Wednesday, July 29, 2009

A Short History Of The Doctrine Of The Atonement (1920)

A Short History Of The Doctrine Of The Atonement (1920)
by L. W. Grensted

All Christians agree that Jesus is the Messiah and Savoir, but what exactly does that mean? What did his death actually accomplish and for whom was it done? Is God the Father angry at us and needs to have his wrath given out on someone? Does Jesus redeem the world, the universe, or just the elect? Is the devil holding us hostage and in need of a ransom? Is the state of death what needs to be "satisfied" and broken? What do the Gospels tell us? St Paul? The earliest church writers? The Fathers East and West? The Medieval theologians? The later Romans and Reformers? These are the types of questions that are at the heart of Grensted's classic, and until recently out of print, text. Such questions are at the very heart of what we think about the nature and "personality" of our God. Grensted rightly says that from the beginning, all Christian theology is soteriology, having to do with the stuff of salvation.

I have used this book extensively in my own study and have found it a fantastic jumping off point, since he has extensive footnotes to the Fathers, theologians and reformers, and he almost always provides a full quotation in the footnotes in the original language after he translates it in the main body of the text. Also be warned that this edition is a copy of the original text, so some pages are a little faded and there is brief underlining by a previous owner, who provided the "proof pages", but they are minimal and neatly scribed. I have found no pages missing, although the publisher's preface warns of it. I think that it must be a general disclaimer. Something that I thought could have been made much more of is the Eastern doctrine of deification (theosis), since that is to my mind the heart of eastern soteriology, and I provide a title to a book on that subject below.

Other books that go along the lines of this one are: Cur Deus Homo, On The Incarnation, Christus Victor: An Historical Study of the Three Main Types of the Idea of Atonement by Aulen (which is VERY useful), The Nature of the Atonement: Four Views (look via Schreiner), Problems With Atonement: The Origins Of, And Controversy About, The Atonement Doctrine (Finlan), The Background And Content Of Paul's Cultic Atonement Metaphors (Academia Biblica (Society of Biblical Literature) also by Finlan, The Atonement: The Origins of the Doctrine in the New Testament by the great Hengel (but if you can find Hengel's "The Cross of the Son of God" you will get this book along with two of his others on the subject in one binding. For a new view of Luther, see Union With Christ: The New Finnish Interpretation of Luther (ed by Braaten). For an Orthodox view, seePartakers of the Divine Nature: The History and Development of Deification in the Christian Traditions (edited by Christensen). Jordan Bajis' Common Ground is also a good comparison of Eastern and Western models.

Let me know if you have other books on the topic, or if you would like to share your thoughts.

May we all be one.

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