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Understanding Atonement: A New and Orthodox Theory

Understanding Atonement: A New and Orthodox Theory. Robin Collins, Professor of Philosophy Messiah College. Acknowledgements. I would like to thank Rebecca Adams, my spouse, for much helpful insights and input as I have worked to develop and present the Incarnational theory.

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Understanding Atonement: A New and Orthodox Theory

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  1. Understanding Atonement: A New and Orthodox Theory Robin Collins, Professor of Philosophy Messiah College

  2. Acknowledgements I would like to thank Rebecca Adams, my spouse, for much helpful insights and input as I have worked to develop and present the Incarnational theory.

  3. Doctrine Versus Theories of Atonement Doctrine of Atonement: Simply states that “through Christ’s Life, Death and Resurrection we are saved from sin and reconciled to God.” **The doctrine of Atonement states in a simple way what all Christians can agree upon with regard to what Christ accomplished by his life, death, and resurrection.

  4. Theory of Atonement Theory of Atonement: Explains how Christ’s life, death and resurrection save us from sin and reconcile us to God and why it made sense for God to use this method. Our Salvation How?

  5. What is a Theory Atonement? Continued Have you ever asked yourself Why Christ Had to Die? Has this ever struck you as puzzling? Why couldn’t God just forgive us of our sins? A theory attempts to answer these questions

  6. Doctrine Versus Theory Continued • Important: No theory of the atonement has been officially sanctioned by any Creed or Council. Neither does Scripture state any theory. Thus, there have been a variety of theories in Church history.

  7. Why Do We Need a Theory? • Helps us understand the very core of the Christian proclamation that Christ suffered and died for our sins. Thus it sheds light on almost everything else about our faith. • Helps us talk to non-Christians. (The Doctrine of Atonement is very puzzling to many outsiders.)‏

  8. Scriptural statements and symbols regarding Atonement and Salvation • Jesus is our sacrifice of Atonement (Sacrificial lamb)‏ • Jesus is our scapegoat • Jesus' life is a ransom for many • Jesus took our punishment (or chastisement)‏ • Jesus bore our sins. • Jesus turned away God wrath against sin • Jesus defeated the powers of darkness and death • Jesus’ blood washes us from sin (expiation • Jesus revealed God’s love for the world • Jesus gave us a perfect moral example to follow

  9. Scriptural Statements Regarding Atonement and Salvation • Jesus gave us new life in God • Jesus released usfrom bondage to sin. • Jesus made us righteous • Jesus justified us • Jesus’ death brought forgiveness of sins • Through Jesus we are Crucified to the World • Eucharist and Baptismal Symbols

  10. Ideally, a theory will incorporate or account for as many of the above scriptural statements regarding atonement and salvation as possible, especially those considered central.

  11. Ransom or Bargain Theory • God Makes A Bargainwith the Devil: “Hand over your claim to humans, and I will give you my only Son in exchange.” • Devil is Tricked since he did not realize that Christ could not be held in the bonds of death.

  12. Anselm’s Critique • Devil is an outlaw, and hence has no claim to anything. • Why would God ever set up the world so that the Devil could gain legal rights over Adam and Eve? This doesn’t make sense!

  13. Important Note The Ransom or Bargain theory is often confused with the so-called Christus Victor “Theory.” Christus Victor stresses that Christ’s death defeated (i.e., gained victory over) the forces of evil. Typically, however, advocates of Christus Victor do not explain how Christ’s death accomplished this, and thus it is not a theory in our sense but closer to a view of what Christ's death accomplished that emphasizes the often neglected statements regarding his defeating the forces of darkness.

  14. Satisfaction and Penal Theories: Basic Ideas • Satisfaction Theory: “Christ paid the debt of obedience that we owe God because of our sins” **First developed by St. Anselm in the 11th century • Penal Theory: Christ took on the punishment that justice demands because of our sins. **First developed by the protestant reformers

  15. SATISFACTION AND PENAL THEORIES: Basic Claims Elaborated Our sins accumulated a debt of obligation (satisfaction theory) or punishment (penal theory) so large that we could not pay it. 2. The moral order (or “God’s honour”) demands that the debt be paid or the sin be punished. 3. Christ paid the debt for us or accepted the punishment, thereby satisfying the demands of Divine Justice. 4.Therefore, God no longer needs to punish us but can shower his mercy and blessings on us.

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  17. Historical Perspective. • Some variation of these theories was dominant among Christians since the time of Anselm in the 11th Century, though the idea goes back to the early centuries. • Today, many conservative Christians, both Catholic and Protestant hold this theory. • Embodied in Christian hymns, songs, and liturgy: “He paid a debt he did not owe, I owed a debt I could not Pay” (Grogan) and “He is the true Paschal Lamb, who at the feast of Passover paid for us the debt of Adam’s sin” (Recent Episcopal Liturgy for Easter Vigil)‏ St. Anselm. Woodcarving John Calvin

  18. Critiques Satisfaction Theory: Since God the Son is united with God the Father, doesn’t this simply amount to God’s paying God’s self? Or who pays the debt we owe God the Son for our sin against him? God Pays God: God transfers money from one of his accounts to another

  19. Logical Critique --Continued Penal Theory: How can justice be satisfied by one person accepting the punishment that another deserves, especially given that God the Son is the One sinned against? Doesn't this amount to God punishing God’s own self for our sins? Does this make any sense? Or ask Yourself: If someone stabs you, does your further flogging yourself pay for the crime they committed against you?

  20. Logical Critique --Continued By further hurting themselves, are these men paying for the sins of those who wronged them?

  21. Other Critiques: • Scriptural: Nowhere does scripture state that Christ paid a debt for us on the Cross or that justice or the moral order requires that sin be punished. At best these theories rely on questionable interpretations of scripture. • Historically Contingent: Based on feudal legal system where a “debt of honor” could be paid by another. (At least for satisfaction theory.)‏ • Ethically/theologically Inadequate: e.g., turns Atonement into an “economic” or “legal” transaction.

  22. Other Critiques-- Continued • Overly Western: Depends on overly Western notions regarding moral order and its demands for punishment – Does this make sense to traditional Chinese? No. One must first convince them them of the idea that their sins are so grave that they deserve a very large, if not infinite, amount of punishment (in hell). That is, one must convince them of the bad news before one can get the the good news!! ??Does this sound like the gospel to a starving child in India, that because of her (or Adam and Eve’s) sins she actually deserves much more suffering than she is experiencing in this life?

  23. Moral Exemplar/Influence Theory Historical Origin: First Proposed byPhilosopher and Theologian Peter Abelard in the 12th Century. Was later popular in liberal theology. Basic Claims: Christ saves us by providing a perfect moral example of love,obedience, and humility to follow and by revealing the loving character of God. Peter Abelard

  24. Major Problem • As a complete theory of the Atonement it minimizes the uniqueness and significance of Christ for salvation. • For example, St. Francis, Martin Luther King, Mother Teresa, Buddhists, and many others provide inspiring, though not perfect, moral examples to follow, and thus seem to perform the same sort of salvific function as Jesus. Indeed, the fact that Jesus was perfect makes him harder to relate to, and thus less effective as an example.

  25. Summary: • To be fair, there are many variations of the above theories that attempt to circumvent the above problems. • However, except for variations of the moral exemplar/influence theory, the Western theories of atonement and salvation have tended to be based on legal metaphors –e.g., salvation as consisting of being declared “not guilty” by the Great Judge, or Satan having legal rights to human beings. . .

  26. A Look at Eastern Orthodoxy • In the the Eastern Orthodox branch of Christianity, salvation has been conceived differently: in terms of participation in the life of God and being “partakers of the divine nature” (2 Peter 1:4.) • In their language, salvation in the fullest consists of deification: being fully caught up in the Trinitarian life of God, with God in us and we in God (John 17:21-22).

  27. Basic Idea behind Eastern Orthodox “theory” of Atonement God had to share in what we are in order for us to share in what God is.

  28. History of Idea • Idea suggested by early Greek Fathers of the Church • Further developed through the centuries by Eastern Orthodox Theologians. • Has been implicit in some of the mystics in the West (i.e., Julian of Norwich). Never systematically developed, however. Eastern Orthodox Church

  29. This idea was never systematically developed in a way that was satisfactory for western philosophical and theological categories

  30. HOWEVER . . . Robin Collins has attempted to systematically develop this idea into a theory in two articles. (They are posted on the web at www.robincollins.org)‏ He calls this theory the Incarnational Theory Robin Philosophizing About Atonement

  31. Incarnational Theory Version #1Basic Claims: Step 1: Salvation = Unity with God = sharing in the life of God. (Jesus' analogy of vine and branches; Paul's analogy of the body of Christ)‏

  32. Basic Claims: Step 2:Apart from the Incarnation and Passion, God's Life would be too alien from ours for this sharing to occur. Analogy: An apple tree branch cannot be grafted into a horse; the horse is too alien for it. Incorrect Correct

  33. Basic Claims--Step 3: Through the Incarnation and Passion, God entered as deeply as possible into our human life-situation of death, suffering, and vulnerability and thereby overcame the alienation between God's self and us. Peter Paul Rubens. Christ on the Cross.1620

  34. Basic Claims Step 4: A fully human/fully divine Life was created in Jesus through his life, death, and resurrection.

  35. Basic Claims – Step 5 By partaking of this life through being grafted into the true Vine, we are saved from sin and reconciled to God. This allowed for us to share in the life of God, thus saving us from sin and bringing us into unity with God.

  36. SpecificTheory: Basic Claims --Step 1 Through the Incarnation and Passion, Christ made active (or “alive”) within the Godhead virtues (such as courage, faith, and love) of a kind that we need, can actively partake of, and exercise in our present human life-situation of vulnerability, alienation, uncertainty, and the like. Sophia and her three daughters, Faith, Hope, and Love. (From a Russian Icon)‏

  37. Basic Claims --Step 2 Apart from the Incarnation and Passion, in general virtues of the kind we need could not exist in “active or living form” in God for they are too closely tied with our life-situation of vulnerability, uncertainty, and Alienation.* *These virtues could, however, exist in dispositional form in God

  38. To Elaborate • God “in all his glory” would know what it was like • to experience fear, doubt, and uncertainty, and alienation from God. • However, God could not actually experience fear, • vulnerability to death and suffering, unjust persecution, and the like without something like the Incarnation and Passion. God in His Glory: From Versailles Chapel of Louis XIV

  39. But one cannot exercise the kind of virtues we need without experiencing fear and vulnerability…

  40. Example: Courage • Courage = a commitment to one’s values in the face of danger, fear, and personal injury. • To exercise courage, one must believe that she is vulnerable to being harmed (or at least have the experience of such vulnerability)‏

  41. Therefore… • Apart from something like the Incarnation and Passion, God could not exercise courage, especially of the kind humans need. Thus, it could not exist as an active part of the life of God. • The same thing goes for the kind of faith and love we need– e.g., trust in the face of doubt and love that risks itself in face of personal injury, alienation, fear, and the like.

  42. Basic Claims--Step 3 • Especially during his Passion and death, Jesus fully experienced human vulnerability, fear, injustice, unjust victimization, and even alienation from God as evidenced by his cry “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me” (Mark 15:34)‏ • Jesus nonetheless acted in complete faith and love towards God and others, thus making these new fully human/fully divine virtues part of the active life of God.

  43. Step #3 -- Continued These new virtues can be thought of as part of the new resurrected, fully divine/fully human life that is in Christ.

  44. Final Step • By partaking of this new resurrected life we are saved from sin and reconciled to God.

  45. That is, we are saved from sin and reconciled to God by partaking of the new fully human/fully divine life in Christ.

  46. Blood Transfusion Analogy “Truly, Truly I tell you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood have eternal life…for my flesh is true food and my blood is true drink. Those who drink my blood and eat my flesh abide in me and I in them” (John 6:54-55)‏

  47. Blood Transfusion Analogy: By entering fully into the human life situation of alienation, suffering, vulnerability, and uncertainty, and yet acting in complete trust and love, Jesus created a new “antibody” for sin. By partaking of this new antibody, the disease of sin is progressively wiped out in our lives. ** Note: In a blood transfusion, the blood types must be compatible. Likewise, for us to share in God’s life of righteousness.

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