Thomas,
You keep saying this... but for those of us without the advantage of your learning, could you please post some evidence that the early church, Anabaptists, and GB denied that the shedding of blood was necessary for our salvation?
Thank you.
That's not quite the point. The first point is what the scriptures say, and the second point is what the death of Jesus means.
The early church's views of the atonement were very different than what developed after the first thousand years. I prefer the early church's views because they were closest to the source -- the apostles who wrote the scriptures. They recognized and formed the canon, and yet their reading of the scriptures did not convey to them any meaning of the atonement such as was developed by the medieval Roman church or the Reformed wing of Magisterial Protestantism.
I just wish people would study the views of Christ's work and God's nature held by the early church. It is eye-opening and different from medieval Roman Catholicism and Magisterial Protestantism. And so are the views of the Anabaptists, who influenced the General Baptists. Now some Anabaptists held views similar to the RCC and Protestants, but most held views in accord with the early church.
This ties into the issue of what was necessary for our salvation. No atonement view denies that Jesus shed His blood, but there is a great difference in what the death of Jesus meant, what was necessary for our salvation, and what God required.
The West tends to isolate the atonement from the rest of Jesus' life and work; it takes a legalistic, atomistic view which was not present in the early church. This is the inheritance from medieval Romanism and Magisterial protestantism, especially the Reformed wing.
It seems for some that Jesus' death was not enough to provide a reconciliation; for these, it had to have come by the shedding of His blood. I do not find the Bible to support that, based on the scriptures I have referenced, especially the OT prophets.
To me, it is enough that Jesus lived and died as one of us, for us, and for me. If He had not shed one drop of blood, He would still have reconciled me to God by His Incarnation, life, death, and bodily Resurrection.
I enjoy discussing things when we can have a respectful exchange. Thank you.