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» Ship of Fools   » Ship's Locker   » Limbo   » Purgatory: Easter Message : Christ did not die for sin (Page 16)

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Source: (consider it) Thread: Purgatory: Easter Message : Christ did not die for sin
Emma Louise

Storm in a teapot
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Hehe - I heard it and recognised the stereotypical psa pitch, and thought of the ship!

Must admit it didnt really hit many of my buttons - Ive rather been enjoying lionel blue's messages of late.

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Mystery of Faith
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# 12176

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quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
Did anyone hear Anne Atkins giving it some for PSA this morning on Radio 4's thought for the day?

At least they are redressing the balance! (and it sent me off to my desk rejoicing!)

It's here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/programmes/thought/documents/t20070426.shtml

if anyone is interested in re-hashing the debates of the last 15 pages again.....

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Seeker963
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quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
Please STOP repeatedly now misrepresenting my God, Seeker. In fact I insist you retract that RIGHT NOW. Or, wow, for the first time I'll call you to hell.

OK?

You can call me to hell if you like, but I don't think I'm under any obligation to engage in a bunfight. That said, I will agree that my statement was somewhat ill-considered as it was written in a hurry.

What I get from what I can understand of your posts is basically what Karl says below: a contradictory picture of a God who loves me and wants to kill me. And the impression that anyone who disagrees with you is simultaneously stupid and gutless but also thinks that they are better than you.

If you want to take me to hell on that basis, feel free. Goodness knows you've sailed darn close to the wind for this entire thread with almost everyone. As you may have guessed, Hell (even on this board) isn't really my thing.

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"People waste so much of their lives on hate and fear." My friend JW-N: Chaplain and three-time cancer survivor. (Went to be with her Lord March 21, 2010. May she rest in peace and rise in glory.)

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Karl: Liberal Backslider
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quote:
Originally posted by Mystery of Faith:
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
Did anyone hear Anne Atkins giving it some for PSA this morning on Radio 4's thought for the day?

At least they are redressing the balance! (and it sent me off to my desk rejoicing!)

It's here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/programmes/thought/documents/t20070426.shtml

if anyone is interested in re-hashing the debates of the last 15 pages again.....

I'm afraid I identify to a certain extend with Ann Atkins' alien. I don't understand retribution either.

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Might as well ask the bloody cat.

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Jolly Jape
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Put me firmly in the alien camp, too! Her line of argument is just, well, incomprehensible, to me at least.

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To those who have never seen the flow and ebb of God's grace in their lives, it means nothing. To those who have seen it, even fleetingly, even only once - it is life itself. (Adeodatus)

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Karl: Liberal Backslider
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# 76

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Funny thing is, I was always taught, from MOR, Catholic and Evangelical sources, that hatred, desire for retribution and desire to hurt others was wrong and un-Christian. I struggle therefore to imagine that God suffers from these, what I was taught to call, sins.

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Might as well ask the bloody cat.

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mousethief

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I don't understand retribution, but I don't understand why the alien can't understand the problem of convicting the person for the wrong crime. That's not justice or even close to justice; even if the penalty is equal to the one that the actual crime committed would incur, it's only accidental justice. The family didn't want MORE justice, they just wanted the RIGHT justice.

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This is the last sig I'll ever write for you...

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Seeker963
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If a member of my family were killed by person A and person A were convicted and sentenced for killing person B, what I'd want would be a court verdict that person A had killed my family member. Not retribution. Just a statement that my family member had been wronged. That's what I'd miss.

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"People waste so much of their lives on hate and fear." My friend JW-N: Chaplain and three-time cancer survivor. (Went to be with her Lord March 21, 2010. May she rest in peace and rise in glory.)

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Callan
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Forgiveness isn't about saying that something doesn't matter. If something doesn't matter then it doesn't need forgiving. Forgiveness is about saying that something matters to the nth degree but that love is more powerful than evil. Which is why I think the cross is about reconciliation rather than punishment. In any event I disagree with Atkins' contention that we are all too modern and enlightened to need retribution any more. Look at the headlines in the tabloids next time there is a particularly appalling child murder. Karl may be too nice to understand the need for revenge. [Biased] I, on the other hand, can see only too well why the bad guys really need a good kicking.

I think that this comes back to Leprechaun's list of distinctives on the other thread. Broadly speaking, I think PSA advocates want to say that sin is really, really bad. I think that they are right about this and I think that they have a point when they complain that non-PSA people sometimes play down the full horror of sin. Where I think I differ from them is that I think, to use the jargon, that sin has a negative ontology. Sin isn't a thing that exists and which is added to a situation but it is a deficiency, an absence a lack. If I commit a sin I have not brought an extra quality into a situation. Adultery, for example is not sex-plus-sin it is sex-minus-justice. This isn't to say that sin and the pain it causes isn't real or that evil is an illusion as it is understood to be in some eastern traditions. But it does mean that sin isn't the kind of thing that can bind God because its a deficiency in us, not Him. God can forgive freely because God's love is more powerful than sin. That still, of course leaves our need to be reconciled with God and for the deficiency caused by our absence of goodness to be rectified. Hence, IMV, the atonement.

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How easy it would be to live in England, if only one did not love her. - G.K. Chesterton

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Callan
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Of course, just for balance a liberal bishop who hasn't heard Atkins' talk ought to denounce her for "denying the glorious heart of the apostolic faith" and insist that it is highly inappropriate for these controversial views to be given an airing over Eastertide.

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How easy it would be to live in England, if only one did not love her. - G.K. Chesterton

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Martin60
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# 368

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There you go again DODdy. Not MY God mate. My God doesn't torture any one. And yeah, the God who drowned the world, according the Bible, the God who nuked S&G, according to the Bible, ... Egypt ... Canaan ... Jesus ... the God who topped Ananias & Sapphira, acc..., LOVES them. MY God isn't contradictory. The Bible's is. For you. Not for me. Well not as much. The liberal God is ABSURD. To me. And very, very strange and CONTRADICTORY at best. What is the theodicy for God-lite? For the ever so nice, laid back, infinitely tolerant Zaphod-I'm just-this-God-kinda-God who lets all of our stuff happen?

Your God is NICE?! Your God lets bone cancer and Iraq and ignorance and death and ... name it. Why's He do that? Your nice God?

My God knows that even He learns through suffering. That NOTHING teaches, averses like experience. Teaches trust.

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Love wins

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Martin60
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Seeker, me neither. Apology accepted. KLS - very good. Vengeance is ... ? Because He's PERFECT. Holy. Ineffable. Because He says so. Trust Him. Hard isn't it? It is for me. I'll still be doubting, fearing the moment I die, especially if I see it coming. Especially if it's for Him.

The lens of Jesus ORDERS us to be martyrs or be annihilated. Or was that just the 12?

He is one TOUGH gracious dood. Dangerous but good.

If it could be any other way, it would. It can't.

Pretending under the covers doesn't cut it.

Pretending He's just ever-so NICE sounds like the ancient Greeks calling the Furies the Eumenides.

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Love wins

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Leprechaun

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quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Funny thing is, I was always taught, from MOR, Catholic and Evangelical sources, that hatred, desire for retribution and desire to hurt others was wrong and un-Christian. I struggle therefore to imagine that God suffers from these, what I was taught to call, sins.

So, in Anne Atkins' terms, is the desire for Lucie Blackman's killer to be convicted for her killing (whether it was this guy or not) on behalf of her parents, wrong and un-Christian?

Callan [Killing me]

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He hath loved us, He hath loved us, because he would love

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Oscar the Grouch

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quote:
He can't "just forgive" and say evil doesn't matter. If He did, he'd be suggesting that Lucie didn't matter - and all the Lucies who've ever suffered injustice in the world.
This is where Anne Atkins comes unstuck.

When you forgive someone, you are NOT saying that what they did "doesn't matter". In fact, you are saying the very opposite! You've done wrong - but I forgive you anyway.

What makes this even worse is that she then claims that God cannot forgive without a price being paid. Not much of forgiveness, then it is? In fact, if a price has to be paid, it isn't forgiveness at all - it's just retribution. It seems to me that Atkins, in her eagerness to assert PSA, ends up throwing out the concept of a God who loves us so much that he will forgive us our sins - without belittling or denying their severity - freely out of that endless, boundless love.

And what is Atkins saying about the forgiveness Christ calls us to show one another? We are called to forgive as we have been forgiven. But in the Atkins world, that means that we cannot forgive someone until a price has been paid and acknowledged.

Nope - it may make some sort of sense to Atkins but it ain't the gospel according to Christ, IMHO.

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Faradiu, dundeibáwa weyu lárigi weyu

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Leprechaun

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quote:
Originally posted by Oscar the Grouch:

And what is Atkins saying about the forgiveness Christ calls us to show one another? We are called to forgive as we have been forgiven. But in the Atkins world, that means that we cannot forgive someone until a price has been paid and acknowledged.


The point being, of course, that the price HAS been paid and acknowledged, and we are therefore free to forgive.

I've always found this particular objection to PSA rather odd. As if the doctrine excuses us from forgiving, when, in fact, it proclaims very strongly that the wrong is dealt with by God and we have no excuse for not forgiving no matter how wrong we feel it to be.

We, like God, should take the hurt and pain from people's wrong on ourselves. I'd say that models Christian forgiveness far more clearly than any of the other atonement "models".

[ 27. April 2007, 09:20: Message edited by: Leprechaun ]

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He hath loved us, He hath loved us, because he would love

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Pokrov
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Forgiveness, like repentance, is so much more than a 'mental ascent' to NOW think something which one had previously not thought.

It, if it is to copy the very nature of God, must involve a fundamental shift in desire and aim. A metamorphasis of the heart.

The problem I have with purely forensic analogies of how 'Christ bore our Sin' is that it fails to do justice to this heart change (or places 'experience' after 'legal declaration') and makes PSA sound like the caricatures that +Tom, Chalke and Dr. John oppose.

I agree that, when we forgive, it involves 'bearing' some of the pain which has been caused against us (just like Christ bore the pain caused against God), but I would hesitate to say that - if I bear pain due to 'sin' against me - I'm in some way being 'punished' for the 'sin'. Of course if I forgive and experience pain, and if this co-bearing of pain leads to the transformation of the one causing me injury then one could say that 'sin' was dealt with (condemned according to Paul) through my co-bearing, but this isn't quite the same thing - which is, I think, the subtle difference between PFOT's POV and +Tom's.

Again, I'm happy to accept that the language of 'punishment' is perfectly biblical but that it is one metaphor which needs balancing with many others.

I agree with +Tom when he says that he hasn't let go of a notion of PSA but sites it within a wider scheme which prevents caricatures and distortions.

I was involved in quite a conservative evangelical (and Calvinistic) church scene for about 10 years and can categorically state that, when the atonement was described, if often ended up sounding a lot more like the caricature than like the balanced doctrine.

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Most Holy Theotokos pray for us!

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mousethief

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# 953

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Hey, Leprechaun, can you answer THIS part, too?

quote:
Originally posted by Oscar the Grouch:
When you forgive someone, you are NOT saying that what they did "doesn't matter". In fact, you are saying the very opposite! You've done wrong - but I forgive you anyway.

What makes this even worse is that she then claims that God cannot forgive without a price being paid. Not much of forgiveness, then it is? In fact, if a price has to be paid, it isn't forgiveness at all - it's just retribution. It seems to me that Atkins, in her eagerness to assert PSA, ends up throwing out the concept of a God who loves us so much that he will forgive us our sins - without belittling or denying their severity - freely out of that endless, boundless love.



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This is the last sig I'll ever write for you...

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Jolly Jape
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# 3296

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quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
quote:
Originally posted by Oscar the Grouch:

And what is Atkins saying about the forgiveness Christ calls us to show one another? We are called to forgive as we have been forgiven. But in the Atkins world, that means that we cannot forgive someone until a price has been paid and acknowledged.


The point being, of course, that the price HAS been paid and acknowledged, and we are therefore free to forgive.

I've always found this particular objection to PSA rather odd. As if the doctrine excuses us from forgiving, when, in fact, it proclaims very strongly that the wrong is dealt with by God and we have no excuse for not forgiving no matter how wrong we feel it to be.

We, like God, should take the hurt and pain from people's wrong on ourselves. I'd say that models Christian forgiveness far more clearly than any of the other atonement "models".

Well, I agree wholeheartedly with your last para, Lep, but to assume hurt and wrong is not to punish it. Wrong is dealt with by forgiveness, by absorbing it, in Jesus' case by the infinite love of the Godhead, and in our case, by our receiving the grace to do so from the infinite love of the Godhead. That's all that is necessary, and to say so is not to belittle the power of evil, but to exalt the power of forgiveness and love.

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To those who have never seen the flow and ebb of God's grace in their lives, it means nothing. To those who have seen it, even fleetingly, even only once - it is life itself. (Adeodatus)

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Leprechaun

Ship's Poison Elf
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quote:
Originally posted by MouseThief:
Hey, Leprechaun, can you answer THIS part, too?

quote:
Originally posted by Oscar the Grouch:
When you forgive someone, you are NOT saying that what they did "doesn't matter". In fact, you are saying the very opposite! You've done wrong - but I forgive you anyway.

What makes this even worse is that she then claims that God cannot forgive without a price being paid. Not much of forgiveness, then it is? In fact, if a price has to be paid, it isn't forgiveness at all - it's just retribution. It seems to me that Atkins, in her eagerness to assert PSA, ends up throwing out the concept of a God who loves us so much that he will forgive us our sins - without belittling or denying their severity - freely out of that endless, boundless love.


I wasn't ignoring this, just thought I'd be trawling up old ground.

But my answer is that it IS retribution not forgiveness if taken out on the guilty party. The point is that Jesus as God takes the "retribution" and pain thereof on himself: so God's attitude towards us is "forgiveness".

I do think Atkins has it right that PSA is far more about God saying "sin matters to me" than it is about retributive justice, because, as many people have pointed out, substitution actually gets in the way of retribution.

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Dafyd
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# 5549

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quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
So, in Anne Atkins' terms, is the desire for Lucie Blackman's killer to be convicted for her killing (whether it was this guy or not) on behalf of her parents, wrong and un-Christian?

Absolutely. They should be happy to fetch any random person off the street and convict them.

Obviously somebody has to suffer for the killing. But why does it have to be the guy who actually did it. It's some primitive unChristian superstition that the person who is punished should be the person who actually committed the crime.

Dafyd

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we remain, thanks to original sin, much in love with talking about, rather than with, one another. Rowan Williams

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Karl: Liberal Backslider
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# 76

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quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Funny thing is, I was always taught, from MOR, Catholic and Evangelical sources, that hatred, desire for retribution and desire to hurt others was wrong and un-Christian. I struggle therefore to imagine that God suffers from these, what I was taught to call, sins.

So, in Anne Atkins' terms, is the desire for Lucie Blackman's killer to be convicted for her killing (whether it was this guy or not) on behalf of her parents, wrong and un-Christian?

No. But hatred for the guy and taking pleasure in seeing him suffer would be. Understandable it may be, but I do believe we're called to reject hatred and desire for vengeance.

Callan [Killing me]



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Might as well ask the bloody cat.

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Karl: Liberal Backslider
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# 76

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quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
Seeker, me neither. Apology accepted. KLS - very good. Vengeance is ... ? Because He's PERFECT. Holy. Ineffable. Because He says so. Trust Him. Hard isn't it? It is for me. I'll still be doubting, fearing the moment I die, especially if I see it coming. Especially if it's for Him.

The lens of Jesus ORDERS us to be martyrs or be annihilated. Or was that just the 12?

He is one TOUGH gracious dood. Dangerous but good.

If it could be any other way, it would. It can't.

Pretending under the covers doesn't cut it.

Pretending He's just ever-so NICE sounds like the ancient Greeks calling the Furies the Eumenides.

Sorry Martin - parsing your posts is like trying to solve crossword clues.

Please, please, please, for the love of God, start posting in normal English paragraphs.

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Might as well ask the bloody cat.

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Karl: Liberal Backslider
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# 76

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Apologies for the code cockup in my penultimate (now antepenultimate) post.

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Might as well ask the bloody cat.

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Seeker963
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# 2066

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quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
I've always found this particular objection to PSA rather odd. As if the doctrine excuses us from forgiving, when, in fact, it proclaims very strongly that the wrong is dealt with by God and we have no excuse for not forgiving no matter how wrong we feel it to be.

We, like God, should take the hurt and pain from people's wrong on ourselves. I'd say that models Christian forgiveness far more clearly than any of the other atonement "models".

Yes, but other models of atonement also proclaim that people have no excuse for not forgiving.

Why the insertion of "God hurt someone so we don't have to" is supposed to be an improvement on "God graciously forgives and requires us to do the same", is something that *I* don't understand.

Furthermore, I do not understand why naming the sin and graciously forgiving is morally inferior to naming the sin and killing someone in retribution - as so many PSAers seem to think (note, I'm not saying you think that Leprechaun, because I don't know.)

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"People waste so much of their lives on hate and fear." My friend JW-N: Chaplain and three-time cancer survivor. (Went to be with her Lord March 21, 2010. May she rest in peace and rise in glory.)

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Callan
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# 525

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Originally posted by Richard Collins:

quote:
Forgiveness, like repentance, is so much more than a 'mental ascent' to NOW think something which one had previously not thought.

It, if it is to copy the very nature of God, must involve a fundamental shift in desire and aim. A metamorphasis of the heart.

I'm not certain of that. I think one of the big problems with PSA is that it understands God's forgiveness to be entirely like our forgiveness. When +Willesden forgives UCCF, to take a topical example, he changes from a state of indignation towards UCCF to a state of non-indignation. I quite simply don't think that God is like that. When we talk about God's forgiveness we are talking about a change in us, not in God who is immutable. St Augustine writes:

quote:
Let not the fact, then, of our having been reconciled unto God through the death of His Son be so listened to or so understood, as if the Son reconciled us to Him in this respect, that He now began to love those whom He formerly hated, in the same way as enemy is reconciled to enemy, so that thereafter they become friends, and mutual love takes the place of their mutual hatred; but we were reconciled unto Him who already loved us, but with whom we were at enmity because of our sin.
(Incidentally we ought to chalk this one up to the thesis that the Fathers may have used PSA like language but did not teach PSA.)

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How easy it would be to live in England, if only one did not love her. - G.K. Chesterton

Posts: 9757 | From: Citizen of the World | Registered: Jun 2001  |  IP: Logged
Leprechaun

Ship's Poison Elf
# 5408

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quote:
Originally posted by Callan:
(Incidentally we ought to chalk this one up to the thesis that the Fathers may have used PSA like language but did not teach PSA.)

Not unlike the Bishope of Durham in that case. [Razz]

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He hath loved us, He hath loved us, because he would love

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Seeker963
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# 2066

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quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
But my answer is that it IS retribution not forgiveness if taken out on the guilty party. The point is that Jesus as God takes the "retribution" and pain thereof on himself: so God's attitude towards us is "forgiveness".

I think that I do understand this. But I also think that the concept of "God punishing himself" opens up the possibility of expressing atonement in a non-violent way. I think "God punishing himself" opens up the possibility of saying "God graciously forgives"

quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
I do think Atkins has it right that PSA is far more about God saying "sin matters to me" than it is about retributive justice, because, as many people have pointed out, substitution actually gets in the way of retribution.

I always thought that the historic theory of substitionary atonement was more about saying "sin matters to God". But, if that's the case, is it then so wrong to simply posit the idea that sin matters vitally but that God forgives? Why do so very many[1] PSAers get so upset with the rest of us about doing so? Why do so many[1] claim that 'without PSA there is no salvation'?

Again, I think Miroslav Volf does a darn good job of putting forward all the constructs for saying "sin matters vitally to God, but God forgives graciously" in his book Free of Charge even though the book never once argues for any particular theory of atonement. Volf ain't no liberal (or, who knows, maybe he is to some people?)

[1] Please note that I have deliberately avoided saying "all" because I know that there are a number of PSA-people out there who don't consign the rest of us to non-salvation.

[ 27. April 2007, 10:36: Message edited by: Seeker963 ]

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Qupe
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I'm a bit wary of posting this as I've dipped in and out of this thread and I've lost count of who has said what, so please forgive me if I just repeat what everyone else is saying! [Hot and Hormonal]

Anyway, I've been following this debate about PSA and it has perplexed me! (Doesn't take much..!) [Biased] because I have not found it at all easy to say with any great certainty 'where I stand' (to use an awful overused christian expression) on the issue. I have always believed that Jesus took my punishment on the cross; yet the idea of God the Father punishing Jesus in my place is a bit questionable...

I belong to an Anglican evo church and recently we had a sermon basically saying 'PSA is true; it's in the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation'. The sermon left me a bit dissatisfied and feeling that our vicar, lovely though he is, had not even begun to address the issues raised by Jeffrey John or Steve Chalke. (IMO there's been a lot of knee-jerk reactions going on).

Anyway I had one of those 'eureka!' moments yesterday when the whole thing suddenly started to make sense to me. IMHO, it's all about understanding the Holy Trinity - it's not that nasty angry authoritarian God sent poor little innocent Jesus into the world to be killed - as Jeffrey John said, if any human behaved like that they would be a monster. No, appreciating the Trinity teaches us that in Christ, God himself came into the world and of his own choice, out of love, took upon himself the sin of the world.

There can be no status or heirachy in the Trinity, can there? God is God is God, whether manifested through the father in heaven, the suffering man on the cross, or the Spirit at work in the world today. Therefore Christ on the cross was the highest expression of God there is, because every moment of his life was the higest expression of God. So the idea of God the Father being the authority which must be placated suggests that the Father has a greater status within the Trinity than the Son - that doesn't sound right to me. As Jeffrey JOhn said, the Trinity cannot be divided.

The whole thing about 'cosmic child abuse' becomes a nonsense when the gospel is interpreted in a trinitarian way. People who choose, with full understanding of what they are doing, to give their lives for a higher cause, in order to benefit others, are considered heroes. Isn't that just what God did on the cross?

Sorry to have rambled, or 'stated the bleeding obvious' (John Cleese, Fawlty Towers!) [Smile]

What does anyone make of this argument? Any glaringly obvious holes in it?

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Pokrov
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Callan,

I wasn't meaning to say that I thought God's forgiveness involved a 'shift' from hating to loving - but was trying to say that in our forgiving we seek to attain the immutable 'state of God' which - as you rightly point out - is always loving.

I was trying to refute the articulation of atonement which made 'forgiveness' a sort of 'conjuring trick with metaphysical propositions'.

When I was a more conservative evangelical, it was often said that we 'ought' to now behave in a loving way out of gratitude to Christ who went through his passion for us. This 'ethics of guilt' didn't do much for me (and still doesn't). However, when my stubborn and hating heart experiences the love of God-in-Christ-through-the-Spirit I find (stalling and falteringly) that I can come to love the formerly unlovable and forgive the abuser.

In which case my experience of atonement (and I think +Tom in emphasising the 'meal' is pointing to human experience rather than theory) is greater than any notion of being told I'm 'off the hook 'cos Jesus took the penalty for me'.

But I suspect we're onto the psychology of faith as well as Christian assurance.

Incidentally I note that chimichanga has quoted Romans 3 about Christ 'demonstrating God's justice/dikaiosune' and wonder whether differing understanding of atonement flow from the whole 'new perspective' debate?

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Callan
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Originally posted by Richard Collins:

quote:
I wasn't meaning to say that I thought God's forgiveness involved a 'shift' from hating to loving - but was trying to say that in our forgiving we seek to attain the immutable 'state of God' which - as you rightly point out - is always loving.
In that case I agree with you.

Originally posted by Leprechaun:

quote:
Originally posted by Callan:
(Incidentally we ought to chalk this one up to the thesis that the Fathers may have used PSA like language but did not teach PSA.)

Not unlike the Bishope of Durham in that case. [Razz]

Nicely done! Out of interest what would you see as the difference between +Wright's position and that of PSA proper, as it were.

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GreyFace
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quote:
Originally posted by Doulos:
it's not that nasty angry authoritarian God sent poor little innocent Jesus into the world to be killed - as Jeffrey John said, if any human behaved like that they would be a monster. No, appreciating the Trinity teaches us that in Christ, God himself came into the world and of his own choice, out of love, took upon himself the sin of the world.

I agree with this bit.

quote:
There can be no status or heirachy in the Trinity, can there?
Well... actually there can in some sense. I don't think I would be guilty of subordinationism if I pointed out that according to orthodox belief the Father begets the Son and breathes the Holy Spirit, yet the Holy Spirit neither begets not breathes either of the other two hypostases.

quote:
God is God is God, whether manifested through the father in heaven, the suffering man on the cross, or the Spirit at work in the world today. Therefore Christ on the cross was the highest expression of God there is, because every moment of his life was the higest expression of God. So the idea of God the Father being the authority which must be placated suggests that the Father has a greater status within the Trinity than the Son - that doesn't sound right to me. As Jeffrey JOhn said, the Trinity cannot be divided.
Although I don't think you're wrong in what you're saying, it seems to me that you might have to approach modalism in order to make the argument strong enough to stand. Jesus Christ suffered and died on the Cross, the Father and the Holy Spirit didn't.

In any case, does it help with the arguments against PSA? I never accepted that the main argument was that it makes God indifferent to the identity of the victim - Lep's been working with that one on this thread. No, the main problem for me is how justice is satisfied by an innocent party taking the rap, and it makes no difference if that party is the son of the judge or the judge himself. It wouldn't be just according to my understanding of justice, if I killed myself in order to save a murderer from punishment.

quote:
The whole thing about 'cosmic child abuse' becomes a nonsense when the gospel is interpreted in a trinitarian way. People who choose, with full understanding of what they are doing, to give their lives for a higher cause, in order to benefit others, are considered heroes. Isn't that just what God did on the cross?
What you're missing is what his life was given for. Now I find this bit very interesting, because I perceive a split between two views both claiming to be PSA here:

1. Christ died because God's justice demands that someone suffers punishment for our sins - that's open to all the question about what justice is, the examples of shooting random people in the street and so on.

2. Christ died because God's justice demands that his hatred of sin be expressed - that's open to the question, "Why?" which can lead to Christus Victor or Abelard quite easily, and isn't what I mean by PSA.

Is that fair?

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Oscar the Grouch

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quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
The point being, of course, that the price HAS been paid and acknowledged, and we are therefore free to forgive.

I thought you might say that. It doesn't hold water, though.

Assume for a moment that my wife has done something which has really upset me. For example, I've planned a great meal out for our wedding anniversary and she forgets to be there.

I love her - but what do I say?

"I can't forgive you until reparation has been paid"? Of course not.

"I can forgive you but only because Jesus has paid the price on the cross"? No - that won't do either.

"I forgive you because I love you". That's what I would say. It doesn't ignore the hurt but chooses to freely forgive. Why does there have to be a price attached to forgiveness? Why can't it just be freely given?

quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
I'd say that models Christian forgiveness far more clearly than any of the other atonement "models".

And that just seems to indicate that you have a poor understanding of other atonement models and also of what forgiveness is really all about.

One thing I come back to is this:

Jesus talking to the paralysed man:
quote:
"Friend, your sins are forgiven you."
Jesus talking to the women who anointed his feet:
quote:
Your sins are forgiven."
Not "your sins will be forgiven as soon as I've been nailed to a cross". Jesus forgave sins then and there - where is the price being paid? There was none. That's because forgiveness isn't the same as retribution - forgiveness doesn't need a price.

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Leprechaun

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quote:
Originally posted by Oscar the Grouch:


Assume for a moment that my wife has done something which has really upset me. For example, I've planned a great meal out for our wedding anniversary and she forgets to be there.

I love her - but what do I say?

"I can't forgive you until reparation has been paid"? Of course not.

"I can forgive you but only because Jesus has paid the price on the cross"? No - that won't do either.

"I forgive you because I love you". That's what I would say. It doesn't ignore the hurt but chooses to freely forgive. Why does there have to be a price attached to forgiveness? Why can't it just be freely given?

There are a number of issues here.

You may forgive your wife because you love her. But let's take the situation that is much more like the Bible describes: your wife has an affair, sells your wedding ring to buy a present for her new boyfriend, and isn't sorry.

Is it then right that you should say "I forgive you because I love you" and that be the end of it? Maybe you say yes. That's fine. I think, and I think the Bible says about God that he demands there be some recognition that that was wrong, that it did not deserve forgiveness. Not that he is unwilling to forgive, but sees that wrong should be resognised as wrong. That's the heart of PSA.

The other issue is why forgiveness has to have a price. Well, its linked, but I guess that depends on how you think the Bible (and church tradition if that's your bag) is concerned with God being seen to be God and sin being seen to be sin. As I said on a few pages before, that's why one of the key questions is whether you think the important effect of sin is on us or on God. Classic PSA, influenced very strongly by the Reformers and Augustine's emphasis that the Gospel is God-centred and ultimately he saves for his glory, puts the "effect" our sin has on God at the centre of the atonement.

I guess Callan, in answer to your question why I think Tom Wright is miles away from classic PSA. The idea of Jesus as lightning conductor drawing evil away from us is S, but not P, because it is not God's attitude to sin being vindicated, but God getting us out of a mess. God is not an active agent in punishing (which is, after all why the word penal is in there!) I guess that's why his view is acceptable to so many who reject classic PSA, which is fair enough, but I think he should come clean!

That's also why I think PSA and CV are so closely linked as to be inseparable; in punishing Jesus God asserts his true character on creation, thus beginning his restoration of his true rule, character and Kingdom in creation (which is where, ironically, Jesus and the Victory of God is so helpful).

Right, that is a long post with a lot packed in: but it's hard trying to answer everyone's objections! Sorry if I missed yours!

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Callan
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Originally posted by Leprechaun:

quote:
You may forgive your wife because you love her. But let's take the situation that is much more like the Bible describes: your wife has an affair, sells your wedding ring to buy a present for her new boyfriend, and isn't sorry.

Is it then right that you should say "I forgive you because I love you" and that be the end of it? Maybe you say yes. That's fine. I think, and I think the Bible says about God that he demands there be some recognition that that was wrong, that it did not deserve forgiveness. Not that he is unwilling to forgive, but sees that wrong should be resognised as wrong. That's the heart of PSA.

Of course, for those of us who support SA but not PSA one should freely forgive the wife but the relationship can only be restored if she makes some kind of effort to restore the relationship. Which is what Christ does.

quote:
The other issue is why forgiveness has to have a price. Well, its linked, but I guess that depends on how you think the Bible (and church tradition if that's your bag) is concerned with God being seen to be God and sin being seen to be sin. As I said on a few pages before, that's why one of the key questions is whether you think the important effect of sin is on us or on God. Classic PSA, influenced very strongly by the Reformers and Augustine's emphasis that the Gospel is God-centred and ultimately he saves for his glory, puts the "effect" our sin has on God at the centre of the atonement.
I think I agree with you that sin has a price, in the sense that it has consequences. The crucifixion is, in that sense, the price, the consequences of the crucifying world human beings have created. As you note we differ as to for whose benefit the atonement takes place.

quote:
I guess Callan, in answer to your question why I think Tom Wright is miles away from classic PSA. The idea of Jesus as lightning conductor drawing evil away from us is S, but not P, because it is not God's attitude to sin being vindicated, but God getting us out of a mess. God is not an active agent in punishing (which is, after all why the word penal is in there!) I guess that's why his view is acceptable to so many who reject classic PSA, which is fair enough, but I think he should come clean!
Thanks for that. I pretty agree with you which is why I found Wright's article so annoying!

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Jolly Jape
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I know we've had these discussions ad nauseam, Lep, but I still can't see why God insisting on punishment being involved in the "remedying", if you like, of sin, shows God in a better light that Him absorbing the sin into Himself, as +Tom would maybe put it, in other words, forgiving without anyone being punished. Surely the second view places God even higher in the glory stakes, if I can be so irreverent, because He is even further removed from sin, his victory even more absolute. Maybe I'm just being thick, or maybe our moral constitutions are just wired differently, but ISTM that the person who forgives, as it were, ex nihilo, is much more remarkable than one who is able to forgive only on condition that the offence is also punished.

So I agree with you, in a funny sort of way, that the issue revolves around God's glory, but I think that is vindicated more by a non-penal than by a penal view of the atonement.

ETA:
btw, I agree with you about +Tom being non-PSA - That's why I like what he says so much! [Biased] [Big Grin] Like Callan, though, I do think he's being less than straightforward about this.

[ 27. April 2007, 13:47: Message edited by: Jolly Jape ]

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mousethief

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quote:
Originally posted by Doulos:
There can be no status or heirachy in the Trinity, can there?

Yes, there can be. The Father is the source of the Son and the Spirit in a way the Son is not of the Father (or the Spirit, depending whether you ask the RCC or the EOC), and the Spirit is the source of neither the Son nor the Father.

quote:
God is God is God, whether manifested through the father in heaven, the suffering man on the cross, or the Spirit at work in the world today.
This sounds like modalism to me. How God manifests Herself to the world is quite different from the persons of the Trinity.

quote:
So the idea of God the Father being the authority which must be placated suggests that the Father has a greater status within the Trinity than the Son - that doesn't sound right to me.
Which is exactly why I reject PSA. Well, one of the many reasons, anyway.

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BroJames
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I've re-read Tom Wright's Fulcrum piece, and with apologies for the extent of the quotation, I find it really hard to see how anyone can say that this idea of SA is not penal.

From N.T. Wright here
quote:
The biblical doctrine of God's wrath is rooted in the doctrine of God as the good, wise and loving creator, who hates - yes, hates, and hates implacably - anything that spoils, defaces, distorts or damages his beautiful creation, and in particular anything that does that to his image-bearing creatures. If God does not hate racial prejudice, he is neither good nor loving. If God is not wrathful at child abuse, he is neither good nor loving. If God is not utterly determined to root out from his creation, in an act of proper wrath and judgment, the arrogance that allows people to exploit, bomb, bully and enslave one another, he is neither loving, nor good, nor wise.
<snip>
if you get one part of Isaiah 53 you probably get the whole thing, and with it not only a substitutionary death but a penal substitutionary death, yet without any of the problems that the caricature would carry:

He was wounded for our transgressions
and bruised for our iniquities;
upon him was the punishment that brought us peace
and with his stripes we are healed.
All we like sheep have gone astray;
We have turned every one to his own way;
And YHWH has laid on him the iniquity of us all.
(Isaiah 53:5-6.)
<snip>
He is the wise and loving creator who cannot abide his creation being despoiled. On the cross he drew the full force not only of that despoiling, but of his own proper, judicial, punitive rejection of it, on to himself. That is what the New Testament says. That is what Jesus himself, I have argued elsewhere, believed what was going on.
<snip>
"God is love, say [some], and therefore he does not require a propitiation. God is love, say the Apostles, and therefore he provides a propitiation. Which of these doctrines appeals best to the conscience? Which of them gives reality, and contents, and substance, to the love of God? Is it not the apostolic doctrine? Does not the other cut out and cast away that very thing which made the soul of God's love to Paul and John? . . . Nobody has any right to borrow the words 'God is love' from an apostle, and then to put them in circulation after carefully emptying them of their apostolic import. . . . But this is what they do who appeal to love against propitiation. To take the condemnation out of the Cross is to take the nerve out of the Gospel . . . Its whole virtue, its consistency with God's character, its aptness to man's need, its real dimensions as a revelation of love, depend ultimately on this, that mercy comes to us in it through judgment." (James Denney, The Second Epistle to the Corinthians, Expositor's Bible, Hodder, 1894, p. 221f.)

When I read that, it sounded as though Denney were addressing Dr John directly. And I was put in mind of a characteristically gentle remark of Henry Chadwick, in his introductory lectures on doctrine which I attended my first year in Oxford. After carefully discussing all the various theories of atonement, Dr Chadwick allowed that there were of course some problems with the idea of penal substitution. But he said, 'until something like this has been said, it is hard to escape the conclusion that the full story has not yet been told.'
<snip>
Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures, and all because of the unstoppable love of the one creator God. There is 'no condemnation' for those who are in Christ, because on the cross God condemned sin in the flesh of the Son who, as the expression of his own self-giving love, had been sent for that very purpose.


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Jolly Jape
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BroJames, the clue is here, in the last paragraph you cited:
quote:
Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures, and all because of the unstoppable love of the one creator God. There is 'no condemnation' for those who are in Christ, because on the cross God condemned sin in the flesh of the Son who, as the expression of his own self-giving love, had been sent for that very purpose.
God is, in Christ, condemning our sin. Thus God's wrath is directed at our sin, not at us. Thus this is substitutionary, but not penal, because "sin", being a non-sentient concept, cannot suffer and thus cannot materially be punished.

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Oscar the Grouch

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quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
You may forgive your wife because you love her. But let's take the situation that is much more like the Bible describes: your wife has an affair, sells your wedding ring to buy a present for her new boyfriend, and isn't sorry.

Sorry - but this is just setting up a pointless diversion and I don't think it is at all "much more like the Bible describes". It may be what you would like the Bible to describe, but that's another matter. I guess you're trying to describe "total depravity", but as that is a concept I find as alien to Christian faith as PSA, you're not really helping me at all.

I notice that you didn't comment on the way that Jesus forgave people in the Gospels - without price. This utterly undermines the PSA argument that forgiveness requires some sort of payment.

I still maintain that you can only really hold to PSA by having an impoverished understanding of forgiveness. I can't see anything in what you have written so far that leads me to think that you really have grasped what it means to be forgiven. You seem to know what it means to buy someone off (which is what PSA is basically about) - but that ain't forgiveness.

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Leprechaun

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quote:
Originally posted by Oscar the Grouch:
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
You may forgive your wife because you love her. But let's take the situation that is much more like the Bible describes: your wife has an affair, sells your wedding ring to buy a present for her new boyfriend, and isn't sorry.

Sorry - but this is just setting up a pointless diversion and I don't think it is at all "much more like the Bible describes". It may be what you would like the Bible to describe, but that's another matter. I guess you're trying to describe "total depravity", but as that is a concept I find as alien to Christian faith as PSA, you're not really helping me at all.
I was actually trying to rewrite the story to be more like the story of Hosea, which is the nearest the Bible gets to "God as the wounded lover" analogy that you were playing on as far as I can see.
quote:

I still maintain that you can only really hold to PSA by having an impoverished understanding of forgiveness. I can't see anything in what you have written so far that leads me to think that you really have grasped what it means to be forgiven. You seem to know what it means to buy someone off (which is what PSA is basically about) - but that ain't forgiveness.

I have tried very hard to engage in this debate without questioning anyone's relationship with God or appreciation of the grace of God in Christ. I don't really want to continue in the conversation if you won't extend the same courtesy.

[ 27. April 2007, 16:37: Message edited by: Leprechaun ]

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BroJames
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quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
BroJames, the clue is here, in the last paragraph you cited:
quote:
Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures, and all because of the unstoppable love of the one creator God. There is 'no condemnation' for those who are in Christ, because on the cross God condemned sin in the flesh of the Son who, as the expression of his own self-giving love, had been sent for that very purpose.
God is, in Christ, condemning our sin. Thus God's wrath is directed at our sin, not at us. Thus this is substitutionary, but not penal, because "sin", being a non-sentient concept, cannot suffer and thus cannot materially be punished.
Yes, but sin does not exist in a vacuum. It is always enfleshed, as it were. It is because God enfleshes himself incarnationally in Christ that in that enfleshment in Jesus he bears the penalty of sin.
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Jolly Jape
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Well I could equally say that cancer does not exist in a vacuum, that it can only exist enfleshed in the victim. That does not stop the surgeon hating cancer, nor does it mean that in order to destroy the cancer, he has to hate the person (OK, not necessarly hate, but punish) the victim in order to excise it. If you doubt that +Tom's view is different from the understanding of most (all?) PSAers, consider the lengths he goes to in order not to say that God's wrath is directed towards sinners.

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Wolfgang
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quote:
Originally posted by BroJames:
Yes, but sin does not exist in a vacuum. It is always enfleshed, as it were. It is because God enfleshes himself incarnationally in Christ that in that enfleshment in Jesus he bears the penalty of sin.

Obviously I can't speak for him, but I guess Wright would be comfortable with this analysis. In The Resurrection of the Son of God he comments on Galatians 3, writing

quote:
The transformed fulfilment of the Jewish hope is one of Paul's main subjects in galatians 3. He describes in verses 10-14 how the promise to Abraham, that the whole world would be blessed 'in him', had apparently got stuck when Israel fell victim to the curse of the law. But Israel's God has acted through the Messiah, who bore the law's curse on Israel's behalf , so that "the blessing of Abraham might come on the gentiles in the Messiah, Jesus..."

(p.221)



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"The socialist who is a Christian is more to be dreaded than a socialist who is an atheist" - Dostoevksy

Posts: 121 | From: The North | Registered: Dec 2005  |  IP: Logged
BroJames
Shipmate
# 9636

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quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
Well I could equally say that cancer does not exist in a vacuum, that it can only exist enfleshed in the victim. That does not stop the surgeon hating cancer, nor does it mean that in order to destroy the cancer, he has to hate the person (OK, not necessarly hate, but punish) the victim in order to excise it. If you doubt that +Tom's view is different from the understanding of most (all?) PSAers, consider the lengths he goes to in order not to say that God's wrath is directed towards sinners.

I'll go with your analogy of cancer and say that it is like a cancer that has spread to every part of the patient's body. There is no part of the patient's body which will escape the impact of the attack upon the cancer. In the same way that the surgeon in working out his hatred of the cancer would affect the whole of the patient, so God's 'hatred' of sin affects the whole human person. The mystery of the atonement is that God himself in Christ bears the whole weight of that hatred "in his own body on the tree"
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mousethief

Ship's Thieving Rodent
# 953

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Maybe somebody can help me out here with a Bible question. Is the term "wrath" ever used in connexion with the crucifixion, in either the NT, or in OT texts which are thought to be prophecies of the event? I don't mean wrath at sin outside the context of the crucifixion. If as PSA seems to suppose the crucifixion was a matter of Christ redirecting God's wrath from us to himself, which scriptures attest to that?

Thanks.

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Jolly Jape
Shipmate
# 3296

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BroJames, I think I'd pretty well go along with that account. Of course it is a fuller healing than we have yet discussed, because he not only (to push an analogy probably too far) excises the "cancer" but he restores us such that we are more "healthy" afterwards than we would have been had we never had the "cancer" in the first place! I don't, however, see this as being PSA, since it works perfectly well as an analogy without any penal element.

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To those who have never seen the flow and ebb of God's grace in their lives, it means nothing. To those who have seen it, even fleetingly, even only once - it is life itself. (Adeodatus)

Posts: 3011 | From: A village of gardens | Registered: Sep 2002  |  IP: Logged
Oscar the Grouch

Adopted Cascadian
# 1916

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quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
I have tried very hard to engage in this debate without questioning anyone's relationship with God or appreciation of the grace of God in Christ. I don't really want to continue in the conversation if you won't extend the same courtesy.

I am sorry if I have upset you. BUT....

I did not question your relationship with God, so don't make out I did. I am also not questioning your appreciation of the grace of God in Christ.

What I AM doing is saying that you (like many other Con Evos - Gordon Cheng, for example who just wrote this: God actually doesn't forgive in the loose sense of that word; which is something sentimental like "Well you have done a bad thing, but let's just pretend it hasn't happened and forget about it.") appear to have a serious failure of understanding about what forgiveness really is.

I'm not trying to insult you - I am really seriously concerned. Forgiveness (not retribution) lies at the heart of the Christian gospel.

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Faradiu, dundeibáwa weyu lárigi weyu

Posts: 3871 | From: Gamma Quadrant, just to the left of Galifrey | Registered: Dec 2001  |  IP: Logged
Freddy
Shipmate
# 365

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quote:
Originally posted by MouseThief:
Maybe somebody can help me out here with a Bible question. Is the term "wrath" ever used in connexion with the crucifixion, in either the NT, or in OT texts which are thought to be prophecies of the event? I don't mean wrath at sin outside the context of the crucifixion. If as PSA seems to suppose the crucifixion was a matter of Christ redirecting God's wrath from us to himself, which scriptures attest to that?

I don't think the term "wrath" is ever used in connection with the crucifixion, in either the NT, or in OT texts which are thought to be prophecies of the event. Of course the wrd "wrath" is used about 200 times in the Bible, and many of those times seem to refer to humanity's ultimate judgment because of sin. So the connection is easy to make.

Lots of passages say things like:
quote:
Jeremiah 31:10 “ Hear the word of the LORD, O nations,
And declare it in the isles afar off, and say,
‘ He who scattered Israel will gather him,
And keep him as a shepherd does his flock.’
11 For the LORD has redeemed Jacob,
And ransomed him from the hand of one stronger than he.
12 Therefore they shall come and sing in the height of Zion,
Streaming to the goodness of the LORD—
For wheat and new wine and oil,
For the young of the flock and the herd;
Their souls shall be like a well-watered garden,
And they shall sorrow no more at all.

So God scatters Jacob in wrath, but He also redeems and gathers him.

God's wrath is directed at death:
quote:
Hosea 13:13 The sorrows of a woman in childbirth shall come upon him.
He is an unwise son,
For he should not stay long where children are born.
14 “ I will ransom them from the power of the grave;
I will redeem them from death.
O Death, I will be your plagues!
O Grave, I will be your destruction!
Pity is hidden from My eyes.”

So it's all pretty confusing if we are thinking in terms of where the wrath is directed, how the ransom works, and what redemption is. [Paranoid]

[ 28. April 2007, 12:06: Message edited by: Freddy ]

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"Consequently nothing is of greater importance to a person than knowing what the truth is." Swedenborg

Posts: 12845 | From: Bryn Athyn | Registered: Jun 2001  |  IP: Logged
Divine Outlaw
Gin-soaked boy
# 2252

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quote:
Originally posted by Freddy:
So the connection is easy to make.

The connection is easy to make if one already has a presupposition in favour of PSA. Otherwise 'the connection' is question begging.

And I think this is a lot of the problem with the PSA debate. People who have encountered the Bible only within the context of PSA-believing churches simply find themselves unable to read certain texts without seeing PSA in them. Those of us who are not in this situation find ourselves baffled by the fact that they read these texts in this way. And never the twain shall meet.

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Freddy
Shipmate
# 365

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DOD I agree completely. We read our presuppositions into the texts - which almost always conveniently lend themselves to multiple interpretations.

To me the trick is to find the interpretation that works most consistently for ALL of the texts.

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"Consequently nothing is of greater importance to a person than knowing what the truth is." Swedenborg

Posts: 12845 | From: Bryn Athyn | Registered: Jun 2001  |  IP: Logged



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