G
gurneyhalleck1
Guest
I understand your point and find it valid, as usual, Meghan. I’m honestly not trying to categorize/organize anything. And I know that they’re not all firm philosophies, but holistic and not mutually-exclusive. You’re right, of course. But I notice some Orthodox priests will get put off if you tell them anything in Augustinian or Anselmian terms, things that speak of sacrifice thinking “oh, that’s so Western,” when in reality, as you say, there IS a sacrificial component to the Divine Liturgy itself? That’s all I’m trying to say. There seems a lot of posturing with this anti-Western thinking approach. I understand the importance of “emphasis” but an emphasis cannot drown out the whole picture, that’s all I’m saying. I applaud the focus on the conquering of death, the harrowing of hell, the triumph. No problem with that whatsoever from me!
But I do value the Catholic emphasis as well on the journey to the Cross and the sacrificial side of things that Isaiah 53 speaks of. The triumph cannot happen without the journey to it and the pain therein.
I wonder Scott if you are not running into problems partly because you are thinking in terms of models of the atonement? So we say, well, the West uses this one, and the East that, and the Protestants another?
But really, those models are just ways theologians have categorized the different ways other theologians talk about it. In reality, they are not all neat, separate ideas, and they are not mutually exclusive.
So the East tends to talk about Christ destroying death. But they also talk about Christ being offered as a sacrifice - they have to really, as it’s scriptural language. Both are true but they have preferred to emphasize one. (Or, to put it another way, all of the models are actually untrue and simply point us to an unspeakable reality.)
Which isn’t to say your question doesn’t make sense, because I think there have been some interesting answers on some differences of emphasis with the sacrificial understanding. But it might be helpful not to try to fit them into what are really created categories that people who need to compare theological ideas have come up with.