True Knowledge of God
            
            
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              excellent name than they. For unto which of the angels said He at
            
            
              any time.
            
            
              “Thou art My Son,
            
            
              This day have I begotten Thee?
            
            
              And again,
            
            
              I will be to Him a Father,
            
            
              And He shall be to Me a Son?”
            
            
              Hebrews 1:1-5.
            
            
              The personality of the Father and the Son, also the unity that
            
            
              exists between Them, are presented in the seventeenth chapter of
            
            
              John, in the prayer of Christ for His disciples:
            
            
              “Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall
            
            
              believe on Me through their word; that they all may be one; as Thou,
            
            
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              Father, art in Me, and I in Thee, that they also may be one in Us:
            
            
              that the world may believe that Thou hast sent Me.”
            
            
              John 17:20, 21
            
            
              .
            
            
              The unity that exists between Christ and His disciples does not
            
            
              destroy the personality of either. They are one in purpose, in mind,
            
            
              in character, but not in person. It is thus that God and Christ are one.
            
            
              Character of God Revealed in Christ
            
            
              Taking humanity upon Him, Christ came to be one with hu-
            
            
              manity, and at the same time to reveal our heavenly Father to sinful
            
            
              human beings. He who had been in the presence of the Father from
            
            
              the beginning, He who was the express image of the invisible God,
            
            
              was alone able to reveal the character of the Deity to mankind. He
            
            
              was in all things made like unto His brethren. He became flesh even
            
            
              as we are. He was hungry and thirsty and weary. He was sustained
            
            
              by food and refreshed by sleep. He shared the lot of men; yet He
            
            
              was the blameless Son of God. He was a stranger and sojourner on
            
            
              the earth—in the world, but not of the world; tempted and tried as
            
            
              men and women today are tempted and