How 
              did we come to understand Jesus as both fully human and fully divine? 
            Early 
              Christians spent nearly three hundred years wrestling with the question 
              of whether Jesus was fully human, fully divine, or some combination 
              of human and divine. The process was complicated by the movement 
              from Hebrew culture to Hellenistic, the transformation of the Jesus 
              sect into a separate faith apart from Judaism, numerous competing 
              philosophies and theologies (such as Docetism, which asserted that 
              Jesus only appeared to suffer), and the institutional needs of an 
              increasingly assertive Church.  
            The 
              Council of Nicaea (327 CE) tried to resolve this process of self-definition. 
              Bishops settled on a Trinitarian formula and balancing the humanity 
              of Jesus (being born, suffering) and the divinity of Jesus (being 
              raised, seated at the right hand of God). Jesus himself said that 
              when we see him, we see God. In his humanity and in the power of 
              his presence, he showed the way to God. 
            Every 
              Christian community understands these assertions differently. I 
              encourage you to seek out the pastor of your church and ask his 
              or her interpretation. Please understand that there are no absolutely 
              right or wrong answers. The New Testament bears contradictory witness. 
              Moreover, in wrestling with questions like these, we reach the limits 
              of our comprehension.  
              
            —Tom 
              Ehrich  
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