Hardly any area of Christian doctrine is more widely misunderstood
among the holiness movement's clergy than the doctrine of the Atonement.
I have had whole seminary classes raise their hands, signifying that
they believe Christ paid the penalty for us. It is also widely understood
that Christ's death paid the debt we owed to God. Also, it is sometimes
thought that, in this area, we can use a smorgasbord of theories.
As I understand Scripture, though, it teaches what Arminians have
called the governmental theory, when that theory is expanded to
make room for such matters as ransom and love and God's holiness
(as emphasized by P.T. Forsyth).
The governmental theory of the Atonement is at its base the view
that Christ suffered for us so that the holy God could forgive us
and still govern us justly. The seeds of this theory are in the teachings
of James Arminius (1560-1609); but it was first taught, as an atonement
view, by one of his students, Hugo Grotius. Late last century it
was explicated quite thoroughly by Methodism's John Miley in his
Atonement in Christ.
The theory will be discussed first by showing what it cannot incorporate
into itself, and then by treatment of what it can and does consist
of.
What It Cannot Incorporate
The governmental theory can incorporate into itself everything that
Scripture teaches about the Atonement. It can incorporate into itself,
therefore, the salient aspects of several Atonement theories, such
as the classical 'ransom' and 'moral influence' theories. These matters
will be discussed presently.
At the same time, it is not so eclectic that it has any affinity
for the main elements of two of the major Atonement theories: the
payment of a debt in the 'satisfaction' theory; and Christ's being
punished, as in the 'punishment' theory.
Whereas Calvinists boldly teach that Christ paid the penalty
for us--that He took our punishment--and believe their view to
be Biblical, it is altogether opposed to the teaching of Scripture.
Neither the
Hebrew Old Testament nor the Greek New Testament ever teach
this view. The NIV, translated by Calvinists in the main, renders
the
Hebrew 'musar' in Isa. 53:5 as "punishment" (reading "the
punishment that brought us peace was upon him"), whereas the
KJV uses "chastisement." The KJV, also translated by Calvinists
as a matter of fact, does not once use any form of the English word
for "punishment" to describe what happened to Christ. Always
the word is "suffering," or certain synonyms of that word.
Scripture teaches that Christ 'suffered' for us, not that He was
'punished' for us. The KJV states 27 times that Christ suffered for
us. The NASB has the same number; the NIV has 1 more. The RSV uses
some form of the word "suffering" for what Christ
did for us 26 times.
The reason why Scripture teaches that Christ suffered for us instead
of being punished is, in part, because He was sinless and therfore
guiltless. It is also in part because God the Father really does
forgive us, whereas, if He punished Christ instead of us, He could
not then have forgiven us. In Christ's substitutionary punishment,
justice would have been satisfied, procluding forgiveness. One cannot
both punish and forgive; surely a parent could not.
The other aspect of the Atonement theory that the theory cannot
incorporate into itself is the main aspect of Anselm's 'satisfaction'
theory: that Christ's death paid a debt for us. Even as one
cannot punish and then also forgive, one cannot accept payment
for a debt
and still forgive it. Roman Catholics teach, even make a sacrament
of, the doctrine of penance. This is the doctrine that we do
not receive sheer forgiveness, but that we must first do various
disciplinary
penances in order to receive forgiveness. So Anselm's satisfaction
view suits Roman Catholic teaching but not Protestant doctrine.
Protestants do not understand that Christ paid a debt for us. That
is, we do
not formally and ideally believe it, although the idea creeps
into Protestant practice--as through the Elvina M. Hall hymn, "Jesus
paid it all; All to Him I owe." We might even think of Christ's
paying a debt for us because of the Scripture passage that reads, "You
are not your own; you were bought at a price" Cor. 6:19-20).
This no doubt means that we are bought with the price of Christ's
suffering, not by a debt being paid for us. And the hymn can be sung
with a similar understnding. "Jesus paid it all" can
mean that He paid the cost of suffering, and that we owe Him
everything
because He, the altogether sinless One, suffered on our behalf.
Yet many Protestants no doubt interpret both the Pauline statement
and
the Elvina Hall hymn according to the Roman Catholic teaching
that Christ's death paid the Father a debt on our behalf. But
again, as
with punishment, so with this teaching: neither a human being
nor God can accept payment for and still forgive the same debt.
And forgiveness,
sheer forgiveness, is unique to Christianity of all the religions
and must be protected.
It might seem to some people that there is scriptural basis for
Christ's paying our debt in the Bible's saying that Christ
gave His life as a "ransom" (e.g., Mark 10:45). But payment of a
debt and ransom are different. This is partly because the debt was
thought of as paid to God, whereas Christ's giving His life as a
ransom redeems us, buys us back, from the slavery to Satan that sin
had gotten us into. Thus Halford E. Luccock says that Christ's death
as a ransom is "the price by which people have been delivered
from bondage."
What It Can Incorporate
While the governmental theory cannot incorporate into itself the
understanding that Christ paid the penalty for us, or that He paid
a debt for us, it can indeed incorporate into itself all the various
teachings of Scripture and numerous understandings promoted in the
other major Atonement theories.
For one thing, it can incorporate into itself Peter Forsyth's
emphasis on how God's holiness figures in the Atonement. The basic
elements
of P. T. Forsyth's understanding of the Atonement can be--and
should be--incorporated into the governmental theory. One of Forsyth's
contributions,
in his great book on the Atonement, "The Work of Christ," is
that in this deed, God himself made the "offering." Forsyth
says, "The real objective element in atonement is not that something
was offered to God, but that God made the offering." He similarly
says, "God made the atonement." This is a profound
understanding.
Forsyth also says that the Atonement was "something actually
done, and not merely said or shown, by God, something really done
from the depth of God who is the action of the world." So
God actually did something for us. Some interpreters have suggested
that,
since Forsyth was saying things like this in 1910, he might
well have influenced Karl Barth's emphasis on the deeds that
God actually
did on our behalf. This understanding, which emphasizes what
is concretely historical and actual, in distinction from what
is merely ideational
and ethereal, or conceptual, can and should be incorporated
into the governmental theory.
A kindred emphasis in Forsyth which should also be incorporated
into the governmental theory of the Atonement is that it is
not quite that "Christ and His death reconciled God to man," but
that in that death we have "God reconciling himself." He
means to say that there was no "third party" who
reconciled God and man, but that God Himself did it.
Forsyth also viewed the Atonement as something done for the race,
somewhat as Olin Alfred Curtis had done in his 'Christian Faith'
of 1905. This racial concept can also surely be incorporated
into the governmental theory. Forsyth says, "The first charge upon
Christ and His Cross was the reconciliation of the race, and of its
individuals by implication." Surely Paul had something
like this in mind when he spoke of the racial significance
of both Adam
and Christ Rom. 5:12-21; I Corinthians 15).
Perhaps the single most basic aspect of Forsyth's Atonement view
is his emphasis on God's holiness. Indeed, that emphasis is
part and parcel of these other matters. Forsyth says, "What is meant
by the holiness of God is the holy God." Holiness is more than
an attribute. It is what God basically is. And it is because of this,
for Forsyth, that God had to bring judgment upon sin by Christ's
atoning death, before being able, as holy, to forgive sin. Sin defied
God as the "Holy One." We would not even respect
a God who told us that our sins were simply being overlooked.
In the Atonement,
the holy God himself became an offering for the whole race,
judging sin, making it possible for He Himself to forgive sin
without sin's
being appraised lightly. This is similar to the governmental
theory concept of John Miley and others. It is even more profound,
though,
than Miley's theory that Christ's death makes it possible for
God to forgive the sinner and still maintain His governmental
control
over us, since we will see that sin is serious since Jesus
had to die before it could be forgiven. Forsyth says that Jesus
had to go
to the Cross because God could not otherwise forgive us and
still be the Holy One. Miley's view is Biblical, and Forsyth's
is also
Biblical. Forsyth's understanding is more profoundly Biblical
and theological than Miley's, and it should be incorporated
into the
governmental theory.
The governmental theory can incorporate into itself the emphasis
on Christ's ransoming us as in the classical 'ransom' theory
of the Atonement. Christ did indeed ransom us from Satan, as Scripture
teaches
us. Christ did indeed "give his life as a ransom for many," as
we read in Matt. 20:28 and Mark 10:45 (also see Heb. 9:15). The Greek
word for ransom is 'lutron,' and it literally means "a means
of loosing." Here the accompanying proposition is 'anti,' meaning
that Christ gave His life as a means of loosing us from Satan's bondage--"instead
of" those who accept Him giving their own lives over to
Satan's continuing bondage.
Paul uses the ransom figure the only other time it is found in
the New Testament in 1 Tim. 2:5-6, where he speaks of "the man Christ
Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom (antilutron) for all men." Here
the preposition "for" translates the Greek 'huper,' "on
behalf of." Instead of His doing this for "the many," as
in the Matthew and Mark statement (which might conceivably suggest
that it was done for the elect, but probably refers to the ones who
accept the benefits), Paul here says it was done for "all," "indicating
that the ransom was provisionally universal."
Moreover, the governmental theory incorporates into itself the
emphasis on God's love that is the main point in the Abelardian
'moral
influence' theory. As long as we are not talking about an emphasis
on God's
love so extreme as to deprecate His holiness and man's sinfulness
and other important Christian emphases, a governmental theorist
may and should include an emphasis on God's love. John 3:16 excites
Christians
commonly, where we all read, "For God so loved the world that
he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall
not perish but have eternal life." Christ's own love spelled
out for us in drops of blood from five bleeding wounds is also common
to all Christians, for we all read, "For Christ's love compels
us, because we are convinced that one died for all...And he died
for all, that those who live should no longer live for themselves
but for him who died for them and was raised again" 2 Cor. 5:14-15).
Christ's love--displayed so vividly on the Cross, when He did not
have to die but did, when He could have called for more than 12 legions
of angels to deliver Him from His enemies but did not do it-compels
us to turn to the Father for forgiveness. The RSV, instead of "compels," translates
it with "controls us." The Greek word there means "shuts
us up to a given course," so that we can hardly do anything
else but respond to such a Golgotha deed.
Moreover, the governmental theory includes the vicarious aspect
of the Atonement. That is, it includes the understanding that
Christ did something "on behalf of" us. Here the preposition is
'huper.' It is used in Scripture numerous times for what Christ did.
It is translatd "on behalf of," and it means that Christ's
death was "on behalf of" us. This is the special
basis for our understanding that there is a vicarious element
in the Atonement.
Not only was it something done as a substitute for something
else, but also it was done vicariously for us, or on our behalf,
so that
its benefit can be transferred to us. The use of this word
'huper' means that the worth of His substitutionary suffering
can be transferred
to our account, if we repent and believe.
It Has Wide Applications
Since Christ's suffering on everyone's behalf is provisionally redemptive,
our present suffering on behalf of others is also provisionally redemptive.
This might be the inmost kernel of truth of the Christian faith:
that suffering is provisionally redemptive. And its application is
wide-scoped. It means that when we suffer for others, it can become
a means of their turning to God to receive the benefits of Christ's
suffering love on the Cross.
This is why Paul says, "For it has been granted to you on behalf
of Christ not only to believe on him, but also to suffer for him,
since you are going through the same struggle you saw I had, and
now hear that I still have" (Phil. 1:29-30). The word for "granted" here
is 'echaristhe,' from 'charidzomai,' meaning "to give...graciously
as a favor." It means that the Philippians had been gifted
with the privilege of suffering on Christ's behalf.
Paul is still more clear about the redemptive value of our suffering
when he says to the Colossians, "Now I rejoice in what was suffered
for you, and I fill up in my flesh what is still lacking in regard
to Christ's afflictions, for the sake of his body, which is the church" (1:24).
It might seem strange that something is lacking in Christ's
suffering, which Paul says he makes up for through his own
sufferings. Yet that
is what he says. And what is lackiing in Christ's afflications
is that they were done a long time ago and a long way off.
They are
of infinite worth, of course, but there is much space and time
difference between His sufferings and the life situations of
specific people
today. But when we suffer for them, when we stand right up
in front of people and suffer on their behalf, it commands
their attention.
When a mother suffers for an erring son, not sleeping until
he gets home at night, praying for him, it commands his attention.
When a
Christian factory worker does his own work, plus that of a
fellow worker, uncomplainingly after the worker has been too
drunk on the
weekend to return to the workplace, it commands the worker's
attention and can become redemptive. When a Christian husband
suffers through
a wife's un-Christian practices and still cares for her as
the prophet Hosea did, the suffering can be redemptive. Such
instances of suffering
can occasion a straying person's turning to the God of suffering
love for the forgiveness that He offers.
The governmental theory is also substitutionary. According to
this theory, what Christ did became a substitute for something
else
that would otherwise occur. In the punishment theory, His punishment
is
a substitution for the punishment the elect would have received
in hell. In the satisfaction theory, Christ substituted the payment
of a debt man owed to God by His meritorious death--earning
points
since He was sinless and therefore did not deserve it. But
there is substitution also in the governmental theory--substitution
of
a different sort. Here there is a double-dimension substitution.
There is substitution in the sense that something Christ did
substituted for something that would have been required of the
finally impenitent.
But then, there is a substitution of the guiltless Christ's
suffering for the punishment that those who repent and believe
would have received
in eternal hell. Scripture speaks of some form of substitution.
This is when Scripture uses the proposition 'anti,' "instead of," as
when we read, "The Son of Man did not come to be served, but
to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for (anti) many" (Matt.
20:28; Mark 10:45).
Surely then, we Atonement, in our preaching and teaching, are not
to tell people that Christ paid the penalty for us or our debt. And
surely we are to expand the theory of our tradition to include whatever
is scriptural, particularly its teaching of the ransom figure, of
God's love in it, and of God's holiness.