@Duran
Your response insists that Jesus cannot be God because 1 Timothy 2:5 calls him “a man,” that he gave a “corresponding ransom,” and that Revelation 3:14 calls him “the beginning of the creation by God.” Yet each of these claims either rests on mistranslation, misunderstanding of key terms, or a selective reading of the biblical witness that refuses to let Scripture interpret Scripture.
Let us start with your interpretation of 1 Timothy 2:5–6: “For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, a man, Christ Jesus, who gave himself a corresponding ransom for all.” You claim that since Jesus is called “a man,” he cannot be God. But this passage does not deny Christ’s deity—it affirms his true humanity, which is essential for his role as mediator. The text does not say he is only a man. In fact, only one who is both fully God and fully man could mediate between God and men. A mere man cannot reconcile us to God; a created angel cannot redeem that which is infinitely beneath and infinitely above him at once. The mediation of Jesus Christ flows from the fact that he possesses both natures—divine and human—in one person (cf. Hebrews 2:14–17). The ransom he offers is of infinite worth precisely because of his divine identity. That is the very reason Paul writes in Acts 20:28 that “God purchased the Church with his own blood”—a statement that makes no sense if Jesus is not God in the flesh.
As for the “corresponding ransom” (Greek antilytron)—you reason that the ransom must be of equal ontological value to Adam and that therefore a created being, like a spirit son, could suffice. But this is a philosophical fiction, not a biblical doctrine. The term antilytron does not mean “equal in kind”; it means “in place of.” It speaks of substitution, not equivalence of created natures. Your claim collapses once we remember the fundamental truth: the offense of sin is not measured by the dignity of the offender (Adam), but by the dignity of the one offended (God). And because God is infinite, the satisfaction must be infinite. This is why Psalm 49:7–8 says: “Truly no man can ransom another, or give to God the price of his life.” Only God could pay what was owed to God. If Christ were merely an angel or a man, his death would have no more redemptive value than the death of a prophet or martyr. But Scripture presents the cross as a divine act: “For in him all the fullness of deity dwells bodily” (Col 2:9). Jehovah’s Witnesses erase this truth by mistranslating this verse in the NWT as “the fullness of divine quality”—a distortion designed to strip Jesus of his divine nature, and one that no reputable Greek lexicon supports.
1Timothy 2:6 in the original text there is no "corresponding", this is also one of the infamous Bible forgery inserts in the NWT. While in the WTS theology the ramsom is of equal value, Jesus gives more than the restoration of Adam's perfect condition to those who believe in Him (Romans 5:15-16). You can read about the Adam-Jesus parallel used by the apostle Paul and its WTS reinterpretation here:
The JW theology hinges on the idea that a perfect creature (Jesus, in their view, as Michael the Archangel) could provide a ransom for humanity. This premise drastically undervalues the gravity of sin. Sin, in its essence, is not merely a violation of God’s laws but a radical rupture in the relationship between humanity and God (cf. Isa. 59:2, Rom. 3:23). This rupture is infinite because it is an offense against an infinite God. A finite being, no matter how perfect, cannot repair this breach. Only God, who is infinite, can offer an infinite atonement. This is why God the Son became incarnate. Phil. 2:6-11 reveals that Christ, who "did not count equality with God something to be grasped," humbled Himself to take on human nature and obediently died on the Cross. This act of self-giving love is not God "paying Himself," but God stepping into His creation to restore it from within, a point beautifully captured in the doctrine of the “felix culpa.”
The Incarnation was not merely a post hoc response to sin but part of God’s eternal plan to unite creation to Himself. The Exsultet, the hymn sung during the Easter Vigil, praises the Fall of Adam as a "happy fault" (felix culpa), because it occasioned the Incarnation of Christ, through whom humanity is brought into an even greater union with God than Adam ever experienced. The Incarnation reveals the depths of God’s love. By becoming man, God dignifies human nature and opens the way for humanity not only to be redeemed but to share in the divine life (2 Peter 1:4). This divine condescension demonstrates God’s justice and mercy: justice in that sin is truly atoned for, and mercy in that the atonement is entirely God’s initiative, given freely out of love (John 3:16, Eph. 2:8-9). In the JWs’ theology, which sees Jesus as merely a created being, diminishes the profound mystery of the Incarnation. If Jesus were not God, the ransom would be inadequate, as no creature could restore the infinite breach caused by sin.
JWs frequently cite texts like Job 1-2, Gen. 3, and Rev. 12:10 to suggest that God’s sovereignty needed to be vindicated against Satan’s accusations. However, this framework implies a dualistic struggle between God and Satan, as if God’s sovereignty were ever in question. At the core of the JWs’ theodicy, God is effectively a supernatural Marty McFly playing a cosmic chicken game with the world just because Satan challenged him.
Catholic theology rejects this dualism entirely. God is omnipotent and sovereign, and His actions are never contingent upon Satan’s accusations or challenges. Instead, the story of redemption is about God’s initiative to restore humanity, not as a reaction to Satan’s rebellion but as a fulfillment of His eternal plan. In Gen. 3:15, God promises a Redeemer who will crush the serpent’s head, prefiguring Christ’s victory over sin and death. This victory is not a mere legal transaction but a cosmic renewal of all creation (Rom. 8:19-21).
JWs assert that Jesus’ sacrifice merely restores what Adam lost—perfect human life in an earthly paradise. This view, however, fails to grasp the transformative power of Christ’s redemption. The NT repeatedly emphasizes that Christ does far more than restore; He elevates humanity. Through His death and resurrection, believers are not merely returned to Edenic innocence but are made partakers of the divine nature (2 Pet. 1:4), adopted as children of God (Rom. 8:15-17), and united with Christ in His glory (Col. 3:4). The JWs’ focus on Christ as a "corresponding ransom" (NWT) for Adam’s sin reduces the Incarnation to a mere corrective measure, ignoring the fullness of God’s salvific plan. As Paul writes in Rom. 5:15-17, the grace given through Christ surpasses the trespass of Adam. Salvation is not merely the restoration of what was lost but the elevation of humanity to eternal communion with God.
Catholic theology offers a coherent soteriological framework that fully accounts for the depth of sin and the necessity of God’s direct intervention. The Trinity is not a contradiction but the ultimate expression of God’s nature as love (1 John 4:8). Only a Trinitarian God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—can fully accomplish the work of creation, redemption, and sanctification. JW theology, by denying Christ’s deity, limits the scope of salvation and misunderstands the radical transformation offered through Christ. The Catholic view, grounded in Scripture and tradition, affirms that the Incarnation and the Cross are not merely about restoring what was lost but about drawing humanity into the very life of God—a mystery so profound that it can only be described as a “felix culpa.”
Your appeal to Revelation 3:14, where Jesus is called “the archē of the creation of God” (not "by God", as the NWT falsely renders), is based on a mistranslation. The Greek phrase is hē archē tēs ktiseōs tou Theou. But archē in Greek does not mean “first created thing” but “source” or “origin.” The same word is used in Revelation 21:6 and 22:13 to describe God as “the beginning and the end.” Are we to believe God Himself is a created being? Certainly not. Jesus is the principium, the origin, the source of creation—not the first creature. This is confirmed by John 1:3, which states that “All things were made through him, and without him was not anything made that was made.” Jesus is not part of creation—he is its Creator. If he were created, he would belong to the category of “things that were made.” But John explicitly excludes him from that category.
You cite Colossians 1:15, calling Jesus “the firstborn of all creation,” to support the idea that he was created. But again, this reflects a linguistic error. “Firstborn” (prōtotokos) in Jewish and biblical thought refers not to time of birth, but to rank and preeminence. Israel is called God’s “firstborn” in Exodus 4:22—not because it was the first nation ever created, but because of its privileged status. Likewise, Psalm 89:27 says of the Messiah, “I will make him the firstborn, the highest of the kings of the earth.” Paul’s point in Colossians 1 is not that Jesus is the first created being, but that he is supreme over all creation—because (v.16) “by him all things were created.”
Jehovah’s Witnesses distort this passage by inserting the word “other” four times (“all other things”) into their NWT—without any textual warrant—solely to maintain their theological presupposition that Jesus is created. That is not translation. That is manipulation.
You also quote Philippians 2:6–8, claiming that Jesus “did not even consider the idea of trying to be equal to God” (NWT). But this again is a mistranslation. The Greek says that Jesus, “existing in the form of God (en morphē theou hyparchōn), did not regard equality with God something to be grasped (or clung to), but emptied himself.” Paul’s point is not that Jesus lacked equality with God, but that he possessed it—and chose not to exploit it. The word harpagmos ("grasped") implies something one already has, not something one tries to seize unlawfully. Thus, Christ’s humility does not prove inferiority—it demonstrates that though he is God, he did not use his divine status for self-advantage but entered into human suffering for our sake. The NWT mistranslates this to avoid what the text affirms: Jesus is God, but chose the path of servant love.
You attempt to construct a theology in which Jesus is merely God’s first spirit creation, an exalted angel turned man. But that theology collapses when held up to the whole of Scripture. Consider again Hebrews 1:3: “He is the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his being (hypostasis).” This does not describe a creature. No created being is the exact imprint of God's essence. Psalm 89:6–7 (NWT) states clearly: “Who in the heavens can be compared to Jehovah?”—and the answer is none. Yet Hebrews says the Son is the precise imprint of God’s being. Therefore, the Son is not merely comparable to God—he is God, sharing in the very essence of the Father.
And lest there be any doubt, Hebrews 1:6 commands the angels to worship the Son. The Greek word is proskuneō, which in this context refers to divine worship. Yet Isaiah 42:8 says: “My glory I give to no other.” If Jesus were a creature, then Hebrews would be commanding blasphemy. But it is not blasphemy—because the Son is not “another” from God in essence. He is one in being, distinct in person. He is worthy of the same worship as the Father, because he shares in the same divine glory.
You appeal to emotion and simplicity. But theology must be guided not by our feelings, but by revelation. The God of the Bible is not a solitary monad who creates creatures to solve problems for him. He is the eternal communion of love—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—who, in the fullness of time, took on flesh not because He lacked options, but because He is the option. No angel can save us because no angel is God. And only God can reconcile us to God.
You strip Christ of his glory, claiming he is merely a tool used by Jehovah. But Scripture says “in him the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily” (Col 2:9). Not “divine quality,” as the NWT says, but deity—theotēs. Only one who is truly God can bear infinite justice, offer infinite mercy, and pour out the Holy Spirit to transform the world.
The Trinity is not a philosophical add-on. It is the only theology that preserves the fullness of God’s justice, mercy, and love—while grounding redemption not in creaturely merit, but in divine initiative. It is mystery, yes. But mystery revealed. Not invented by man, but proclaimed by the apostles, confessed by the Church, and preserved by the Spirit.
You can deny it—but Scripture does not. And every page, from Genesis to Revelation, testifies not to a created messenger, but to Emmanuel—God with us.