Apologetics
Jesus Said He Was God. Here Are the Receipts.
Skeptics often claim Jesus never said he was divine. The Gospels say otherwise — and the cultural context makes the claim unmistakable.
There's a popular skeptical claim that goes like this: "Jesus was a wise teacher, but he never actually claimed to be God. That was a later invention by the church."
It's one of those claims that sounds reasonable until you actually read the . Then you discover that almost every page is Jesus saying — or doing — something that makes the divinity claim unmistakable to his original audience. They weren't confused about what he was claiming. Several times they tried to kill him for it.
Here are the receipts.
The "I AM" Statements
In 8, Jesus is in a heated debate with religious leaders about his identity. They press him: "You are not yet fifty years old. Have you seen Abraham?" Jesus answers:
"Very truly I tell you, before Abraham was born, I am!" —
The crowd's response is immediate: "they picked up stones to stone him." Why? Because "I AM" isn't just bad grammar. It's the divine name from Exodus 3, where God identifies himself to as "I AM WHO I AM." Every Jewish person in that crowd knew exactly which words Jesus had just appropriated. Stoning was the prescribed punishment for blasphemy (Leviticus 24:16). They were doing what they understood the Torah to require.
The "I AM" statements in John aren't subtle:
- "I am the bread of life" ()
- "I am the light of the world" ()
- "I am the gate" ()
- "I am the good shepherd" ()
- "I am the resurrection and the life" ()
- "I am the way, the truth, and the life" ()
- "I am the true vine" ()
Each of these echoes Old Testament titles for God. Light. Shepherd. The Way. The Source of Life. The original Jewish audience caught all of them. We miss most of them.
"I and the Father Are One"
In 10, Jesus makes the claim even more directly:
"I and the Father are one." —
The reaction is immediate. "Again his Jewish opponents picked up stones to stone him, but Jesus said to them, 'I have shown you many good works from the Father. For which of these do you stone me?' 'We are not stoning you for any good work,' they replied, 'but for blasphemy, because you, a mere man, claim to be God.'"
This is the most direct evidence imaginable. The original audience interprets Jesus' words as a claim to divinity, and Jesus doesn't correct them. He doesn't say "you misunderstood." He doubles down.
If a wise teacher had been merely claiming to be a prophet or a good rabbi, he would've clarified. Jesus doesn't clarify because the misunderstanding isn't a misunderstanding.
The Trial Confession
The most decisive moment is at Jesus' trial before the ( 14, 26). The high priest demands an answer:
"Are you the Messiah, the Son of the Blessed One?"
"I am," said Jesus. "And you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of the Mighty One and coming on the clouds of heaven."
The high priest tore his clothes. "Why do we need any more witnesses?" he asked. "You have heard the blasphemy. What do you think?" —
Notice what's happening. Jesus doesn't just answer "yes" to being the Messiah — that alone wouldn't have been blasphemy. There were many people in the 1st century claiming to be the Messiah. The Jewish council might disagree, but they wouldn't call it blasphemy.
Jesus' answer is more than "yes." He combines two specific Old Testament texts: "the right hand of the Mighty One" (from Psalm 110) and "coming on the clouds of heaven" (from 7). The passage describes a "Son of Man" who approaches "the Ancient of Days" and is given "authority, glory, and sovereign power" — and is worshiped by all nations. The figure is a divine figure, not a merely human messiah.
The high priest gets it instantly. He tears his robe — the prescribed reaction to hearing blasphemy — and the council condemns Jesus to death. The charge isn't insurrection or political agitation. The charge is divine identity claims. They put him to death because they understood exactly what he was saying.
The Things Only God Does
Beyond direct statements, Jesus repeatedly acts in ways that the Old Testament reserves for God alone:
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He forgives sins. When Jesus tells a paralyzed man "your sins are forgiven" ( 2:5), the religious leaders immediately think: "Who can forgive sins but God alone?" They aren't wrong about the theology. Jesus doesn't back down. He forgives the sins and then heals the man as proof of his authority to do so.
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He receives worship. When sees the risen Jesus and exclaims "My Lord and my God!" ( 20:28), Jesus accepts the worship. (Acts 10:25-26) and the angels (Revelation 22:8-9) explicitly refuse worship when humans offer it. Jesus doesn't.
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He claims authority over the Sabbath. "The Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath" ( 2:28). The Sabbath belongs to God in the Old Testament. Jesus is claiming ownership of God's day.
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He claims to be the Judge of all humanity. 25 describes Jesus returning in glory, sitting on his throne, and judging all nations. That's God's job in the Old Testament. Jesus puts himself in the role.
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He answers prayer. 14:13-14: "And I will do whatever you ask in my name... You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it." Prayer is directed to God. Jesus invites it.
The "Liar, Lunatic, or Lord" Trilemma
The British author C.S. Lewis famously argued that once you take Jesus' claims seriously, only three options remain:
"A man who was merely a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would not be a great moral teacher. He would either be a lunatic — on a level with the man who says he is a poached egg — or else he would be the Devil of Hell. You must make your choice. Either this man was, and is, the Son of God, or else a madman or something worse... but let us not come with any patronizing nonsense about his being a great human teacher. He has not left that open to us. He did not intend to."
The argument is sometimes critiqued as overly tidy, but the core point holds: you can't rescue Jesus as a "great moral teacher who never claimed to be God." He repeatedly claimed to be God. The "wise teacher" reading requires you to ignore most of what he actually said.
The Skeptics' Take
"The divinity claims are only in John, the latest Gospel." This is overstated. The trial confession is in (the earliest Gospel), as are the forgiveness-of-sins claim, the Lord-of-the-Sabbath claim, and the Son-of-Man-coming-on-clouds claim. and preserve the same material. John develops the theme more explicitly, but it's in all four Gospels.
"Jewish messianic expectations included a divine figure." Some did — the "Son of Man" was understood by some Jewish groups as a divine or angelic figure. But that actually strengthens the case. Jesus was claiming a specific Jewish category that everyone in the room understood to involve divinity, and the council's reaction (tearing the robe, condemning him for blasphemy) confirms they understood the claim that way.
"The early church invented the divinity later." The earliest Christian documents are letters, written 20-30 years after the crucifixion. Philippians 2:6-11 is widely recognized as a hymn Paul is quoting — meaning it predates his letter. The hymn describes Jesus as "in very nature God" and calls him "Lord," the standard Greek translation of the divine name YHWH. The high view of Jesus isn't a 4th-century invention. It's in the earliest layer.
The Bottom Line
The claim that Jesus never said he was God only works if you don't read the Gospels. He said it directly. He said it indirectly. He said it in private and in public. He said it at the trial that got him executed. The original audience understood exactly what he was claiming — and several times they tried to kill him for it.
You can call him a liar. You can call him a madman. You can call him Lord. The one option Jesus didn't leave on the table is "great moral teacher who never made the claim."
He made the claim. The receipts are in red letters.