Crime and Punishment

Speaking of Atonement theories, Hugo had a very good post yesterday talking about his attachment to traditional theories of the Atonement despite the fact that many in his progressive milieu sharply reject them. He also linked to an article by Richard Mouw defending a Reformed doctrine of the Atonement against criticisms that it promotes violence and acquiescence in unjust suffering (the link Hugo offered requires a subscription or fee; you can read an abridged version here).

One of the points Mouw emphasizes is that he thinks of Christ’s suffering in our place more in terms of experiencing God’s wrath than suffering physical punishment. By “wrath” he means the experience of separation from God that would be our just punishment as sinners:

These formulations [i.e. in the Heidelberg Catechism and the Geneva Catechism], then, locate the redemptive significance of Christ’s suffering, not so much in pain that can be thought of as being actively inflicted upon him by the Father, but rather in his profound experience as the innocent one of the cursedness of being abandoned by God on behalf of those who do deserve that abandonment. Thus the greatest redemptively significant agony that he experienced on the Cross, on this view, is not when he gasped in pain when they pounded the nails into his flesh, or when he pleaded that his thirst be quenched, or when he heard the mockery of onlookers, but when he cried out in utter forlornness, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Mark 15:34).

Mouw highlights this aspect of Christ’s redemptive suffering in part in order to defuse the criticisms from some feminist theologians that Atonement theory promotes “divine child abuse” and encourages Christians to imitate Christ by submitting to unjust suffering. Mouw says that it is precisely this aspect of Christ’s suffering that we can’t emulate. Because his suffering has a once-and-for-all quality, Christians need not seek to imitate Christ’s experience of abandonment.

One thing that Mouw doesn’t make explicit, but which seems implied by his account, is that this understanding of what Christ suffered on our behalf helps explicate the connection between sin and punishment in a more compelling way than it is sometimes presented.

A common problem with Atonement theories is that people will say, “If God is so compassionate, why doesn’t he just up and forgive us and forget about punishment? Why the need for someone to be punished on our behalf?” This can make God seem like some petty bureaucrat enmeshed in a web of rules that he is unwilling or unable to break.

But if punishment for sin is understood as abandonment by God, then things aren’t quite so simple. The understanding of sin this seems to imply is a kind of “turning away from God” or separating ourselves from him. This is how Augustine, for instance, seems to have understood sin – we turn away from God (our true Good) and toward some finite good(s). But this is essentially irrational because God is the source of Being; so to turn away from God is to turn toward nothingness. It’s like sawing off the branch you’re sitting on.

This understanding of sin seems to imply that punishment has a much tighter connection with sin than we might think. We often think of punishment as a kind of arbitrary penalty tacked on to a particular offense. Rob a convenience store and get ten years, say. But if sin is separating ourselves from God, then punishment, understood as final separation from God, would seem to simply be a logical consequence of sin. This punishment would seem to be an inevitable (barring intervention) outcome of the sin, not a penalty that God arbitrarily attaches to particular acts. Separation from God just is what sin is all about.

This would seem to indicate why God can’t simply “commute the sentence” as it were, since the punishment involved is an inseparable aspect of the sin itself. Instead, God is somehow able to take the punishment onto himself. The inevitable consequence of sin is “deflected” from us and onto the Cross. And through the Resurrection the power of sin is absorbed and transformed into the life-giving power of the Spirit. As Mouw says:

In the death on the Cross, God also took our violent impulses upon himself, mysteriously absorbing them into his very being in order to transform them into the power of reconciling love; and then he offers that love back to us as a gift of sovereign grace.

Comments

5 responses to “Crime and Punishment”

  1. Eric Lee

    “Mouw highlights this aspect of Christ’s redemptive suffering in part in order to defuse the criticisms from some feminist theologians that Atonement theory promotes ‘divine child abuse’ and encourages Christians to imitate Christ by submitting to unjust suffering.”

    I consider myself to be a pretty strong feminist, and I’ve heard of some of these criticisms coming out of the hardcore scholarly feminist camp from some of my friends who have taken women’s studies courses in grad school. Rosemary Radford Ruther is one who thinks that the traditional take on atonement is one that is a kind of “divine child abuse.” This is definitely one of the handful of areas where I have to disagree with feminist theology.

    While I actually don’t think that that is what atonement is all about at all, what troubles me more is to where this kind of view of suffering leads somebody. My guess (and it may very well be a bad one), is that there is a very reasonable, but knee-jerk reaction to all forms of suffering. It’s reasonable coming from feminist women because they have endured oppressive patriarchal suffering for so long (and many still do, unfortunately). And of course, I agree that suffering is actually a bad thing! But, to follow Christ inevitably means that we may have to endure some sort of real suffering and persecution. We should be careful with this, as we are not to seek it and take on persecution complexes (like many culture warriors do today), but we should also realize that if it happens to us while we are being faithful, that we as Christians should realize that not only is Christ suffering right there with us, but that Christ has also conquered suffering and death on the Cross. Christ was so obedient to his Creator, even unto death on a Cross.

    My problem with the knee-jerk reaction to suffering is that I wonder if some of those who only see Christ on the Cross as “divine child abuse” would be able say that they would give up their life for Christ, if need be…? I agree that we should not seek to recreate Christ’s suffering on the cross, but I also think that we should also be obedient to Christ in such a way that we are not afraid of death, for it is that very death that was conquered on the cross, and as you said, “God also took our violent impulses upon himself, mysteriously absorbing them into his very being in order to transform them into the power of reconciling love; and then he offers that love back to us as a gift of sovereign grace.”

    peace,

    eric

  2. Camassia

    I agree with you, Eric. Part of the scandal of the Cross was that Jesus came from an oppressed group that felt it had the right to rise up and liberate itself, but his response was to let himself be oppressed some more! So Jesus was a champion of the oppressed but not exactly in the modern political sense.

    By the way, is your blog still alive, or have you moved to a new career as a full-time commenter?

  3. Eric Lee

    “By the way, is your blog still alive, or have you moved to a new career as a full-time commenter?”

    Camassia, when I read that, I couldn’t help but smile real big. Haha, you’re right, it’s what I’ve become. I sorta knew it was inevitable that I would need to write somewhere, so I was wondering when somebody would catch on!

    To answer your question, I will be resuming my blogging very soon (hopefully within the next week). I’m just taking a few-month long hiatus to spend more time listening, as well as take some time away from blogging in general (I sorta got an unprovoked stalker threat by some local crazy guy who started trolling my blog, so I’ve needed some time to reassess.)

    peace,

    eric

  4. graham old

    I’m not at all happy with penal substitution, but I am glad to see how it develops under writers like Mouw.

    However, surely there comes a point at which the doctrine is so tweaked and improved that we have to be honest enough to say that it is no longer penal substitution. I say this because I’ve read a number of people defending penal substitution (against ideas like ‘it promotes violence’) by saying that maybe we can best think of the penal aspect like this… or the subtitution like this… or so on. And at the end I think, great – big improvement – but that’s not what anyone has ever meant when they’ve used the phrase ‘penal substiution’ in the past.

    Another thing that bugs me is when people continue to refer to PS as if it is the historical view held by the church. (Even Mouw does this to a point.)

  5. Lee

    Graham,

    I agree with you that a lot of folks (mostly conservative Protestants) wrongly treat PS as the historical position of the church. I think it’s probably wise that the church has never settled on one theory as the theory of the Atonement.

    Though I will say that virtually any theory of the Atonement is bound to be “substitutionary” in some way, since they all involve Jesus doing something for us that we are unable to do for ourselves.

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