The Deity of the Son

(Extracts from Francis Turretin, edited into modern English)



Why This Doctrine Matters

The question is not small: Is Jesus Christ truly God, or only a great creature?
Francis Turretin insists that if Christ is not fully God, then the gospel collapses. A creature cannot save sinners, forgive sins, or give eternal life. Scripture presents the Son not as a lesser god, nor as a created being, but as true God, of the same divine essence as the Father.

Turretin argues carefully, not from philosophy, but from the whole witness of Scripture.


1. The Son Is Called “God” in Scripture

Turretin begins with the plain testimony of Scripture. Names matter, especially when God Himself gives them.

The Bible openly and repeatedly calls the Son God, not in a loose or honorary way, but properly and truly.

Turretin argues:
If Scripture calls the Son “God” in the same sense it calls the Father “God,” then
the Son must possess the same divine nature. Scripture does not redefine “God” when it speaks of Christ.

To deny this is not humility, but contradiction.


2. The Son Has the Attributes of God

Next, Turretin shows that the Son possesses qualities that belong to God alone. These are not shared with creatures.

a. Eternity

The Son does not come into existence. He exists eternally.

b. Omnipresence

No creature can be present with all believers at all times. Only God can do this.

c. Omniscience

d. Omnipotence

Turretin’s logic is simple but firm:
If the Son has the incommunicable attributes of God, then the Son must be God.


3. The Son Does the Works of God

God alone performs certain works. Yet Scripture assigns these works to the Son.

a. Creation

Creation is not shared work. God says, “I alone stretched out the heavens.” Yet the Son creates. Therefore, the Son is not outside of God but within the divine identity.

b. Providence

c. Forgiveness of Sins

The answer is clear: God alone can forgive sins, and Jesus does so as God.


4. The Son Receives Divine Worship

Turretin presses this point strongly. Worship belongs to God alone. God does not give His glory to another.

Yet the Son is worshiped:

Jesus never rebukes worship. Angels do. Apostles do. Jesus accepts it, because it belongs to Him by right.

If Christ were a creature, accepting worship would be blasphemy. Since Scripture approves it, Christ must be God.


5. The Son Is Equal with the Father

Turretin emphasizes that the Son is not merely similar to God, but equal with the Father in essence.

The Son is distinct in person, but not inferior in nature.
Equality of essence does not mean confusion of persons.


6. Answering Common Objections

Objection 1: “The Son is called ‘begotten,’ so He must be created.”

Turretin replies:
Begotten” refers not to a beginning in time, but to an eternal relationship within God. The Son is eternally begotten, not made.

Creation produces something outside God. Generation within the Trinity is internal and eternal.


Objection 2: “The Son says the Father is greater than He.”

Turretin distinguishes carefully:

This is not a denial of deity, but a display of humility in redemption.


7. Why the Deity of the Son Is Necessary for Salvation

Turretin ends where theology must always end: with salvation.

If Christ is not God:

But because Christ is God, His work is perfect, complete, and saving.


Summary for Teaching and Meditation

To deny the deity of the Son is to lose the Christ of Scripture.
To confess it is to worship the Savior who is “God with us.”