Luke 2:52 says simply that Jesus "increased in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and man." For orthodox theology that phrase sits easily beside the doctrine of the Son's eternal pre‑existence; for the Socinians of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries it became a hinge. This episode begins by reading that verse and tracing how both classical orthodoxy and the Socinian school understood its force—showing the historical debate, the theological stakes, and why the Racovian circle put human growth at the centre of its Christology.