3. Building a Holistic Concept of Atonement on the Foundation of an Ontological Perspective
Having looked at some particular issues that can prevent us from being able to form a holistic concept of atonement, now I want to present a general outline of the atonement perspective, which I believe is both faithful to the Scripture and to the early patristic tradition. As I said earlier, in Orthodox theology we can find some important foundational guidelines, which then can be enriched by contemporary Protestant biblical scholarship for our task of presenting a concept of atonement that is both Scriptural and patristic. Before I present an ontological perspective on atonement and its biblical foundation, I need to respond to the main problems mentioned in the previous section since the answers will serve as a foundation of the view that I present.
3.1. Metaphors as Key Building Blocks of the Concept of Atonement
Since many contemporary scholars recognize that theological language is fundamentally metaphorical (
Boersma 2006, p. 105), we could say that the history of many Christian doctrines, including the doctrine of atonement, is the history of the use and abuse of metaphors in theology. In biblical teaching on atonement, metaphors are the main means through which biblical authors verbalize the concept of atonement. Therefore, proper interpretation of these metaphors is the key to grasping the biblical concept and formulating it. Using the biblical metaphor of “ransom” as an example, I briefly present how biblical metaphors have been used and abused in the formation of models, theories, and concepts of the atonement.
C. S. Lewis provided a simple definition of metaphor: “thinking (and often then speaking) of a lesser known reality in terms of a better known one that is in some significant way similar to it” (
Macky 1982, p. 206). In each metaphor we have a partial mapping of these similarities from the source domain to the target domain. Each metaphor highlights only certain aspects of the object or concept we are describing. Zoltan Kovecses distinguishes between a simple metaphor and a complex metaphor and shows that simple metaphors can form a cluster of metaphors, which together form a complex metaphor (
Kovecses 2010, pp. 103, 145), which can work as a metaphorical model. For example, in Scripture we find a number of simple metaphors (
slavery, freedom, price paid, Redeemer, etc.), which together form a
biblical model of ransom that presents to us a metaphorical perspective on what has been accomplished by Christ on the cross: we were in “slavery,” but through the “price” of Christ’s life (or blood) we have been “redeemed” (delivered) and now we are “free.” Using a familiar first-century reality of slavery and the redemption from slavery, the biblical authors provided us a partial revelation of our target domain (what happened on the cross).
We need to remember that not every element of the source domain is mapped into the target domain. In other words, analogy is always limited. For example, Scripture never tells us to whom the price is paid, what happens with the price that was paid, etc. These elements are not part of the metaphorical analogy intended by the original author(s). Therefore, metaphors and metaphorical models always provide us only a limited presentation of reality. If we try to get from a metaphor more than it is supposed to provide, we begin to distort the meaning of the metaphor. No single metaphor is able to present a full picture of reality. This is why we need multiple metaphors in order to reconstruct a biblical concept of atonement, where each metaphor will provide a certain fragment of the larger conceptual picture.
Unfortunately, on the way to reconstructing a biblical concept of atonement, many have taken a wrong route. In order to get a full picture (or outline) of the concept, they began to extend metaphorical analogy and to develop new entailments deduced from the source domain. For example, Origen began to ask: “to whom is the price of redemption paid?”, and as a result, he added new elements to the limited biblical model of ransom. As a result, in RV they may often talk about the devil as the one who had legal rights to hold humanity in slavery and God had to pay him the price to make us free. We see the development of what we can call a theological atonement theory, which takes a limited biblical metaphorical model and begins to develop it by adding new elements of analogy to interpretation. What we have in the end is a literalization of metaphor and the formation of a new narrative, which becomes dominant in a certain atonement perspective. Thus, a limited biblical ransom model that shows us that God made us free through the costly act of Christ, turns into a “full story” theological ransom theory that provides a complete explanation of how redemption has been accomplished.
Something similar happened with the cluster of legal metaphors of Scripture. The biblical model of release from condemnation of death through Christ’s death and resurrection turned into a number of legal theological theories, with PSA as the most famous of them. According to PSA, on the cross, Christ takes upon Himself God’s legal punishment that we deserve: God pours out His wrath against sin on Jesus and turns His face from Him, and Christ experiences the terrible condemnation of spiritual death. Once God’s judgement is accomplished, His wrath is appeased, and there is now no condemnation for those for whom Christ suffered. Again, we see how a limited biblical metaphorical model of release from condemnation obtains new details in order to become a “full picture.” However, as we said, metaphorical presentation of concept can never provide a “full picture” since it goes against the very nature of metaphor. Thus, what we have as a result of such a process is the literalization of metaphorical presentation and the formation of a completed model or narrative, while Scripture always provides only a limited metaphorical model.
Because of such literalization, in each theory of atonement we have a new narrative of what happened on the cross, which often becomes the central dominant narrative. In PSA, it is the story of God punishing Christ instead of us with spiritual death. In RV, it is the story of God paying the devil the ransom price. The problem is that neither of these two narratives are found in the New Testament. We will not find them in the apostolic kerygma in the book of Acts nor in the apostles’ reflections in their epistles when they talk about what happened on the cross. These two narratives are only constructed in the process of a particular interpretation of certain metaphorical fragments. At the same time, in Scripture we have a clear redemptive narrative, which is repeated dozens of times in different forms but is often neglected in many atonement theories, as I will show further.
In my view, forming a biblical concept of atonement through the literalization and development of a certain biblical model into a full theory of atonement is a wrong approach since it goes against the very nature of a metaphor and how it works. For example, when Scripture uses the metaphor “Jesus is the bread of life” it maps only certain features of the source domain (“bread”) to the target domain (“Jesus”), such as the idea of providing what is needed for life. Yet, if we, not satisfied with such a limited perspective, decide to develop entailments of the source domain and begin to map such ideas as the “origin of bread,” “what happens to bread as we eat it,” etc., we will end up with wrong ideas that will result in a distorted understanding of the person and work of Christ. The same is true for any other metaphor or metaphorical model. Metaphor always provides us with only a partial understanding of the fragment of reality it describes. Any attempt to add new elements to a limited biblical metaphorical model in order to have a “fuller picture” will automatically distort our understanding of the metaphor and of the concept it forms.
How should we form our concepts then? In many ways, the work of a theologian is similar to someone who puts together a big picture of a jigsaw puzzle. Irenaeus of Lyon uses a powerful image that describes the importance of the process of the formation of doctrine (Irenaeus,
AH 1.8.1 (see also 1.9.4))
7. He compared biblical images with precious stones, from which the artist made a beautiful image of the king. However, others take these precious stones and make of them an image of a dog or a fox but call it the image of a king, indicating that they use the same stones. Irenaeus, using such a vivid metaphor, skillfully shows that in order to see and understand the true “image of the king,” it is not enough to just use the “precious stones” of Scripture, but these “stones” must be correctly placed in the right relationship to each other, because only when they are placed in the right order can they present us with the right image.
Various New Testament texts present different elements of the reality of Christ’s atonement, and we have quite a difficult task to bring all of these elements together and integrate them into one holistic concept of atonement. In order to do that, we need to have some structure or contours that provide us with the shape of the big picture. We noticed that in any perspective on atonement, we find a key narrative. Michael Root highlights that narrative is unavoidable in soteriology since it “presumes two states of human existence, a state of deprivation (sin, corruption) and a state of release from that deprivation (salvation, liberation), and an event that produces a change from the first state to the second,” which forms “the sufficient conditions of a narrative” (
Root 1986, p. 145).
Therefore, we could say that the biblical concept of atonement is presented through a number of what we would call metaphorical narrative models, which we could associate with root metaphors (redemption, reconciliation, forgiveness, justification, etc.). These models usually present a problem (debt, slavery, guilt, etc.), a state of freedom from this problem, and some additional details (e.g., “price of ransom”). It is interesting to notice that the event that produces change in most cases is the death and resurrection of Christ.
I think here it is important to differentiate between historical narrative and metaphorical narrative, which serves as one of the ways to present historical narrative. In describing the past event of my visit to a friend and giving him a book (historical narrative), I can say: “I paid him my debt.” Depending on the context, giving a book and paying my debt could be two different things (two lines of historical narrative), or it could be that “paying the debt” is a metaphorical way of describing the returning of a book to my friend (metaphorical narrative). Thus, one of the most critical issues in the theology of atonement will be the decisions we need to make, whether, in different descriptions of what happened on the cross, we are dealing with historical narrative or metaphorical narrative that presents historical narrative through metaphor. I believe that one of the main problems with many atonement theories is that they literalized metaphors and interpreted certain metaphorical narratives as historical narrative. By doing this, they not only took a wrong route but also often ignored or diminished the importance of key redemptive narratives of the New Testament. This brings us to the next point.
3.2. The Apostolic Kerygma as a Basic Structure of the Concept of Atonement
I believe that it is in the apostolic kerygma that we find the key redemptive narrative, which provides us with the structure of the concept of atonement. As we said earlier, instead of trying to reconstruct some hidden narrative of “what really happened” on the cross, we need to pay careful attention to the message of the apostles. In the message of the apostolic church, what happened on the cross is presented to us in the form of a short narrative statement: Jesus died, was buried, and rose again on the third day (see 1 Cor. 15:3–4
8). This was the central element of the Gospel (τὸ εὐαγγέλιον) (1 Cor. 15:1) or the apostolic “kerygma” (τὸ κήρυγμα) (1 Cor. 15:14), and later it became the central element of what St. Irenaeus called the “rule of faith,” which he called the “foundation of the edifice” of all Christian teaching (
AP, 6)
9.
We are so used to this basic narrative of the creed that often it becomes just a statement of belief in the historical event and we may miss the powerful theological meaning that goes with it, which describes the very essence of atonement. Christ died, having experienced real human death in His nature, but on the third day He rose again, not simply returning back to life (as Lazarus did), but raising His human nature to a new state of immortality and incorruption. Therefore, kerygma proclaims not only a historical event but also a deep theological truth: Jesus died and rose again, having overcome death in His human nature once and for all. Apostolic preaching was not about settling with the devil the issue of who owns humanity nor it was about settling legal issues of our status before God. It was about what happened with Christ in his human nature and the benefits it provides for us and our salvation.
This is what provides a foundation and a structure for the further development of a concept of atonement. Obviously, having such a basic structure, we still need more enlightenment about the nature of what happened and what it has done for us, but here we enter a reality that is very difficult to explain. This is why biblical writers use metaphors as one of the main means to talk about reality, which is abstract or unknown to us. According to C. S. Lewis, when we describe things like incarnation, redemption through death, and the resurrection of Christ, we are dealing with two things: “the supernatural, unconditioned reality, and those events on the historical level which its irruption into the natural universe is held to have produced. The first thing is indescribable in ‘literal’ speech, and therefore we rightly interpret all that is said about it metaphorically. But the second thing is in a wholly different position. Events on the historical level are the sort of things we can talk about literally” (
Lewis 1947, p. 97). Therefore, in the NT we have the historical narrative of Christ’s death and resurrection presented through a number of metaphors and metaphorical models (or narratives).
We should notice that in the New Testament the apostolic kerygma is often followed by a short but very important statement: all this happened “for our sins”
10, that is, to deal with the problem of “sin”. Here we come to the issue, which is the foundation for a holistic ontological concept of atonement.
3.3. The Biblical Concept of Sin as the Foundation of the Biblical Concept of Atonement
Earlier I stressed that our view of sin will determine the way that we view atonement. It is interesting that in Orthodox theology we can find a perspective on sin and its consequences that is somewhat different than a traditional Western understanding. This perspective reflects the view of many Eastern Church Fathers and is much closer to the biblical Hebrew notion of sin, which we desperately need to return to, since only then will we have a solid foundation for reconstructing a biblical concept of atonement.
Sin in the OT is a complex concept. First, sin has to be viewed primarily through a relational perspective. This is why the Ten Commandments and the whole OT law are presented in the context of covenantal relationships with God. In the New Testament, sin is most of all a failure to live in love toward God and toward neighbors, expressed in the two greatest commandments, which are relational at their core. Often the NT talks about sin in the singular, pointing to the most fundamental SIN of broken relationships with God expressed in the failure of trust in, submission to, love for, and worship of God as the ultimate center of human life. This is why one of the main works of the Holy Spirit is to “convict the world concerning sin” (Jn. 16:8 NAS), which is expressed in that “they do not believe in Me” (Jn. 16:9 NAS). This SIN leads to multiple sins as a distorted dynamic of human life (wrong acts, thoughts, desires, will, etc.), which does not correspond to God’s intention and purpose for human life.
But the Hebrew concept of sin also has another dimension. Jay Sklar points out that Old Testament terms for sin “refer not only to the wrong itself, but also to the consequences for the wrong” (
Sklar 2005, p. 12). One of the best summaries of the various aspects of the Hebrew concept of sin we find in Mark Biddle’s study of sin: “the Bible does not separate the act from the effects that follow fluidly and organically. As a result, usages of the Hebrew noun
11 can be roughly classified into three categories along the deed-consequence continuum: (1) to refer to the wrongful act itself; (2) to denote the state of guilt into which the agent enters; (3) to indicate the consequences suffered by the agent and the environment as guilt ‘matures’ into results” (
Biddle 2005, p. 117). All these meanings are part of one organic continuum, which shows that
sin as an
act leads to the condition of “bearing
sin” as
guilt or responsibility for one’s action and results in
sin as the devastating and deadly
consequences that sin triggers. Therefore, guilt and punishment should not be viewed as separate external legal categories but rather as ontological realities closely connected to sin as an act. Mark Biddle stresses that “the biblical viewpoint … views sin and its consequences in holistic, organic terms” (
Biddle 2005, p. 122).
We can see this very clearly in many NT passages that show the organic unity between sin and death. Death “entered” the world through sin (Rom. 5:12). Paul clearly shows the natural cause-and-effect relationship between sin and death using a variety of organic phytomorphic and farming metaphors: “sinful passions” bring forth “the fruit of death” (Rom. 7: 5), and he who nourishes the sinful desires of the flesh will “reap corruption” (Gal. 6: 8). Death is the “τέλος” of sin, that is, the ontological completion, the culmination of sin (Rom. 6:21). Therefore, it is not so much God who “punishes” with death as sin itself that “kills” a man (Rom. 7:11) and “produces death” (Rom. 7:13). As a result, a person “dies” in his/her sins (Jn. 8:21, 24). A similar relationship, but through the metaphor of conception and birth, is also presented by the apostle James: sin, which begins with desire, “begets death” (James 1:15). It is in light of such an organic connection that we should view the idea that death is a “payment” for sin (Rom. 6:23), but not in a retributive sense. Thus, the relationship between sin and death can be seen as a “law,” “the law of sin and death” (Rom. 8:2), the principle of organic connection, which is especially evident in the Hebrew concept of “sin,” in which sin itself and its consequences are called by the same word, as parts of one single concept.
OP has a concept of guilt, but it is viewed in an organic connection with sin and its consequences. Guilt is not a separate legal reality that has to be dealt with in a special way. Guilt is acknowledgement that a person is liable to suffer consequences for his/her sinful act or the condition of the heart. The language of guilt is a way to describe the ontological reality of sin and its consequences by legal terms.
Though we can see the rediscovery of this aspect of the Hebrew concept of sin in many studies of Protestant biblical scholars, not much work has been done in connecting this concept with Christ’s atonement. It is in the works of some Eastern Church Fathers that we can find these ideas brought together. They may express this idea in different ways, but because of the limitation of this work, I will provide only one example.
St. Maximus the Confessor clearly shows us what he calls the “proper distinction between the two senses of the word ‘sin’” (
Maximus the Confessor 2018, p. 244). In Question 42 of his
The Responses to Thalassios, he deals with the question of how “the Lord is said to have ‘become sin’ without knowing sin.” His answer is that the word “sin” in Scripture is used in two senses: “the first sin” is “the fall of free choice from the good toward evil,” whereas “second sin,” a consequence of and the result of the first, is an “alteration of nature from incorruptibility to corruption” (
Maximus the Confessor 2018, p. 241). Thus, we see that St. Maximus understood that the word “sin” can mean sin itself and the consequences of sin, which corresponds to how this word was used in the Old Testament. In order to distinguish these two aspects, he uses the phrases “first sin” and “second sin.” “The first sin” is what we normally call “sin” as a failure to live according to God’s intent. “The second sin” is the natural consequence of the first and is “corruption and mortality in nature” (
Maximus the Confessor 2018, p. 243). What Christ deals with in His redemptive work is “the second sin” of corruption and mortality of nature, which Christ restored and “brought about through the resurrection, a return of impassibility, incorruptibility, and immortality” (
Maximus the Confessor 2018, p. 244). This does not mean that “the first sin” is not important or that Christ does not deal with that through His salvific work. He does, but the way He does it can only be understood if we have a holistic picture of God’s salvation. The next section will deal with a holistic perspective on salvation as the context of the biblical understanding of the atonement.
3.4. Holistic Concept of Salvation as the Context for a Biblical Understanding of the Atonement
If we do not distinguish between various aspects of salvation, we will mix and confuse these realities and will not be able to come to a correct understanding of the atonement. We will define
salvation in its broad sense as
God’s work of restoration and perfection of all aspects of human life to God’s ultimate purpose. As such, it includes, first, the restoration of relationships with God, dealing with what we called
SIN, relational alienation from God. This
SIN is dealt with in conversion, when a person through the work of the Holy Spirit returns to his Creator in faith, trust, and total commitment of his life to God in order to live according to His will, restoring the most fundamental relationship of his life. Paul talks about this aspect of salvation as deliverance from the
dominion (lordship) of SIN by coming under the lordship of Christ/God: “you who were once slaves of sin have become obedient from the heart to the standard of teaching to which you were committed, and, having been set free from sin, have become slaves of righteousness … you have been set free from sin and have become slaves of God” (Rom. 6:17–18, 22 ESV)
12. Conversion and commitment to God and to the way of discipleship brings freedom from the dominating power of SIN.
Yet, through conversion a Christian does not become perfect. There are various areas in a person’s behavior, thought, life, passions, desires, motives, etc. where there is the presence of sin, and in which he needs freedom. Jesus described the sanctifying process of discipleship in the following way: “Jesus said to the Jews who had believed him, ‘If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free’” (Jn. 8:31–32 ESV). When we abide and live in the truth of Christ, we continue in the process of sanctification (Rom. 6:22), becoming and staying free from the presence of sins. Though a Christian has already put off “the old self” in conversion, he needs to continue to be renewed into the image of Christ (Eph. 4:20–32; Col. 3:9–14, etc.).
However, there is another “sin” that has to be dealt with. In the Hebrew concept of sin, the consequences of sin were also called “sin.” St. Maximus the Confessor called it “second sin,” which is mortality and the corruption of nature. Christ deals with this “sin” through His death and resurrection, delivering human nature from mortality and corruption and imparting it with incorruption and immortality. Through the same faith through which we were reunited with God and Christ, we also become partakers of Christ and what He has achieved for us in atonement. Calvin talked about the double grace we receive through faith: justification and sanctification (Inst. III.3.19). Probably it would be better to talk about the triple grace of deliverance from all aspects of sin: to deliver people from SIN as the distorted fundamental relationships of human life, Christ called people to come back to Him/to repent and to believe in Him/to deny themselves and to commit to Him and His discipleship (Mk. 1:15; 8:34) (conversion); to make people free from sins, He called them to abide in His teaching (Jn. 8:31–32, Mt. 28:20), so that God’s truth may sanctify them (Jn. 17:17) (sanctification); but, deliverance from “sin” (as a consequence of the sinful dynamic of life resulting in death and corruption) is accomplished through the death and resurrection of Christ (redemption).
3.5. Ontological Perspective on Atonement
It is in Orthodox theology that we find a clear statement about the particular area of the problem Christ deals with on the cross. Orthodox theologian Vladimir Lossky states, “The redeeming work of the Son is related to our nature” (
Лоccкий 2000, p. 287). We have already seen in the writings of St. Maximus the Confessor that in His death and resurrection, Christ deals with “second sin,” that is, mortality and corruption of our nature, which is the result of sin
13. This clear understanding of the target of the redemptive work of Christ shows the inadequacy of a moral interpretation of atonement both in Protestant and Orthodox theology and was rightly criticized by many theologians. We understand that many moral atonement views were a reaction to the neglect or lack of emphasis on Christ’s dealing with sins as a moral problem. However, the solution is not a reinterpretation of atonement through moral categories but is pointing to the teaching role of Christ and the deliverance from sins through abiding in His teaching (as was shown above). We also recognize that Christ teaches us by His words and example even on the cross, and therefore, there is indeed moral influence through his suffering, but it is not the main meaning of His death.
I believe that an ontological perspective provides a clear biblical explanation of what happened in redemption, basing it on the apostolic kerygma (or apostolic Gospel), which states: “Christ died and rose again.” This is very simple, but it is also a deep proclamation about what Jesus “underwent” in order to redeem us: He underwent death and resurrection in His human nature, in His body. It is in his resurrection that death has been overcome permanently: “We know that Christ, being raised from the dead, will never die again; death no longer has dominion over him” (Rom. 6:9 ESV), and now in His nature “the perishable puts on the imperishable, and the mortal puts on immortality” (1 Cor. 15:54 ESV). Christ “abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel” (2 Tim. 1:10 ESV).
An ontological perspective clearly shows that the problem Christ deals with on the cross is ontological related to the consequences of sin in human nature. Sin leads to death, destroying human nature through corruption. Christ voluntarily goes to the cross to experience real death, but because of the inseparable presence of divine nature in the person of the Son, death is able to lay hold of Christ only for as long as He allows it. Being the true Life of the world, He has ultimate control of the situation, not death. On the third day, through the power of divine life, which was inseparable from His human nature even in death, Christ breaks the control of death over His human nature, and not only brings His human nature back to life but also transforms it, imparting immortality and incorruption. We could say that Christ heals the human nature and sanctifies it. This is the essence of atonement.
An ontological perspective on redemption is inseparable from an important biblical teaching, which is central both in Reformed theology and in Orthodox theology: union with Christ. It is only in spiritual union with Christ through faith that we become partakers of Christ (Heb. 3:14) and only through being “in Him” that we have all the benefits of His redemption: “In whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins” (Eph. 1:7 KJV). Believers already have the right to these benefits, but they will experience these blessings of the redemption of our nature on the last day in the Resurrection of the dead. This is why Paul, who said that in Christ we already have redemption (Eph. 1:7, Col. 1:14), also said that we “wait eagerly for … the redemption of our bodies” (Rom. 8:23 ESV).
In light of this ontological perspective on atonement, we may understand much better some other important biblical truths. For example, in this view, resurrection is not so much God’s confirmation that He has accepted the satisfaction/payment for our sins (as in some legal perspectives), but it is an essential element of atonement. Only from an ontological perspective can we understand why the problem of sin (as consequences) is not resolved, if Christ has not risen
14 and what it means that He was “raised for our justification” (Rom. 4:25 ESV). In this perspective, we can understand why faith in the full humanity and divinity of Christ was so important to the early Church, especially for their understanding of the atonement. Christ heals what he assumes
15, but this is possible only through the hypostatic union of His human nature with His divine nature in His person. St. Basil shows very clearly the importance of divine nature in the atonement: “death in the flesh … was swallowed up by the divine nature”
16 (
Basil 1939, p. 83).
This perspective on atonement is not something new, but rather is the oldest tradition of understanding atonement present in the writings of practically all of the Church Fathers, in Church creeds, and in early liturgies. I believe it is sufficient to provide one quote from Calvin to show that this understanding of atonement was never lost from Christian theology. Calvin said: “Death held us captive under its yoke; Christ, in our stead, gave himself over to its power to deliver us from it … By dying, he ensured that we would not die, or—which is the same thing—redeemed us to life by his own death.”
17 Unfortunately, when Calvin makes a major emphasis on the spiritual death of Christ, then the ontological perspective, which was the heart of the message of the early Church, becomes secondary, giving place to a new narrative about Christ paying “a greater and more excellent price in suffering in his soul the terrible torments of a condemned and forsaken man” (Inst., 2.16.10) (
Calvin et al. 2006, p. 516), a narrative which we will not find as part of apostolic kerygma or early creeds. As mentioned above, the problem of “spiritual death” (or
SIN) is resolved not by Christ “dying spiritually” instead of us but through conversion of a person to God
18.
3.6. Integration of Atonement Metaphors into an Ontological Perspective
It goes beyond the scope of this article to show in detail how multiple biblical metaphors and metaphorical models of atonement represent various aspects of the meaning of Christ’s death and resurrection. Yet, in this section, I want to show a general direction regarding how these metaphors can be integrated into an ontological perspective on atonement.
I believe that the ontological reality of Christ’s deliverance of human nature from death and corruption is clearly presented in Scripture in the apostolic kerygma, but it is also described by numerous atonement metaphors. Gordon Fee is right when he says: “A careful reading of Paul’s letters reveals that all of his basic theological concerns are an outworking of his fundamental confession: ‘Christ died for our sins, according to the Scriptures; he was buried, and he was raised’ (1 Cor 15:3–4)” (
Fee 2013, p. 483).
As previously said, in His work accomplished through His death and resurrection, Christ deals primarily with the ontological problem of the consequences of sin for human nature. This ontological problem and its solution are described in Scripture by different metaphors taken from various domains of human life (legal, cultic, commercial, accounting, etc.). Therefore, we should not hold the view that on the cross Christ had to resolve the problem of a certain spiritual debt that we owed, or the legal condemnation we were under, etc. According to the view of many Church Fathers, our mortality and the corruption of our nature is our “debt” that we need to have “forgiven”; it is our “slavery” that we need to be “redeemed” from; it is our “condemnation,” and therefore, we are in need of “justification.” Christ is our “Passover lamb” whose shed blood saves us from the “plague” of death. Christ is our “sin offering” who gives His life so that we could live, have our sins forgiven, and not have to experience the consequence of death for sin. It is insightful, for example, to look at how Irenaeus uses various metaphors in connection to death so that we might see how rich the metaphorical language can be, as it describes the same concept through different images. For example, Irenaeus describes death as “slavery” (AH 4.22.1), “debt” (AH 3.19.1, 4.22.1, 5.23.2), “captivity” (AH 3.23.1), “exile” (AH 4.8.2), “power” (AH 3.18.7), “condemnation” (AH 4.8.2), “reign” (D, 31, 39), “dominion” (AH 5.13.3), and “oppression” (AP, 31). We can find similar language in many Church Fathers and in Scripture. In Romans 5:16–17 we see how the word pair “condemnation”—“justification” is paralleled with “death”—“life”.
Therefore, atonement metaphors do not describe separate (legal, slave market, cultic, accounting) realities nor do they represent some invisible historic narratives that happen parallel to Christ’s death and resurrection. They all describe the same ontological reality, using different metaphors taken from various source domains. Each of these metaphors present a limited metaphorical model out of the general scheme of problem-agent-process-result in atonement in which it may highlight only some aspects of the scheme and exclude others. The narrative of each such model is metaphorical and it is never complete according to the very nature of how metaphor works; it is always fragmental with missing elements from a “full story” of the source domain. In the “redemption” metaphorical narrative there is no “receiver of ransom payment.” Legal metaphors do not explain how those under “condemnation” (of death) are now “justified.” “Filling in” such information goes against the limited function of a metaphor and automatically distorts the meaning of a metaphor. The Bible never tells us that guilt or sin was legally transferred to Christ (somehow) or that the Father punished His Son or poured His wrath on Him, as we find it in some legal theories. The legal metaphorical model is limited, and through powerful imagery it only points our attention to the problem and the result of atonement. Often “what is missing” may be highlighted by an element of another biblical metaphorical model of atonement or by some other biblical statements. This is why we need all the biblical metaphors and models, but we have to embrace them and integrate them into the concept of atonement in their limited nature.
As we evaluate the views of early Church Fathers on atonement, we have to be careful not to confuse their use of certain biblical (or their own innovative) metaphors and models as proof that they support or hold to a certain “theory of atonement” that was developed based on this metaphor/model. We can say that they hold to a certain theory only if they present the full narrative of this theory and take it literally.
At the same time, we need to remember that many metaphors in Scripture are used to describe different aspects of truth. For example, the metaphor of “slavery” can refer to various spheres: “slavery to sin,” “slavery to death,” or even “slavery to the devil,” and therefore, the same metaphorical phrase, such as “deliverance from slavery” or “redemption” may mean “liberation from the slavery of death”
19 or “liberation from the slavery of sin,” etc. The same metaphor in a different context may apply to different aspects of soteriology (i.e., redemption vs. sanctification). Therefore, before we interpret any specific metaphor, we need to understand its cultural and theological context and locate each metaphor in its proper place in the large soteriological picture.
Thus, when we talk about integration, it is not the integration of “theories of atonement” into one concept, but it is the integration of limited biblical metaphors and metaphorical models into a holistic concept of atonement. This process has to be part of a larger work of integration of other soteriological metaphors into a holistic concept of salvation, discerning where each metaphor belongs and how it fits into this larger soteriological picture. This task requires a separate extended presentation.
Finally, special attention also needs to be given to the presentation of the ontological view in the context of the biblical meta-narrative. Due to the limited scope of this paper, we have not dealt with this issue, but there is great potential to show a beautiful harmony of the larger biblical story with Christ’s redemption viewed through an ontological perspective. For example, many authors, like N. T. Wright, have pointed out that early Christians viewed Christ’s death as the New Exodus. Wright also stresses the importance of temple theology and the topic of forgiveness in light of the biblical story (
Wright 2016). However, I want to suggest that Wright’s approach could be greatly enriched if he looked at these issues through the OP on atonement. Through Christ, we have the Final Greatest Exodus from the ultimate slavery of death. It is the ultimate Forgiveness of sin through Christ’s sacrifice that the prophets prophesied about. Through Christ’s death, resurrection, and ascension, humanity has access back to the paradise from which it was expelled. He is a New Temple and we, being connected to Him, are living stones in this Temple. There are many other themes that could brought together as we connect the OP on atonement and the biblical meta-narrative.
Atonement has to be seen as part of the larger ultimate purpose of God. In such a perspective, a special emphasis of Orthodox theology is extremely important. According to Greek patristic tradition and many Orthodox theologians, the redemption of humanity is only a step towards God’s larger purpose, which is deification. Andrew Louth emphasizes the need to see “the full story of God’s dealing with the world that begins with creation and runs through to deification, which is the consequence of union with God that he intended for creation through the human” (
Louth 2019, p. 42). According to Louth, “redemption is not an end in itself: its purpose is to facilitate God’s original and eternal purpose for his created order, to draw it into union with himself, to deify it” (
Louth 2019, p. 36). Therefore, according to OP, Christ’s death and resurrection accomplishes not only redemption but also deification of human nature, which is part of God’s ultimate purpose for humanity and, in turn, is an integral part of transformation of the whole cosmos.