Posted by: krandolph | April 22, 2011

Packer on Penal Substitution

As we contemplate the death of Jesus on this Good Friday, here is an excerpt from an article by J.I. Packer on The Logic of Penal Substitution. This excerpt comes from a section of the essay in which Packer is dealing with substitution and divine love.

Furthermore, if the true measure of love is how low it stoops to help, and how much in its humility it is ready to do and bear, then it may fairly be claimed that the penal substitutionary model embodies a richer witness to divine love than any other model of atonement, for it sees the Son at his Father’s will going lower than any other view ventures to suggest. That death on the cross was a criminal’s death, physically as painful as, if not more painful than, any mode of judicial execution that the world has seen; and that Jesus endured it in full consciousness of being innocent before God and man, and yet of being despised and rejected, whether in malicious conceit or in sheer fecklessness, by persons he had loved and tried to save — this is ground common to all views, and tells us already that the love of Jesus, which took him to the cross, brought him appallingly low. But the penal substitution model adds to all this a further dimension of truly unimaginable distress, compared with which everything mentioned so far pales into insignificance. This is the dimension indicated by Denney — ‘that in that dark hour He had to realise to the full the divine reaction against sin in the race.’ Owen stated this formally, abstractly and non-psychologically: Christ, he said, satisfied God’s justice ‘for all the sins of all those for whom he made satisfaction, by undergoing that same punishment which, by reason of the obligation that was upon them, they were bound to undergo. When I say the same I mean essentially the same in weight and pressure, though not in all accidents of duration and the like . . .’ Jonathan Edwards expressed the thought with tender and noble empathy: ‘God dealt with him as if he had been exceedingly angry with him, and as though he had been the object of his dreadful wrath. This made all the sufferings of Christ the more terrible to him, because they were from the hand of his Father, whom he infinitely loved, and whose infinite love he had had eternal experience of. Besides, it was an effect of God’s wrath that he forsook Christ. This caused Christ to cry out . . . “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” This was infinitely terrible to Christ. Christ’s knowledge of the glory of the Father, and his love to the Father, and the sense and experience he had had of the worth of his Father’s love to him, made the withholding the pleasant ideas and manifestations of his Father’s love as terrible to him, as the sense and knowledge of his hatred is to the damned, that have no knowledge of God’s excellency, no love to him, nor any experience of the infinite sweetness of his love.’ And the legendary ‘Rabbi’ Duncan concentrated it all into a single unforgettable sentence, in a famous outburst to one of his classes: ‘D’ye know what Calvary was? what? what? what?’ Then, with tears on his face — ‘It was damnation; and he took it lovingly.’ It is precisely this love that, in the last analysis, penal substitution is all about, and that explains its power in the lives of those who acknowledge it.


Responses

  1. Unfortunately, Packer is very wrong about his views on Penal Substitution, this Article shows why Penal Substitution is flatly incompatible with Scripture by violating the very definition of Atonement.

    • Nick,
      I can see we are at different places in our understanding of the atonement having read your blog post. I believe that you make some valid points about the ransom/redemption theme in the Old Testament. This is certainly one aspect of the atoning work of Christ. Yet, I think you go too far in suggesting that there is no basis for a penal substitution aspect of the atonement. Having read the comment section of your blog post, many of the passages/arguments I would offer have already been made. I believe Leon Morris has made an excellent case for penal substitution in his Apostolic Preaching of the Cross, as well as Jeffrey, Ovey, and Sach in Pierced for Our Transgressions.

      Kelly Randolph

      • Hi Kelly,

        I have read Pierced for Our Transgressions, but they too often selectively cite whatever passage suits them, and don’t always take into consideration the context of the Biblical passages they quote. Also, they never examined the Biblical term “Atonement” in any meaningful way. My claim is that when we examine every occurrence of the Biblical term “Atonement,” there is not a single case where Penal Substitution is clearly being taught – and I speak as objectively as I can when I say that.


Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Categories

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 440 other followers