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Renewing Your Mind

Man: The Supreme Paradox

17 Nov 2025

Transcription

Chapter 1: What does it mean to be human from God's perspective?

0.031 - 21.651 R.C. Sproul

No one can really understand who God is until we first have some kind of understanding of who we are as human beings. And yet, paradoxically and conversely, there's no way that we can really understand what it means to be human until we first understand the character of God.

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21.631 - 31.27 R.C. Sproul

so that the knowledge of God and the knowledge of man work together in a kind of reciprocity, that both are mutually interdependent.

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37.527 - 55.718 Nathan W. Bingham

What is man? The question of identity. Who are we? It's a pressing question of our time, especially for the rising generations. This is the Monday edition of Renewing Your Mind. I'm your host, Nathan W. Bingham. This week we'll consider what it means to be human.

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Chapter 2: How does the knowledge of God relate to our understanding of humanity?

56.339 - 80.066 Nathan W. Bingham

And you'll hear R.C. Sproul say today that we're living in a time in history where the definition of what it means to be human is one of the most hotly debated and contested questions of our era. That was true when he recorded this series and has only continued to be debated and contested. And the truth of what it means to be human, only further and further distorted and perverted.

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80.727 - 109.39 Nathan W. Bingham

That's why a series like this is so important. And you can request lifetime digital access to this series and its study guide. Plus, we'll send you a copy of R.C. Sproul's book, The Hunger for Significance, when you give a donation at renewingyourmind.org or when you call us at 800-435-4343. Well, here's Dr. Sproul to begin this series with a message titled, The Supreme Paradox.

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Chapter 3: What is the significance of identity in contemporary discussions?

112.112 - 128.758 R.C. Sproul

When I was a boy, I remember one of my favorite radio programs began with this exciting lead-in. The announcer came on the air and said, Look up in the air. It's a bird. It's a plane. It's Superman.

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129.299 - 149.277 R.C. Sproul

And of course, I think most of us remember that kind of episode from radio days, but as I've reflected on it now as an adult, I thought we must be rather simple if we can't discern the difference between a bird and an airplane and a human being.

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149.577 - 184.883 R.C. Sproul

And as simple as that may seem to us, nevertheless we are living in a time in history where the definition of what it means to be human is one of the most hotly debated and contested questions of our era. And so what we're going to be doing in this series is to focus our attention on the question, what does it mean to be human? And in the generic sense, then what is man?

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185.74 - 213.047 R.C. Sproul

Now remember that in the Scriptures at one point the psalmist breaks out in a spirit of praise and doxology towards the majesty of God, obviously with the grandeur and holiness of God before his thinking when he said, O Lord, our Lord, how excellent is Thy name in all of the earth. And then as the psalmist would spend time praising God,

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213.365 - 246.156 R.C. Sproul

He would say that the glory of God, the majesty of God was manifest through the works of creation. the heavens declare the glory of God, the firmament shows forth His handiwork. And as we look at that idea that all of creation reveals or manifests the majesty of God, then the psalmist raises the question, what is man that thou art mindful of him, or the son of man that thou dost visit him?

246.372 - 272.582 R.C. Sproul

Now in Ligonier, at our ministries, the most widely viewed video series that we've ever produced has been the one called The Holiness of God. And obviously the proper study of theology is the character of God Himself, but it's been said by one of the greatest theologians in history that no one can really understand who God is

272.765 - 302.299 R.C. Sproul

until we first have some kind of understanding of who we are as human beings. And yet, paradoxically and conversely, there's no way that we can really understand what it means to be human until we first understand the character of God. So that the knowledge of God and the knowledge of man work together in a kind of reciprocity, that both are mutually interdependent, aren't they?

Chapter 4: How has the definition of humanity evolved through history?

303.123 - 327.325 R.C. Sproul

or the Scriptures tell us that man is made in the image of God. Some way we are like God, so that the more we understand who God is, the easier it is for us to understand who we are. And if we resemble God in any way, the more we understand what it means to be human, the more insight we can gain about the character of God. But in this day and age,

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327.305 - 360.969 R.C. Sproul

The accent in an attempt to understand what it means to be human has not fallen on theology. For the most part, modern attempts to understand humanness have been made from a this-worldly perspective without reference to God. In fact, the most common definition for a human being, or what it means to be human, is to classify us as homo sapiens. Now what does that mean?

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362.331 - 387.214 R.C. Sproul

We're borrowing here from the Latin root sapientia, which is the Latin word for wisdom. And so when we define man as homo sapiens, we are saying that the thing that distinguishes man from all other creatures, from all other animals in the animal kingdom, has to do with our intelligence or with our wisdom.

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387.194 - 412.797 R.C. Sproul

And in almost every era of Western civilization, the philosophers and the theologians have zeroed in on man's thinking capacity to point to the uniqueness of his identity. And so we have this idea that what it means to be a person, a human being, is to be homo sapiens, to be one with a capacity for wisdom.

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412.777 - 433.502 R.C. Sproul

Now let me just say that I think we can be somewhat simplistic to say that human beings can think and animals have no cognition. You know, the simple way of approaching the animal world is to say that animals react by instinct, and that word instinct has become sort of a magic word to cover

433.482 - 460.502 R.C. Sproul

response mechanisms that we don't fully understand because we can't get inside of the brain of a dog or a horse or a porpoise or a turtle and react to external stimuli the way they do. It sure seems like the dogs that I've had thought more deeply than some people that I have met, but certainly when we say that man's uniqueness is found in his mental capacity

461.782 - 495.946 R.C. Sproul

We're talking here more of a difference in degree than necessarily in kind. When Pascal says that man is the highest creature in terms of the grandeur because of his ability to contemplate his own existence, he doesn't mean to suggest by that that animals in simple ways are totally unaware of their existence. But we can think of our future. We can think about the meaning of our very existence.

Chapter 5: What philosophical perspectives have shaped our understanding of man?

496.346 - 521.969 R.C. Sproul

In fact, the poet has said that the proper study of mankind is what? Man. Now what I want us to see in the time that we have together is how we think about ourselves as creatures. How we answer the question, what is man, will have a profound impact on how we live.

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522.589 - 548.168 R.C. Sproul

It's been said by one theologian that how human beings understand their own existence determines how they think, how they behave, and the type of culture that people produce. that the culture that we're living in right now is a product of our own understanding of what it means to be human.

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548.452 - 578.003 R.C. Sproul

Now when Pascal says the highest grandeur of mankind is our ability to contemplate our own existence, he says at the same time that's the cause of our worst misery in that we can always speculate upon or project in our imaginations a better life than we presently enjoy and are even able to bring to pass. And so we become aware of our shortcomings.

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578.168 - 610.251 R.C. Sproul

I wonder if ants and dogs and kangaroos suffer from guilt. I wonder if they go through processes of moral anguish, if they carry wounds and scars in their psyches because of moral failures in their lives. Whether or not elephants do that or dogs do, we know that that is basic to human beings.

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610.957 - 633.201 R.C. Sproul

because we know that not only is life not as good as we can possibly imagine it, but rather than drawing away from the abstract and bringing it home, we know we are not as good as we could conceive ourselves to be. And so that interjects a note of misery to us.

633.181 - 652.775 R.C. Sproul

Now, before I give us a little historical reconnaissance on various views of what it means to be human that have emerged in the history of Western thought, I'd like to just give a brief outline of what I would call the current crisis in anthropology. Quick little summary of history.

653.116 - 682.398 R.C. Sproul

In the early centuries of Greek philosophical inquiry, the overarching concern for the philosopher was in the dimension that we call metaphysics Thales and Parmenides and Anaximander and Anaxagoras and people of that stripe before Socrates and Plato and Aristotle and so on, they were asking the big questions. What is the ultimate substance from which everything comes in the universe?

682.738 - 707.417 R.C. Sproul

What is the essence of things? What stands above and beyond the physical? And that we call in philosophy the quest for metaphysics, that which is above and beyond the visible world of physical appearances. And so the ancient philosophers were preoccupied with what we call metaphysics, but they wouldn't agree on what ultimate reality was.

707.701 - 731.869 R.C. Sproul

And Plato said it was one thing, and Aristotle said it was something else again, and they would argue back and forth and so on. And finally the question was, well, wait a minute. This man's learned, and this man's learned. They're both very acute in their thinking, and yet they come to radically different conclusions about ultimate issues of metaphysics. How's that come? How do we explain that?

Chapter 6: How do modern views of anthropology differ from traditional views?

732.001 - 759.263 R.C. Sproul

So the next great emphasis in philosophy was in the dimension or the subdivision of this discipline that we call epistemology. How many of you do not know what epistemology is? Let me put it up there on the board. Who does not know what the word epistemology is? And if you don't put your hand up, I'm liable to call on you to give a definition. All right, fine.

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759.283 - 785.472 R.C. Sproul

This is one of those technical terms that the philosophers use. Epistemology is simply the science of science. I don't mean to stutter. What that means is that it is the specific discipline that undergirds all science. It asks this question, how do we know what we know? How do we learn? How can we know anything?

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786.033 - 811.806 R.C. Sproul

Do we know principally through the activity of the mind, or is it through observation, seeing, hearing, tasting, touching, and so on? So that the philosophers then said, okay, we're disagreeing over ultimate things. Now let's focus our attention on, well, how do we know anything? And so philosophy went through a lengthy period of great debate studying epistemology. The next great moment

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812.495 - 848.821 R.C. Sproul

in philosophy was the study of history. I call that phase three, man and society in relationship to each other. Ladies and gentlemen, the twentieth century has marked a dramatic shift in the whole history of theoretical thought. The overarching dominant concern of the intellectual in philosophical pursuit in the 20th century has been in the area of anthropology, asking the question, what is man?

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849.982 - 880.479 R.C. Sproul

What does it mean to exist as a human being? You've heard of existentialism, for example, as a contemporary philosophical movement of great import. We're very much concerned about self-esteem, self-identity, understanding who we are, and as creatures. As I said, there have been tremendous differences of opinions. In fact, my own professor, when I was in graduate school, made this observation.

880.539 - 883.401 R.C. Sproul

I'd like to read a quote from my professor, G.C. Berkhauer.

Chapter 7: What role does choice play in defining human existence?

884.122 - 920.802 R.C. Sproul

He made this statement, that man's reflection upon the nature of man has produced an astonishing variety of views. I mean as we think about ourselves, contemplate our own humanity, we come to all kinds of wildly divergent viewpoints. Here are some of the ways in which we have tried to define man historically. First of all, we've tried to define man strictly in terms of biology or zoology.

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921.136 - 938.311 R.C. Sproul

Do you remember when you were going to high school and you took a course in chemistry or in biology and your teacher said to you, now the total value of your person is, you know, $24.37. Now I don't know what it is today. In fact, I think it was less than that when I was in school.

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938.331 - 959.53 R.C. Sproul

I'm allowing for a certain measure of inflation, but it was some paltry sum, wasn't it, that says the total value of the zinc and the copper and the things that are found in your body, that's about what you're worth. I can buy and sell you for less than $50 on the precious commodities exchange there, according to that particular view.

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959.991 - 984.897 R.C. Sproul

Or we've seen attempts to understand man as simply one specific variety of primate apes. Remember Desmond Morris' book that was a bestseller several years ago entitled The Naked Ape, in which he said there were some 89 or so specific kinds of primates on this planet.

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985.438 - 1008.795 R.C. Sproul

You know, there are chimpanzees and there are orangutans and there are gorillas and all these different kinds of baboons and rhesus monkeys. But there's one of these primate apes that is distinguished from all the rest, not so much by its intelligence, is by the fact that it is naked.

1009.476 - 1038.438 R.C. Sproul

It's not covered with this coat of hair like orangutans and gorillas and chimpanzees, and so this one that we call Homo sapiens is distinct by the fact that it has to go out and manufacture artificial clothes to cover its nakedness because evidently this is the only one of these 80-some varieties of primates that has a problem with nakedness. has a problem with guilt.

1039.499 - 1065.576 R.C. Sproul

Notice that we're the only animal in all of creation that has artificial garments. And the Scriptures tell us the reason for it is not to keep ourselves warm, but to cover our shame. Plato was perplexed by the question of giving precise definition to a man. See, in the whole science of taxonomy, which is the science of classification.

1065.596 - 1092.096 R.C. Sproul

When I want to distinguish a bird from a fish and a fish from an antelope, I look at things that are different among them, but I also look at similarities. Look, up in the air, it's a bird. No, no, it's not a bird, it's a plane. Now, for me to confuse a bird and a plane, they have to have something in common. What do you suppose it is? They're flying through the air.

1092.837 - 1101.97 R.C. Sproul

Birds have wings and planes have wings. When planes start flapping their wings, they're not in the air very much longer.

Chapter 8: How does being made in the image of God affect our identity?

1101.99 - 1133.359 R.C. Sproul

I mean, planes don't have feathers. Planes don't build nests. Planes don't kick their little planelets out of those nests. Okay? Planes don't lay eggs, but they have in common with birds that both of them fly through the air. And of course, both of those have it in common with Superman, who also has that ability. So you see what we do when we classify. We see the similarities and the differences.

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1133.862 - 1161.583 R.C. Sproul

And Plato was going crazy trying to pinpoint the actual distinctives that would separate or distinguish a human being from all other forms of life. And finally, he had it figured out, boiled it down in his taxonomy to call man a featherless biped. That's a two-legged mammal without feathers.

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1162.324 - 1196.547 R.C. Sproul

One of the students got a plucked chicken and wrote a sign across its chest, Plato's Man, threw it over the wall into the academy, and Plato had to start all over again looking for a definition of man. Karl Marx described man as homo faber. man the fabricator, man the maker. Marx wanted to understand the uniqueness of man, not in his chemistry, not in his anatomy, but in his work habits.

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1197.208 - 1224.646 R.C. Sproul

He said man's whole life revolves around his work, his toil. And the history of civilization, the history of warfare has to do with the conflict over economic forces clashing as a result of the yield of man's labor, of his product. Man's greatest alienation is his alienation from the fruit of his own labor, which is unnatural.

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1225.167 - 1240.093 R.C. Sproul

And so Mark's whole theory of economics was rooted and grounded in the fact that he saw man as a tool maker. When anthropologists and paleontologists go back in time and try to draw the line between

1241.002 - 1272.524 R.C. Sproul

one kind of primate and human beings, the presence of tools among the fossils becomes very important because man, homo faber, is one who begins to fashion tools and use those tools to increase his production. Homo volens, V-O-L-E-N-S. Another way in which man has been defined, particularly in the latter part of the nineteenth century with a school called voluntarism.

1272.985 - 1307.003 R.C. Sproul

Here, Homo Volans says, what makes man unique is in his capacity to make choices. The real greatness of man is in his ability to choose. Nietzsche took this to one measure in where he said that the real man, the authentic man, again the ubermensch, the superman that Nietzsche wanted was a person who made his choices on his own. He was the supreme fellow who did his own thing.

1307.624 - 1340.213 R.C. Sproul

He did not live by the pressure of what Nietzsche called the herd morality. but he defined a master morality. He affirmed his own personal existence. He decided to live his life on the basis of his own private choices because that's the essence of being human. Edmund Husserl spoke of man's intentionality, that is to choose with a purpose and view as being his basic uniqueness. Jean-Paul Sartre

1340.193 - 1367.54 R.C. Sproul

In a more pessimistic vein, his conclusion, his concluding evaluation of what it means to be human was this. Sartre, you remember, said, man is a useless passion. But again, Sartre was focusing in on the dimension of choosing, making choices driven by passion that is ultimately meaningless. It's a useless, a futile passion.

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