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Jesus is not God: Two Natures Absurdity


One of the central disputes in Christian theology is known as the two natures controversy. By the time of the Council of Chalcedon in 451 CE, the Church officially declared that Jesus was both “fully God and fully man,” possessing two natures united in one person without confusion or separation. This doctrine, however, was not drawn directly from the words of Jesus or the writings of the earliest followers, but was the result of centuries of heated debate, philosophical speculation, and political compromise within the institutional church.

What is striking when we turn to the pages of the Bible is that Jesus himself never distinguishes between a supposed divine nature and a human nature. He never says, “This I speak as a man, but this I declare as God.” Instead, the Gospels present him simply as a single human being who prays, hungers, sleeps, grows in knowledge, submits, and ultimately dies. At the same time, he also speaks with authority, forgives sins, and points to his unique role as God’s chosen messenger. The tension arises not because Jesus divided his identity into two philosophical “natures,” but because later theologians, struggling to preserve the doctrine of the Trinity, felt compelled to explain away the very human qualities the New Testament so clearly ascribes to him.

Thus, the two natures doctrine should be seen not as a faithful reflection of Jesus’ teaching but as a fabrication of the post-biblical Church — a framework invented to defend the Trinity against its obvious contradictions. By creating this artificial distinction, the Church sought to maintain Jesus’ divinity even in places where the Bible explicitly shows his limitations and dependency on God. The result was a dogma that says far more about human attempts to rationalize doctrine than it does about the testimony of Scripture itself.

The Biblical Evidence

If the Bible truly supported the doctrine of two natures, we would expect Jesus to distinguish between them — claiming divinity in one breath, and then attributing weakness only to his humanity in another. Yet we never see this. Instead, the Scriptures consistently portray Jesus displaying qualities that God Himself explicitly declares He does not possess. This direct contradiction shows that the “two natures” explanation was a later invention, a patch meant to cover the cracks in Trinitarian logic. The following examples make this clear:

1. Sleep vs. God’s Watchfulness

Jesus, like any other man, experienced fatigue. Mark records him asleep in the boat as a storm raged around him (Mark 4:38). Sleep is a sign of limitation, dependence, and the need for restoration. But the Psalms declare of God: “He who watches over Israel will neither slumber nor sleep” (Psalm 121:4). The Creator of the universe does not grow weary or lose awareness. To equate the sleeping Jesus with the sleepless God is to confuse the temporal with the eternal.

2. Hunger vs. God’s Self-Sufficiency

After forty days of fasting, Jesus “was hungry” (Matthew 4:2). This natural human response shows dependency on food for survival. In stark contrast, the Almighty does not require sustenance — He is the sustainer. Jesus’ hunger proves his humanity, not his deity.

3. Thirst vs. God as the Source of Living Water

On the cross, Jesus cried out, “I am thirsty” (John 19:28). Here the Gospels present a suffering servant who shares in the weakness of flesh. Yet Jeremiah identifies God as the “fountain of living waters” (Jeremiah 2:13). The One who quenches all thirst cannot Himself thirst. This contrast demolishes the notion that Jesus’ cry was merely “his human nature speaking” — the Bible knows no such division.

4. Temptation vs. God’s Holiness

The Gospels tell us that “Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil” (Matthew 4:1). First, consider the absurdity of imagining that Satan could tempt God — and even more, that he could do so by offering the very earth that God Himself created and rules over. Temptation is not a theatrical exercise; it requires a genuine enticement, the real consideration of that enticement, and the active decision to resist. If one cannot even conceive of yielding, then it is not temptation but an empty show. To be tempted means to face the possibility of sin and to consciously struggle against it.

Yet James is explicit: “God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does He tempt anyone” (James 1:13). These two statements cannot both be true of the same being. If Jesus was genuinely tempted, then he was not God. If he was not truly tempted, then the Gospel accounts are reduced to a staged illusion. Either way, the Church’s explanation that Jesus was “tempted only in his humanity” is a theological invention never found in Scripture, designed solely to preserve a doctrine that collapses under the plain meaning of the text.

5. Servanthood and Submission vs. God’s Sovereignty

Jesus openly identified himself as a servant. He declared: “The Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many” (Mark 10:45). In Gethsemane, he prayed in surrender: “Not my will, but yours be done” (Luke 22:42). He even laid down a principle to his disciples: “A servant is not greater than his master” (John 13:16; cf. John 15:20). By his own teaching, he placed himself in the role of servant, and God as his Master.

This language is not symbolic but explicit — he confessed his servanthood and submission to a higher authority. In contrast, Scripture describes God as the one who reigns over all: “His dominion is an everlasting dominion, and His kingdom endures from generation to generation” (Daniel 7:14). God is the one to whom service and worship are offered. The one who prays, submits, and identifies himself as a servant cannot be the same as the One who is the eternal Master.

6. Prayer vs. God as the One Prayed To

Repeatedly, Jesus withdrew to pray: “Very early in the morning… Jesus got up, left the house, and went off to a solitary place, where he prayed” (Mark 1:35). Prayer is an act of dependence — a request to someone greater. Scripture describes God as “the one who hears prayer” (Psalm 65:2), never one who prays. The one who prays is not the one who answers prayer.

7. Limited Knowledge vs. God’s Omniscience

Jesus himself confessed his ignorance about the end times: “But about that day or hour no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father” (Mark 13:32). This is not partial ignorance but a categorical admission of not knowing. The Psalms affirm the opposite about God: “His understanding is infinite” (Psalm 147:5). The Son who admits ignorance cannot be the same as the God who knows all things.

Nor was this an isolated admission. Other passages in the Gospels reveal the same limitation. When the woman with the issue of blood touched his garment, “Jesus realized that power had gone out from him. He turned around in the crowd and asked, ‘Who touched my clothes?’” (Mark 5:30). If he were omniscient, he would not have needed to ask; yet here he is shown as genuinely not knowing. Similarly, when he approached the fig tree, “he found nothing but leaves, because it was not the season for figs” (Mark 11:13). He came seeking fruit, unaware of its condition until he arrived. God, by contrast, does not seek information He lacks — His knowledge is perfect. Even the book of Hebrews testifies that “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered” (Hebrews 5:8). Learning and discovery are human qualities, not divine ones.

Taken together, these accounts paint a consistent picture: Jesus displayed ignorance, limitation, and discovery. These traits are irreconcilable with the omniscient God whom Scripture describes as infinite in knowledge.

8. Growth in Wisdom vs. God as the Source of Wisdom

Luke reports that “Jesus increased in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men” (Luke 2:52). Growth in wisdom implies learning, development, and lack prior to acquisition. By contrast, Proverbs teaches: “For the LORD gives wisdom” (Proverbs 2:6). God does not acquire knowledge; He is the eternal source of it. A being who grows in wisdom is not God.

9. Death vs. God’s Immortality

At the climax of his earthly ministry, Jesus cried out and “breathed his last” (Mark 15:37). Death is the ultimate human limitation — the cessation of life. Yet Scripture insists: “The eternal God is your refuge” (Deuteronomy 33:27) and “God alone has immortality” (1 Timothy 6:16). The one who dies is not the same as the One who cannot die.

10. Birth vs. God’s Eternality

Luke plainly states: “She gave birth to her firstborn son” (Luke 2:7). Jesus had a beginning, entering the world as all humans do. The Psalmist declares of God: “Before the mountains were born… from everlasting to everlasting you are God” (Psalm 90:2). The One who is eternal and without origin cannot be equated with one who was born in time.

11. Goodness vs. God’s Absolute Goodness

When a man addressed him as “Good Teacher,” Jesus replied: “Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone” (Mark 10:18). Far from claiming divinity, Jesus directed attention away from himself and toward God as the source of all goodness. Scripture affirms: “The LORD is good to all” (Psalm 145:9). The refusal to accept divine titles for himself is consistent with his servanthood, not with deity.

12. Movement vs. God’s Omnipresence

Jesus traveled from city to city: “Jesus went about in Galilee” (John 7:1). His ministry required physical presence, and his absence in one place meant he was not present elsewhere. But God declares: “Do I not fill heaven and earth?” (Jeremiah 23:24). The limitation of locality is incompatible with the nature of the omnipresent God.

13. Weeping vs. God Wiping Away Tears

At Lazarus’ tomb, “Jesus wept” (John 11:35). This tender moment reveals genuine human sorrow. Yet Isaiah prophesies of God: “He will wipe away tears from all faces” (Isaiah 25:8). God is the comforter and healer of sorrow, not one overtaken by it.

Conclusion

The evidence from Scripture is overwhelming: Jesus is portrayed with the full range of human limitations — he sleeps, hungers, thirsts, prays, submits, grows in wisdom, admits ignorance, and even dies. Each of these traits is explicitly denied of God in the very same Scriptures. The Bible never presents Jesus distinguishing between a supposed divine nature and a human nature. That distinction was invented centuries later as a theological bandage to preserve the collapsing framework of the Trinity.

At its core, the “two natures” doctrine is not only unbiblical but also illogical. The most basic principle of rational thought, the Law of Identity, declares that a thing is what it is: A = A. God is eternal, omniscient, and omnipotent. Man is temporal, limited, and mortal. To say that one person is both all-knowing and ignorant, both immortal and mortal, both the master and the servant, is to deny the very essence of identity. Such contradictions are not mysteries of faith but violations of logic itself.

If Jesus is truly God, then he cannot lack what God possesses in absolute perfection. If Jesus displays what God explicitly denies of Himself, then he cannot be God. The attempt to fuse two contradictory natures into one person is not faithful to Scripture and not faithful to reason. It is a fabrication born of later Church councils — not the testimony of the Gospels, and not the word of God.

Jesus (Human Limitation) God (Divine Perfection)
Jesus slept (Mark 4:38) God does not sleep (Psalm 121:4)
Jesus hungered (Matthew 4:2) God does not hunger (Psalm 50:12)
Jesus thirsted (John 19:28) God is the fountain of living waters (Jeremiah 2:13)
Jesus was tempted (Matthew 4:1) God cannot be tempted (James 1:13)
Jesus came to serve (Mark 10:45); Jesus submitted (Luke 22:42) God is served and worshiped (Daniel 7:14; Psalm 100:2)
Jesus prayed (Mark 1:35) God is the one prayed to (Psalm 65:2)
Jesus did not know the hour (Mark 13:32) God’s understanding is infinite (Psalm 147:5)
Jesus grew in wisdom (Luke 2:52) God gives wisdom; He does not grow in it (Proverbs 2:6)
Jesus died (Mark 15:37) God is immortal (Deuteronomy 33:27; 1 Timothy 6:16)
Jesus was born (Luke 2:7) God is from everlasting to everlasting (Psalm 90:2)
Jesus denied being good (Mark 10:18) God alone is good (Psalm 145:9)
Jesus moved from place to place (John 7:1) God is everywhere (Jeremiah 23:24)
Jesus wept (John 11:35) God wipes away tears (Isaiah 25:8)



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