A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

Calvin on the Atonement and God’s wrath

One of the problems with penal substitutionary theories of the Atonement, at least as sometimes presented, is that, on the one hand, they present God the Father as being unable to be reconciled to humanity until his wrath is spent, but on the other hand, the Bible is very clear that the work of Christ is initiated and carried out by God the Father and the Son, not the Son acting on the Father as it were.

John Calvin, who is often regarded as one of the fathers of this understanding of the Atonement writes (in my heavily abridged version of the Institutes):

Before we go any further, we must try to see how God, who goes before us in mercy, was our enemy until he was reconciled to us by Christ. But how could he have given us that unique seal of his love — the gift of his only begotten Son — if he had not already freely embraced us in his favour? (p. 129)

What Calvin goes on to say seems to me to be that God has to make us understand how horrible our sin is, and that part of the reason why Jesus has to be crucified is to show this. “If it was not stated clearly that divine wrath and vengeance and eternal death hang over us, we would be less aware of our condemnation without the mercy of God, and less likely to value the blessings of salvation” (p. 129).

But what’s not clear to me is whether Calvin is saying that God is truly merciful but has to “put on a show” of being wrathful in order to impress upon us the awfulness of our sins. Or is he actually saying that Jesus’ death propitiates God’s wrath, objectively speaking? This seems to be implied by what he says later about the “guilt which made us liable to punishment was transferred to the head of the Son of God” (p. 131), but if so, then it seems to me that he hasn’t really addressed the apparent contradiction of God being our enemy but also acting to reconcile himself to us (and it’s interesting that Calvin says that God is was reconciled to us (p. 129), whereas Paul says God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself. Is this significant?).

It could well be that I’m just missing enough of the text that the argument isn’t spelled out more explicitly. Any Calvin-philes out there want to clear this up? Is the wrath for Calvin our perception which God alters by offering his Son, or does the Son objectively “satifsy” the wrath? Or both?

One response to “Calvin on the Atonement and God’s wrath”

  1. Love your questions!

    That is a problem. I’m not altogether uncomfortable with Calvin here, because I think some of that tension seems endemic to the Biblical text.

    “While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8) must be accepted alongside “remember that you were at that time separate from Christ, excluded from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers to the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world” (Ephesians 2:12). Now, a lot can be read in the latter verse, but I only really wish to make one point. I think we would all have to say that whatever else was true of the Ephesians, before they turned to Christ, it could be said of them both that God showed his love for them, and also that they were without God in the world. At the same time.

    The “show” part of Calvin’s passage is perhaps the most problematic. Though I would think that if anything, it demonstrated that some elements of Christus Victor are even present in Calvin. If Christus Victor is also called the “dramatic” view, I would think that a show was a drama as well.

    I also think that some degree of this is implied by “For God has shut up all in disobedience so that He may show mercy to all.” The text implies that mercy is not visible until disobedience is visible. Calvin sees that disobedience may not be visible until wrath is visible. At the very least, the fall could not be fixed apart from a grasp of God’s mercy. But if St. Paul’s words apply to the fall itself, then Creation itself was undertaken to the end of demonstrating God’s mercy.

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