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Was Jesus Only a Prophet? A Socratic Exploration
**(LinkedIn Post: A Moment of Reflection)**
Sometimes the most important conversations aren't about what we know, but about what we genuinely consider. I’ve been reflecting lately on the power of a question, especially those that force us to look past established dogma and into the heart of a person.
If you had a moment to pause and reflect on one of history's most debated figures—Jesus—what internal questions does His story raise for you, personally?
We often see historical figures—great leaders, profound teachers, or prophets—who serve as powerful messengers. The universal pattern among these revered figures is a determined humility: they consistently redirect all glory and honor away from themselves and toward a higher power. When offered worship, they forcefully, even frantically, reject it, proclaiming, "I am only a man myself!".
But here is where the historical record presents a profound paradox, one that stirs the heart:
When Jesus was offered the deepest form of worship (the Greek *proskuneo*), He accepted it. Not once did He rebuke those who bowed down to Him, even when the Jewish leaders clearly understood His claims as being tantamount to claiming to be God.
This difference is striking. If every truly great messenger and servant of God throughout history rejected worship, what does it mean to you that Jesus calmly accepted it?
It forces us to ask deep questions about identity:
* If Jesus knew He was merely a prophet, what kind of conviction—or deception—would allow Him to accept acts that prophets like Moses, Peter, and Paul vehemently refused?
* If we stripped away the centuries of tradition and looked at those radical, personal claims—"I am the way, the truth, and the life," or "Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father"—how do you reconcile those words with the image of a 'good moral teacher'? C.S. Lewis suggested He must be liar, lunatic, or Lord; what makes that choice so demanding?
* What does it take for a group of followers—eyewitnesses, monotheists who abhorred idolatry—to become so utterly convinced of a person's identity that they were willing to abandon everything and face death for that belief?
These are not questions that can be answered academically alone; they require us to look inward at what we believe about authority, conviction, and truth itself.
I'd love to hear your thoughts. What is the most challenging or compelling question the person of Jesus raises for you today? Share your reflections below.
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