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Featured Romans 3:21-26 doesn't support penal substitution

Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by Arthur King, Jun 27, 2023.

  1. Arthur King

    Arthur King Active Member

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    But now apart from the Law, the righteousness of God has been manifested, being witnessed by the Law and the Prophets: that is, the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all those who believe; for there is no distinction; for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, being justified as a gift by His grace through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus; whom God displayed publicly as a propitiatory sacrifice in His blood through faith. This was to demonstrate His righteousness, because of the passing over of the sins previously committed in the forbearance of God; for the demonstration of His righteousness at the present time, so that He would be just and the justifier of the one who is of the faith of Jesus.

    Paul says that in the death of Jesus, the “righteousness of God has been manifested” and again that Jesus’ death “was to demonstrate His righteousness.” How does the death of Christ on the cross manifest and demonstrate God’s righteousness?

    According to penal substitution, the need for God to demonstrate His righteousness arises from actions on His part that make him seem unrighteous. Specifically, God’s action of “passing over the sins previously committed in the forbearance of God” is taken to mean that God left sins unpunished prior to the coming of Christ, and therefore has made Himself to look unjust, unrighteous, and unfaithful to His commitment to uphold His own worth and holiness in punishing sin. However, penal substitution will argue, God’s action in “displaying publicly” or “setting forth” Jesus as a sacrifice shows Himself faithful in punishing sin by pouring out the withheld punishment on Jesus on the cross. When the text says that God set forth Jesus as a “propitiatory sacrifice” that word “propitiation” means the averting of wrath. So penal substitution takes that to mean that God withheld wrath from sins past, and displaced that wrath on Jesus instead in the event of the crucifixion.

    But let’s ask the question: does a person really come away from the Old Testament feeling like God is not one who punishes sin? Look at this brief sketch of judgment in the Old Testament: humanity is spiritually dead in their own sin, cast out of Paradise and God’s presence and consigned to physical death, a global flood, the scattering of all nations following the tower of Babel, fire and brimstone on Sodom and Gomorrah, the ten plagues on Egypt including the death of all the firstborn, 40 years wandering in the harsh wilderness, the annihilation of the Canaanites, the persecutions under foreign powers and the wars of the Judges, and then exile to Assyria, then Babylon, then rule under Persia, then Greece, then Rome. Furthermore, when Paul begins his argument in Romans, he begins right off the bat saying that “the wrath of God is revealed (past tense and present tense) from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness.” The following paragraphs of his argument in Romans 1 make all sorts of references to Genesis, making it clear that Paul is arguing about the wrath of God revealed against humanity since humanity’s original Fall. Remember also what Paul says in Galatians 3. The whole problem of Galatians 3 is that Israel is under a curse. So penal substitution advocates have to argue that though Israel is in bondage to the curse of the law, having drank the cup of God’s anger to the dregs, and though the wrath of God has been revealed from heaven against all ungodliness of humanity, God also seems negligent in punishing sin. That makes absolutely no sense. There is no way that Paul or other Jews in the first century would be sitting around thinking, “Gosh, when is this softy, pacifist God going to start taking sin seriously and execute His punishments?” Yes, they were hoping that God would punish Rome, the current foreign empire they were under, but the narrative context for such punishment would be the elevation of Israel to reign over the world. Again, the real question against God’s justice is when He will restore Israel and the rest of the nations through her; any expected outpouring of wrath would fit within the pursuit of that goal.

    Look at these strong statements from the prophets Isaiah and Daniel that God has been active in punishing Israel for her sins. In Isaiah 51:17, the prophet says to Jerusalem, “Arise, O Jerusalem, You who have drunk from the LORD’S hand the cup of His anger; The chalice of reeling you have drained to the dregs.” Jerusalem had drained the cup of God’s wrath down to the dregs. Is that compatible with the idea that God seemed to let their sins go unpunished? Similarly, in Daniel 9:11, Daniel confesses that, “Indeed all Israel has transgressed Your law and turned aside, not obeying Your voice; so the curse has been poured out on us, along with the oath which is written in the law of Moses the servant of God, for we have sinned against Him.” Again, it makes no sense to have these verses in mind and then think that there is some major problem of God appearing negligent in punishing sin.

    Furthermore, in those instances in which God does withhold punishment from Israel, as in the moments following the incident with the Golden Calf, it is to prove His justice in the sight of the nations (see Exodus 32). As Isaiah 48:9 says, “For the sake of My name I delay My wrath, And for My praise I restrain it for you, In order not to cut you off.” Withholding punishment from Israel proves that He is just, that is, faithful to His promises to bless all nations through Abraham's offspring.

    Rather, it makes far more sense that God’s action of “passing over the sins previously committed” refers to His delay in purging and purifying Israel from sin. God’s delay in purging sin may indeed have included certain instances in which wrath was withheld, but the overall charge against God’s faithfulness/justice is that God seems truant in fulfilling His promise to bless all nations through Abraham’s offspring, that is, Israel. The complaint is, “God, if we are the nation through whom you are to save the world and reverse Adam’s curse and crush the serpent, why do we struggle with sin just like the other nations, and why have we been stomped on by wicked and ungodly empires for the last 500 years?” Remember, because of God’s promises, Israel’s failure is God’s failure. If God fails to save the world through Israel, then He is an unjust God.

    But through Jesus and his death and resurrection, God has fulfilled his promises to bless all nations through Abraham's offspring. Through his death he has purified humanity of sin, and by his resurrection, brought us out of exile to sin, Satan, and death. God is just (faithful to bless all nations through Abraham's offspring) and the justifier of the one who is of the faith of Jesus (regardless of whether that person is Jew or Gentile).
     
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  2. 37818

    37818 Well-Known Member

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    Specifically what in all of that disallows penal substitution in Romans 3:21-26? How must Romans 3:21-26 contradict Mark 10:45? . . . αντι . . . ?
     
  3. Van

    Van Well-Known Member
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    PSA is a Trojan horse for Limited Atonement. It is false doctrine as has been shown time and time again.
    If Christ died for those never to be saved, 2 Peter 2:1, then His death provided the means of salvation for everyone, not the specific sins of a preselected group of individuals. It is a lock!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
     
  4. Arthur King

    Arthur King Active Member

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    Mark 10:45 "For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many."

    Ransom just means payment of a price to free from bondage. In his death, Jesus pays our debt of obedience (Romans 5). There is nothing that necessitates punishment to satisfy wrath here.

    Furthermore, Jesus' words are not meant to be substitutionary, but exemplary and participatory for his followers. See the preceding verses:

    "The cup that I drink you shall drink; and you shall be baptized with the baptism with which I am baptized."

    "“You know that those who are recognized as rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them; and their great men exercise authority over them. But it is not this way among you, but whoever wishes to become great among you shall be your servant; and whoever wishes to be first among you shall be slave of all. For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many.”
     
  5. 37818

    37818 Well-Known Member

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    I said nothing about wrath. Mark 10:45;Jesus' soul in exchange for many.
     
  6. Martin Marprelate

    Martin Marprelate Well-Known Member
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    Why did the Lord Jesus refuse the wine mixed with Myrrh (Mark 15:34; Mark 15:23)?
     
  7. Arthur King

    Arthur King Active Member

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    Not quite sure what you are getting at with the question. Again, regarding the cup, Jesus says “The cup that I drink you shall drink; and you shall be baptized with the baptism with which I am baptized." That's not substitution.

    The cry of dereliction does not support penal substitution.

    First, the cry of dereliction is not unique to Jesus. David cried it first, because he is the one who wrote the psalm. Others sang the psalm as well to express their feelings of distress, abandonment, or God-forsakenness. The Psalmist himself, within the psalm, looks to what the fathers did when they were in moments of distress, feeling abandoned and forsaken by God (v. 4-5). So it is hard to argue that the cry of dereliction in Psalm 22 is unique to Jesus and therefore “substitutionary.” The cry of dereliction is participatory, for in it Jesus identifies with David, with all others who have sung the psalm, and with the fathers of Israel that the psalmist looks to as examples. Jesus is “forsaken” so that he can save the forsaken. He is not forsaken “instead of us” so that we will not be forsaken. Once again, we have a verse that belongs in the category of participation or recapitulation and not substitution. (The logic of recapitulation is, “just as, so also.” Just as Jesus felt forsaken, so also David and others felt forsaken).

    It is also hard to argue that the cry of dereliction in psalm 22 is “penal.” Both in the immediate context of the psalm and in the context in which Jesus quotes it, the situation is very clearly a Godly man given over into the hands of sinners. Neither the gospels nor psalm 22 depict a “sinner in the hands of an angry God” scenario. Jesus is forsaken into the hands of sinners, but He is not forsaken of the Father’s love, for verse 24 of psalm 22 explicitly says, “Nor has [God] hidden His face from Him, but when he cried to Him for help, He heard.” Preachers often use Psalm 22 to support the idea that the Father turned His face away from the Son, but the psalm clearly and directly says the opposite. Jesus’ struggle on the cross is to love God by obeying Him unto death, and to trust in God’s love for Him in the midst of enduring all of humanity’s sin against him. The cry, “Why have you forsaken me?” is an expression of how the psalmist subjectively feels, not a statement of how circumstances objectively are. The objective reality discovered at the end of the psalm is that God has not forsaken the persecuted.
     
  8. 37818

    37818 Well-Known Member

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    What Jesus did, being forsaken, was completed prior to John 19:28.
     
  9. Arthur King

    Arthur King Active Member

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    I don't know what your point is. What is your argument for penal substitution, or that Romans 3 supports penal substitution?
     
  10. 37818

    37818 Well-Known Member

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    Simple.
    The lost, their body and soul will perish, Matthew 10:28.
    Jesus' soul died on the cross, per Isaiah 53:12. And this was finished before He physically died for His bodily resurrection, John 19:28.
     
    #10 37818, Jun 27, 2023
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  11. Martin Marprelate

    Martin Marprelate Well-Known Member
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    No, you're not. The wine mixed with myrrh was an analgesic. Why do you think He wouldn't take it?
     
  12. Arthur King

    Arthur King Active Member

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    Still not sure what point you are making? Would you like to make an argument for penal substitution? Or an argument that Romans 3 supports penal substitution?
     
  13. Martin Marprelate

    Martin Marprelate Well-Known Member
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    I am making an argument for Penal Substitution. Why do you think that our Lord would not take the wine mixed with myrrh?
    Spurgeon gives a whole sermon to the matter (sermon No. 2,443, New Park St. Chapel).
     
  14. Marooncat79

    Marooncat79 Well-Known Member
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    That is the most direct statement that Jesus ever made about His a earthly ministry

    notice, it says He died for many not all
     
    #14 Marooncat79, Jun 28, 2023
    Last edited: Jun 28, 2023
  15. Arthur King

    Arthur King Active Member

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    The question of the extent of the atonement (limited or unlimited) is a different discussion than the one in this thread. This discussion is about the mechanism of atonement. That is, HOW the death and resurrection of Jesus reconciles sinners to God. Extent of the atonement is downstream from the mechanism question. Nevertheless, there are many verses that say that Jesus died for "all", even though certainly not all will be saved but many will.
     
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  16. Arthur King

    Arthur King Active Member

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    I am not sure I agree with the interpretation of the wine mixed with myrrh as a pain killer, but regardless, I scanned through the Spurgeon sermon and I'm not finding much of an argument for penal substitution (certainly not one that mentions Romans 3).

    So Jesus refused the wine mixed with myrrh in order that his suffering might be complete. So what? That's not an argument for penal substitution. Usually arguments for penal substitution concerning the cup take the form of "Jesus drank the cup of God's wrath so we won't have to."

    Spurgeon has tons to say about participating in Christ's death and fellowship with his sufferings in this sermon: "If your Maker has put you there, to suffer for his name’s sake, do not come down from the cross to which he has nailed you by a daily crucifixion, until you have suffered all; and do not take the myrrh cup of an escape until you have borne all for Christ." Spurgeon is certainly a penal substitution advocate, but not seeing what his argument is in this particular case. Maybe I scanned too quickly.
     
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  17. Martin Marprelate

    Martin Marprelate Well-Known Member
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    Every commentator I can find agrees that it was an analgesic.
    It is most certainly an argument for Penal Substitution. If all our Lord had to do was to die so that He could be raised, it begs the question of why He had to undergo such a horrific death as crucifixion at all. But at the very least, there could be no objection to him availing Himself such such small mercy as was offered to Him. But the fact is that He could not do so. He had to make propitiation for the sins of His people, and to do that He had to satisfy the outraged justice of God.
    We read in Hebrews 7:22, ‘By so much more Jesus has become a surety of a better covenant.’ So what's a 'surety? A surety or 'guarantor' (ESV) is someone who guarantees the debts of a friend or family member and must pay them in full if the friend defaults. In Britain, where house prices are extremely high, it is not uncommon for parents to guarantee the mortgages of their children. There are several warnings in the Book of Proverbs against becoming a surety (Proverbs 6:1-5; 11:15; 17:18), since one is making the debts of one’s friend or child effectively one’s own. If they default upon their debt, the bank will come after the surety for the money exactly as if the debt was his own. Never mind if you have lived a life of exemplary financial probity, the bank will extract from you the very last penny owed. So the Lord Jesus had to give complete satisfaction to the justice of God in order to redeem us poor sinners from hell.

    In the Scriptures we also have the concept of the mediator, one who might fill up the gap between the outraged holiness of God and rebellious man (Isaiah 59:2). But mediation requires a satisfaction to be made to the offended party. We see this is the book of Philemon. Here we have an offended party, Philemon, whose servant has run away from him, perhaps stealing some goods as he went; an offending party, Onesimus, and Paul who is attempting to mediate between them. Onesimus needs to return to his master, but fears the sanctions that may be imposed upon him if he does so. Paul takes these sanctions upon himself: ‘But if he has wronged you or owes anything, put that on my account. I, Paul, am writing with my own hand. I will repay…..’ (Philemon 18-19). Whatever is wanting to propitiate Philemon’s anger against his servant and to effect reconciliation, Paul the mediator willingly agrees to provide. In the same way, the Lord Jesus has become a Mediator between men and God (1 Timothy 2:5; Hebrews 8:6).
    In 2 Corinthians 5:19, we learn that God does not impute trespasses against His people; in Christ; He has reconciled the world [believing Jew and Gentile alike] to Himself. How has He done this? Through the Mediator Jesus Christ. For He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us….’ (v.21). The Lord Jesus has taken our sins upon Himself and made satisfaction to God for them. Therefore the message of reconciliation can be preached to all.
    Spurgeon was preaching a sermon, and therefore was diligent to provide application for his congregation. But he was also diligent to show the reason why our Lord had to suffer so greatly:
    'Nor do I think the reason is to be found in any love of pain that Christ had, nor in any heartless bravado ..... Far be that from Christ.; He never thrust Himself in the way of suffering when it was unnecessary; He did not go to give Himself into the hands of His enemies before His hour was come; He avoided persecution when [it] would not be an injury ti His cause; He withdrew out of Judea and would not walk in the land, because of Herod who sought to slay Him. I believe that, if our Saviour had not been the atoning sacrifice, if His sufferings had merely been those of a martyr, He would have quaffed to the very dregs the cup that was offered Him, and would not have left any of it. The reason why He refused the cup, is to be found in another thing altogether........
    First, I say that it was necessary to make the atonement complete. If our Saviour had drunk the myrrhed cup the atonement would not have been valid ........ We believe that Christ did, on the cross, suffer just enough, and not one particle more than was necessary for the redemption of His people. If then, this wine-cup had taken away part of His sufferings, the ransom price would not have been fully complete, it would not have been fully paid. ,,,,,,, If a man's ransom is to be pad, it must all be paid; for though one single farthing be left unpaid, the man is not fully redeemed, and he is not yet totally free.

    There is an organization in Britain (Barnabas Aid) that pays off the debts of poor Pakistani Christians to free them from bonded labour. It goes without saying that if the full amount is not paid, the slaves (for that is effectively what they are) will not be freed.
    And this takes us back to the O.P. and Romans 3. Through the suffering and death of the Lord Jesus, God can be 'just and the justifier' of those who trust in Christ. If those sufferings are insufficient to satisfy the justice of God, then His justice demands that sinners pay for their own sins, and this they are quite unable to do.
     
    #17 Martin Marprelate, Jun 28, 2023
    Last edited: Jun 28, 2023
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  18. Arthur King

    Arthur King Active Member

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    "A surety or 'guarantor' (ESV) is someone who guarantees the debts of a friend or family member and must pay them in full if the friend defaults."

    You keep using payment analogies that are totally contrary to penal substitution.

    I agree Jesus pays our debt—our debt of obedience. But that is not penal substitution. Penal substitution is that Jesus is punished in our place to satisfy retributive justice.

    Jesus pays 1 billion dollars on our behalf. He does not go to the electric chair instead of us (going to the electric chair doesn't restore anyone any money).

    Anselm argues that Jesus pays our debt. Yet Anselm does not teach penal substitution. You are confusing the satisfaction of justice via restitution (payment to restore what is broken) and satisfaction of justice via retribution.

    For example, if I crash into your car and do $1,000 of damage, you will be angry. Your anger threatens me with punishment unless I do certain things, namely pay you restitution and apologize. So when I tell you my insurance company will pay you $5,000 and tell you that I will drive better in the future, your anger will be gone. You will be propitiated. There is no longer a purpose for the wrath because resources were provided to fix what was broken.

    But penalty substitution demands a different definition and different mechanism regarding propitiation. Penalty substitution defines propitiation as “wrath exhaustion via displacement.” This means that the threatened wrath must be exhausted either on the offender or a substitute standing in for the offender. On penalty substitution, it is not enough for the anger to simply be averted. The anger must be vented. It must be carried out, or there is an injustice. Punishment must be carried out for punishment’s sake. It would be as if I came to you with $5,000 to fix your car and you said, “Nope, call up the insurance company and have them instead provide me with a car of equal worth to my own, that I can do $1,000 worth of damage to. I need to exhaust my retributive anger, and justice will not be satisfied until my anger is exhausted. Only then will I be propitiated.” This is ridiculous, and it would do nothing to fix the car, but it is exactly how the penalty substitution advocate understands the cross. God has wrath against humanity because our sin has damaged His infinite worth, and His wrath must be satisfied either on us or on Jesus to an infinite degree. Jesus stands in place of humanity and suffers his wrath, exhausting it via displacement, thus achieving propitiation. But this mechanism of wrath displacement is nowhere in Scripture.

    I have commented on 2 Corinthians 5:21 before. Do you have follow up questions to my commentary?
     
  19. Martin Marprelate

    Martin Marprelate Well-Known Member
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    The only car crash is your attempted analogies, which fail on multiple counts.
    We don't owe God any money, and if we did, we are not insured, We owe, as you say, a debt of obedience and righteousness, a debt that we are quite unable to pay. Our promises to 'drive better' are not going to be kept for a moment and God's righteous anger remains (eg. Psalms 7:11; Isaiah 9:17b etc.) Your attempt to pass off sin as if it were an unfortunate accident caused by momentary carelessness totally underplays its seriousness in the eyes of God. Instead of reading Anselm, you would do much better to read the Puritans on the 'sinfulness of sin,' notably Sin, Plague of Plagues, written by Ralph Venning immediately after the Great Plague of London.
    'The soul that sins shall die.' That is the verdict of our righteous God, 'but after this the judgment.' Our sins are indeed likened to debts in Scripture, but we are told, "I tell you, you shall not depart from there until you have paid the very last mite' (Luke 12:59), something we shall never be able to do. The Lord Jesus is indeed our Surety, but He does not pay a monetary debt; He pays on our behalf the debt of righteousness we owe to God, and pays in full the penalty that our sins have earned.

    Also, of course, you have made no attempt to explain why the Lord Jesus refused the wine mixed with myrrh.
     
  20. Martin Marprelate

    Martin Marprelate Well-Known Member
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    I may have overlooked it. If you would like to point me to it, I will certainly consider it.
     
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