Jesus Saves, But How?
Office and Atonement
- Jesus Saves, but How?
"The Son of Man must suffer" (Mark 8:31). Why? And what does the rest of Jesus' career mean?
Christians agree over his victory, but disagree over the battle plan (Eph 3:4-13).
Apostolic testimonies help interpret by covering more than Jesus' passion.
- They generally begin at his baptism, center on his crucifixion, and conclude with events beyond his resurrection.
- These display several roles or 'offices', and several aspects (or contesting 'theories') of atonement:
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priesthood |
sacrifice |
royalty |
victory |
prophethood |
moral influence |
- Atonement along Jesus' Narrative
- How do we honor complexity (e.g., Lev 16's two goats, Ps 107's varieties of sin)?
- Is there underlying harmony among theories of atonement, or exclusivity?
- One synthetic approach: A narrative framework for inclusion or conversion.
Incarnation (Christmas): assumption, divinization.
- God comes personally into creation to dwell as 'one of us.'
- Baptism (Epiphany): identification, penance, empowerment.
- In the Son, the Father forecloses old wrong relationships
and initiates new relationships between creation and the Holy Spirit.
- Temptation (Lent): obedience, conformation.
- Discipline grows right relationships of obedience, virtue (primarily trust = faith), and character.
- Itinerant ministry (Ordinary): following, discipleship, replenishment.
- Jesus 'takes office' as the Kingdom invades and the world responds
with resistance, then either rejection or migration and naturalization.
- Crucifixion (Passover/Good Friday): intercession, reparative sacrifice.
- Jesus' priestly sacrificial commitment to both the Father and us repairs the divine-human relationship.
- Burial (Holy Saturday): 'omega', ransom.
- Jesus takes on death as both the victim and heir of sin's curses,
defusing our 'strength' with God's 'weakness' and curing our weakness with God's strength.
- Resurrection (Easter): 'alpha', victory.
- Jesus risen defeats and discredits sin and death and transcends their consequences for himself and us,
grounding new lives of hope.
- Ascension (Ascension): reparation, delegation, mission.
- Jesus leaves for the Kingdom's capital to represent us as priest and receive the Father's glorious affirmation,
and to be represented on earth by his Spirit-empowered church.
- Session (Pentecost): revelation/moral influence.
- Jesus reigns while his memories, testimonies, and life change our character into a new community of love.
- Return (Advent): judgment, glorification.
- Jesus appears in glory to expel all that is unfitting for new creation
and promote his faithful representatives to eternal lives of exaltation and wise authority.
- Jesus is the central figure in the Triune act of saving creation.
- Each interlocking stage presumably bears upon creation care. How?
- The Priestly Office, and Sacrificial Atonement
Jewish priesthood is worship-leading.
- Priests sacrifice, and are God's and Israel's sacrifice (Num 8:5-22) at their meeting place.
Priests intercede, teach torah, and discern and conserve Israel's holiness.
Dilemma: The blood required for cleansing (Ex 12:12, 24:8) cannot work (1 Sam 2, Isa 1:10-17, Mic 6:6-8, Heb 10:3-4).
- Christ's priestly mission: offer the resources of reconciliation (Heb 9:14).
- His baptism declares his Sonship (Ps 2:7 in Heb 5:5).
Devil's (and later opponents') counterstrategy: put God to the test (Luke 4:9-12, Ps 91, Deut 6:16, Ex 17:2-7).
Highlights include teaching, cleansing, exorcism, healing, forgiving sins (Mark 1:21-2:12).
Jesus takes 'the Temple' with him, practicing 'offensive holiness'.
Climax: the cross as representative atonement (cf. Heb 10:12-13, Phil 2:5-11, 1 Cor 11:23-26).
- Atonement as sacrifice or reparation:
- Jesus is the sacrifice that repairs the divine-human relationship.
Sin becomes guilt, grace becomes forgiveness.
Variations: Satisfaction (Anselm) (Heb 2:14-17);
penal/vicarious substitution (Calvin; The Fundamentals).
- Priesthood continued: Jesus still intercedes (Heb 7:23-25, 9:24, Rom 8:34) ...
- in ascension, having ratified the new covenant (Heb 9:11-28) that removes our sin (9:26-10:25),
and through us (Isa 61:6 in Rev 1:5-6, 5:10, 1 Pet 2:5-9)
who share his “power of the keys” (Rev 1:18, Matt 16:18-19, John 20:23, Vatican seal).
- Jesus is the temple of the New Jerusalem (Rev 21:22, 27).
- The Royal Office, and Atonement as Victory
- Jewish monarchy is (mostly) a failure to trust God as king (1 Sam 8:1-22).
- Yet King David, though a sinner, went "fully after God" (1 Kings 11:4-5, 2 Sam 6:14-23).
God promises David's eternal restoration (Ps 89:4, 132:11).
Dilemma: How can the kingdom of Israel be reconciled to the Kingdom of God?
- Christ's royal mission: restore the Kingdom of David as the Kingdom of God.
- This "son of David" (Matt 1:1-17) is born king (Matt 2:2).
His baptism declares the Son God's heir (Ps 2).
Devil's (and opponents') counterstrategy: reject God as King (Luke 4:5-8/Ps 2:7-11, Deut 6:10-15).
Jesus' signs and wonders bring the Kingdom of God (Matt 12:28/Luke 11:20, Luke 17:21) as a new arrangement: a new politics or order of holy relationships.
Highlights include calling twelve disciples, associating with outcasts (Mark 2:16), breaking tradition on his own prerogative (Mark 2:23-28, 7:1-13, Matt 11:19), inviting sinners to enter through his word rather than ritual repentance, and entering Jerusalem as its "king coming" (Mark 11:10, cf. Ps 118:26; Matt 21:5/John 12:15, cf. Zech 9:9).
Climax: the cross as the parable of the vineyard (Mark 12:1-12), Rome's execution of "the king of the Jews" (Matt 27:11, 27:29, 27:37, 27:42), and Jesus' exaltation (John 12:27-36).
- Atonement as Victory (Christus Victor):
- Jesus conquered sin and death (Col 2:14-15, Rev 5:5, Gustav Aulén's Christus Victor).
Sin becomes oppression, grace becomes liberation.
Illustration: Prince of Egypt, Gran Torino.
Popular in the early Church, Lutheranism, Eastern Orthodoxy, Pentecostalism, liberation theology.
Variations: Ransom theory (goodness as intolerable), Christ the healer, Christ the liberator.
- Royalty continued: Jesus' present reign.
- Pentecost shows (Acts 2:33-36) the ascended Christ at the Father's right hand (Ps 110).
Apostles' evangelism proclaims, proves, and exercises Christ's rule over every nation and kingdom.
Jesus shares his rule with us (Rev 3:21, 5:10) as servant-kings (Rom 8:15-17).
- Jesus returns and judges all things (and we do too, 1 Cor 6:3),
and we reign with Christ forever (Rev 22:1-5).
- The Prophetic Office, and Atonement as Moral Influence
- Jewish prophecy centers in revolutionary 'speech-act' (Jer 1:4-10, Hos 1, Jer 19:1ff, John 2:1-11).
- Israel awaits a "prophet like Moses" (Deut 18:15-19).
Dilemma: he does not arrive (Deut 34:10-12, cf. Acts 3:18-26).
- Christ's prophetic mission: announce the Kingdom's approach (Isa 61:1-2 in Luke 4:18-22, Matt 25:31ff).
- Devil's (and opponents') counterstrategy: seek a sign (Luke 4:3-4, Deut 8:3; Matt 12:38-39).
Prophetic highlights: Jesus' work proclaims God's Reign, is misunderstood, and reveals the Father.
Prophetic climaxes: clearing the Temple (Isa 56:7 and Jer 7:11 in Luke 19:41-48), the cross.
Jesus is God's definitive self-revelation (John 1:18).
- Atonement as moral influence or example:
- Peter Abelard and predecessors: Jesus' redemptive love changes our character (Rom 5:5-8, Acts 2:36-38, Heb 12:1-12).
Sin becomes concupiscence and ignorance, grace becomes revelation and inspiration (John 1:18, Rom 12:2, Phil 2:5).
"The Son of Man must be lifted up" (John 3:14-15, after Numbers 21:4-9): Facing the cross saves us.
Illustration: Spitfire Grill.
Popular in the early church, liberal Protestantism; increasingly popular in revivalism.
Variation: Jesus encounters us with saving revelation (dialectical theology in Barth, Bultmann).
- Prophethood continued: Jesus the living Word.
- When Christ gives his Spirit, disciples become inspired prophets (Acts 2, on Joel 2; 1 Cor 11:5; John 16:12-15; Matt 28:20) with whom Jesus speaks clearly (Num 12:6-8; Mark 4:11-12, John 16:29).
Jesus' words open the final act (Rev 5:1-5) that defeats sin forever (Rev 19:15).
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