agreement and never see the fallacy of such reasoning.
C. S. Lewis, who was a
professor at Cambridge University and once an agnostic, understood this issue
clearly. He writes:
I
am trying here to prevent anyone saying the really foolish thing that people
often say about Him: "I'm ready to accept Jesus as a great moral teacher,
but I don't accept His claim to be God." That is the one thing we must not
say. A man who was merely a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would
not be a great moral teacher. He would either be a lunatic ‑on a level
with the man who says he is a poached egg‑ or else he would be the Devil
of Hell. You must make your choice. Either this man was, and is, the son of
God: or else a madman or something worse.
Then Lewis adds:
You can shut Him up for a fool, you can spit at Him and kill Him as a demon; or you can fall at His feet and call Him Lord and God. But let us not come up with any patronizing nonsense about His being a great human teacher. He has not left that open to us. He did not intend to.
In the words of Kenneth Scott Latourette, historian of Christianity at Yale University: "It is not His teachings which make Jesus so remarkable, although these would be enough to give Him distinction. It is a combination of the teachings with the man Himself. The two cannot be separated."
Jesus claimed to be
God. He didn't leave any other option open. His claim must be either true or
false, so it is something that should be given serious consideration. Jesus'
question to His disciples, "But who do you say that I am?" (Matthew
16:15) has several alternatives.
First, suppose that
His claim to be God was false. If it was false, then we have only two
alternatives. He either knew it was false or He didn't know it was false. We
will consider each one separately and examine the evidence.
>>
Was He a Liar?
If, when Jesus made
His claims, He knew that He was not God, then He was lying and deliberately
deceiving His followers. But if He was a liar, then He was also a hypocrite
because He told others to be honest, whatever the cost, while He himself taught
and lived a colossal lie. More than that, He was a demon, because He told
others to trust Him for their eternal destiny. If He couldn't back up His
claims and knew it, then He was unspeakably evil. Last, He would also be a fool
because it was His claims to being God that led to His crucifixion.
Many will say that
Jesus was a good moral teacher. Let's be realistic. How could He be a great
moral teacher and knowingly mislead people at the most important point of His
teaching ‑His own identity?
You would have to
conclude logically that He was a deliberate liar. This view of Jesus, however doesn't coincide with what we know either
of Him or the results of His life and teachings. Wherever Jesus has been
proclaimed, lives have been changed for the good, nations have changed for the
better, thieves are made honest, alcoholics are cured, hateful individuals
become channels of love, unjust persons become just.
William Lecky, one of
Great Britain's most noted historians and a dedicated opponent of organized
Christianity, writes:
It
was reserved for Christianity to present to the world an ideal character which
through all the changes of eighteen centuries has inspired the hearts of men
with an impassioned love; has shown itself capable of acting on all ages,
nations, temperaments and conditions; has been not only the highest pattern of
virtue, but the strongest incentive to its practice.... The simple record of
these three short years of active life has done more to regenerate and soften
mankind than all the disquisitions of philosophers and all the exhortations of
moralists.
Historian Philip Schaff says:
How,
in the name of logic, common sense, and experience, could an imposter‑that
is a deceitful, selfish, depraved man‑have invented, and consistently
maintained from the beginning to end, the purest and noblest character known in
history with the most perfect air of truth and reality? How could He have
conceived and successfully carried out a plan of unparalleled beneficence,
moral magnitude, and sublimity, and sacrificed His own life for it, in the face
of the strongest prejudices of His people and age? 70/9495
If Jesus wanted to get
people to follow Him and believe in Him as God, why did He go to the Jewish
nation? Why go as a Nazarene carpenter to a country so small in size and
population and so thoroughly adhering the undivided unity of God? Why didn't He
go to Egypt or, even more, to Greece, where they believed in various gods and
various manifestations of them?
Someone who lived as
Jesus lived, taught as Jesus taught, and died as Jesus died could not have been
a liar. What other alternatives are there?
>> Was He a Lunatic?
If it is inconceivable
for Jesus to be a liar, then couldn't He actually have thought Himself to be
God, but been mistaken? After all, it's possible to be both sincere and wrong.
But we must remember that for someone to think himself God, especially in a
fiercely monotheistic culture, and then to tell others that their eternal
destiny depended on believing in him, is no light flight of fantasy but the
thoughts of a lunatic in the fullest sense. Was Jesus Christ such a person?
Someone who believes
he is God sounds like someone today believing himself Napoleon. He would be
deluded and self‑deceived, and probably he would be locked up so he
wouldn't hurt himself or anyone else. Yet in Jesus we don't observe the
abnormalities and imbalance that usually go along with being deranged. His
poise and composure would certainly be amazing if He were insane.
Noyes and Kolb, in a
medical text, describe the schizophrenic as a person who is more autistic than
realistic. The schizophrenic desires to escape from the world of reality. Let's
face it; claiming to be God would certainly be a retreat from reality.
In
light of the other things we know about Jesus, it's hard to imagine that He was
mentally disturbed. Here is a man who spoke some of the most profound sayings
ever recorded. His instructions have liberated many individuals from mental bondage.
Clark H. Pinnock asks:
Was He deluded about His greatness, a paranoid, an
unintentional deceiver, a schizophrenic? Again, the skill and depth of His
teachings support the case only for His total mental soundness. If only we were
as sane as He!
A student at a California university told me
that his psychology professor had said in class that "all he has to do is
pick up the Bible and read portions of Christ's
teaching to many of his patients.
That's all the counseling they need."
Psychiatrist J. T. Fisher states:
If
you were to take the sum total of all authoritative articles ever written by
the most qualified of psychologists and psychiatrists on the subject of mental
hygiene ‑if you were to combine them and refine them, and cleave out the
excess verbiage ‑ if you were to take the whole of the meat and none of
the parsley, and if you were to have these unadulterated bits of pure
scientific knowledge concisely expressed by the most capable of living poets,
you would have an awkward and incomplete summation of the Sermon on the Mount.
And it would suffer immeasurably through comparison. For nearly two thousand
years the Christian world has been holding in its hands the complete answer to
its restless and fruitless yearnings. Here ... rests the blueprint for
successful human life with optimism, mental health, and contentment.
C. S. Lewis writes:
The
historical difficulty of giving for the life, sayings and influence of Jesus
any explanation that is not harder than the Christian explanation is very
great. The discrepancy between the depth and sanity ... of His moral teaching
and the rampant megalomania which must lie behind His theological teaching
unless He is indeed God has never been satisfactorily explained. Hence the non‑Christian
hypotheses succeed one another with the restless fertility of bewilderment.
Philip Schaff reasons:
Is
such an intellect ‑clear as the sky, bracing as the mountain air, sharp
and penetrating as a sword, thoroughly healthy and vigorous, always ready and
always self‑possessed ‑liable to a radical and most serious
delusion concerning His own character and mission? Preposterous imagination!
>> Was He Lord?
I cannot personally conclude that Jesus was a
liar or a lunatic. The only other
alternative is that He was the Christ, the Son of God, as He claimed.
When I discuss this with most Jewish people,
it's interesting how they respond. They usually tell me that Jesus was a moral,
upright, religious leader, a good man, or some kind of prophet. I then share
with them the claims Jesus made about Himself and then the material in this
chapter on the trilemma (liar, lunatic, or Lord). When I ask if they believe
Jesus was a liar, there is a sharp "No!"
Then I ask, "Do
you believe He was a lunatic?"
The reply is, "Of
course not."
"Do you believe
He is God?"
Before I can get a
breath in edgewise, there is a resounding, "Absolutely not."
Yet one has only so
many choices.
The issue with these
three alternatives is not which is possible, for it is obvious that all three
are possible. Rather, the question is, "Which is more probable?" Who
you decide Jesus Christ is must not be an idle intellectual exercise. You
cannot put Him on the shelf as a great moral teacher. That is not a valid
option. He is either a liar, a lunatic, or Lord and God. You must make a
choice. "But," as the apostle John wrote, "these have been
written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God;
and" ‑more important‑ "that believing you might have life
in His name" (John 20:31).
The evidence is
clearly in favor of Jesus as Lord. Some people, however, reject this clear
evidence because of moral implications involved. They don't want to face up to
the responsibility or implications of calling Him Lord.
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ARD-1.1-ENG-0009 - 30-May-2002