Yeshua was the visible (outer mosaic) human form of his Father; in other words, he carried the mind of his Father. He spoke his Father's words and carried out his Father's commands and expressions. Even his human gestures and mannerisms reflected his Father. Although he was never his Father, nor identical or truly equal to him, he was his Son, the Son of God in a very unique and personal way, very different from other men and other creatures called a son of God.
From a young age, Yeshua learned about his Father and his mission. By the time he first met John the Baptist, he had become a humble man, devoted solely to serving his Father. He chose to surrender his own will and spirit to his Father—this act of emptying himself—and formally declared this commitment through his baptism. Like Isaac with his Father, Yeshua and his Father, God, became human servants willing to die unconditionally for their Fathers.
This is a very weak explanation of the passage that changes the order of what Paul says. Notice that
you say "He chose to surrender his own will and spirit to his Father—this act of emptying himself." But what does the Bible say?
Php 2:6 who,
though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped,
Php 2:7 but
emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men.
Php 2:8 And
being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.
There is clearly a sequential order to what Paul states. First, the Son "was in the form of God." Second, the Son "emptied himself." And Paul tells us
how he emptied himself--"by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men."
Notice that Paul contrasts the Son being "in the form of God" with "taking the form of servant." The meaning is the same in regards to "form." So, your claim--"Yeshua was the visible (outer mosaic) human form of his Father; in other words, he carried the mind of his Father."--doesn't make sense of the context at all. We should note also that "being found in human form"
was the result of him
emptying himself; the Son was the one who did the emptying, not the Father.
This is perfectly consistent with John 1:1 and 1:14--the Word always was (
en), meaning had always existed, in an eternal, interpersonal relationship with (
pros) God and was God in nature, and then entered time and became (
egeneto) flesh. It is worth noting that
egeneto is also used in verse 3, translated as "were made." John contrasts that with
en, used three times in verse 1 and once in verse 2, which has the idea of continuous existence. He is showing who is eternal and what is not.
That is the consistent message throughout the NT.
Regarding how point #4 relates to #1...
By Yeshua's own choice, he accepted being expendable, even to the point of death for his Father. He then naturally filled this spiritual void and his purpose with his Father's purpose. He embraced, obeyed, and imitated his Father's will in both thought and action, who is God. It was as if he truly lived as his Father's natural Son, while still being a son of man.
1.
Who "was in the form of God"?
4.
How did he empty himself?
In light of what I have said above, about what the passage is saying, it seems that the only reasonable answer is that the Son "emptied himself" because being God in nature, he had the power to do so. We must be careful to understand that this does not mean he ceased being God, but simply that by taking on human nature, the way he existed as God became different; that he was willing to humble himself.
And that is precisely Paul's point of the passage--Christ's humility (vv. 1-4, 8). There is no greater example of humility that could be conceived than that of God (the Son) becoming human, a creature that he created, so that we could be saved from the mess we got ourselves into. That is the mind we are to have towards each other.
No, and yet it is. We must read what the Bible actually states plainly.
I don't see where you answered my question: What is "the word of the Father," according to Scripture?