Obviously many people reject the penal substitutionary theory of the atonement.
It is not salvific.
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Obviously many people reject the penal substitutionary theory of the atonement.
This will apparently come as a shock to you but there are many, many, Christians who do not hold to the penal substitution view of atonement.
The atonement described in the Lion, the Witch and Wardrobe is the "Christus Victor" theory of the atonement and not the "penal substitution" theory. Aslans death, you may recall, was a victory over death, not a propitiation of divine wrath. C.S. Lewis did not have a single positive word for the explanation that Jesus suffered in our place the divine punishment that we deserved.
C.S. Lewis had this to say about the penal substitutionary theory: "On the face of it that is a very silly theory. If God was prepared to let us off, why on earth did He not do so? And what possible point could there be in punishing an innocent person? None at all that I can see." Mere Christianity. C. S. Lewis had a defective view of salvation and was an opponent of the substitutionary and penal view of the atonement." Martyn Lloyd-Jones.
Atheists and pagans object to the penal substitutionary theory of the atonement, mocking it as "divine child abuse," "unjust and immoral," and "Christian foolishness." 1 Corinthians 1:18-25. For some nonbelievers, this is the reason why they reject Christianity. So, Christians who refuse it have this in common with all non-Christians. The penal substitution atonement is approximately 2000 years old -- dating back to when Jesus died on the cross suffering the punishment for sin that we deserved. Obviously our understanding of this work grows each passing year with the development of systematic theology, but Jesus's finished work on the cross is not "new." It is no newer than Galatians 3:10-13, Isaiah 53:5-6, 10, Romans 5:8-10, Romans 3:25-26, etc. etc.
But this thread is not about atonement theories -- we have all seen enough of those thread, and that ground is well trodden. This thread is about C.S. Lewis and the fact that he would refuse God's commands before refusing C.S. Lewis's opinion of good and evil if they conflicted.
C.S. Lewis would refuse to unreservedly say to God "Thy will be done." C.S. Lewis believed that we were not obligated to obey biblical commands that appear to us to be evil. "The ultimate question is whether the doctrine of the goodness of God or that of the inerrancy of Scriptures is to prevail when they conflict. I think the doctrine of the goodness of God is the more certain of the two. Indeed, only that doctrine renders this worship of Him obligatory or even permissible." (C.S. Lewis's letter to John Beversluis, dated July 3, 1963.)
Christian theology has always stood by the teaching that truth is true because God says it is true, and right is right because God says it is right. It was Socrates the pagan philosopher who insisted that he wanted himself to be the ultimate judge of the nature of piety, and that he did not care what God said about it. Euthyphro. Lewis is quite right in stating the issue between Christianity and non-Christianity in the terms he uses. He is, however, quite mistaken when he chooses the side of paganism against Christianity.
Your doctrinal leanings are not synonymous with Christianity. Not at all. But slander is always slander, regardless of doctrinal positions.
C.S. Lewis is just a fallible man, hes not the Lord or even an apostle. Why get so worked up over the fallible opinions of some man? C.S. Lewis is not the Church.
How so?
C.S. Lewis is just a fallible man, hes not the Lord or even an apostle. Why get so worked up over the fallible opinions of some man? C.S. Lewis is not the Church.
C.S. Lewis would refuse to unreservedly say to God "Thy will be done." C.S. Lewis believed that we were not obligated to obey biblical commands that appear to us to be evil. "The ultimate question is whether the doctrine of the goodness of God or that of the inerrancy of Scriptures is to prevail when they conflict. I think the doctrine of the goodness of God is the more certain of the two. Indeed, only that doctrine renders this worship of Him obligatory or even permissible." (C.S. Lewis's letter to John Beversluis, dated July 3, 1963.)
Christian theology has always stood by the teaching that truth is true because God says it is true, and right is right because God says it is right. It was Socrates the pagan philosopher who insisted that he wanted himself to be the ultimate judge of the nature of piety, and that he did not care what God said about it. Euthyphro. Lewis is quite right in stating the issue between Christianity and non-Christianity in the terms he uses. He is, however, quite mistaken when he chooses the side of paganism against Christianity.
C.S. Lewis believed that we were not obligated to obey biblical commands that appear to us to be evil. "The ultimate question is whether the doctrine of the goodness of God or that of the inerrancy of Scriptures is to prevail when they conflict. I think the doctrine of the goodness of God is the more certain of the two.
I'm afraid I'm with Lewis on this one, as I see the argument (and I have not read the piece, but only what you quote here). If the option is to believe what the Scriptures SEEM TO BE saying, or believe that God is good ... then I'm going to choose God's goodness.
I say the Scriptures SEEM TO BE saying something, because if in any case we believe they tell us something that makes God out NOT to be good, then obviously we are wrong about the Scriptures.
Because God IS good.
The sticky point is that we must always be operating within Romans 12--with renewed minds that are in conformance with the mind of Christ--"then you can judge God's perfect will."
The Christian must revise his conscience to conform to the mind of Christ. God calls upon a nonbeliever to reverse the dictates of his heart: "If anyone should think to himself, 'I will do well enough if I follow the dictates of my heart,' Yahweh will not pardon him. His wrath shall burn against him. And all the curses written in the book will come upon him." Deuteronomy 29:18-20 (New Jerusalem Bible) The conscience of the nonbeliever cannot see any value or logic in living the Christian life or converting to Christianity. His moral conscience tells him to remain what he is. That is why it actually takes a miracle for a nonbeliever to convert to Christianity.
Can I get you to give input on one of these threads?Penal substitution was not taught by the early Christian church. None of the early Church Fathers profess a belief in such a theory. Ideas about penal substitution didn't develop until centuries later.
So, I, along with other Christians, reject penal substitution. (And as an aside, I think in the "The Lion, the Witch, & the Wardrobe," Lewis was modeling the ransom theory of atonement, which did exist in early Christian thought & belief.)
By contrast, Christian theology has always stood by the teaching that truth is true because God says it is true, and right is right because God says it is right. Christianity rejects the idea of human autonomy.
The atonement described in the Lion, the Witch and Wardrobe is the "Christus Victor" theory of the atonement and not the "penal substitution" theory.