Salvation As a Mechanical Process

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Salvation As a Mechanical Process

Do Christians Need to Believe that Jesus Died for Their Sins?

Christianity Christian life and practice Theology Personal religious testimony and popular inspirational works

Author: Richard E. Davies

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Language: English

Published by: Wipf and Stock

Published on: 14th February 2020

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 9 Mb

ISBN: 9781532694554


Introduction

Christians have been taught that Jesus died on the cross to pay a fine or ransom to expiate or atone for our sins. Furthermore, they have been taught that the death of Jesus is the only way individuals can receive eternal salvation. In general, this notion is called the doctrine of blood atonement or penal substitution, or some similar name.

Development of the Doctrine

One reason for this teaching is that the development of Newtonian mechanics has led us to believe that God's laws of salvation must be as easy to understand as the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century laws of our physical world. This book demonstrates that there are alternatives for understanding Jesus' execution that are consistent with the twentieth- and twenty-first-century understanding of our physical world.

Historical Perspectives

In fact, the early Christian writers (including the Bible itself) described these alternatives. Sacrifice was only one form of the early Christian narrative explaining the death of Jesus.

Conclusion

Although blood atonement was understandable in ancient Roman culture, it is not understandable in our culture. The inevitable conclusion is that we should abandon blood atonement and develop one of the alternative ways of understanding the cosmic significance of Jesus' execution.

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