Why is Jesus called "Son of Man"?
Let me give a common
understanding and then a more sophisticated historical understanding.
The common
understanding is that "Son of God" implies his deity—which it
does—and that "Son of Man" implies his humanity, which it does too.
He was a son of man,
that is, a human being. And he is the Son of God, in that he has always existed
as the Eternally Begotten One who comes forth from the Father forever. He
always has, and he always will. He is the Second Person of the Trinity with all
of the divine nature fully in him.
He is born of a virgin.
He had a human father but he didn't have sex with this virgin until Jesus was
conceived. He was conceived of the Holy Spirit in the virgin Mary. Thus he is
human—fully human. The Bible wants to emphasize that he is fully human.
So that's the common
understanding: he is both divine and he is human—two natures, one person.
The more sophisticated
and important historical insight is that the term "Son of Man"
doesn't merely align him with humanity. It is probably taken from Daniel 7. And
if you read that chapter you'll see that the Son of Man is a very exalted
figure: not just a human figure but an exalted figure. It was Jesus' favorite
self-designation.
If you do a study of
the term "Son of Man" in the Gospels you'll see that he didn't refer
to himself most often as Son of God but as Son of Man. He said things like, in Mark 10:45,
"The Son of Man came not to be served but to serve and to give his life as
a ransom for many." So he calls himself Son of Man very often.
I think the reason he
did so is because, on the face of it, Son of Man is an ordinary phrase for
"human being." He was born of a man. And there's no offense there:
who isn't a son of man? But those with ears to hear could hear Daniel 7, in
which he was claiming a very exalted role in the history of redemption. And he
meant to do it.
Jesus was very subtle
in that he was always opening his identity to those with eyes to see, but he
wasn't opening it so blatantly that everybody would come and make him king. He
had to steer a very narrow course in disclosing his identity, not just openly
saying, "I'm the Messiah, I'm the King of the World. Come and acknowledge
me as King." He didn't talk like that.
He was quiet. He was
subtle. And he would make claims that were explicit in certain settings and
implicit in others. And only when the time was right—mainly when he was on
trial for his life, and they said, "Are you the Christ, the Son of the
living God?"—did he say, "I am, and you will see the Son of Man
coming with great power and glory." So he confessed his open deity right
at the point where he knew he would be crucified for it.
So I hope that helps.
"Son of Man" has the double meaning of human being and, according to
Daniel 7, exalted heavenly one. And Jesus means to communicate both of those.
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