Exactly."God is our creditor and we are His debtors by virtue of our sins. But every creditor has the absolute right to forgive the debtor his debt - either in whole or in part - without receiving satisfaction." Socinus
From William Lane Craig's "Atonement and the Death of Christ"
"For Aquinas, as for Anselm and the Reformers, God satisfies the demands of retributive justice through Christ; but for Aquinas He does so contingently. By contrast, Socinus thinks that God's contingent choice to forgive sinners is independent of justice's demands. God gratuitously extends to repentant sinners forgiveness of their sins and reserves His punitive justice for the unrepentant. Just as Socinus opposed Anselm's view that satisfaction of divine justice is necessary, he would be equally oppose to Aquinas' view that God through Christ contingently satisfied divine justice."
Now, this is important. Craig goes on to say that "Socinus proceeds to argue that satisfaction is actually logically incompatible with the remission of sins,..."
In other words, where have we heard someone argue that where satisfaction is made already, there is therefore no need for forgiveness. Anyway, that is just a further exploration into Socinus nuanced view. Any similarities with any arguments made on this site are I'm sure, coincidental.
And that is why it is sinful for you to compare Christus Victor or anything I have posted to Socinianism.
Your view of God's justice in the Atonement is actually central to the Mormon understanding of the Atonement. Are you linked to Mormonism? I do not think so. So it woukd be dishonest for me to make that connection. Just as it is dishonest of you here.
Anselm did not center the Atonement on justice. He believed Adam had, on behalf of mankind, robbed God of His honor and sin is a theft of honor. You have your history mixed up.
Either way, my position that the New Covenant in Christ's blood is God's righteousness manifested apart from the Law is not Socinianism.
I never once said the Atonementis not centered in divine justice. I said that you have attributed a failed judicial philosophy to God.
I think we can see the problem you have. You are unable to deal with anybody's words - whether mine (which do not matter) or God's with any faithfulness to what was actually said.