So baby Jesus created the universe and everything in it, is that what you are saying?
Excuse me, I didn't read any part where it says “baby” in your sentence, even if we pretend that the sentence is authentic saying of Jesus (pbuh), which is stretching facts by a lot, since there is no way Jesus (p) spoke in modern english, and most certainly he spoke first century aramaic or ancient hebrew to his disciples.
The rest of your post follows these premise.
Now my question is: I understand that some catholics worship baby Jesus, but why is it that not all catholics worship baby Jesus if he was god?
I've seen plenty christians (catholics, protestants, etc) worship and pray to crucified Jesus, but why do you guys not worship and pray to baby Jesus?
Isn't this ageism towards God?
Why do you prefer to worship adult God and neglect baby God?
Are you being obtuse on purpose? Honestly, I think so. But I'm going to give you the benefit of the doubt and walk through this. But as I am doing this, and am treating this as a serious question, I expect you to take it seriously. Smart aleck remarks such as have recently appeared in this thread simply show a side of your behavior that is completely contrary to the teachings of Islam's declaration to respect the people of the Book. If such is our treatment, there really is no reason for us to respect the mocker and render him any answer whatsoever, even if he has makes a valid point or has a sincere question in the future, for he is proven to behave without charity or justice toward others and instead demonstrates an inability or even an unwillingness to listen when people have tried to respond to him:
Have you not turned your attention to one who disputed with Abraham about his Guardian-Lord, because God had granted him power? Abraham said, "My Guardian Lord is one who gives life and death." [The king] replied, "I give life and death. " Said Abraham, "But it is God that causes the sun to rise from the East, can you then cause it to rise from the West? Thus the rejecter of faith was confounded, for God does not grant guidance to unjust people.
Let us begin with the nature of God in his eternal state. This would be to seek to understand God's nature outside of time and space, completely unrelated to any aspect of creation. In this state, which would include the conditions before the creation of the world, before the creation of time, before the creation of anything, God exists. But even then, God exists (in the Christian view, no need to argue that you believe or the Qur'an teachers otherwise, for you have asked clarification with regard to understand Christian teachings) as a tri-personal being: Father, Son, and Spirit. Using technical language the three persons exist in a perichoresis in which while they are distinguishable from one another, they are inseperable and are one being. So we speak of just one God, not three. Thus when one says that God is eternal, one is saying that God the Father is eternal and uncreated, God the Son is eternal and uncreated, and God the Spirit is eternal and uncreated. But internal to their relationship with one another there is a generation of the Son by the Father and the Spirit proceeds from this relationship between the two of them.
I know that may be a hard concept for several reasons. One has to do with the term "
monogenes," frequently translated as "only begotten." As I have explained multiple times in other threads, I personally don't like the "begetting" language because it causes people to think in terms of animal biology. In reality, we are not speaking of anything to do with biology or anatomy or any other sort of procreation. The biblical term which was translated into English as "only begotten Son" about 400 years ago had a completely different concept behind it and would best be translated today as "unique Son." But it has been used so much and for so long, I fear we are stuck with it, even though it can make it difficult to grasp the nature of what is being said. So, quite naturally, we turn to the very properly translated "Father" and "Son" language to help understand what is trying to be communicated. Now, in my life, when I think of a human father generating a human, I quite naturally begin to think in terms of the father having existed in history prior to the son. And that would be true. However, remember, we are not speaking of humans who live within history and for whom the arrow of time is relevant. When we Christians speak of Jesus being the only begotten Son of God, we are NOT speaking of anything that has to do with the virgin birth. In fact, we are not even speaking of anything that has to do with the earthly or physical person we come to know as Jesus. We are speaking of his pre-incarnate self, prior to his conception and being placed in Mary's womb. So, we certainly aren't thinking of a little baby who would eventually appear in the course of time. For we are thinking about something that happened before Nature was created at all, before time began.
Just as there never was a time when the Father was not, so there never was a time when the Son was not. This really is not unreasonable at all. If God's nature is immutable and never changes, and if Jesus did indeed teach his disciples that in praying to God that among the ways it was appropriate to address God including calling him "
abba," or Father. Then Jesus is communicating to us something about the nature of God. But for God to be called "Father" it implies that he is a father. And, by definition, one cannot be a father and childless at the same time. So, if God is a father, and his nature is immutable, then he has always been a father since before the beginning of time. And if in speaking of God there has always been the Father to speak of, it is appropriate to conceive that there must always have been the Son. So, the Father is not before the Son, for both Father and Son are co-eternal, meaning that the Son is himself eternal even though the physical earthly body of Jesus would not be created until nature itself had been created and he would be born occupying a particular point in historical time.
As to the generation of the Son from the Father, this is not an act of creation. Again, because creation implies a beginning point, and the Son being eternal in nature has neither beginning nor end. In fact, Scripture affirms that Christ is himself the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end -- meaning that these beginning and ending points of creation are found within him, rather than he being found within it. So, that too speaks to the Son being outside of time. And passages that speak of the Christ being the "firstborn of all creation" need to be read in the context of understanding the usage of the term "firstborn" in the Jewish culture which did not necessarily actually mean the first child (nor even the first son) to pass through the birth canal, rather the term "firstborn" referred to the one who was to receive the inheritance of the father. This is most certainly true of the Christ.
So, if not procreation or an aspect of time, how then is generation to be understood?
I would like you, for the moment, to get a picture of something in your mind. I would like you to think of two books lying on a table, one on top of the other. Obviously the bottom book is keeping the top book up -- supporting it. It is because of the underneath book that the top book is resting, say, two inches above the surface of the table instead of touching the table. Let's call the underneath book A and the top one B. The position of A is causing the position of B. That is if A was not present, B would no longer exist in the space 2 inches above the table that B presently occupies. Now, imagine that these two books have always been in exactly the positions in which they now are. In such a case, B's position would have always been the result of A's position. But all the same, A's position would not have existed before B's position. IN other words, the result of B's position does not timewise come after the cause, that A exists in its supportive position.
So, while A's position may be the cause generating, as it were, B's position. There is no temporal relationship necessary for A to generate B.
But, perhaps an even better way to conceive of this is to reflect on my request to have you imagine two books. I don't know what your books looked like, but I suspect you actually had a picture in your mind. Quite obviously, then, your act of imaging was the cause generating the resultant mental picture. But that does not mean that your first did the imagining and then got the picture. The moment you did it, the picture was there. Your will was keeping the picture before you all the time. Yet the act of the will and the picture began at exactly the same moment and ended at the same moment. If there were a Being who had always existed and had been imagining one thing, his act would always have been producing a mental picture, but the picture would be just as eternal as the act.
In the same way we must think of the Son always, so to speak, streaming forth from the Father, like light from a lamp or thoughts from a mind. He, the Son, is the self-expression of the Father--the Word the Father has to say. And there never was a time when the Father was not saying it. And since this whole time we have been talking about God, when the Bible speaks of the Word it declares that the Word is with God and the Word was God. And further, in perfect concert with Genesis 1, it declares that all things are created through this eternal divine Word (John 1:1-3). Note: we are not referring to the historical Jesus at all, but to the pre-incarnate Son who in time (meaning entering into time and nature) becomes flesh and dwells among humanity. This Son comes from the Father and is himself God (John 1:14 & 18).
How does God the Son enter into created nature? He incarnates himself. That word means that he puts on flesh. He makes himself into a human. His human body is not begotten. It is created in the same way that all other aspects of creation are created by God (I believe probably spoken into being), only it is created within Mary's womb.
Now remember I spoke earlier of the perichoresis of God's tri-personal being. The literal meaning of the term is “dancing around”. I find that it creates a helpful picture in my mind of a dance in which the partners are distinct individuals but the dance itself can only exist as long as they partners are one. The moment they quit being partners and become individuals, the dance is no more. While not a perfect analogy for the interpenetrating relations that exist within God’s own internal being, I do believe it helpful reminds us that we far too often speak of the persons as if they can be separated from one another, when in fact they exist within one another precisely because they are one and not three.
C.S. Lewis, when writing about the nature of God wrote something along these lines as well:
All sorts of people are fond of repeating All sorts of people are fond of repeating the Christian statement that ‘God is love’. But they seem not to notice that the words ‘God is love’ have no real meaning unless God contains at least two Persons. Love is something that one person has for another person. If God was a single person, then before the world was made, He was not love…. [Christians] believe that the living, dynamic activity of love has been going on in God for ever and has created everything else. And that, by the way, is perhaps the most important difference between Christianity and all other religions: that in Christianity God is not a static thing … but a dynamic, pulsating activity, a life, almost a kind of drama. Almost, if you will not think me irreverent, a kind of dance.
The union between the Father and Son is such a live concrete thing that this union itself is also a Person. I know this is almost inconceivable, but look at it thus. You know that among human beings, when they get together in a family, or a club, or a trade union, people talk about the "spirit" of that family, or club, or trade union. They talk about its "spirit" because the individual members, when they are together, do really develop particular ways of talking and behaving which they would not have if they were apart. It is as if a sort of communal personality came into existence. Of course, it is not a real person: it is only rather like a person. But that is just one of the differences between God and us. What grows out of the joint life of the Father and Son is a real Person, is in fact the Third of the three Persons who are God.
And now, what does it all matter? It matters more than anything else in the world. The whole dance, or drama, or pattern of this three-Personal life is to be played out in each one of us: or (putting it the other way round) each one of us has got to enter that pattern, take his place in that dance. There is no other way to the happiness for which we were made. Good things as well as bad, you know, are caught by a kind of infection. If you want to get warm you must stand near the fire: if you want to be wet you must get into the water. If you want joy, power, peace, eternal life, you must get close to, or even into, the thing that has them. They are not a sort of prizes which God could, if He chose, just hand out to anyone. They are a great fountain of energy and beauty spurting up at the very centre of reality. If you are dose to it, the spray will wet you: if you are not, you will remain dry. Once a man is united to God, how could he not live forever? Once a man is separated from God, what can he do but wither and die?
And so it is that God in Christ speaks and, even more importantly, acts in ways that serve to unite humankind with God. By incarnating himself God becomes one of us. By being baptized by John he identifies himself with sinful humanity --even though he himself never sinned—and joins in announcing John’s message of a need to live out the ethic of God’s divine kingdom even on earth. In so doing, Jesus proclaims that one does not have to wait any longer for the hoped for parousia, but that we could experience God’s future coming kingdom in the here and now. By dying on the cross he does what no human before him had done, he lives to completion a life perfectly submitted to the will of the Father. And because he is the divinely anointed (i.e. the Messiah) representative of God among humanity, he not takes on completes the human task of living the life we were created for, he offers to let us share in his life. Thus, just as he is in the Father and the Father is in him, he makes possible that we too can be one with them. This means that incredibly we become (in the words of scripture) “new creations” in Christ. By letting God have his way in our life and being submissive to the Father’s will just as Christ was, we come to share in the life of Christ. If we do, we shall then be sharing a life which was begotten, not made, which always has existed and always will exist Christ is the Son of God. If we share in this kind of life we also shall be sons of God. We shall love the Father as the Son does and the Holy Spirit will arise in us. God the Son came to this world and became a man in order to spread to other men the kind of life He has—by what Lewis calls "good infection." Every Christian is to become a little Christ. The whole purpose of becoming a Christian is simply nothing else.
And when we Christians worship, be we Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox, or Coptic, we worship God revealed to us in the person of Jesus Christ. We worship Father, Son, AND Holy Spirit. And with respect to Jesus, it isn’t just on the cross or any other particular setting that we worship him. We worship him as Lord of heaven and earth, reigning from the right hand of the Father. The use of the cross/crucifix is just a mnemonic device to remind us of that particular event in Jesus’ life. But that is not the only event we remember. We do in fact also use other tableaus to help remind us of the events of his life including those you asked about such as his birth – also his resurrection, his ascension, and his anticipated return among others. But we don’t worship any of those events or tableaus, including the crucifixion; we simply worship Jesus’ divine essence.
And before someone asks that oft repeated question about where was God when Jesus was on the cross and dead in the tomb, let me address that as well. He was in those places AND he was in heaven, AND he was preaching to the dead in the grave, AND he was creating the world, AND he was bringing in the eschaton, and he was sitting right beside you just as he is now pricking your conscience to awaken to his presence.
Remember, God exists outside of human history, outside of time and space and all of nature. All of these things exist within him and he holds them together. The problem our human minds have is that we try to conceive of him being in all these places and doing all of these things
in the same moment. But that is once again thinking in human terms, rather than divine ones.
Our life comes to us one moment at a time. God’s does not. He experiences all moments as present. God is not hurried along in the Time-stream of this universe. He has infinite attention to spare for each one of us.
So we are actually asking amiss when we ask questions such as “How did the whole universe keep going while He was a baby, or while He was asleep?” “How could He at the same time be God who knows everything and also a man asking his disciples ‘Who touched me?’ " Or, “Who ran the universe while God was in the tomb?”
You will notice that the sting lay in the time words: "While He was a baby"—"How could He at the same time”—“While God was." In other words in asking the question we assume that Christ's life as God was in time, and that His life as the man Jesus in Palestine was a shorter period taken out of that time—just as my time doing any given activity is a period of time taken out of my total life. We picture God living through a period when His human life was still in the future: then coming to a period when it was present: then going on to a period when He could look back on it as something in the past. But these ideas correspond to nothing congruent with the factual nature of God’s eternal being. We cannot fit Christ's earthly life in Palestine into any fixed sort of time-relationship with His life as God the Son who exists beyond all space and time.
Though from our point of view, Jesus’ earthly life fills a particular period in the history of our world, we cannot therefore conclude it is also a period in the history of God's own existence. In truth, God has no history. He is too completely and utterly real to have one. For, of course, to have a history means losing part of your reality (because it had already slipped away into the past) and not yet having another part (because it is still in the future): in fact having nothing but the tiny little present, which has gone before you can speak about it. God forbid we should think God was like that. Even we are promised that our lives shall not always be rationed out that way.