14Jul2026
  • Sanan Pasha Street – El Zeitoun – Cairo
  • [email protected]
TwitterFacebook-fYoutubeSpotifySoundcloud
logotype
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية

Type To Search

Contact Us
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
logotype

Type To Search

logotype
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
Biblical Criticism – Does God Cry, Hunger, Thirst, Die, or Nurse?
Home All Categories Encyclopedias Encyclopedia of Comparative Theology Modern Heresies Biblical Criticism – Does God Cry, Hunger, Thirst, Die, or Nurse?
Modern Heresies
By Helana Ghatas4 May 19930 Comments

Biblical Criticism – Does God Cry, Hunger, Thirst, Die, or Nurse?

popeshenoda podcast

متصفحك لا يدعم تشغيل الصوتيات.

⬇️ تحميل المحاضرة

His Holiness Pope Shenouda III explains that questions such as “Does God cry? Hunger? Thirst? Die? Nurse?” arise from confusing Christ’s divine nature (divinity) with His human nature (humanity).
All these experiences — hunger, thirst, pain, and growth — belong to His humanity, not His divinity.


1. The Union of Divinity and Humanity:
Christ is fully God and fully Man.
These two natures united without mixture, confusion, or separation.
However, what belongs to the body is not attributed to the divine essence.


2. Distinguishing Between the Two Natures:
When the Bible says that Christ cried, hungered, or died — this refers to His human nature.
His divine nature cannot cry, hunger, or die because it is eternal and unchanging.

  • He cried as a human (John 11:35).

  • He hungered and thirsted through His human body.

  • He died in the flesh, but His divinity never dies.

  • He was nursed and grew as a human child, while His divinity neither grows nor changes.


3. The Purpose of the Incarnation:
God took human flesh to save humanity and to share in our weakness — not because He needed anything.

“The Word became flesh and dwelt among us” (John 1:14).
He experienced human suffering to redeem it, not because His divinity was limited.


4. The One Answer to All Such Questions:
Questions like “Does God pray? Does God suffer?” have one answer:

These acts belong to Christ’s human nature, not His divine one.
He prayed and was tempted as a man, but His divinity cannot be tempted or need prayer.


5. The Theological Summary:

  • Divine Nature: unchanging, impassible, eternal.

  • Human Nature: capable of hunger, pain, growth, and death.
    Yet both are united in one Person — Jesus Christ.


Faith Message:
God did not lose His divinity when He became man.
He chose to live our humanity to raise it, not because He needed anything.
Thus, every human aspect of Christ reveals divine humility and love, not divine weakness.


“For better translation support, please contact the center.”

Audio Section Biblical Criticism – Does God Cry- Hunger- Thirst- Die- or Nurse? The Union of Divinity and Humanity
Biblical Criticism – Were the Disciples Not Eyewitnesses of the Crucifixion Since They All Fled?

Biblical Criticism – Were the Disciples Not Eyewitnesses of the Crucifixion Since They All Fled?

4 May 1993

Biblical Criticism – Was the Body Seen by the Disciples a Spirit or Truly a Risen Body?

4 May 1993
Biblical Criticism – Was the Body Seen by the Disciples a Spirit or Truly a Risen Body?

منشورات ذات صلة

popeshenoda podcast
Modern Heresies
7 December 1993

The Misconception Some Hold About Participation in the Divine Nature

By Helana Ghatas
popeshenoda podcast
Modern Heresies
24 April 1991

Fellowship with God

By Helana Ghatas

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archive by Date
الاقسام
Related Topics
  • Pride and Humility in Teaching and Interpretation
    Pride and Humility in Teaching and Interpretation
    28 December 2004
  • Responding to the Ideas of Father Matta El-Meskeen – The Book Church and State
    Responding to the Ideas of Father Matta El-Meskeen – The Book Church and State
    14 March 2002
  • The Agpeya — Not Praying the Third Section to the Virgin Mary
    The Agpeya — Not Praying the Third Section to the Virgin Mary
    23 January 1996
Tags
Al-Ahram Newspaper Al Keraza Magazine Asceticism Audio Section Church Creation Discernment Divinity Doctrine Education Eternity Faith Forgiveness giving Grace Holiness Hope Humility Incarnation Knowledge Love Marriage Martyrdom Mercy Monasticism Obedience Peace Prayer Preaching Priesthood Purity Redemption Repentance Responsibility Resurrection Salvation Service Sin spirituality Steadfastness Teaching Unity Video Section Watani Newspaper Wisdom
Categories
  • All Categories(63)
  • Atheism(4)
  • Attributes of God(82)
  • Beginning of the New Year(4)
  • Calmness(1)
  • Canons of the Ecumenical Councils(4)
  • Canons of the Fathers (Apostles and Patriarchs)(7)
  • Christian Concepts(10)
  • Christian Conduct(7)
  • Christianity in Egypt(1)
  • Church Occasions(3)
  • Church Organizations(29)
  • Church Penalties(17)
  • Commentary on the New Testament(106)
  • Commentary on the Old Testament(40)
  • Concepts(114)
  • Deacons and Deaconesses(13)
  • Differences with the Catholics(28)
  • Differences with the Protestants(42)
  • Doctrinal Issues(8)
  • E-books(1)
  • Encyclopedia of Ascetic Theology(7)
  • Encyclopedia of Barthology(27)
  • Encyclopedia of Canon Law (Legislative Theology)(43)
  • Encyclopedia of Church History(58)
  • Encyclopedia of Comparative Theology(179)
  • Encyclopedia of Dogmatic Theology(17)
  • Encyclopedia of Dogmatic Theology(88)
  • Encyclopedia of Eschatology(36)
  • Encyclopedia of Feasts and Occasions(132)
  • Encyclopedia of Liturgical Theology(34)
  • Encyclopedia of Moral Theology(115)
  • Encyclopedia of Pastoral Theology(115)
  • Encyclopedia of Spiritual Theology(397)
  • Encyclopedia of the Holy Bible(157)
  • Encyclopedia of the Saints’ Lives(103)
  • Faith(2)
  • Famous Christians in the Islamic Eras(1)
  • Famous Fathers in the Early Centuries(5)
  • Feast of the Epiphany(11)
  • Feast of the Nativity(17)
  • Feast of the Resurrection(7)
  • Feasts of the Saints(3)
  • General Introduction to Church History(1)
  • God’s Providence(35)
  • Historical Verification(2)
  • History of Heresies and Schisms in the Early Centuries(5)
  • History of the Coptic Church and Its Martyrs(3)
  • Hope(1)
  • Ibn al-‘Assal’s Canonical Collection(6)
  • Jehovah’s Witnesses(12)
  • Judgment(2)
  • Life Experiences(2)
  • Life of Saint Mark the Apostle(3)
  • Life of Stillness(3)
  • Liturgies(5)
  • Lives of the Anchorite Fathers(15)
  • Lives of the Martyrs and Confessors(6)
  • Love(5)
  • Meekness and Humility(5)
  • Milestones of the Spiritual Journey(10)
  • Modern Heresies(42)
  • Monasticism(8)
  • Monasticism(6)
  • New Testament(7)
  • Old Testament(24)
  • Others, Miscellaneous and Various Topics(109)
  • Our Apostolic Fathers(7)
  • Pelagianism and Original Sin(2)
  • Personal Status(35)
  • Persons of the New Testament(6)
  • Persons of the Old Testament(63)
  • Poems, Hymns, and Songs(96)
  • Priestly Service(207)
  • Questions(31)
  • Questions and Answers(21)
  • Redemption(5)
  • Repentance – Self-Examination(1)
  • Saints of Virginity and Monasticism(4)
  • Salvation(1)
  • Seventh-day Adventists(11)
  • Some Categories of Pastoral Care(161)
  • Some Fields of Pastoral Care(55)
  • Spiritual Theology – Virtues(21)
  • Spiritual Topics – New Testament(10)
  • Spiritual Topics – Old Testament(2)
  • Spiritual Warfare(23)
  • The Altar(2)
  • The Angels(6)
  • The Armenians(1)
  • The Beginning of the Christian Church(2)
  • The Church(27)
  • The Church after Chalcedon(1)
  • The Church after the Schism – The Middle Ages(2)
  • The Church before the Schism(5)
  • The Church in the Diaspora(1)
  • The Church of Alexandria and Its Patriarchs(7)
  • The Conscience and the Influencing Factors(7)
  • The Early Church(6)
  • The Fourth Century and Its Importance(7)
  • The Holy Trinity(14)
  • The Human(11)
  • The Incarnation(5)
  • The Self(2)
  • The Spiritual Man(12)
  • The Theology of the Holy Spirit(4)
  • The Virgin Mary, Mother of God(19)
  • Video(1)
  • Virtues (Moral Theology)(2)
  • Wars of Thought(1)
Gallery
caption
caption
caption

caption
caption
caption

Featured image: Biblical Criticism – Does God Cry, Hunger, Thirst, Die, or Nurse?

Make Kids Happy

GET IN TOUGHT