Aidan,
You keep pointing people back to your post #25, so I’m guessing you want us to engage you on your assertions there…
Vicarious Atonement
The word “vicarious” means substitute. Therefore, Christ was a substitute for others in that he took their place
Fair enough – I think we all agree that ‘substitution’ is the name of the game; the point of disagreement isn’t on ‘substitution’ but on the question of ‘punishment’ or ‘satisfaction’…
Therefore, Christ was a substitute for others in that he took their place and suffered their punishment.
This is a logical error. ‘Substitution’ does not necessarily imply ‘punishment’.
It was also a legal act whereby Christ fulfilled the law and lawfully paid the penalty of sin.
Again, this is highly interpretative and requires us to willfully ignore those passages in which even Christ declares that His sacrifice is one of love – and not one of a simple business transaction. God is our
Father, declares Jesus – not our
creditor.
First of all, we see vicarious sacrifice in the Old Testament.
Let’s be fair – ‘vicarious sacrifice’ doesn’t prove ‘penal substitution’…
Genesis 22:13… Notice that the ram was offered in place of Isaac. This was a substitutionary sacrifice which is exactly what “vicarious” means.
Notice that Isaac wasn’t being punished, and neither was the ram.
Isaiah 53:4-5 …
2 Cor. 5:21 …
Rom. 4:25
Again,
satisfaction meets these conditions, too. You’re not proving your point here…
Jesus did what we could not. He took our place and bore our sins in his body on the cross (1 Pet. 2:24) and made propitiation for our sins.
Here, I’ll rely on assertions already made in this thread: Augustine’s claim that the ‘sin’ here is ‘death’ itself. Therefore, yes, Christ took on death in his body for us; yet, that doesn’t prove penal substitution. Also, we’ve got (Kliska’s, I think) unrefuted assertion, which (I would agree) completely demolishes penal substitution: if the punishment is merely ‘eternal death’, then Christ’s sacrifice does not fit the bill: He was dead only three days. Moreover, if ‘eternal death’ is all that is required, and ‘substitution’ suffices, then
any (redeemed) human who gives his life for another fulfills God’s justice. (Here’s a thought experiment for you: suppose I get baptized; therefore, I am bought at a price, and no longer under the punishment of sin. Imagine I
immediately give up my life for a non-believer (an atheist, let’s say). Does my sacrifice atone for the atheist and guarantee him heaven? Under the notion of ‘penal substitution’, it does, yet that’s antithetical to Christian belief.)
The word propitiation “properly signifies the removal of wrath by the offering of a gift.”
I’m going to defer a discussion on the value of this definition, and instead just go right to demonstrating that it refutes your position. “The offering of a gift” implies
satisfaction, not
punishment. The ‘offering’ here is the substitution, not the adequacy of the punishment. If you were to have defined propitiation as “the removal of wrath by the replacement of an equivalent item”, then you’d have a leg to stand on (except that it would be an untenable definition). As it is, the notion that the ‘offering’ was ‘sufficient punishment’ is what sinks you here. Remember God’s own words: “I desire
mercy, not
sacrifice”.
since Jesus is our propitiation and turns away the lawful wrath of God, we have further evidence that Christ’s sacrifice was to avert God’s righteous wrath against us, the sinners.
True, but this only speaks to the fact that Jesus’ sacrifice was efficacious – it doesn’t imply that it it was efficacious because it fulfilled God’s justice.
Since the law of God must be met and cannot be ignored
Be careful here – you’ve already quoted Scripture (Romans 3:25) that refutes this: God
Himself chooses not to punish us, knowing beforehand what Jesus will do. Your citation of Romans shows us that God does not require that His law “cannot be ignores”, since this is precisely what He does!
Christ’s death was a legal payment.
Your conclusion is unsupported, for the reasons I’ve outlined above.
In addition to Christ’s atonement being vicarious, it was also legal.
You keep making this assertion, but without attribution.
When a law is broken, a punishment is incurred.
Yes, but it does not follow that the punishment must be enforced. See Jesus’ response to the woman caught in adultery. He doesn’t assert that she’s
innocent; just that He does not condemn her to the legal punishment. Yet again, we see that your argument is refuted in Scripture.
when Jesus was on the cross, he said “It is finished!” (John 19:30). In Greek it is, “tetelistai,” and it was a legal term.
Can you please provide a reference that proves that this is the proper interpretation of this word? I’m willing to grant that it
can be used in this way, but not that it
must be interpreted thusly. You see, “telos” speaks to purpose or goal; to be “tetelestai” is to have accomplished one’s purpose. This is the same word Jesus uses when He tells us “be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect” – the word ‘perfect’ here is really the adjectival form of telos (just as tetelestai is a verbal form of telos). If it must be interpreted as “paid in full”, what support do you have for this claim?