Is Jesus Christ truly God? Can one person be both fully divine and fully human?For two thousand years, the Christian church has confessed that Jesus Christ is the eternal Son of God incarnate-truly God and truly man, one person in two natures. Yet this central doctrine has faced relentless challenges from philosophical skeptics, Jewish scholars, and Islamic theologians who argue that the Incarnation is logically impossible, biblically unfounded, or theologically blasphemous.Defending the Incarnate God provides a comprehensive defense of orthodox Christology against its most formidable critics. Drawing on Scripture, the church fathers, and the ecumenical councils, this book demonstrates why Christ must be both God and man for salvation to be possible.Inside, you'll discover: Rigorous responses to philosophical objections: Can omniscience and limited knowledge coexist in one person? How can the immutable God become incarnate? Does the Incarnation violate basic logic? Learn how Chalcedonian Christology resolves apparent contradictions through careful distinction between person and nature.Biblical evidence for Christ's divinity: Examine the New Testament's pervasive testimony-from pre-Pauline hymns to the "I AM" statements of John's Gospel-showing that the earliest Christians worshiped Jesus as God within years of his resurrection.Answers to Jewish critiques: Engage thoughtful Jewish objections about messianic prophecies, the virgin birth, the Suffering Servant of Isaiah 53, and how Christian worship of Jesus relates to the Shema's confession of God's absolute unity.Refutations of Islamic challenges: Respond to accusations of shirk (associating partners with God), the impossibility of divine begetting, claims of scriptural corruption (tahrif), and Islamic portrayals of Jesus as prophet rather than divine Savior.The patristic consensus: Trace how the church fathers-from Ignatius of Antioch (107 AD) to John of Damascus (8th century)-consistently taught Christ's full divinity and full humanity across diverse cultures and languages.The ecumenical councils: Understand how Nicaea, Constantinople, Ephesus, Chalcedon, and subsequent councils formulated orthodox Christology in response to heresies that threatened the gospel itself.Soteriological necessity: Discover why redemption requires Christ to be both God (to possess power to save) and man (to represent humanity)-and why every heresy that compromises either nature inadvertently destroys salvation.Christology and Christian life: Explore how orthodox understanding of Christ's person shapes worship, prayer, the sacraments, suffering, hope, and the pursuit of holiness.Written for thoughtful Christians seeking to understand and defend their faith, this book combines scholarly rigor with pastoral sensitivity. Whether you're a pastor, student, apologist, or inquirer wrestling with Christianity's central claims, Defending the Incarnate God equips you to articulate why the church's ancient confession-that Jesus Christ is Lord, fully God and fully man-remains intellectually credible, biblically grounded, and spiritually vital.The debate over Christ's identity is not peripheral theology but the foundation of Christian faith. Get Christology wrong, and everything else unravels. Get it right, and everything else finds its center."That which He has not assumed He has not healed; but that which is united to His Godhead is also saved." -Gregory of Nazianzus