For those who contend that various Church Fathers taught PSA: Besides the links that I have already posted that refute this claim, I'll add this to also prove otherwise: The official teaching of the church for the first 1000 years -- East and West, Greek and Latin -- was Ransom/Christus Victor. To claim that the Fathers taught PSA is to claim that they taught a doctrine that was unknown and thus not taught in the church as a whole. If any of the Fathers had taught PSA, they would have been considered heretics by the church. But they did not and were not. They could not have taught something that had not been invented yet.
Hello ntchristian. Thanks for contributing.
However, you make a variety of claims without any Scripture or other evidence (quotations from the ECFs or councils) to back them up.
You say that the official teaching of the Church for the first 1,000 years was Ransom/Christus Victor. What Papal edict or Council can you quote to show that this is the case. Where exactly was Penal Substitution anathematized?
Now everyone believes in Christus Victor. Who believes in Christus Loser? But in what sense did Christ triumph? If He simply rose from the grave, that's true, and great, but how does it help guilty souls under condemnation for their sins? Are you acquainted with the writings of Gustav Aulen?
@JonC says he isn't, but if you are, we could discuss his views if you like.
Ransom Theory comes with Origen, whose teachings on the subject include God paying a ransom to Satan, and has the demerit of God being involved with fraudulent activity. But even Origen comes to Penal Substitution when he considers Romans 3:26.
''In the most recent times, God has manifested His righteousness and given Christ to be our redemption. He has made Him our propitiator.... for God is just and therefore could not justify the unjust. Therefore He required the intervention of a propitiator, so that by having faith in Him those who could not be justified by their own works might be justified.' [Commentary on Romans]
So to Origen, the cross is the place where God's justice is satisfied. Christ has accomplished a work of propitiation that turns away judgment. However, this will not always be the case. Origen continues,
'When the day of judgement comes, [God's righteousness will be revealed for retribution' [ibid] So ransom, expiation and propitiation are drawn together, with propitiation front and centre. The judgment of God for unrighteousness is borne by another, Jesus Christ. His death deals with sin and ransoms the believer from captivity.
In his Commentary on John, Origen quotes from 1 John 2:1-2:
'We have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous: and He is the propitiation for our sins...........who blotted out the written bond that was against us by His own blood, so that not even a trace of our blotted-out sins might still be found, and nailed it to His cross.....'
Whatever else Origen may have believed, it is clear that he understood that Christ had propitiated the Father and the sins that were against us are blotted out and nailed to the cross. How was this done?
By His own blood. Penal Substitution.