The Necessity of the Atonement
The Scholastic Reformer explains
why the Atonement of Christ was utterly necessary for us and our
salvation.
The
Necessity of the Atonement
by Dr.
Francis Turretin
The
Priesthood of Christ, according to the Apostle Paul and the types of the
Jewish ritual, is divided into two parts: the atonement which he made to
divine justice, and his intercession in heaven, (1 John 2: 2. Heb. 9:
12). The necessity of such an atonement, which is the foundation of all
practical piety and all Christian hopes, must therefore be firmly
established, and defended against the fiery darts of Satan, with which
it is attacked by innumerable adversaries.
Upon
this subject, the opinions of divines may be classed under three heads:
1. That of the Socinians, who I not only deny that an atonement was
made, but affirm that it was not at all necessary, since God both could
and would pardon sin, without any satisfaction made to his justice. 2.
That of those who distinguish between an absolute and a hypothetical
necessity; and in opposition to the Socinians maintain the latter, while
they deny the former. By a hypothetical necessity they mean that which
flows from the divine decree, God has decreed that an atonement is to be
made, therefore it is necessary. To this they also add a necessity of
fitness; as the commands-of God have 1 been transgressed, it is fit that
satisfaction should be made, that the transgressor may not pass with
impunity. Yet they deny that it was absolutely necessary, as God, they
say, might have devised some other way of pardon than through the medium
of an atonement. This is the ground taken by Augustine in his book on
the Trinity. Some of the reformers who wrote before the time of Socinus,
adopt the opinions of that father. 3. That of those who maintain its
absolute necessity; affirming that God neither has willed, nor could
have willed to forgive sins, without a satisfaction made to his justice.
This, the common opinion of the orthodox, is our opinion.
Various
errors are maintained on this point, by our opponents. The removal of
the grounds upon which they rest will throw light upon the whole
subject. They err in their views of the nature of sin, for which a
satisfaction is required; of the satisfaction itself; of the character
of God to whom it is to be rendered; and of Christ by whom it is
rendered.
1.
Of sin, which renders us guilty, and binds us over to punishment as
hated of God. It may be viewed as a debt which we are bound to pay to
divine justice, in which sense the law is called "a
hand-writing," (Col 2:14) as a principle of enmity, whereby we hate
God and he becomes our enemy: as a crime against the government of the
universe by which, before God, the supreme governor and judge, we become
deserving of everlasting death and malediction. Whence, sinners are
expressly called "debtors," (Matt. 6:12); "enemies to
God," both actively and passively, (Col. 1:21); "and guilty
before God," (Rom. 3:19.) We, therefore, infer that three things
were necessary in order to our redemption; the payment of the debt
contracted by sin., the appeasing of the divine wrath, and the expiation
of guilt.
2.
From the preceding remarks, the -nature of the satisfaction which sin
requires may be easily perceived. That which we are chiefly to attend to
in sin being its criminality, satisfaction has relation to the penalty
enacted against it by the Supreme Judge.
But here we must attend to a twofold payment, which is noticed by
jurists. One which, by the very deed of payment, sets at liberty the
debtor, and annuls the obligation, whether the payment is made by the
debtor in his own person, or by a surety in his name. Another in which
the fact of payment is not sufficient to liberate the debtor, because,
the payment is not precisely that which is demanded in the obligation,
but all equivalent. In this case, though the creditor such payment, has
a right to refuse the acceptance of yet if lie admits it and esteems it
a payment, it is a satisfaction. The former of these takes place in a
pecuniary, the latter in a penal debt. In a pecuniary transaction, the
fact of the payment of the sum due frees tile debtor, by whomsoever the
payment is made. Respect here is bad, not to the person paying but to
the payment only. Whence, the creditor, having been paid the full amount
due, is not said to have treated with indulgence the debtor, or to have
forgiven the debt. But in penal matters the case is different. The debt
rewards not things, but persons; not what is paid, so much as him who
pays; i.e., that the transgressor may be punished. For as the law
demands individual personal obedience, so it demands individual personal
suffering. In order that the guilty person may be released through an
atonement made by another in his stead, the governor or judge must pass
a decree to that effect. That decree or act of the judge is, in relation
to the law, called relaxation, and in relation to the debtor or guilty
person., pardon; for his personal suffering is dispensed with, and in
its place a vicarious suffering accepted. But because, in the subject
under discussion, sin has not a relation to debt only, but also to
punishment, satisfaction is not of that kind, which by the act itself
frees the debtor. To effect this there must be an act of pardon passed
by the Supreme Judge, because that is not precisely paid, i.e., a
personal enduring of the penalty, which the law demands, but a vicarious
suffering only. Hence we discover how perfectly accordant remission and
satisfaction are with each other, notwithstanding the outcry made by the
enemy respecting their supposed discrepancy. Christ made the satisfaction
in his life and at his death, and God, by accepting this
satisfaction, provides for remission. The satisfaction respects
Christ, from whom God demands a punishment, not numerically, but in
kind, the same with that which we owed. Pardon respects believers, who
are freed from punishment in their own persons, while a vicarious
suffering is accepted. Hence we see how admirably mercy is tempered with
justice. Justice is exercised against sin, and mercy towards the sinner;
an atonement is made to the divine justice by a surety, and God
mercifully pardons us.
3.
This reasoning is greatly fortified from a consideration of the
relations in which God stands to the sinner. He may be viewed in a
threefold relation: as the creditor; as the Lord and party offended; and
as the judge and ruler. But though both the former relations must be
attended to in this matter, yet the third is to be chiefly considered.
God here is not merely a creditor, who may at pleasure remit what is his
due, nor merely the party offended who may do as he will with his own
claims without injury to any one; but he is also a judge and rectoral
governor, to whom alone pertains the infliction of punishment upon
offenders, and the power of remitting the penal sanction of the law.
This all jurists know belongs to the chief magistrate alone. The
creditor may demand his debt, and the party offended reparation for the
offence or indemnity for his loss; but the judge alone has the power to
compel payment, or exact punishment. Here lies the capital error of our
adversaries, who maintain that God is to be considered merely in the
light of a creditor, who is at liberty to exact or remit the punishment
at pleasure. It is however certain, that God sustains the character of
judge and ruler of the world, who has the rights of sovereignty to
maintain, and professes himself to be the guardian and avenger of his
laws; and hence lie possesses not only the claims of a creditor, which
he might assert or remit at pleasure, but also the right of government
and of punishment, which is naturally indispensable. We must, however,
in the punishment itself, distinguish accurately between the enforcing
of the penalty, and the manner and circumstances under which it is
enforced, as they are things widely different. Punishment may be viewed
generally; and in this respect the right of Heaven to inflict it is
indispensable, being founded in the divine justice. If there be such an
attribute as justice belonging to God, then sin must have its due, which
is punishment. But as to the manner and circumstances of the punishment,
the case is altogether different. They are not essential to that
attribute. They are to be arranged according to his will and pleasure.
It may seem fit to the goodness of God that there should be, in relation
to time, a delay of punishment; in relation to degree, a mitigation of
it; and in relation to persons, a substitution. For although the person
sinning deserves punishment and might suffer it with the strictest
justice, yet such punishment is not necessarily indispensable. For
reasons of great importance, it may be transferred to a surety. In this
sense, it is said by divines that sin is of necessity punished
impersonally, but every sinner is not therefore of necessity to be
punished personally. Through the singular mercy of God some may be
exempted from punishment, by the substitution of a surety in their
stead.
But
that we may conceive it possible for God to do this, he must not be
considered as an inferior judge appointed by law. An officer of that
character cannot remit anything of the rigour of the law by transferring
the punishment from the actual offender to another person. God must be
viewed in his true character, as a supreme judge who giveth account of
none of his matters, who will satisfy his justice by the punishment of
sin, and who, through his infinite wisdom and unspeakable mercy,
determines to do this in such a way as shall relax somewhat of the
extreme rigour of punishment, by admitting a substitute and letting the
sinner go free. Hence we discover to whom the atonement is to be made;
whether to the devil, (as Socinus, with a sneer, asks,) or to God, as
sovereign judge. For as the devil is no more than the servant of God,
the keeper of the prison, who has no power over sinners, unless by the
just judgment of God, the atonement is not to be made to this executor
of the divine vengeance, but to the Supreme Ruler, who primarily and
principally holds them in durance. We may add, that it is a gratuitous
and false supposition, that in the suffering of punishment, there must
be some person to whom the punishment shall be rendered, as in a
pecuniary debt. It is sufficient that there is a judge, who may exact it
in order to support the majesty of the State, and maintain the order of
the empire.
4.
The person who makes the atonement is here to be considered. As
sin is to be viewed in the threefold light of debt, enmity, and crime;
and God in the threefold light of creditor, party offended, and judge;
so Christ must put on a threefold relation corresponding to all these.
He must sustain the character of a Surety, for the payment of the debt.
He must be a Mediator, a peace-maker, to take away the enmity of the
parties and reconcile us to God. He must be a Priest and victim, to
substitute himself in our room, and make atonement, by enduring the
penal sanction of the law. Again: that such an atonement may be made,
two things are requisite: —
1.
That the same nature which sins shall make restitution. 2. That
the consideration given must possess infinite value, in order to the
removal of the infinite demerit of sin.
In
Christ, two natures were necessary for the making of an atonement: a
human nature, to stiffer, and a divine nature, to give the requisite
value to his sufferings. Moreover, we must demonstrate how it is
possible, in consistency with justice, to substitute an innocent person,
as Christ was. in our room; because such a substitution, at first view,
appears to be not only unusual, but also unjust. Though a substitution,
which is common in a pecuniary debt, rarely occurs in penal transactions
— nay,
is sometimes prohibited, as was the case among the Romans, because no
one is master of his own life, and because the commonwealth would suffer
loss in such cases
— yet
it was not 'unknown among the heathen. We have an example of it in Damon
and Pythias; two intimate friends, one of whom voluntarily entered
himself bail for the other to Dionysius in a capital cause. Curtius,
Codrus, and Brutus devoted themselves for their country. The right of
punishing hostages, when princes fail in their promises, has been
recognized by all nations. Hence hostages are called anti-psukoi substitutes.
To this Paul alludes, when he says, (Rom. 5:7) "For a good man some
would even dare to die." The Holy Scriptures often give it support,
not only from the imputation of sin, by which one bears the punishment
due to another, but from the public use of sacrifices, in which the
victim was substituted in the place of the sinner and suffered death in
his stead. Hence the imposition of hands, and the confession of sins
over the head of the victims.
But,
that such a substitution may be made without the slightest appearance of
injustice, various conditions are requisite in the substitute or surety,
all which are found in Christ. 1. A common nature, that sin may be
punished in the same nature which is guilty, (Heb. 2:14). 2. The consent
of the will, that he should voluntarily take the burden upon himself,
(Heb. 10:9) —
"Lo,
I come to do thy will." 3. Power over his own life, so that he
may rightfully determine respecting it, (John, 10:18) —
"No
one taketh away my life, but I lay it down of myself, for I have
power to lay it down, and take it up again." 4. The power of
bearing the punishment due to us, and of freeing both himself and us
from the power of death; because, if he himself could be holden of
death, he could free no one from its dominion. That Christ possesses
this power, no one doubts. 5. Holiness and immaculate purity, that,
being polluted by no sin, he might not have to offer sacrifice for
himself, but for us only, (Heb. 7:26-27.)
Under
these conditions, it was not unjust for Christ to substitute himself in
our room, while lie is righteous and we unrighteous. By this act no
injury is done to any one. Not to Christ, for he voluntarily took the
punishment upon himself, and had the right to decide concerning his own
life and death, and also power to raise himself from the dead. Not to
God the judge, for he willed and commanded it; nor to his natural
justice, for the Surety satisfied this by suffering the punishment which
demanded it. Not to the empire of the universe, by depriving an innocent
person of life, for Christ, freed from death, lives for evermore; or by
the life of the surviving sinner injuring the kingdom of God, for he is
converted and made holy by Christ. Not to the divine law, for its honour
has been maintained by the perfect fulfillment of all its demands,
through the righteousness of the Mediator; and, by our legal and
mystical union, he becomes one with us, and we one with him. Hence he
may justly take upon him our sin and sorrows, and impart to us his
righteousness and blessings. So there is no abrogation of the law, no
derogation from its claims; as what we owed is transferred to the
account of Christ, to be paid by him.
These
preliminary remarks we have thought necessary, in order to the lucid
discussion of the question concerning the necessity of the atonement. We
now proceed to inquire whether it was necessary that Christ should
satisfy for us, as well absolutely, in relation to the divine justice,
as hypothetically, on the ground of a divine decree: whether it was
absolutely necessary, in order to our salvation, that an atonement
should be made, God not having the power to pardon our sins without a
satisfaction, or whether it was rendered necessary only by the divine
decree? The Socinians, indeed, admit no kind of necessity. Some of the
old divines, and some members of the Reformed Church, contend for a
hypothetical necessity only. They think it sufficient for the refutation
of the heretic. But we, with the great body of the orthodox, contend for
both. We do not urge a necessity simply natural, such as that of fire to
burn, which is in-voluntary, and admits of no modification in its
exercise. It is a moral and rational necessity for which we plead; one
which, as it flows from the holiness and justice of God, and cannot be
exercised any other way than freely and voluntarily, admits of various
modifications, provided there is no infringement of the natural rights
of Deity. That there is such a necessity, is evinced by many arguments.
1.
The vindicatory justice of God. That such an attribute is natural
and essential to God, has been proved at large elsewhere. This avenging
justice belongs to God as a judge, and he can no more dispense with it
than he can cease to be a judge or deny himself; though, at the same
time, he exercises it freely. It does not consist in the exercise of a
gratuitous power, like mercy, by which, whether it be exercised or not,
injustice is done to no one. It is that attribute by which God gives to
every one his due, and from the exercise of which, when proper objects
are presented, he can no more abstain, than he can do what is unjust.
This justice is the constant will of punishing sinners, which in God
cannot be inefficient, as his majesty is supreme and his power infinite.
And hence the infliction of punishment upon the transgressor or his
surety is inevitable. No objection to this can be drawn from the liberty
of God, for that is exercised only in matters of positive enactment, not
in such as are of natural right: nor from his mercy, because that, while
it may free the sinner from punishment, does not demand that sin shall
not be punished.
2.
The nature of sin, which is a moral evil and essentially opposed
to holiness, forms another argument. The connection between it and
physical evil is natural and necessary. As physical or penal evil cannot
exist without moral evil, either personal or imputed, so there cannot be
moral evil without producing natural evil. Moral and physical good, or
holiness and happiness, are united together by the wisdom, as well as by
the goodness and justice of God; so that a good man must be happy, for
goodness is a part of the divine image. The wicked must be miserable,
because God is just; and this the rather, because when God gives
blessings to the righteous, he does it of his own bounty, without any
merit on their part; but when he punishes the sinner, he renders to him
precisely what he has merited by his sins.
3.
The sanction of the Law, which threatens death to the sinner, (Deut.
27:29, Gen. 2:17, Ez. 18:20, Rom. 1:18, 32, and 6:23). Since God is true
and cannot lie, these threatenings must necessarily be executed either
upon the sinner, or upon some one in his stead. In vain do our opponents
reply, that the threatening is hypothetical, not absolute, and may be
relaxed by repentance. This is a gratuitous supposition. That such a
condition is either expressed or understood, neither has been nor can be
proved. Nay, as the penal sanction of the law is a part of the law
itself, which is natural and indispensable, this sanction must also be
immutable. With the judicial threatenings of the law, we must not
confound particular and economical comminations, or such as are paternal
and evangelical, which are denounced against men to recall them to
repentance. Such threatening's may be recalled in case of penitence. Of
this kind were those denounced against Hezekiah, (Isaiah 38) and against
Nineveh, (Jon. 3).
4.
The Preaching of the Gospel, which announces the violent and
painful death of the Mediator and Surety on the cross, is another
argument which power fully confirms the necessity of that event. For we
cannot believe that God would multiply sufferings unnecessarily. His
goodness and wisdom do not permit us to harbour an idea that the Father
could expose his most innocent and beloved Son to an excruciating and
ignominious death, without a necessity which admits of no relaxation.
The only necessity which can be possibly imagined here,, is that of
making an atonement to the divine justice for our sins. Every, one must
perceive that it was absolutely necessary. I know that our opponents
affect to produce various other reasons for the accursed death of the
cross, such as to confirm Christ's doctrine, and to set an example of
all kinds of virtue, especially of charity and constancy! But since
Christ had confirmed his doctrines by numerous stupendous miracles, and
11 through his life had given the most illustrious examples of every
human virtue, who could believe that God, for that one cause alone,
would expose his only begotten Son to such dire torments? Therefore,
without all doubt, there was another cause for that dispensation, to
wit: a regard for the honour of his justice. To this the Holy Spirit
bears witness by the Apostle Paul, (Rom. 3:5) who affirms that "God
hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation for our sins to declare
his righteousness," which was inexorable, and did not suffer
our sins to be pardoned on any other terms, than by the intervention of
the death of Christ.
Again:
if God was able and willing by his word alone without any atonement to
pardon our sins, why does the Apostle Paul so often and emphatically
refer our justification and salvation to the blood of Christ? "We
are justified- by the redemption which is in his blood," (Rom.
3:24.) "We have redemption through his blood; the remission of
sins," (Eph. 1:7). "He hath reconciled all things to
himself by the blood of Christ," (Col. 1:20). Now there was no
need that his blood should be shed if remission depended solely upon the
divine will. On this supposition, the apostle would rashly and falsely
affirm, what he often Arms, that the blood of bulls and of goats, that
is, the sacrifices under the law, could not take away sins; and that the
oblation of Christ alone could If there was no need of any purgation,
but penitence alone was sufficient to take away sin, that is, the
guilt of sin, without any sacrifice, the apostle's assertion is
groundless. What could be taken away without any sacrifice at all, could
surely be removed by legal sacrifices. If the divine will alone is
necessary, why is it that Paul never refers to it, but always ascends to
the nature of things, as when he asserts that it was impossible for the
blood of bulls to take away sins? Surely it must be because sin is so
hateful to God, that its stain can be washed away by nothing less than
the blood of the Son of God.
5.
If there was no necessity that Christ should die, the greatness of
God's love in not sparing his own Son, but delivering, him up for us
all, which the apostle commends, will be not a little diminished. If
there was no obstacle on the part of justice, in the way of our
salvation, it would indeed have been great grace in God to have forgiven
our sins. But it would have fallen far short of that stupendous love
which, though justice inexorable stood in the way, removed, by means
found in the treasures of infinite wisdom, all impediments to our
redemption, displaying a most amiable harmony between justice and mercy.
Nor can Christ be said to have appeased the wrath of God, if he, without
demanding any satisfaction, could by a mere volition have laid aside his
own wrath.
6.
Finally, our opinion relative to the necessity of an atonement does not,
in the least, derogate from any of the Divine Perfections. Not
from God's absolute Power, because he can neither deny himself nor any
of his attributes, nor can he act in such a way as to give the
appearance of delighting in sin, by holding communion with the sinner.
Not from the Freedom of his Will, because he can will nothing contrary
to his justice and holiness, which would be injured should sin go
unpunished. Not from his boundless Mercy, for this is exercised towards
the sinner, though punishment is inflicted on the Surety. On the
contrary, it makes a glorious display of the most illustrious of the
divine perfections: of his Holiness, on account of which he can have no
communion with the sinner, until, by an atonement, his guilt is removed
and his pollution purged; of his Justice, which inexorably demands
punishment of sin; of his Wisdom, in reconciling the respective claims
of justice and mercy; and of his Love, in not sparing his own Son in
order that he might spare us. |
|

Back to
Francis Turretin

Turretin's work on the Atonement is now available.
Click Here
for details
|