To continue discussion
2 Corinthians 5:21 doesn't support penal substitution (continued)
Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by JonC, Sep 2, 2023.
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Response to the man, the myth the legend: @DaveXR650
Are you saying that the work of Christ on our behalf was an outworking, demonstration and manifestation of our sin and that is the extent of what His death accomplishes at the atonement?
Not necessarily. That is just what Paul is talking about in 2 Corinthians 5:21.
The cross is where all humanity put Jesus to death. The cross is where you and I tortured and killed Jesus by our sins. "The Lord laid on him the iniquity of us all" means that WE killed him. Not that God imputed our sins to him so that he became guilty in some sense and then killed him in our place as deserved punishment.
You correctly say that Jesus didn't literally become sinful ( which I agree with), and refuse to accept "imputation" of sin, yet have no trouble making us all guilty of Christ's death - but how? We weren't there, so it must be by imputation. Peter preached that message to the people who were there but not to everyone, everywhere.
I don't have a problem with the idea of imputation in general. But you can't just imputation like a magic wand whenever you want in order to make guilty parties innocent and vice versa. Imputation must still be bound by the priorities of justice.
For example, someone could have my debt imputed to them and pay off my debt in order to satisfy the priority of restitution.
Imputation can also be used to say I killed Jesus, even though I lived 2,000 years in history after him.
However, I could never have a murderer's crime imputed to me so that I go to the electric chair in his place - because that does not satisfy any priority of justice. The priority of retribution is not that the justice system punish someone, but that the sin of the sinner is stopped or destroyed. This happens for us when we die physically. "He who has died is freed from sin" (Romans 6). This is why you will continue to sin until your physical death.
Then you say "On the cross, Jesus was made my sin". What gives? You deny imputation of sin, which would allow Jesus to suffer the guilt and penalty without actually being made sinful yet you turn around and say "Jesus was made my sin".
But my whole post explains this, right? Let's say Bob tortured and killed Mike. Mike's tortured and bloody dead body is found by the police. If they pointed at Mike's mutilated body and said "This right here IS Bob's sin" that is the sense in which I think Paul means it. Look again at the example of Whipped Peter in the OP. I have been very clear in what I mean. -
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That is why, contrary to another thread you are trying to start, the gospel preached by the apostles was not that "you crucified Christ" unless they were preaching to those - who crucified Christ, or to those under authority of the Priests who were part of it and believed it was the right thing to do.
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Response to the brilliant and noble: @Martin Marprelate
You say: Psalm 44 is often called the martyrs' song. Yet it ends, 'Arise for our help, and redeem us for Your mercies' sake.' That prayer will have been swiftly answered in the light of Psalms 37:25.
That Psalm 44 is called the "martyr's song" proves my point. Thank you. They are innocent and suffering unjustly, and yet they attribute all sorts of harsh language to God about their treatment, therefore such language cannot be used as sufficient evidence of a "deserved punishment" narrative:
You have rejected us and brought us to dishonor,
You give us as sheep to be eaten
You make us a reproach to our neighbors,
A scoffing and a derision to those around us.
You have crushed us in a place of jackals
And covered us with the shadow of death.
But for Your sake we are killed all day long;
We are considered as sheep to be slaughtered.
Why do You hide Your face
And forget our affliction and our oppression?
For our soul has sunk down into the dust;
Our body cleaves to the earth.
This is all extremely harsh language attributed to God as direct treatment of these individuals. Notice, importantly, that it is also sacrificial language. But it is all CLEARLY in the context of righteous people suffering unjustly.
Language of harsh treatment by God is just not evidence of "deserved punishment of a guilty person." We find the same language used of innocent people suffering unjustly.
And Zechariah 13 does not describe ANYONE escaping harsh treatment:
“Strike the Shepherd that the sheep may be scattered;
And I will turn My hand against the little ones.
“It will come about in all the land,”
Declares the Lord,
“That two parts in it will be cut off and perish;
But the third will be left in it.
“And I will bring the third part through the fire,
The Servant is struck, the "little ones" are also struck (God turns his hand against them). And everyone else either perishes or passes through the fire. There is no "substitution" here. All are going to go through tribulation.
Where does the Bible say that God killed Abel? Where does it say that He killed Stephen? Joseph was not killed, but where does it say that God killed Abel?
The Bible clearly and explicitly want us to see Jesus' death as like Abel's death, like Stephen's death, like Joseph's suffering, like Naboth's death. Unjust treatment of the righteous.
Amen! The blood of Abel cried out for justice (Genesis 4:10); the blood of Christ speaks of reconciliation (Ephesians 2:13). The blood of the covenant which has been shed is the blood of an innocent person who has been unjustly murdered, like Abel except better than Abel.
That Hebrews says the sprinkled blood of the covenant is like that of Abel's is so strong. Clearly we are to think of the blood of the covenant as the blood of a righteous person whose blood is unjustly shed by murder.
What you and other penal substitution advocates want to say is that Jesus' shed blood, the blood of the covenant, is like that of Goliath, or of Herod in Acts 12, or of Agag. You want to say that it is the shed blood of a guilty person who is suffering deserved wrath at the hands of God. But that is just not the Biblical picture. We are explicitly told it is a different narrative.
It is the blood of an innocent Person, but our Lord was bearing all the sins of His people (1 Peter 2:24), and paid the price of their iniquities and the curse attached to them.
Paying the price (Jesus paying our debt of obedience) is completely different that being punished as our substitute. We have been over this. Changing the subject to the faulty idea within penal substitution that payment and punishment are the same thing is a poor debate move.
You are also assuming a wrong definition of "bearing the sins." That does not mean that our sins were imputed to him such that he became guilty. It means that he is dealing with the consequences of our sins, or indeed being sinned against. You are trying to smuggle an entire legal philosophy of imputation and guilt into that phrase which is totally unwarranted.
The Passover lambs were a type of Christ. Were they killed unjustly? 'The LORD will provide for Himself the lamb for a burnt offering.'
I will do a separate post on the Passover. Hint: Exodus explicitly states that Israel suffering in Egypt was the suffering of God's firstborn son. See Exodus 4:22. The slavery of Israel in Egypt is a crucifixion type event. -
"Imputation can also be used to say I killed Jesus, even though I lived 2,000 years in history after him."
I spend 16 hours composing each response, so I hope you read them. -
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"I am guilty of the death of Jesus" is not the same statement as "Jesus is guilty of my sin."
You seem to be thinking "If I am guilty of the death of Jesus by imputation, then it follows that Jesus is guilty of my sins through imputation" which is a complete non sequitur. Those are two completely different concepts.
Just because "legal imputation" can be a valid concept, does not mean ALL ideas of legal imputation are valid. Again, you can't just wave imputation around like a magic wand. -
You have a theology that has no meaning as far as Jesus death being an actual remedy for our sin. I am truly suspect of any such theology and would love to know where it comes from. The fact that you are so evasive on that makes me even more concerned. -
Another point, @DaveXR650 , that you should consider is the altering of Scripture.
God tells us that the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is life in Christ Jesus.
Penal Substitution theorists accept the latter but deny the former.
The wages of sin is death. Sin produces death. We earn that death as a wage. It does not say that the wages from God for sin is death.
The wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ.
Sin produces a death we earn.
God gives a life we do not earn. -
God is immutable. His word stands.
The wages of sin is death. Sin begats death. We earn that death. This is immutable because sin is against a holy, immutable God. We sin. We die.
But the gift of God is everlasting life in Christ Jesus.
This does not change the wages of sin. Jesus did not submit Himself under the wages of sin - wages He did not earn - to somehow undo God's word.
What happened is the "sting of death" was removed. It is still appointed man once to die, and now the Judgment which is centered on Christ. But even though we die, so shall we live. This is the gift of God. -
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Look at the wages of sin being death.
Do you know of a Penal Substitution theorist who believes that the wages of sin, rather than the punishment of God for sin, is death?
It is a valid question. Does sin produce death (are the wages of sin death) or do you reimagine the verse to read that God will kill those who sin?
Another issue is forgiveness.
Do you know of a Penal Substitution theorist who legitimately believes that God forgives sin rather than believing God must punish sin? -
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No, the wages of sin is not a punishment. I warn you that the wage of drinking a deadly poison is death, that should you drink the poison you will die....and you drink the poison anyway that death is not a punishment. It is the wage you earned by drinking the poison.
God is sovereign. Christ suffered and died under "evil", "evil doers", "the powers of this world", "the wicked"....but this was "according to God's predetermined plan". He was pleased "to crush Him". It was His will.
That is what the Bible says.
The problem is that Penal Substitution Theory takes this to an unbiblical extreme by exchanging Satan and God. They decide that if God is sovereign then not only must it have been His predetermined plan that Christ suffer and die under the powers of evil, but that God Himself must be this power.
You are too caught up in how to biblically support the Penal Substitution Theory of Atonement that you are completely missing what is written in the Bible.
Why look for a "better" Atonement than "what is written"? -
Where you go wrong is that you take a verse that says Jesus was crucified by wicked men and for some reason refuse to allow that to reside along side a verse that say He gave himself a ransom for many. Both are true. -
Christ became a curse for us, shared our infirmitiy, was made sin for us, removed the "sting of death", unified with man, reconciled the World to Himself that men may be reconciled to God, overcame the evil under which He suffered and died, gave us life, nailed the Law to the tree, and freed us from the bondage of sin and death. -
If you are trying to say something else just say it and stop beating around the bush. I think Torrance may have objected to the fact that some took penal substitution and made it "mechanical" so that it was something that was done and then God himself couldn't change anything at that point. In fact, while we know that all judgement is now committed to Jesus we still must be forgiven by him. The verses that indicate penal substitution show us why and why this can be done justly and without violating the holiness of God.
If you're trying to say that you cannot claim your sins have been taken care of by penal substitution and so therefore living a life of obedience to God is not essential I would say don't reject penal substitution, just read the Puritans. They can match the early church, the Anabaptists, the Mennonites, and the Moravians in the area of Christian living. You don't need to reject penal substitution for that reason either.
There really is no reason to keep going round and round in this. I see it and don't see how anyone could miss it. You don't. -
There is not punishment anywhere in the concept. Scripture is direct, not concealing some truth but revealing to us truth.
I am not beating around the bush. I have not thread Torrance in a long time (he isn't my cup of tea, although I appreciated some of his points).
I am not talking about anything being mechanical, forensic, spiritualized....none of that. I am plainly, without beating around the bush, stating that I believe God's Word has to be the criteria by which doctrine is measured in order for that doctrine to be objective. The Penal Substitution Theory of Atonement fails this test.
You keep talking about what could be indicated by Scripture, about how things could work out. BUT what if God's Word (what is written) actually, completely and sufficiently states the truth?
Scripture makes sense without adding to it. So why add to it and say these verses could support this theory or that theory? -
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