I am a newbie when it comes to understanding the vocabulary of Soteriology. So forgive me for displayed ignorance!
I was reading the "Jesus Creed" blog and read a post about "Penal Substitution". Are any of you familiar with this term?
do you have any insight on these articles? Any summary for those of us who are just beginning in our deeper exploration into these topics? What do you think about penal substitution?
http://www.jesuscreed.org/?p=968
I was reading the "Jesus Creed" blog and read a post about "Penal Substitution". Are any of you familiar with this term?
penal substitution focuses (and Ill deal with this tomorrow) on Jesus substitution instead of us in his suffering the punishment of God/Father (but be careful not to divide the persons against one another). That is, we have the Gods wrath (penal) directed at sin and sinners, and Jesus steps in, suffers/absorbs that wrath instead of us so we are relieved or let off the hook. But once again: for a genuinely trinitarian penal substitution, we must not divide the persons of the Trinity: this, too, springs from Father, Son, and Spirit.
http://www.jesuscreed.org/?p=963
Is he saying that there would be salvation even without the resurrection and sending of the Spirit at shavuot/Pentecost? I happen to agree, but I think it's interesting to think of it that way.What is about these two terms penal and substitution?
Here is what one is saying by using those terms: the atonement takes place at the cross; the cross is the place where God vented his wrath against sin; the cross is the place where God in Christ assumed the punishment for sin; the cross is the place where Christ substituted for my sins; the cross is the place where Christ was punished for the sins of the world (or, if you so think, the elect). The use of these terms suggests that it is stating atonement takes place on the cross (no resurrection, no Pentecost) and that is fundamentally about propitiating the wrath of God against sin. To clarify Im not suggesting for one second that those who believe in penal substitution do not think there is saving significance in the resurrection or in Pentecost; Im suggesting the terms being used do not naturally convey those events as well. Ive rarely heard anyone speak of a vicarious or substitutionary resurrection though I think orthodoxy believes in such.
http://www.jesuscreed.org/?p=968
do you have any insight on these articles? Any summary for those of us who are just beginning in our deeper exploration into these topics? What do you think about penal substitution?
http://www.jesuscreed.org/?p=968