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Dr. William Lane Craig
Welcome to Defenders, the teaching class of Dr. William Lane Craig today the Doctrine of Man, Part 4. For more information and resources from Dr. Craig, go to reasonablefaith.org in our study
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of the doctrine of man, we now come to point C on our outline evaluation. Let's talk first about man in the image and likeness of God.
Cindy
What might we say about these alternative
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construals of the image of God by way of evaluation?
Cindy
Well, I think first of all that we have to agree with the Protestant Reformers that there is no difference between
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the image and likeness of God.
Cindy
I already indicated that when we looked at the biblical material from Genesis, that
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these words are used in parallel and synonymously. To say that man is created in God's image and according to his likeness is just an example of Hebrew parallelism. The terms have virtually the same meaning,
Cindy
so they are not meant to indicate
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two different aspects of human being. Rather, these are synonymous ways designating man
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as in some way reflecting God in a special way that sets him apart
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from the rest of creation.
Cindy
But then I think we have to
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say, contrary to the Reformers, that the
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image is not lost in the fall because fallen man clearly is in the
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image of God as as we saw
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in Genesis 9, 6, fallen man is
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referred to as being in God's image.
Cindy
Therefore, the image of God is not the original righteousness or something of that sort which could be lost in the fall.
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We shouldn't think of the image of
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God as something that is given up
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or lost as a result of man's fall into sin.
Cindy
So the first point is that the
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image and likeness of God are identical. They refer to the same thing, and that they are not lost in the fall.
Cindy
When it is said that Christ is
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the image of God.
Cindy
Here I think we are dealing with a totally different concern.
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The Word may be the same image,
Cindy
but it isn't in the same sphere
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of discussion as when we talk about man created in God's image.
Cindy
In Colossians, Paul is saying that Christ is the visible exemplification of the invisible God.
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When you look at Christ and you're
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looking at God, he is God in the flesh.
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He is God incarnate.
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And this just isn't the same sphere
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of discussion as when we talk about what it means for man to be in God's image.
Cindy
Similarly, when the Scriptures talk about Christians
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being in Christ being conformed to the image of Christ, and that is again,
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just a separate discussion, it's not relevant
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to the question of what it means for man to be created in God's
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image with respect to being conformed to
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the image of Christ, the concern there
Cindy
is ethical or spiritual.
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Man is being conformed to the character of Christ through the ongoing work of the Holy Spirit.
Cindy
This is about the sanctification of believers. So again, even though the vocabulary may
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be the same using the word image,
Cindy
it's not the same discussion as what
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it means to say that man is in God's image.
Cindy
Man, then, is in the image of God. Even as a sinner, his relationship with
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God may be broken because of sin.
Cindy
He finds himself estranged from God, spiritually
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alienated from God, condemned by God's justice
Cindy
and under God's wrath, but nevertheless he still is in God's image. So what does this mean then? This is a question which comes down
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to whether you take the image of God to be an ontological term or a relational term or a functional term.
Cindy
Is it specifying some aspect of human being that resembles God's nature, or is it merely a way in which we relate or function? This is going to depend on how
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you interpret a couple of Hebrew prepositions, Ba and ka. According to Genesis, man is created in God's image. The Hebrew word there is ba, not as God's image. It says further that man is created according to God's likeness. And the Hebrew word there the preposition
Cindy
is cut not as God's likeness.
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He is in or according to God's image and likeness. But it doesn't say he is God's image and likeness.
Cindy
So the text doesn't say that, prima
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facie at least, that man is God's image or likeness.
Cindy
Rather, it says he's created in his
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image and according to his likeness.
Cindy
Scholars agree that these two prepositions basically
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mean the same thing.
Cindy
However, the first of these prepositions, ba, can be taken in the sense of identity.
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It could be taken or interpreted to mean that man is God's image, that he is created as God's image rather than in God's image.
Cindy
But the second k cannot be taken
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to mean as or to indicate an identity relationship.
Cindy
Still, in Genesis 5, verses 1 to 3, these prepositions are reversed with regard
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to Adam's son Seth, whom it says
Cindy
is created in his likeness and according
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to his his image.
Cindy
So you have the prepositions switched in
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Genesis 5, 1, 3 in his likeness and according to his image. So even though k does not mean
Cindy
as, doesn't indicate identity. Nevertheless, the word likeness could also be
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used with ba, in which case one could interpret it to mean identity that we are God's likeness and we are his image.
Cindy
So these Hebrew prepositions are not decisive
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in guiding our interpretation of what it means to be created in God's image and likeness, though an interpretation taking man to just be God's image and likeness
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does involve interpreting these prepositions differently than
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their normal meanings of in and according
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to in his highly acclaimed book the Liberating Image of God,
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Subtitled The Imago Dei in Genesis 1 the Liberating Image the Imago Dei in Genesis 1, Richard
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Middleton distinguishes between what he calls a substantialistic, a relational, and a functional interpretation
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of the image of God substantialistic, relational, or functional. And Middleton plumps for a functional rather
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than either a substantial or relational interpretation
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of of the imago dei.
Cindy
In fact, he reports that today there is virtual unanimity among Old Testament scholars
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concerning the meaning of the image of God. The Context in Genesis 1, he says,
Cindy
has a predominantly royal flavor, beginning with the close linkage of the image of God with a mandate to rule and subdue the earth.
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In Genesis 1:26 and 1:28, where God commands man to have dominion over the earth and its creatures and to rule. Moreover, the God in whose image and likeness human beings are created is depicted as the king or the sovereign over the cosmos.
Cindy
He he rules by royal decree, let
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there be and something ensues and even
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addresses the divine counsel of the heavenly
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court of angelic beings in saying, let us make man in our image.
Cindy
So the writer portrays God as a
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king presiding over the heaven and earth.
Cindy
Humanity is is created like this God, with the special role of representing or
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imaging God's rule in the world.
Cindy
Now certainly Old Testament scholars are correct in seeing man as having this royal
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duty and role on the earth. It's clearly assigned in Genesis 1:26,7.
Cindy
But that itself does not imply that
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the image of God just is that function.
Cindy
Man's royal duty may be the role
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that God has given to man.
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But Middleton says the royal function or
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purpose of humanity in 126 is not
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a mere add on, separable in some
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way from man's essence or nature.
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Middleton says that while rule may be
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grammatically only the purpose and not the definition of the image in 126, an
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initial look at the overall rhetorical world of the text suggests that it is a necessary and inseparable purpose and therefore
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virtually constitutive of the image.
Cindy
But again, I think Middleton's conclusion is overdrawn. A thing's having an essential function is
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just not the same thing as a thing's definition.
Cindy
Rather, what is key to Middleton's Case is his second reason for the consensus
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among Old Testament scholars, and that is
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the ancient Near Eastern ideology of kings in Mesopotamia and Egypt that describe their function as the images of the gods. Now, many would draw our attention to
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the fact that these ancient kings would
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often set up statues or or images of themselves in distant lands under their control. And Middleton recognizes that the kings did often have this practice of setting up statues of themselves in distant lands. This is well attested. But he says the meaning of this practice is contested. The images could just be monuments to the kings and their accomplishments.
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Many of these images are votive objects
Cindy
which are dedicated to the gods. But he says the Egyptian pharaohs did set up images of themselves as symbols
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of their authority in distant lands.
Cindy
The statue represents the absent king in some way. Middleton thinks that since this representative notion is intrinsic to the understanding of images in the ancient near east, it seems quite plausible to regard the king's practice of setting up images of themselves as a legitimate parallel to the creation of humans.
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In the image of God, we Man
Cindy
is God's image and represents God and his authority on the earth. Now, while this kingly practice is interesting, it's not clear to me at least, that it is a legitimate parallel to
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man's being created in God's image and likeness.
Cindy
Genesis does not portray the Earth as being like a distant land from which God is absent. Rather, God is himself active in the world. He doesn't need some surrogate to stand in his place. Moreover, notice that the king's statue in a distant land doesn't really function in the king's place. It doesn't do anything. It just represents his authority over the land. The king's statue is rather like the pictures of the president on the walls of police stations and post offices. They represent his authority. But humans are living images of God. They are not images of God in this ancient Near Eastern sense of a statue. Middleton says, however, that the best ancient Near Eastern parallels are texts that describe the various kings and priests as themselves images of a God. Not that they set up images of themselves in a distant land, but rather, there are many ancient Near Eastern texts that describe the king himself as an
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image of of a God.
Cindy
This is the most widely cited set of parallels for Genesis 1, and let me read you a sample of these texts to give just a couple examples. Pharaoh Ahmose I is described as a prince like Re, the son of Keb, his heir. The image of Re, whom he created, the avenger or the representative for whom
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he has set himself on Earth.
Cindy
Queen Hatsheput has been described as a superb image of Ammon, the image of
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Ammon on earth, the image of Amon, Re to eternity, his living monument on earth.
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Amenhotep II is described variously as the image of Re, image of Horus, image
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of Atum, holy image of the Lord
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of the Gods, foremost image of Re,
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holy image of Re, holy image of Ammon, image of Ammon like Re, and so forth. Middleton comments on these texts. To understand the meaning and function of
Cindy
this idea, we need to grasp something of the wider ideology of kingship in Egypt. Central to this ideology was the divinity of the pharaoh, by which he was
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set apart from all other human beings.
Cindy
The notion of the pharaoh as an image of a God must be understood in this context. In one sense, the notion of image
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is but one among many other ways
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of expressing the pharaoh's divine origin and kingship to the gods. The pharaoh was thought in a fairly
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strong sense to to be a physical,
Cindy
local incarnation of deity, analogous to that of a cult statue or image of a God, which was also such an incarnation. The king, as the living image of God was, like the cult statue, a place where the God manifested himself and and was a primary means by which
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the deity worked on earth.
Cindy
And these texts are said to support
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a functional interpretation of the image of God.
Cindy
Middleton says on this reading, the imago DEI represents the royal office or calling
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of human beings, and as God's representative
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and agents in the world, granted authorized
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power to share in God's rule or
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administration of the earth's resources and creatures.
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End quote, page 27.
Cindy
There are, however, two major flaws which undermine Middleton's case. First, Middleton admits that a functional interpretation does not preclude and even presupposes a substantial interpretation. It does not preclude, but actually even presupposes a substantial interpretation. Listen to what he says in a
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footnote on page 27.
Cindy
Both functional and relational interpretations of the image are like substantialistic interpretations, strictly speaking, metaphysical, in that they also make ontological assumptions about human nature.
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A functional interpretation might be seen as
Cindy
consonant with some version of of action theory, where the focus is on persons as agents who act responsibly or irresponsibly. Action on this model includes all that an agent does, including thinking, as an integral unity. Now, this admission completely undermines Middleton's case
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for a purely functional interpretation, for he
Cindy
recognizes that the function is rooted in ontology. More than that, it is rooted in personal agency. And personal agency is not a function. It's a property of personal agents, that is to say, personal, causally effective beings. And notice as well that the relation
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between ontology and function and is asymmetric
Cindy
functions are grounded in ontology, not vice versa. The substantialist is quite happy to recognize that human persons have been created by God to carry out a function.
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They can carry out that function, however,
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because of what they are, namely personal agents. The first point is that the functional interpretation actually presupposes the substantial interpretation in
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grounding function in the ontology of human beings as personal agents. The second point is that the Mesopotamian
Cindy
and Egyptian texts cited do not support
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a functional interpretation, but rather a different fourth interpretation.
Cindy
As Middleton convincingly shows, when the ancient Near Eastern texts speak of an idol or of the pharaoh as a God's image, what they mean is that the idol or the pharaoh embodies or incarnates the God the deity is present in and lives through the idol or the king. The problem is this is not a functional interpretation. It is a metaphysical view of the relation between the idol or king and the God. It is better, therefore, to call it,
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I think, an incarnational interpretation.
Cindy
The king is the incarnation of the God. The idol is the embodiment of the God. But then this interpretation is irrelevant for the interpretation of the Genesis texts. For those texts do not think of
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human beings as incarnations of God through
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which he lives and acts in the world. An anti iconic religion like Judaism that prohibited images of God would have recoiled
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at the idea that human beings are embodiments of God.
Cindy
So it seems to me that a substantialist interpretation is practically unavoidable. In order to function as God's co regent on this planet, man must have certain faculties like rationality, self consciousness, freedom of the will, and so forth. So in fact we shouldn't be playing off functional versus substantial understandings of God's image.
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The reason that we can function as
Cindy
God has commanded us to is is
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because we are created in God's image.
Cindy
That is to say, we have some ontological similarity to God which enables us to serve as his representative and co regent. In Genesis 5:1:3, Seth is said to be born in Adam's image and likeness. That I think is decisive for a substantialist interpretation. For Seth was not Adam's representative or co regent. Now the functionalist might say, well, but being in the image of is a transitive relation like less than so that Seth is in God's image, not just in Adam's image. The problem is that the resemblance relation is not transitive. A daughter may resemble her mother and the mother may resemble her mother, but the granddaughter may not resemble the grandmother. Seth is said to be born not in God's image and likeness as Adam was created, but rather in Adam's image, image and likeness. In other words, Adam brought forth another human being like himself. So think back to our discussion of the attributes of God. Remember, we saw that God is an infinite personal being. Insofar as man is finite. There is a great chasm that separates man from God.
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Man is like the rest of creation in his finitude.
Cindy
So how is man like God? Well, he is like God in that he is personal. Then the chasm separates man and God
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from the rest of creation in that
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the rest of creation are not persons.
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On this view, the reason that man can serve as God's co regent and
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representative on this planet and and to govern the earth is because he is
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in the image of God.
Cindy
That is to say, he is a person in the same way that God is personal and thus has the attributes of personhood. Any discussion of this interpretation of the image of God.
Okay, Cindy, Carrying that image to mean can it also mean it's a God given responsibility? There are certain responsibilities, not only in the sense that you just illustrated, but to carry it a bit further, is the expectation that he, man will carry out God's plan.
I don't see that as part of the image, Cindy. As I said, someone can have a function. That function can even be essential to
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that thing, but that's not a definition of the thing. I think that the image of God
Cindy
is man's ontological resemblance to God, but
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that God has then given man this responsibility to rule the earth and to steward it and to manifest God's reign upon this planet.
Cindy
So there is an essential function that man is given to carry out and is responsible for. I just don't want to conflate that with the image.
And there's nothing there to embed it into it. That would say that God has chosen to use man to implement, if you will, his will.
Yes, I would even create it strong, say it's stronger, not just use.
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But I'd say he created man in order that man might represent God's reign upon the earth and subdue it and
Cindy
take care of it and implement his plan for.
Yes, of course.
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And then there's the broader plan, of course. God's intention, I think, was not the fall, but rather to bless Adam and his progeny. But once the fall occurred, then God has plan B, which involves the call of Abraham in Genesis 12 and the
Cindy
election of the nation of Israel, through which he would bring a savior of the world. And in the end, as he says to Abraham, all the nations of the world will be blessed.
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That original blessing intended for Adam and Eve and their progeny will be fulfilled in Christ. Okay, some other comment, Bobby?
Bobby
Hey, Dr. Craig, two questions. One is, are you familiar with or I haven't been familiar with Middleton. What about John Walton's work? Because I know he proposes something similar about and temple creation.
Cindy
Man being right, I thought of Walton as I was offering this critique of the ancient Near Eastern parallels of setting up a statue in a distant land to represent your authority in your absence. But on somebody like John Walton's view, far from being absent, the world is God's temple in which he resides. So he doesn't need a cult statue or image in his temple. He's there himself. Now, I'm not persuaded by Walton's interpretation, but nevertheless, that popular interpretation is completely at odds with this construal of the image of God as being on the parallel of a statue of a king in a distant land from which he is absent.
Bobby
Sure. Well, I guess then my question would be do they acknowledge or concede that it's not a perfect parallel, but they put it out there anyway? To say that Genesis is a. Or that initial account in Genesis is a polemic against those.
Cindy
I couldn't speak for what Walton thinks on this.
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Middleton
Cindy
isn't really very persuaded by this analogy or parallel of the king setting up his statue in a distant land. Rather, he puts his money on the
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second argument, that the king or pharaoh
Cindy
himself, like a cult statue, is an
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embodiment or incarnation of the God, and
Cindy
that's what he thinks is the true parent parallel. And notice again, Bobby, these two interpretations are incompatible with each other. In the one, the statue incorporates or embodies the deity, he is present in the statue. In the other interpretation, the king is absent and the statue is there in his place to kind of represent him. So it's so funny that you've got these two sets of ancient Near Eastern texts that are appealed to by scholars when in fact they support contradictory interpretations of the image. And I think, as we saw from the very texts I read, that the second stream of texts supports what I
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call an incarnational interpretation of God's image.
Bobby
That's good. Thank you.
Dr. Craig
Anybody else? I think we've got time for one more question. Jacob?
Cindy
Oh, I'm sorry. Yes, Steve,
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make it quick, please.
Steve
I wouldn't call it incarnational, but just like talking about the two images of God in Christ's image, the more you change to be like him as you see him as he is, you start attaining his authority, so you rule with him like he says, and so that's not an incarnation, but you are ruling with him and you have authority in the same way a pagan, when they're doing the will of the intermediate, the sin, then he has authority from that deity. So they're both very similar.
Cindy
Well, I'm not persuaded that's right, Steve. I mean, one of the strange things is how in the world could these ancient Egyptians regard the pharaoh as divine? When they know he was born, they know he's going to get sick and die. They prepared his body for burial with mummy and embalming and built the tombs of the pharaohs. How could they regard them as divine when they're so obviously mortal? And the answer is, I think, as Middleton shows, is that they incarnate the deity. Incarnation comes from Latin in plus carnis in the flesh, so they literally incarnate God. Now, a cult statue doesn't incarnate God because it's not made of flesh, but it does embody God. So the cult statue embodies the deity, and therefore that's why the idol is divine, even though it's made out of stone. The pharaoh, even though he's made out
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of flesh, he embodies or incarnates the God. So I do think the language is appropriate.
Cindy
Well, let's close with a word of prayer. Father, thank you so much for the
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time that we've been able to spend
Cindy
together this morning and for the stimulus
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of thinking about this important question of what it means to be created in your image and after your likeness. And we pray that you would fill
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us with your holy Spirit now to live lives that are pleasing to you
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and that would bring us gradually into conformity to the image of Christ, your Son, in whose name we pray. Amen.
Dr. William Lane Craig
The copyright for the preceding material is held by Dr. William Lane Craig. For more, go to reasonablefaith.org.
Host: Dr. William Lane Craig
Date: January 29, 2020
In this episode of "Defenders," Dr. William Lane Craig leads his class through a critical evaluation of the various construals of the biblical "image of God" (imago Dei). The discussion centers on the meaning of Genesis' language, traditional and modern interpretations (substantial, relational, functional), and the relevance of ancient Near Eastern parallels. Dr. Craig especially responds to the widely held functional view advocated by scholar Richard Middleton, evaluating how well Old Testament and extra-biblical evidence support it, and argues for an unavoidable ontological or "substantialist" component to the idea that humans are made in God’s image.
Main Point:
Dr. Craig and his class agree with the Protestant Reformers that there is no difference between "image" and "likeness" in Genesis; the terms are parallel and mean the same thing (00:39, 00:57, 01:14).
“These words are used in parallel and synonymously. To say that man is created in God’s image and according to his likeness is just an example of Hebrew parallelism.” — Dr. Craig [00:57]
Implication:
No two-tiered anthropology is implied; both terms affirm man’s unique relationship to God over creation.
Traditional View Questioned:
Contrary to some Reformers, Dr. Craig insists the image of God persists in fallen humanity (01:37–02:22), supported by references in Genesis 9:6.
“Fallen man clearly is in the image of God as we saw in Genesis 9,6...so the image of God is not the original righteousness or something of that sort which could be lost in the fall.” — Dr. Craig [01:55 & 02:00]
Christ as Image of God:
Dr. Craig differentiates between biblical references to Christ as the image of God and humans as image-bearers. Christ is the “visible exemplification of the invisible God”—God incarnate—a unique case (03:05–03:15).
Believers Being Conformed to Christ’s Image:
Being “conformed to Christ’s image” is about sanctification, not about the doctrine of the imago Dei as pertaining to all humanity (03:35–04:13).
Dr. Craig, following Middleton, outlines the main approaches:
The class explores the implications of the Hebrew prepositions b’ ("in") and k’ ("according to"), and argues that the phrasing “in the image of God” and “according to his likeness” does not literally mean “as” God’s image. These distinctions, however, do not decisively settle which interpretation is correct (05:22–08:10).
“These Hebrew prepositions are not decisive in guiding our interpretation of what it means to be created in God’s image and likeness.” — Dr. Craig [07:42]
Middleton’s Claim:
Citing consensus among contemporary Old Testament scholars, Middleton argues that the image of God in Genesis is primarily functional—humans are granted royal authority to represent God and rule over creation (09:11–11:41).
"The imago Dei represents the royal office or calling of human beings, and as God's representatives and agents in the world, granted authorized power to share in God's rule or administration of the earth's resources and creatures." — Middleton (quoted by Dr. Craig) [18:34–18:58]
Royal Topos & Ancient Parallels:
Middleton draws connections to ancient Near Eastern (ANE) practices—kings setting up statues (as authority symbols in distant lands) and, more importantly, the cultural idea that kings and high priests themselves are images or incarnations of deities (12:09–18:21).
Point 1: Functional Implies Substantial
Dr. Craig contends that even Middleton concedes function is rooted in ontology—humans can only perform the God-assigned function because of what they are (19:01–21:35).
“The functional interpretation actually presupposes the substantial interpretation in grounding function in the ontology of human beings as personal agents.” — Dr. Craig [21:16–21:35]
Point 2: Misapplied Parallels
The presence of ANE parallels (kings as "images" or even embodiments of gods) actually suggests an "incarnational" view, not a merely functional one. However, Genesis and Judaism would have rejected such physical or metaphysical embodiment due to their anti-iconic theology (21:44–23:26).
“An anti-iconic religion like Judaism...would have recoiled at the idea that human beings are embodiments of God.” — Dr. Craig [23:08–23:20]
Functional and Substantial are Not Mutually Exclusive:
Dr. Craig concludes man must possess certain ontological faculties (rationality, self-consciousness, freedom of will, personhood) in order to fulfill the human vocation as God’s representative (23:26–24:04).
Key Argument:
Genesis 5:1–3, which describes Seth as being in Adam’s image and likeness, better supports the idea of ontological resemblance than pure functionalism (24:04–25:44).
“Seth was not Adam’s representative or co-regent... Adam brought forth another human being like himself.” — Dr. Craig [24:27–24:48]
Definition of Likeness:
The uniqueness of humankind is summed up: humans are, like God, personal beings. This is what separates man both from God (by finitude) and from the rest of creation (by personhood) (25:44–26:19).
In the Q&A, Cindy asks if the “image” could also mean a God-given responsibility. Dr. Craig draws a distinction:
“Someone can have a function. That function can even be essential to that thing, but that's not a definition of the thing. I think that the image of God is man's ontological resemblance to God, but that God has then given man this responsibility to rule the earth and to steward it and to manifest God's reign upon this planet.” — Dr. Craig [27:01–27:24]
On Synonymity of Image and Likeness:
“These are synonymous ways designating man as in some way reflecting God in a special way that sets him apart from the rest of creation.” — Dr. Craig [01:25–01:32]
On the Persistence of the Image after the Fall:
“...the image of God is not the original righteousness or something of that sort which could be lost in the fall.” — Dr. Craig [02:00]
On ANE Parallels:
“Genesis does not portray the Earth as being like a distant land from which God is absent. Rather, God is himself active in the world. He doesn’t need some surrogate to stand in his place.” — Dr. Craig [14:14–14:28]
On the Limitation of the Functional View:
“A thing’s having an essential function is just not the same thing as a thing’s definition.” — Dr. Craig [11:47]
On the Inescapability of Ontological Interpretation:
“It seems to me that a substantialist interpretation is practically unavoidable. In order to function as God’s co-regent, man must have certain faculties like rationality, self-consciousness, freedom of the will.” — Dr. Craig [23:26]
Dr. Craig’s in-depth analysis argues strongly that the image of God cannot be reduced to function or representational role—though these are important, they depend on deeper ontological features. The substantial (ontological) interpretation—that man is God’s image because he is a personal, rational agent—is seen as fundamental, while the functional (royal stewardship) aspect is a vocation that flows from that ontology. Ancient Near Eastern parallels, while suggestive, ultimately argue for models (incarnational, hierarchical) that Judaism purposely avoids. Thus, "image" is a rich term grounded in personhood, enabling humanity’s unique calling in creation.