Jesus Paid the Penalty for My Sin. Is that Really Good News?

For most of my life I have understood the good news to be that on the cross Jesus paid the penalty for my sins. Like the rest of humanity, I was a sinner and deserved to be punished with eternal torment in hell. But to save me Jesus, who was not a sinner and didn’t deserve to die, took my place. On the cross he experienced the penalty I deserve and I received the reward he deserved.

This no longer seems like good news to me. It pictures a God whom it is difficult to admire. This God  is unable to forgive without first punishing. Mercy and grace are but an illusion for the principle of an eye for an eye, of strict retribution, ultimately reigns supreme. But it gets worse, for in exacting punishment God punishes the innocent. It seems it doesn’t matter who God  punishes, just that he punishes someone. God becomes a bully worked up in a rage looking for someone to hit “because someone’s gotta pay.”

Not only does the doctrine of Christ as substitute portray an angry God who is incapable of genuine grace, it is filled with tortured logic. If the penalty for my sin is eternal torment Christ didn’t pay it, for he rose on the third day. If the penalty is an eternal ceasing to be, he didn’t pay that either. And if the penalty for the sin of humankind has been paid, there can be no future judgement, for the judgement has already taken place. To judge in the future, God would be exacting punishment for something for which the penalty has already been paid.

To the moral and logical difficulties we must add  a third: it is unbiblical. The New Testament doesn’t speak of Christ dying instead of me, but of dying with me, or more correctly, of me dying with him. This suggests the language that Christ died “for” me does not indicate “instead of”/”in my place” but “for the benefit of”.

When I first began to raise these questions about the nature of the good news I wondered if I was losing my faith. Then I discovered that the idea of Christ’s death as paying the penalty for my sin was just one of a number of theories about how God saves that has been held throughout the church’s history. It had its origins in the writings of the twelfth century leader Anselm and didn’t reach the form we have it today until the Reformation. What’s more, many Christian thinkers reject the “penal substitution” theory.

So what did Christ’s death achieve? I think that it must be held together with the resurrection. In Christ God identified fully and completely with humankind. The wages of sin is death, so Christ underwent this also. But the resurrection represented a new reality, a new possibility. The logic of sin and death was burst apart. Sin might inevitably lead to death, to the end of human existence, but it is not the last word in God’s universe. Resurrection is. On that Roman cross, a symbol of the depths of human cruelty and the raw use of power, as Christ was humiliated and mocked, God declared that he could take whatever we can throw at him and he will meet it with forgiveness and suffering love. And on the third day he declared that not only would he refuse to  meet violence with violence, but he was opening up a new way, a fresh possibility for us all, that resurrection rather than death can be the end point of our lives and our universe.

Now that, to me, is a good God who brings good news.

 

8 comments

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  • Brilliant article, as usual. Do you know of any books/authors who expand on this idea? Or any critiques of it?

  • Hi Scott,

    A thought provoking piece. I agree that the good news (i.e. the gospel) is not that Jesus paid the penalty for our sins on the cross. Surely, in the NT (not to mention Isa 40), it is the news that Jesus is God’s appointed king who ushers in God’s reign. Too many Christians seem to focus on the technicalities—you must adhere to a particular understanding of the atonement—instead of the simple message that Jesus is Lord.

    However, I’d still like to disagree a bit…

    For me, your piece raises the question of whether justice is important. If it is, does justice consist only in mercy, grace, and forgiveness? Or is there a place in justice for restitution, retribution, and penalty? I feel like you’ve opted for an either/or answer: we have mercy, grace, and forgiveness, or we have punishment. Is there no room for both—indeed, could they not all feasibly be linked together?

    Furthermore, I wouldn’t primarily characterise the penal God as angry, but rather as both just and loving. Anger is a response to injustice (amongst other things), and to focus on the response is to miss the underlying justification for that response. The difficulty, it would seem, is trying to be loving and just at the same time.

    I’m also not convinced by your claim that retributive justice is founded on “tortured logic.” First, surely the only truly innocent person to be punished was Jesus. So God punishes Jesus, but Jesus is God. Whatever’s going on, I don’t think this can be assessed as a simple punishment of the innocent. Second, at least some of the NT references to eternal punishment are in the context of persistent, ongoing, unrepentant, and even violent rebellion. So there’s the possibility that a justification for “eternal” punishment lies in the response of those suffering the punishment, a response unlike that of Jesus.

    When I began my Masters we did an intensive course on research methodology. This was the only time that all the Masters candidates were together in one place (at a very nice Catholic monastry for a few days). There were only a few of us, some Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Anglican (not Sydney Anglican), and myself (Uniting). One of the Anglicans was working on Acts. When I was chatting with him, he noted how appalling he found the idea of substitutionary atonement to be and how he simply could not accept it. What was interesting, however, was that he openly acknowledged that it was clearly found in the NT. I think he was right, and texts like 2Cor 5:19–21 are not easily explained other than as substitution.

    On the other hand, I don’t think this one idea even remotely exhausts the significance of Jesus’ death, nor is it the only way the NT talks about this (as you pointed out). You made a good point that death is not the end, and it is true that more vehement proponents of substitutionary atonement tend to overlook the significance of the resurrection. I even think there’s a degree of mystery in the events of Easter so that while I think we can say some things, I don’t think we can say everything about what happened, what it achieved, and what it meant.

    Anyway, hope you have an enjoyable Easter!

    Martin.

    • Hi Martin,

      Thanks for your thoughtful comments.

      Having read Chris Marshall on punishment in the NT I think there are good grounds to doubt that the NT teaches substitutionary atonement.

      I agree that retribution can be part of ours and God’s response to evil, but that it is only valid to the degree it serves restorative justice. And here’s the problem, penal substitution is usually coupled to the idea that justice is primarily and ultimately retributive.

  • Great! I had to do an essay on theories of the atonement, and it was the first time I was introduced to the fact that there had been a range of views on why Jesus died on the cross. It was very very helpful to do the reading & open up my thinking, and I agree with your conclusions here. Also with the fact that bringing us into the resurrection life of the Kingdom is the ultimate aim of the cross.

    Did you ever get my song, “The cross is the great doorway”? Some of it is based on this stuff.

    thanks for your thoughts
    xo Nerida

  • God was in Christ, reconciling the world to himself – 2 Corinthians 5:19, He punished no one, God in Christ took our punishment & death had no hold on him.
    But God raised him from the dead, freeing him from the agony of death, because it was impossible for death to keep its hold on him.

    Acts 2:24

    For we know that since Christ was raised from the dead, he cannot die again; death no longer has mastery over him.

    Romans 6:9
    &
    If you look at Hebrews chapter 1 & 2, it goes on to explain, that Jesus as the Son of God, offered himself – who God appointed Heir & lawful owner over all things, to sit at the right hand of God, where his enemies would be made His foot stool, subject to him & that he would go on forever. Hebrews 2:14 -18, goes on to explain that Jesus, came in the flesh, so that by going through death, He might destroy the devil, who had the power of death.

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