huckelberry wrote:This post seemed to me to be a reasonable first response to the opening post by CaliforniaKid. I was puzzled that it was not picked up on much.
It's true that many scholars have claimed Anselm was the first to say Christ bore the penalty for our sins in order to appease the wrath or justice of God. According to these scholars, the "classic" theory ("Ransom Theory") was that the payment was made not to God, but to an autonomous power such as Death, Justice, or the Devil.
My response to this is twofold.
First, not all scholars agree with this assessment. Jeffrey, Ovey, and Sach find satisfaction theory taught in nearly all the early Fathers. They point, for example, to Irenaeus's statement that Christ "did not make void, but fulfilled the law, by performing the offices of the high priest, propitiating God for men, and cleansing the lepers, healing the sick, and Himself suffering death, that exiled man might go forth from condemnation, and might return without fear to his own inheritance" (Against Heresies 4.8.2). It's true that Irenaeus elsewhere speaks of the atonement in terms of ransom, but this just suggests Irenaeus saw the two theories as complementary, with Death, the Devil, and Justice acting as subordinates of God rather than his autonomous equals. (See also Job, where the Devil is more an official in God's court than his avowed opponent.)
Second, it's not surprising that the Greek Fathers, who generally despised the Jewish sacrificial system, explained the atonement in terms more consonant with their worldview. However, it seems clear to me that the first-century
Jewish Christians who wrote the New Testament understood the atonement in terms of Jewish sacrificial theology as a payment made to God, not the Devil. The very term "atonement"-- a New Testament term-- assumes that framework. I'm happy to listen to alternative interpretations of the passages I quoted in my previous post, but I don't see how they can be interpreted to support a ransom theory or any of the other popular alternatives. And if the satisfaction model was the original Jewish understanding, then the subsequent Hellenistic reinterpretations of that model are just revisionism. Little wonder they haven't caught on, since they virtually ignore the Jewish context of Jesus's life and mission, and prefer instead to impose interpretations foreign to the text.