DaveXR650
Well-Known Member
I don't agree with that as Owen himself said the opposite.The issue isn't that Western Christianity has the Father standing off to the side but that it has the Son as not being the exact representation of the Father.
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I don't agree with that as Owen himself said the opposite.The issue isn't that Western Christianity has the Father standing off to the side but that it has the Son as not being the exact representation of the Father.
Not all Reformed believe that. Torrance and Barth, for example, were Reformed theologians.I don't agree with that as Owen himself said the opposite.
No problem. I probably read more into your post than you meant. Sorry.I didn't mean to lay it at your feet. It was Torrance's argument. I was just pointing out that he was doing the same thing he thought the Calvinists were doing with rational arguments in that his argument - that if Christ represented all men in the incarnation then he had to represent all men at the cross, is not a logical necessity though he tried to make it so. I happen to agree with him that Christ did represent everyone in both places but so do a lot of Calvinists. Otherwise, Christ's sinless life and righteousness could not be imputed to us and all Calvinists say that is essential also. As far as the extent of this (whether all means all), all Christians have to deal with the fact that not everyone will be saved - we just come up with different ways of explaining it. Strict Calvinists say that the atoning work of Christ on the cross is absolutely effective so they limit it there. Low Calvinists and Arminians say it isn't applied to everyone. Torrance said that it is applied to everyone and those who consciously reject it dash themselves as it were on the atonement and it becomes their judgement.
For those on here who are not Calvinists, I was just pointing out that Torrance has a way of refuting limited atonement (and he strongly and clearly does that) which is different and was new to me at least. It is different that what the four point or "Amyraldians" did in that the cross for Torrance was just as effective as a Calvinist but it included everyone. Those lost actively reject Christ and so it's not that they didn't hear or weren't called in a special way. So he was not a universalist in the modern sense of universal salvation but he did not believe that everyone was walking around naturally an enemy of God and with a sentence of wrath on them as a default position. This I think is problematic but Torrance believes this is because of Christ's atoning work therefore the message we have is truly one of reconciliation.
Sorry to go on so long but Torrance said a lot, and he sometimes seemed to contradict himself. One reason may be that he didn't seem to be on a crusade for anything but he just loved looking into these things.
Torrance, while insisting penal substitution is not a stand alone total explanation of Christ's atoning work on Earth is fully on board with penal substitution as an aspect of the atonement.
No. I didn't say that he did. What I am saying is that Owen was careful to differentiate the differences in functions of the Father and the Son while at the same time showing how the love shown us was not a matter exhibited by the Son but by both because they are indeed one. You can read that in detail in Owens "On the Satisfaction of Christ". What I was saying that makes Torrance confusing is that he will on one hand criticize the Reformers for carefully making the above distinctions, then turn around and say you must avoid the heresy that God the Father himself suffered on the cross.I cannot recall Owen stating that on the cross we see the Father in Christ suffering for our sins, but I take your word for it.
Oh....I agree with that (that Owen was careful). But reading Torrance his observation is that they overstep in that differentiation.No. I didn't say that he did. What I am saying is that Owen was careful to differentiate the differences in functions of the Father and the Son while at the same time showing how the love shown us was not a matter exhibited by the Son but by both because they are indeed one. You can read that in detail in Owens "On the Satisfaction of Christ". What I was saying that makes Torrance confusing is that he will on one hand criticize the Reformers for carefully making the above distinctions, then turn around and say you must avoid the heresy that God the Father himself suffered on the cross.
I agree and Torrance brings out in a beautiful and comprehensive way those many aspects. I would just say that Reformed theologians do too though. Martyn Lloyd Jones has at least 10 sermons on line about the various aspects of the atonement. Calvinists also bring out things Torrance includes in the atonement but they don't put them as part of the atonement. There is a time where the Lamb is actually slain and Calvinists dwell on that because it is central and the core of the atonement. But that does not mean that teachings about the essential nature of the incarnation, the resurrection, the sinless life lived on our behalf by Christ, and of being unified with Christ are not also important. It's just that in Calvinistic literature, usually you find it taught separately.We might liken the doctrine of the atonement in the early church to a single ray that enters a prism and refracts into many colors of doctrine. These fathers and mothers of the church appreciated and exhausted the various ways Scripture speaks of Christ’s work on the cross. Penal substitutionary atonement—the idea that Jesus was punished in our place—is certainly one of those colors, even if it’s no brighter than the other colors in their writings...."
I'd add this......Torrance, Barth, Calvin, Wright, Edwards.....these are not writings we can simply pick up and reference.I agree and Torrance brings out in a beautiful and comprehensive way those many aspects. I would just say that Reformed theologians do too though. Martyn Lloyd Jones has at least 10 sermons on line about the various aspects of the atonement. Calvinists also bring out things Torrance includes in the atonement but they don't put them as part of the atonement. There is a time where the Lamb is actually slain and Calvinists dwell on that because it is central and the core of the atonement. But that does not mean that teachings about the essential nature of the incarnation, the resurrection, the sinless life lived on our behalf by Christ, and of being unified with Christ are not also important. It's just that in Calvinistic literature, usually you find it taught separately.
True. Here is Torrance again: "Or to use more juridical terms, the wrath of God is removed only when his righteous will has punished sin and judged it. Now it is import here to see that we cannot talk here of his mercy triumphing over his wrath, or as his love over his judgement - that would be to introduce a schizophrenia into God which is impossible, and to misunderstand the wrath of God and the meaning of the penalty or righteous infliction that is due sin. Punishment and wrath are terms speaking of the wholly godly resistance of God to sin, the fact that the holy love of God excludes all that is not holy love. Sin must be judged, guilt must be expiated by it's judgement and complete condemnation, else God is not God, and God is not love." From Torrance's "Atonement: The Person and Work of Christ" page 154.The real "heresy" comes in, however, when people present the Father's role as causing the Son's suffering (that denies both creeds). But that is from me, not Torrance.
People can make of that what they want.True. Here is Torrance again: "Or to use more juridical terms, the wrath of God is removed only when his righteous will has punished sin and judged it. Now it is import here to see that we cannot talk here of his mercy triumphing over his wrath, or as his love over his judgement - that would be to introduce a schizophrenia into God which is impossible, and to misunderstand the wrath of God and the meaning of the penalty or righteous infliction that is due sin. Punishment and wrath are terms speaking of the wholly godly resistance of God to sin, the fact that the holy love of God excludes all that is not holy love. Sin must be judged, guilt must be expiated by it's judgement and complete condemnation, else God is not God, and God is not love." From Torrance's "Atonement: The Person and Work of Christ" page 154.
Those reading this can make of it what they will. But the fact is, the standard idea that your Calvinist or Arminian or semi-Pelagian preacher had when he said Christ was punished for our sins is sound and is what Torrance was talking about above. I thank Torrance for cautioning us on having a mistaken image in our minds that has Christ attempting to placate an unloving, vengeful Father - but anyone who tries to remove the idea of Jesus being punished for our sins is guilty of huge error in my opinion.
I guess in a way it's really all we have if we want to try to do theology. What I like about Torrance is that he seems to stay in his lane of being an academic theologian. A lot of the older theologians we use were church leaders operating in an official capacity and they were quick to curse everyone who didn't accept everything they said - even though it was to an extent, human logic too.So even if Torrance is not personally introducing logic, he is relying on the human reasoning already in what forms his view of orthodoxy.
I agree.I guess in a way it's really all we have if we want to try to do theology. What I like about Torrance is that he seems to stay in his lane of being an academic theologian. A lot of the older theologians we use were church leaders operating in an official capacity and they were quick to curse everyone who didn't accept everything they said - even though it was to an extent, human logic too.
The truth is, as soon as I make a theological statement it becomes a matter of "well if that's the case then this has to be true also". So we then go down a trail of human logic. And we will always end up appealing to "mystery", or "paradox", or we insist on a dogmatic statement adhered to to the letter (which I sometimes wonder if those who do that are really just trying to solidify their position in their chosen camp). Of course, my mystery or paradox is to someone else a contradiction or an evasion and so it goes.