Who is Jesus?
Image used with permission from The Chosen TV Series.
Christians have two ways of understanding who Jesus is. Two ways that start at very different places, but ultimately end up saying the same thing.
The first way starts with God- the God who made this universe and everything in it.
Imagine what an introduction from this God might look like; imagine this God wanted to show us what they are like. There could be messages sent to us (and Christians think this God has done that). Perhaps there might be intentional clues and hints put into the fabric of this world (and we think God has done that too).
But by far the best way for God to be fully introduced to us would be for God to genuinely become a human. Because then, if we met this God-human, we wouldn’t just be learning about God, we would actually be meeting God!
The first way Christians understand who Jesus is, is that he is God become human – Jesus is God introducing us to God’s self in a way that we can really know the God who made this universe and everything in it.

God became human
God became Human
Video used with permission from The Chosen TV Series. (S01E08)

The second way Christians understand who Jesus is starts with a human – a normal, everyday human – someone who puts his trousers on one leg at a time just like the rest of us.
This human lived at a particular time and at a particular place – being an individual human meant he had a particular culture, a particular gender, a particular body, a particular group of friends and acquaintances, and a particular name – Jesus.
But these friends and acquaintances noticed that Jesus said and did things that humans don’t do. He healed people; he controlled the wind and rain with a word; he spent time with outcasts and people that polite society rejected. And when he died, he came back alive again. Normal people don’t do that! Those around him eventually worked out that the reason for all this is that God’s Spirit was guiding and empowering him.
Jesus wasn’t just an extraordinary human, he was a human-God.
So working from the top down, Jesus is a God-human. Working from the bottom up, Jesus is a human-God.


Any way you look at it, the utterly unique thing about Jesus is that he is the meeting point between creator and creation. Jesus is not just God’s introduction to us; God is standing with us on humanity’s side, leading us back to God’s self. Everything Jesus is, said, or did is all about bringing God and humanity together.
Our Baptist faith communities exist to participate in Jesus' ongoing work of bringing God and humanity together – we refer to this as gospel renewal to people and places.
Click here to find a local church. Or if you would like to read more about Jesus, a good place to start would be an account of his life that a medical doctor wrote who lived at the same time as Jesus, the doctor’s name was Luke. The book is based on extensive research, and you can read it online here. (Luke, NLT).
Latest articles
Register now for Hui ā Māori 2024: ‘no greater time to be unified’
A call for Baptist Māori to engage with the significant kōrero coming to Hui ā Māori 2024.
Reflections on the season of Matariki
Three Baptist Māori share what they’ll be doing to acknowledge this season.
Are our social support services making a difference?
Transactional or transformational support: what services should our local church aim for to empower our communities?
Israel and Palestine: Twenty-one questions, part 4
What is the rapture? This is the fourth in a series of articles answering questions about Israel and Palestine that may resource our thinking on…
From the President: On the road again…
This song by Willie Nelson is easily the theme for our President’s June update. Susan shares the gold from her roadie down south.
Rare event forecast for July
What will it be like when profound individual journeys of praying, wrestling with and singing the Psalms join together?
Charles Mail: A future with hope
Equipping our churches in growing young | Meeting with the Prime Minister | Praying for our church elders | More baptisms!
Children in relationship with God
Passing on relational connection as well as knowledge to the next generation.
Salt of the earth: This is all normal
One of Kev’s bizarre pastoral experiences filled with cultural surprises and learnings in the service of his multi-ethnic church...
Israel and Palestine: Twenty-one questions, part 3
What is Christian Zionism? This is the third in a series of articles answering questions about Israel and Palestine that may resource our thinking on…
Charles Mail: Young people bring renewal
Te Puke Baptist Church breaks ground for their housing project | Baptist whānau in national awards | KB youth leaders retreat | More…
Singing for a change
“…be formed, confronted, enriched, and renewed as we linger in the Psalms as a community.”
Missional Mizos, two young women and William Carey
Siblings journey to Tripura for celebrations with a flourishing missional church over 70 years after their Aunt Marjorie Turner followed God's call there.
Fanning the flames of youth ministry
Baptist youth leaders reflect on how showing God’s love and grace is working out in the lives of young people.
Charles Mail: On a mission
Ask your church’s youth leaders about their weekend | A role carved out for us | How the Psalms can inspire Christian worship | More…
Inspiring the next missional generation
Our missionary society, Arotahi, has launched its new children’s programme, Whiria Kids! Find church and home resources that help inspire our tamariki for God’s mission.
Parents at the centre of faith formation
Equipping families to disciple their children outside of church children’s programs.
Survey on power and authority in the church
One of our Carey lecturers seeks your help with a book she is writing.
Israel and Palestine: Twenty-one questions, part 2
This is the second of a series of articles answering questions about Israel and Palestine that may resource our thinking on the current conflict, the…
Charles Mail: Graduation
The most exciting Kingdom event I’ve ever been to | Highlights of our college’s class of 2023 graduation | We need to get radial with…