The Apostles and early Church Fathers presented in simplicity the
life and atoning death of Christ as the only way of salvation through
repentance and faith, and did not concentrate on developing scientific
statements on how this takes place. It appears that we can group
the theories of the centuries under four main headings:
1. SATISFACTION THEORY: - Strictly vicarious and exactly
equivalent to man's guilt.
A. Satisfaction to Satan, to whom man had chosen to give allegiance
and must be liberated by Christ paying to him the ransom price (common
from 3rd to 11th centuries): Irenaeus (130?-202?); Origen (185?-254?);
Gregory of Nyssa (335-399; Augustine (354-430); Bernard of Clairvaux
(1091-1153).
B. Satisfaction to God the Father universally for all mankind,
through a sacrificial death of the Divine Logos who had become
one
with lost humanity: Athanasius (296-373), the great defender of
the Deity of
Christ. In salvation the goodness of God must act consistent
with His truthfulness and honor, which involves the principle of
justice. "Christ
as man endured death for us, inasmuch as He offered Himself for that
purpose to the Father." Man must be freed not only from
the penalty of sin, but from sin itself and be quickened into
life.
C. Satisfaction to the ethical nature or justice of God, which demands
absolute legal vindication: Anselm (1033-1109), said to have written
the first scientific treatise on the Atonement, 1098. God rightfully
demands honor and supremacy which man has refused to give, and thus
has incurred a debt to God which can only be paid by punishment or
by some substituted satisfaction. The God-man, Jesus Christ, with
austere dignity came into our world and by His immaculate conduct
and by His obedience to a gruesome suffering of death acquired merit
before God which may be imputed to the believer as a perfect judicial
standing.
D. Satisfaction through a mystical union or a sacrificial bearing
of the penalty of sin, providing a "relative satisfaction" as
distinguished from an absolute strictly l egal satisfaction
in the full discharge of guilt, as advocated by Anselm: Bernard
of Clairvaux
(1091-1153), a pious and influential monk, typical of the majority
of theological leaders from Apostolic times up to Anselm and
the Reformation, who followed the descriptive statements of
the New Testament
without pursuing them to ultimate speculative conclusions.
E. Satisfaction to the offended holiness and justice of God through
Christ's bearing the full penalty of man's sin in His vicarious
death: Luther (1483-1546); Calvin (1509-1564); and early Reformation
leaders,
who adopted Anselm's principle of strict judicial satisfaction.
The entire guilt and punishment that sinners deserve was transferred
to Christ, who by His obedience in life and sufferings endured
their
total penalty so that sin may no longer be imputed or penalty
demanded from those for whom He died, or from those who had been
elected to
be saved from all eternity. "Our sins were transferred
to Him by imputation."
F. Satisfaction as above, with greater emphasis in early post-Reformation
times upon the active righteousness of Christ being imputed to the
believer as a perfect positive standing: Lutheran and Reformed (or
Calvinistic) Confessions, and the Federal Headship theory developed
by Cocceius (1603-1669) and more fully elaborated by Turretin (1623-1687).
Under the Covenant of Works, Adam was the federal head of all mankind
so his sin and its consequences is legally imputed to all.
This somewhat replaced the organic or natural relationship theory
of guilt for Adam's sin advanced by Augustine (354-430). Through
the Covenant of Grace, the Lord Jesus is the federal Head of
those who are to experience salvation, being appointed to bear
the full
guilt of their sins (Adamic and personal) in an atoning death
viewed as His passive obedience. By His active obedience to the
full demands
of Divine law, He is said to have fulfilled perfectly man's
requirements and imputes His righteousness to believers so that
it is legally
considered to be theirs Since in the full development of the
satisfaction theory, whatever has been accomplished in the Atonement
is an exact
equivalent of guilt so that salvation proceeds upon the basis
of strict judicial justice, in no understandable way can it be
general
or made for everyone in the same sense, or all will be saved
since God will not demand a double payment f or guilt-Christ's
and the
sinner's. But the sacred Atonement was made for all, with no
theological reservations: Jn. 3:16-17; Mk. 16:15-16; II Co. 5:14-15;
I Tim. 2:3-6;
He. 2:9; I Jn. 2:1-2. The Lord Jesus as the Son of Man was
under obligation to obey for Himself, since He was "born under the
law" (Ga. 4:4-5). His obedience could not, therefore, be imputed
to anyone, but He was free to give His life in atonement since He "committed
no sin."
2. GOVERNMENTAL THEORY: - The Atonement was necessary
to solve the problems of God as a Moral Governor, who lovingly desires
to reconcile mankind.
A. The sufferings of Christ were necessary to the Divine government,
rather than to the Divine nature: Gregory of Nazianzus (330-390). "Is
it not plain that the Father received the ransom, not because He
Himself required or needed it, but for the sake of the Divine government
of the universe, and because man must be sanctified through the incarnation
of the Son of God?" He strongly opposed the idea of a ransom
paid to Satan, and could not understand why a ransom should be paid
to the Father. He could only fall back on the "economy" of
God and put forth no theory of satisfaction. Other early writers,
like Athanasius, also mentioned God's governmental problems.
B. Christ suffered unto death in His human nature, not in His
Divine nature, and thus the Atonement was not an infinite value
to
pay fully for the eternal punishment of sinners, but was graciously
accepted
by God the Father as sufficient to satisfy Divine justice:
Duns Scotus (1265-1308) In line with the majority of Christian
thinkers of the
centuries, he held the principle that the Atonement provided
a "relative
satisfaction" to the justice of God and proposed his theory
in opposition to Anselm, who had insisted upon absolute total
equivalent satisfaction through an infinite sacrifice. He came
to view the Divine
will as not bound by anything fixed in the Divine nature, but
free to decide upon what basis sins could be forgiven.
C. Christ, the Savior of the world, died for all men and for every
man, and His grace is extended to all. His atoning sacrifice is in
and of itself sufficient for the redemption of the whole world, and
is intended for all by God the Father. The sacrifice of Christ is
not the payment of a debt, nor is it a complete satisfaction of justice
for sin. It is a Divinely-appointed condition which precedes the
forgiveness of sin, just as the death of a lamb or a goat in the
Mosaic economy. Christ's sufferings took the place of a penalty,
so that His sufferings have the same effect in reconciling God to
man, and procuring the forgiveness of sin, that the sinner's endurance
of the punishment due to his sins would have had. The sufferings
of Christ were not a substituted penalty, but a substitute for a
penalty: Jacobus Arminius (1560-1609); Episcopius (1583-1643); Curcellaeus
(1586 1659); Limborch (1633-1712); known as Arminianism. Outside
Holland, Arminianism exerted considerable influence in France, Switzerland,
Germany, Engl and, and America, and hence throughout the world through
various denominations, especially Methodism.
D. God came to be viewed as a benevolent Ruler exercising control
over moral beings by good and wise laws designed for mutual happiness
of Himself and them. Regulation in a moral government is by means
of promised blessings for conformity and penalties of suffering for
disobedience. While God in compassionate mercy is willing to forgive
or relax His just claims against rebellious moral beings upon evidence
of a willingness to cease from rebellion and return to happy submission,
He cannot wisely do so without some terrible measure of enlightenment
and suffering by a Being of profound dignity. This must demonstrate
before all the dreadful nature and consequences of sin and provide
an eternal moral force against further indulgence and heart-break
to Himself as well as to them: Hugo Grotius (1583-1645), a prominent
Dutch jurist and Arminian theologian, who wrote an important book
against Socinianism, 1617.
E. The sufferings and especially the death of Christ were sacrificial,
were not the punishment of the law but were equivalent in meaning
to it, were representative of it and substituted for it. The
demands of the law were not satisfied by it, but the honor of the
law was
promoted by it as much as this honor would have been promoted
by inflicting the legal penalty upon all sinners. The distributive
(or
vindictive) justice of God was not satisfied by it, but His
general (or justice for the public good) as a responsible Moral
Governor
was perfectly satisfied. The active obedience or holiness of
Christ made possible His virtuous death in man's behalf, but is
not legally
imputed to the believer. Christ's atonement was made for all
men in the same sense. It was necessary on God's account to enable
Him
as a consistent Ruler to fulfill His moral obligations to His
subjects, when repentant sinners are pardoned through a commitment
of faith
(E.A. Park, 1883): New England Theology; Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758);
his son (1745-1801); Nathaniel Emmons (1745-1840); Caleb Burge
(1782-1838); N.W. Taylor (1786-1858); C. G. Finney (1792-1875);
Congregationalists
(very extensively); "New School" Presbyterians; several
groups of Baptists; other groups and leaders in America and England
(called "American Theology").
In the governmental theory, the Atonement is not required by the
subjective nature or vindictive justice of God before mercy is extended.
It is not God in isolation as the injured party, but rather God as
a benevolent Ruler in relationship to His moral creatures, with great
problems of reconciliation that require solution. These problems
involve man's relation to God in intelligent moral government, as
well as some means to convey God's very deep reactions toward sin
and His abounding mercy toward man in spite of man's desperate rebellion.
Man must be broken down before God in deep respect and penitence
in a return to a right attitude towards God's loving regulation before
forgiveness can take place. The sacred advent and atonement of Christ,
therefore, is not merely a.measure to discharge guilt by some calculated
equivalent. It is the most profound measure conceivable, with an
objective to restore a ruptured God-man relationship in all that
is involved. The Atonement was, therefore, general in the absolute
sense and legally discharged the guilt of no one.
3. MORAL INFLUENCE THEORY: - A manifestation of suffering
Divine love was necessary to subdue man's rebellion so reconciliation
could take place.
The life and sufferings of Christ were conceived to be an exhibition
of Divine love to reconcile man back to God by breaking down his
resistance and drawing him back into a life of fellowship with God.
There is no specific necessity of satisfying the Divine nature or
the problems of God's moral government. The life and sufferings of
the God-Man were intended to exert a moral impression upon a hard
and impenitent heart, which is thereby melted into contrition, and
then received into favor by the boundless compassion of God (Abelard):
Clement (185?-254?) of Alexandria; Peter Abelard (1079-1142) of France,
who opposed Anselm; Horace Bushnell (1802-1876), a lawyer and New
England pastor. Many liberals in theology of succeeding generations
accepted his general opinions without sharing his deep sincerity.
4. ETHICAL EXAMPLE THEORY: - Sinful man has been misguided
and needed a noble virtuous example to challenge him to a new way
of living.
If man is going to realize his potential and be reconciled to God,
he must repent and reform his ways. For this purpose Jesus Christ
was miraculously brought into our world and thus was more than a
mere man (Socinianism, 1600's), or was natural born and as a religious
genius identified himself with God in special devotion to achieve
a unique ministry to mankind (Unitarianism, 1700's). His virtuous
and loving conduct in life and in death as a noble martyr showed
us how we ought to love God and each other, or become converted and
reconciled to God: Laelius Socinus (1525-1562) and his nephew Faustus
Socinus (1539-1604), in Poland; Unitarians, who trace their views
back through Arius (256-336); and others of humanistic opinion (Christ
a mere man).
THE NATURE AND EXTENT OF THE ATONEMENT
Case 1: -The Atonement was a literal or an exact payment for sin.
-All are not being saved through it. -Therefore, It could not have
been made for all.
Case 2: -The Atonement was a literal or an exact payment for sin.
-It was made for all. -Therefore, all will be saved through it.
Case 3: -The Atonement was made for all: Is. 53:6; Lk. 2:10-11;
Jn. 1:29; 3:16-17; 6:51; II Co. 5:14-15; I Tim. 2.3-6; Tit. 2:11;
He. 2:9; I Jn. 2:2; also Is. 1:18; 45:22; 55:1; Eze. 18:30-32; Mt.
23:37; Mk. 16:15-16; Ro. 2:11; Re. 3:20.
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Only a minority are being saved through it: Ge. 6:5-8; Is. 53:1;
Mt. 21:10; Lk. 13:23-24; 23:21; Jn. 5:40; 6:60, 67; 7:7; 16:33;
Acts 8:1; 14:22; I Co. 4:13.
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Therefore, it was not a literal or an exact payment for sin.