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Spot-checking Some Distinctives of the Premial View

PISTIS (ΠΙΣΤΙΣ) should usually be rendered “faithfulness” when attributed to Jesus Christ.

HAMARTIA (ΆΜΑΡΤΙΑ) can denote “sin-offering” in key New Testament passages reflecting the ritual sacrificial language of Leviticus (LXX).

HAIMA (ΆΙΜΑ)blood (of sacrificial rituals) represents the diverse powers of resurrected life.

Romans 5:8-10 equates “blood” with “life,” when the syntactical structure is accurately aligned, not with “death.”

DIKAIOMA (ΔΙΚΑΙΩΜΑ) in Romans 5:16,18 & 8:3 signifies a “just award” (judicially granted Christ by God, namely, the Holy Spirit of life via resurrection), and not either a “righteous act/deed” (done by Christ, i.e., “suffering the cross”) (5:16,18) or “righteousness” (as inner moral virtue) (8:3), as traditionally translated.

The righteousness of God” in the New Testament is uniformly premial (not penal) and was supremely exemplified by God’s historic act of raising Jesus from the dead.

The cross was a place of diabolical rage and fury plus human condemnation, but decidedly not a locus of divine wrath or condemnation in any sense whatsoever.

The victory of the cross was that Jesus remained sinless even in the face of the most extreme and unjust suffering of abuse, rather than either justifying himself or using his rightful messianic prerogatives to avenge himself. He waited for God’s justice/justification. Therefore, he won the just award of immortal life, and some!

God’s justice toward His Son was exclusively rewarding (premial), not at all penal.

God’s justice toward His Son was ultracompensatory.

Jesus’ ransom was a heroic exchange and not at all a penal substitution (so there was no economic equivalence or parity at play).

Jesus was not “forsaken” in the Unseen (ΆΙΔΗΣ, hades), Acts 2:25-28, Psalm 16:8-11 LXX, and only briefly “forsaken” (Psalm 22:1) on the cross to permit the strategic death of his body and compassionate cessation of his suffering abuse (which, after all, was never intended as any sort of exchange currency whose gross amount must weigh in on the extent of mercy or grace or atonement or salvation or anything else in God’s possession, for that matter, neo-liberal, zero-sum economics to the contrary notwithstanding).

God’s wrath/indignation fell not upon His Messiah at the cross, but upon all Jerusalem before that generation passed away (70 A.D.), on account of what they perpetrated by the cross as well as to earlier prophets.

To “bear” sins is to “absorb” whatever harm and loss they cause, instead of retaliating (i.e., avenging oneself). Therefore, it denotes forgiving or pardoning others of their sins against us, not some phantom notion of “getting imputed with sins” ourselves.

We should leave avenging of ourselves to God, not because avenging is wrong per se for human beings (after all, that’s what “the higher authorities” have been officially appointed by God to do, Rom. 13:1-7), but because only God can do so with truly satisfying justice, sans overreactions or lurking self-interests and hidden agendas.

Adam’s sin was not “imputed” to his descendants (rendering them guilty for them, too).

Our sins are not “imputed” to Christ (rendering him guilty before God and worthy of wrath).

Christ’s righteousness is not “imputed” (ΛΟΓΙΖ-, counted, accounted) to us who believe (allegedly rendering us righteous before God).

The Holy Spirit in superabundance was part of Christ’s just award from God for his enduring obedience to his Father’s precepts even through a treacherous, prolonged public execution.

The Holy Spirit in abundance overflows to believing sinners and actually effects the internal cleansing from our sins.

The Explanation of the Proclamation is the power of salvation and alone possessses the ability to generate faith because it provides the abundant eye-witness testimony required to validate it.

The function of believing is an ineradicable capacity of divinely-crafted human nature, which God fashioned to be dependent on evidence and proof for its proper foundation and direction.

All who are “in Christ” by faith and baptism are “dead TO” sins, offenses, lusts, and foreskin/’uncircumcision’ (Eph. 2:1, 5, Col. 2:13, properly translated, cf. Romans 6:1-14); no scripture speaks of anyone being “dead IN” sin, etc.

When Adam sinned, death “passed through to all mankind, whereupon [ΕΦΩ, literally “on/upon which”] all sinned” (Rom. 5:12), i.e., precisely the inverse causality from the Vulgate’s (Jerome’s) culpable mistranslation, “because” (which in Greek would require ΔΙΑ, with the accusative case) and Augustine’s notorious exploitation of it. “Original sin” is therefore a serious misnomer and can only lead to spurious inferences and doctrinal confusion.

The resurrection of Jesus was the supreme historic event where God was justified and Jesus was justified. On the strength of that event, all who trust God are likewise justified and, accordingly, receive the Spirit of Life.

Jesus was not saved at the cross but, much rather, destroyed there, in sight of throngs of eyewitnesses (or haven’t you read the Bible?). He was saved by his resurrection, and that salvation by God precipitated the salvation of all others who trust him as Savior.

Human sovereignty and authority, also over our own bodily and psychical faculties, have not been revoked; they account for what is commonly, popularly, but erroneously categorized under the rubric of ‘freewill.’

God’s graciousness was not ‘bought‘ by Christ’s sufferings of abuse, therefore it is not limited, metered, or calculated commensurate with them.

Sins have not been “paid for“; they neither need to, ought to, nor can be. Sacrifices were never intended for “payment“; much rather, they prophetically pre-figured the voluntary self-sacrifice of the Son and Heir of God, the King of Israel, in order to win a just repayment from God in return for that incomparaable injustice so as to ransom sinful humanity from death and its sting, alike.

Adam’s posterity ‘pay for’ (if you insist…but see Romans 6:7 and enveloping context) their own sins simply by dying. However, to gain newness of life we need to identify with Christ’s wrongful death and rightful resurrection by way of faith and baptism.

God only warned Adam of death if he should ever eat of the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, yet not of ‘spiritual death,’ much less ‘eternal death‘ (Genesis 2:16-17). Christ’s own death (not some postulated ‘eternal‘ or ‘spiritual‘ vagary) was a quite sufficient injustice inflicted upon this sinlessly innocent man so that God was induced to render him the supercompensating justice of resurrection from the dead plus royal exaltation to David’s promised throne over the earth. Oh, and did I mention the inexpressible boon of the Holy Spirit?

“The righteousness of God” and “the faithfulness of Christ Jesus” are complementary covenantal expressions as employed by Paul’s arguments in Romans, Galatians, and Philippians.

2 Corinthians 5:21 makes reference to Christ being made a “sin [offering],” not a “sin” per se! Such normative usage is marbled throughout Leviticus. The clincher? The very function of that ritualsin” was precisely to constitute the offerer rituallyrighteous” again. Christ Jesus ushered in the prophesied real McCoy once for all on Golgotha; that realrighteousness,” in turn, was dispensed abroad at the following Pentecost, i.e., God’s promised Holy Spirit in colossal outpour (2 Corinthians 3:2-9)—God’s very own personal righteousness to all who dare to believe the News!

Romans 8:3 also makes reference to God sending His own Son an “[offering] concerning sin.” This was God’s quintessential conciliatory, propitiatory, peacemaking gesture vis a vis a long-alienated, still-desperate humanity starving, thirsting, gasping for life.

The Biblical concept of the Levitical blood sacrifices regards them as prophetic figures of the most extreme sin[-offering] of treasonously crucifying their designated Savior. Their aggregate fulfillment and radical supercession by way of the Savior’s resurrection forever nullified and dismantled the Levitical ritual system going forward.

Paul’s epistle to the Romans nowhere develops a “theology of the cross” in the slightest degree; quite the contrary, a “theology of the resurrection” is his obsessive focus. [5/2,4-6/11; 5/1-2/24]

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The OATH and PROMISE of the Old Covenant bound God to its fulfillment in spite of every conceivable contingency relative to His faithful and just covenant partner, the Lord Jesus Christ, not even death itself excepted.

If Jesus’ getting “given up” to his enemies was due to the “wrath of God” (à la the Protestant Reformers) then who’s to say our own dreaded occasions of getting delivered into the hands of some enemy or other is not likewise due to the wrath of God for some sinful provocation, known or unknown? This could well catapult us into spiritual limbo, not to add existential terror! How much needless drama and trauma result from spiritual insecurity deriving from this source in unsound doctrine concerning God’s inner character and disposition toward mortally sinful human beings? [4/18/11; 4/23/24]

In view of the deeply embedded prevalence of the penal satisfaction theory of Christ’s Atonement, then for the diametric opposite stance of premial restitution to have plausibility in the current climate of rampant institutional abusiveness by political partisan self-interest, military establishment, criminal justice system, policing, public and private prison systems, stock market, financial services, payday loan industry, pharmaceutical industry, healthcare industry, fossil fuel industry, petro-chemical industry, agribusiness, trucking industry—I’ve barely gotten started!—virtually every passage of Scripture traditionally commandeered and impressed into forced service to the dominant ideology will have to become repurposed to serve a more evidently sound and natural interpretation in support of the premial perspective. What are the prospects if such a revolution should happen to succeed? This perspective should lend a fresh and convincing light to the solution of many perennial difficulties of Bible interpretation and especially incline toward the harmonious reintegration of seemingly intractable, or at least traditionally irreconcilable, positions on textual interpretations resulting from their captivation to systems of doctrine by way of prooftexting. Above all, the new expositions should be more in accord with the Holy Spirit of the Gospel as taught both by Jesus and his apostles (including the most misinterpreted of all: Paul). The end result of such a radical-biblical adjustment in Christian consciousness for the more rapid progress of fundamental societal reforms would be seismic. Dare we settle for less in the shadow of looming political crises and simmering violence? [4/18/11; 4/23-24/24]

In his epistle to the Romans, Paul is intent on emphasizing the “justice of God” that accounts for Christ’s resurrection. The oath and promise of the Old Covenant bound God to its fulfillment in spite of every conceivable contingency relative to His faithful and just covenant partner, the Lord Jesus Christ, not even death excepted. Hereby, his resurrection was secured against all odds whatsoever. [4/19/11]

To be “humbled under the mighty hand of God” is a far cry from experiencing the “wrath of His countenance,” etc. The first is aimed at discipline in justness toward the goal of maturation in love. The second is for punitive reasons of extreme correction or, failing that, of grim destruction. The first is intended for the amenable, the second for the stubborn. The first is fully in accord with God’s favor and its goal is to extend favor yet further. The second is a reflex of God’s righteous indignation at the incorrigible when milder measures prove ineffectual. [4/21/11]

TRADITIONAL PROTESTANT EXPRESSIONS NOT NECESSARY OR APPLICABLE TO THE NEW TESTAMENT’S PREMIAL EXPLANATION CONCERNING ATONEMENT THROUGH CHRIST JESUS:

Adam’s sin accounted to his descendants by God

Christ accounted with human sin(s) on the cross by God

Christ’s righteousness accounted to believers by God

Christ assuming the guilt of sin(s) on the cross

Christ condemned by God on the cross

Christ cursed by God on the cross

Christ drinking the cup of God’s wrath on the cross

Christ experiencing the displeasure of God on the cross

Christ experiencing the justice/vengeance of God on the cross

Christ identifying with sin(s) on the cross

Christ made sin on the cross

Christ paying for sin(s) on the cross

Christ paying the debt of sin(s) on the cross

Christ paying the penalty for sin(s) on the cross

Christ propitiating God on the cross

Christ punished by God on the cross

Christ reconciling God to man on the cross

Christ satisfying God’s justice on the cross

Christ satisfying God’s honor on the cross

Christ suffering as a substitute on the cross

Christ suffering in our place/stead on the cross

Christ suffering the curse for sin(s) on the cross

Christ suffering the pains of hell on the cross

Christ suffering the pangs of hell after the crucifixion

Christ suffering the punishment for sin(s) on the cross

Christ suffering the wrath of God on the cross

Christ suffering what sinners deserved on the cross

[4/21/11; 4/23-24/24]

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Flotsam & Jetsam from the Slow Shipwreck of Calvinistic Soteriology on Account of Neglecting the Premial Atonement in Heaven

Occasionally sprawling, not seldom convoluted, excruciatingly tedious, yet often extraordinally innovative, seclect elaborations of the Atonement such as those of Hugo Grotius, John Owen, William Pynchon, John McLeod Campbell, Robert C. Moberly, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Leon Morris, René Girard, H. D. McDonald, John Stott, I. Howard Marshall, Fleming Rutledge, Eleonore Stump, N. T. Wright, William Lane Craig, Adonis Vidu, Michael Gorman, David Brondos, Greg Boyd, Hans Boersma, Douglas Campbell, Darrin Snyder Belousek, Mako Nagasawa, and W. Ross Hastings, hailing from widely disparate standpoints and Christian traditions, all alike manifest obliviousness to the inextricable roles of Christ’s resurrection, ascension, and enthronement WITHIN THE INTEGRAL PROCESS OF GOD’S PREMIAL JUSTICE CULMINATING IN THE PROTECTIVE COVER (“ATONEMENT”) CHRIST OFFERED EXCLUSIVELY AT GOD’S THRONE IN HEAVEN, followed by the outpouring of the promised award of Holy Spirit and Christ’s continual intercession thereafter. And that’s despite the sterling advances of many of these authors in multiple respects. I find this state of affairs almost heartbreaking, especially in view of the visibly and increasingly deleterious societal consequences of this “little” perennial oversight by “us Christians (all!).” The inevitable side-effect and byproduct of thus shunting around these vitally essential components is the palpable sense of ill-satisfaction that proliferates via compulsive but needless over-qualifying, over-elaboration, and over-defensiveness—in effect, “multiplying words without knowledge.” [3/13/11; 4/10-12/24]

A telling example of the burgeoning excesses that can spawn from just one prominent sectarian tradition of theologizing is the following ample tally of historically scattered and systematically superfluous flotsam & jetsam that has accumulated over five centuries from the slow-motion deterioration and imminent shipwreck of Calvinistic soteriology in particular, including both its own due property as well as outlying spinoffs by way of inevitable counteractions and overreactions. It should be disturbing to “true believers” that none of the following phrases or technical terms is to be found, as such, in Scripture itself, unless by way of unwarranted imposition and even outright mistranslation from the original, a practice regrettably becoming more common among scholars now that such error has become increasingly and calmly assured of widespread acceptance without risk of contradiction. (Accordingly, some or parts of the following might have been placed in quotes, but where to stop? That said, I shall spare you the technicality.)

acceptilation

active righteousness/obedience [vs. passive righteousness/obedience] of Christ

Amyraldianism

antinomianism

common grace [vs. special grace]

divine decrees

divine sovereignty [vs. human freewill]

double/triple imputation

double jeopardy (of the reprobate)

double predestination

effectual calling

equal ultimacy

eternal conscious punishment (of human beings)

eternal security

external call [vs. internal call]

fideism

freewill (hunan) [vs. divine sovereignty]

God’s reconciliation to man

governmental theory of atonement

hypothetical/conditional universalism

impetration vs. application

imputation of Adam’s sin to his descendants (from Augustine)

imputation of Christ’s righteousness to believers/the elect

imputation of sin(s) to Christ

infralapsarianism

internal call [vs. external call]

irresistible grace

justification vs. sanctification

legalism

limited atonement

monergism [vs. synergism]

order of decrees

ordo salutis

original sin (reprising Augustine)

passive righteousness/obedience [vs. active righteousness/obedience] of Christ

payment for (debt of) sin(s)

penal satisfaction

penal substitution

perfectionism

predestination

perseverance of the saints

preterition

prevenient/preventive/preceding grace

rectoral theory of atonement

reprobation (decree of…)

sanctification vs. justification

secret regeneration

sovereign grace

sovereignty of God

special call [vs. universal call]

special grace [vs. common grace]

spiritual death (being dead in sin)

sublapsarianism

suffering of Christ in hell

supralapsarianism

synergism [vs. monergism]

total depravity

unconditional election

universal call [vs. special call]

universalism

The foregoing litany comprises, one and all, artificial byproducts of a toxic (if well-meaning) theology industry: plastic pollution. These irreversibly degrading plastic components cannot be rendered non-toxic and will inevitably spread within the environmental footprint of any church that tolerates their use. We must pursue the difficult task of disemploying them and getting comfortable with the crisp, spare, consistent terminology of apostolic formulation inspired by the Spirit of wholesomeness. Isn’t it about time to take out the trash, provided we can somehow dispose of it where it’s not liable to re-enter the safe places of the church and surrounding environment to recontaminate them, perhaps with yet more inveigling iterations? [3/13/11; 4/9-12/24]

The curious fact that an extremely low percentage of relatives, friends, pastors, scholars, authors, and other Christian leaders to whom I have communicated the premial approach to the Atonement, even on multiple occasions, have ever responded, and that even those who have replied were mostly non-enthusiastic, rather curt, and certainly non-committal (although curiously, somewhat fewer in number being overtly opposed or hostile to the message), and, finally, that after several years I can still count on one hand those who seem to have warmed up to it, and on the other hand those who did not maintain objections to it—all suggest the unusually captivating grip of the penal hypothesis concerning atonement on a worldwide scale (my contacts span the globe).

Clearly. I have not yet communicated…clearly! Or the Holy Spirit, whose message I firmly believe this to be, has not yet deemed it quite ready to endorse. Now, I’m not whining, but what sober, plausible reasons might be advanced to account for this odd circumstance (well, of course, aside from my own delaying to submit it for publication in normal book fashion)? [3/14/11; 4/10-12/24]

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77 Questions about the Atonement (Q&A #3)

3.     Isn’t Adam’s ‘original sin’ washed away at baptism?

Since Adam’s own sin was not in fact imputed to following generations, and only the premonitory consequence of that sin continued to reign–namely, a slow death by deprivation of the regenerating fruit, any attempts to consume which would be only then penalized by the untimely fatal stroke of a guarding cherub’s flaming sword–then that original sin, no less or more than any other, was dealt with by Christ’s achievement in the same way as everyone else’s.  Since that sin itself was not passed on to Adam’s descendants, naturally there is no need for any of us to get cleansed from it, by baptism or otherwise.

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77 Questions about the Atonement (Q&A #2)

2.     Wasn’t Adam’s sin imputed to his descendants?

This is altogether contrary to sound teaching.  Rather, because of his sin, Adam suffered the consequence of losing access to the Tree of Life and therefore eventually died.  All his descendants automatically lost this right, too.  Thus death passed down to all mankind and reigned unchallenged over the whole race, whereupon, perforce, everyone became enslaved to sin, which in turn reigned in the resultant cravings and pervasive fear of death.  Sin became endemic and, but for divine intervention, all but inescapable—a raging tyrant.

 

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