Atonement History
The
Christian Churches attempts to understand Christ’s Atonement and Sacrifice. The
following theories are listed in chronological order. However multiple theories
may exist concurrently.
Moral
Influence Theory
The
Apostolic Fathers About 100-200 AD Vague time frame.
Their
chief emphasis is on what Christ imparted to us: new Knowledge, Fresh life,
Immortality.
Clement
states: Through Him God has called us from darkness to light from ignorance to
knowledge of the glory of His name. Clement further says that Christ endured it
all on account of us and that His sufferings should bring us to repentance. Hemas adds that Christ reveals to us the true God. Barnabas notes that
He came to abolish death and to demonstrate resurrection from the dead.
Reiterated by Abelard in the 1100’s
Apologists
also about 100-200 AD
The ideas
stayed much the same with the Apologists with the addition of the concept that
not only does God impart saving knowledge and bestow illumination, but
principalities and powers are destroyed by Him. Justin says that the aim of the
incarnation was the conquest of the serpent. Justin further adds that Christ
became a man for our sakes, so that participating in our miseries He might heal
them. The essence of the Moral Influence theory is that Christ’s Atoning work
is directed to leading man to repentance and faith by revealing the true nature
of God
Irenaeus
about 180 AD
The Theory
of Recapitulation (AKA Physical Theory, Mystical Theory)
This idea
presupposes some kind of mystical solidarity or identity, between the father of
the race and all his descendants. At the time of the fall they somehow already
existed in Adam. Thus Irenaeus states that just as Adam contained in himself
all his descendants (which is how all have sinned by Adams sin) so Christ
recapitulated in Himself all the dispersed peoples dating back to Adam, all
tongues and the whole race of mankind, along with Adam himself. His conclusion
is that humanity which was seminally present in Adam has been given the
opportunity of making a new start in Christ, the second Adam, through
incorporation in his mystical body. The original Adam by disobedience
introduced the principle of sin and death, but Christ by His obedience has
reintroduced the principle of life and immortality. Because He is identified
with the human race at every phase of it existence, He restores fellowship with
God to all. To Irenaeus it is obedience that God requires, and in order to
exhibit such obedience, Christ had to live His life through all its stages, not
excluding death itself.
Origen
184-254
Origen who
had one of the greatest influences on Christian thinking incorporated a wide
range of reasons for Christ’s sacrifice. His views incorporated elements of
knowledge and illumination, mysticism, Jesus as model, Ransom to the Devil, and
ideas of substitution. Origen was an extremely creative thinker, however many
of his ideas border on the bizarre.
Ransom
Theory about 350-400
This
theory with elements taken from Origin interprets the death of Christ as a
Ransom paid by God to Satan in order to secure the redemption of humanity,
which has been brought under his dominion by sin.
Different
writers had various options on this theory. Some admitted the possession of his
captives, and the death is interpreted as a ransom due to the devil on grounds
of justice. Others denied the devil has a right to sinners, but by God’s
graciousness in being unwilling to take by force that which was rightfully His.
Still others felt that man’s deliverance was secured by deception on God’s
part. Satan being deceived by the humble appearance of the Redeemer into
supposing that he had to do with a mere man. Finding only too late that the
Deity whose presence he had not perceived escaped his clutches through the
Resurrection.
Some of
the adherents to this view include Augustine, Gregory the Great, Gregory of
Nyssa. Amazingly enough this theory lasted for several centuries.
Satisfaction Theory 1100
This
theory was first produced in a clear coherent manner by Anselm in his treatise,
Cur Deus Homo, which translated means Why a Godman? Anselm finds no reason in
justice why God was under any obligation to Satan. Anselm maintains that
Christ’s Atonement concerns God and not the devil. Man by his sin has violated
the honor of God and defiled His handiwork. It is not consistent with the
Divine self-respect that He should permit His purpose to be thwarted. Yet this
purpose requires the fulfillment by man of the perfect law of God, which by sin
man has transgressed. For this transgression, repentance is no remedy, since
penitence, however sincere, cannot atone for the guilt of past sin. Nor can any
finite substitute, whether man or angel make reparation. Sin being against the
infinite God, is infinitely guilty, and can be atoned for only by an infinite
satisfaction. Thus either man must be punished and God’s purpose fail or else
man must make an infinite satisfaction, which is impossible. There is only one
way of escape, and that is that someone should be found who can unite in his
own person the attributes both of humanity and of infinity. This is brought
about by the incarnation of Christ. In Christ we have one who is very man, and
can therefore make satisfaction to God on behalf of humanity, but who is at the
same time very God, and whose person therefore gives infinite worth to the
satisfaction which He makes. Christ death which is voluntarily given when it is
not due since He was without sin, is the infinite satisfaction which secures
the salvation of man.
Substitution
Theory 1500’s (AKA Penal Theory)
The
Protestant view held many of Anselm’s presuppositions regarding Christ’s
Atonement. However it was modified in one very substantial way. The central
position of the Atonement was interpreted not as satisfaction, but as
punishment, and hence given a substitutionary significance. The infinite guilt
of man’s sin which has so utterly alienated mankind from the Kingdom of Heaven
that none but a person reaching to God can be the medium of restoring peace.
Such an efficient mediator is found in Christ alone. Through whose atoning
death the price of man’s forgiveness is paid and a way of salvation made open.
Calvin considers the Atonement not as a meritorious satisfaction accepted as a
substitute for punishment, but as the vicarious endurance by Christ of that
punishment itself. Calvin denies that God was ever hostile to Christ or angry
with Him, yet in His Divine providence He suffered His Son to go through the
experience of those against whom God is thus hostile. In His own consciousness,
Christ bore the weight of the Divine anger, was smitten and afflicted, and
experienced all the signs of an angry and avenging God.
The Penal
Theory was severally criticized by the Socinians, who attacked the entire
concept of substitutionary punishment. They held that punishment and
forgiveness are inconsistent ideas. If a man is punished he cannot be forgiven,
and vice versa. Under the theory of distributive justice, punishment, being a
matter of the relation between individual guilt and its consequences, is
strictly untransferable. The Socinians held to the Moral Influence Theory as
mentioned by the Apostolic Fathers and the Apologists of the second century
church.
Governmental Theory (AKA Rectoral Theory)
In
response to the Socinians Hugo Grotius wrote a work entitled The
Satisfaction of Christ. Grotius was writing in defense of the
Penal/Substitution Theory, however he, perhaps unknowingly modified the theory.
In this view God does not deal with men as a judge but as a governor, who
unlike a judge may temper justice with mercy, but the motives which lead him so
to temperate are never arbitrary. Thus Christ’s death is a substitute for
punishment, a suffering inflicted by God and voluntarily accepted by Christ,
which works upon men by moral influence in order to conserve the ends of
righteousness. Such suffering on Christ’s part is necessary, since forgiveness
on the basis of repentance alone might be misinterpreted by men and lead to grave
carelessness. Among Arminians it has practically supplanted the older Penal
Theory.
These
constitute the main Salvation/Atonement theories. However there are several
variations on each of the above theories, as well as different combinations of
the major theories by other Theologians.
Sources:
Early
Christian Doctrines J.N.D. Kelly Harper & Row, Pub. New York 1960
pp.
163-183, 375-395
Encyclopedia
of Religion and Ethics Vol. 5 pp. 640-650
The New
Schaff-Herzog Religious Encyclopedia pp. 349-356
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