Yeah see. You did it again. You just can't stop so no, there will be no possibility of legitimate discussion with you.
But so did you (in the very post you apologized).
For my part - until we agree otherwise I will continue as it may cause others to turn to Scripture.
Until you decide you want to turn back the clock and agree to an honest discussion this will remain on its current track.
I believe Christus Victor and I have provided the citations where others like Owen, in their works believe it too. So not only have I not belittled it but I believe it is true.
This is not true. But I am not sure you realize you insult others by your reductions.
Owen rejected Christus Victor (Owen taught that Christ suffered God's punishment against our sins, that Christ was a penal substitute).
To give you an example -
I believe that Christ bore our sins, died for our sins, that it pleased the Lord to crush Him, that He became a curse for us, that it is by His stripes we are healed.
It would be dishonest of me to say this means I believe PSA because that theory is more than those truths. I absolutely reject that Christ died as a penal substitute.
You claim that you and Owen believe that Christ was a penal substitute (you affirm PSA) but also that you reject that Christ was a penal substitute as you also hold Christus Victor.
What you do is take
aspects you agree with in Christus Victor but not Christus Victor itself.
I also believe Christ's work involves Recapitulation, but once again, not as the only or exclusive explanation of the atonement.
This is interesting. It is rare to find a Baptist who believes Recapitulation. I disagree with you here. I do not believe that Christ came to undo Adam's disobedience. Instead I view Christ as bring in a New Covenant.
I do agree with Irenaeus about the nature of Christ as our substitute (as opposed to penal substitution). But this is common with all views prior to Aquinas.
.I even believe that Christ's obedience and submission to the Father acts as the supreme example for us to follow
@DaveXR650
You do not get it.
Believing Christ was victorious over Satsn is NOT Christus Victor. Believing Christ set a moral example is NOT Moral Influence Theory. Believing Christ brought honor to God is NOT Substitution Theory. Believing Christ brought in the Kingdom is NOT Governmental Theory. Believing Christ bore our sins is NOT Penal Substitution
Theory.
If you drive a Honda accord you cannot say you fly an aeroplane because they both move people.
You are taking adpects of positions, pretending those positions are the aspects you like, and claiming to hold all of these contradictory views.
One CAN hold PSA and aspects of Christus Victor. One CAN hold Christus Victor and aspects of PSA. One CANNOT hold PSA and Christus Victor.
I think at this point I have enough of a comprehensive knowledge of what's being said to understand what is going on overall and let me just say that when I first got involved in these conversations I was only aware of the Socinian views and/or the modernist views as far as the methods being used to attack penal substitution.
The problem is that no Socinian view has ever been used on the Baptist Board to argue against my view or PSA. The only Modernist view that I have seen ised against PSA is the "cosmic child abuse" argument- but I have not seen that one here in years (and I never made it).
But this goes back to your practice of picking out things that may appear to you as similar and linking it to a foreign position.
For example - although your argument against Christus Victor is the same argument Mormons make against Christis Victor, it would be dishonest to say you make Mormon arguments.
Why? Because Mormons are not the only group that rejects Christis Victor.
This goes back to you choosing insults as the only reason to equate Christus Victor arguments against PSA to Socinian (an anti-Trinitarian movement that rejects divine omniscience) is to insult.
That is dishonest, just as if I were to equate your arguments to Mormonism would be dishonest even though your arguments against Christus Victor is the same.
should you come across any Early Church writings arguing against any of the concepts that later became penal substitution, please share the references.
The problem is not the concepts. We all agree on the concepts. Christ bore our sins. The problem is the heresy Calvin came up using these concepts.
Look at Socinianism. You can find no Early Church writing arguing against the concepts that later became Socinianism. The problem was not the concepts but what these concepts became.
But no, I don't see any use in continuing these circular arguments accompanied with insults and animosity.
Yes, that was my point to you.
I am always willing to discuss theology. BUT only with an agreed upon presupposition - that God's Word be the standard (the "test").
Until you are willing to set aside insults and animosity, I think these arguments will just be shots fired at one another.
I tried to discuss Scripture with you in the past, but you quickly moved to insults and attacks. I do not mind responding in kind, but there is no profit in it.