Atonement
From Freepedia
- For Ian McEwan's novel, see Atonement (novel).
The Atonement is the central doctrine of Christianity: everything else derives from it. It is reconciliation with God, of people who have sinned. It is a concept of forgiveness and repair, based on the mercy of God, the central idea of Christianity.
It attempts to explain why the sinless human being Jesus died, and in terms of the Trinity, why God the Son, the second Person of the Trinity, incarnated in human flesh as Jesus, suffered horribly and died on the cross.
Especially prominent in western Christianity is the concept of substitutionary atonement pioneered by Anselm of Canterbury and adapted by Pierre Abélard, Thomas Aquinas, Hugo Grotius, John Calvin, John Miley and others. (Eastern Orthodoxy has a substantively different soteriology; this is sometimes cited as the core difference between Eastern and Western Christianity.)
In Judaism, the Holiest day of the year is the Day of Atonement known as Yom Kippur in Hebrew. It comes exactly ten days after the Jewish New Year known as Rosh Hashana.
Contents |
Atonement theories in Christianity
According to American Methodist theologian John Miley in his 1879 book The Atonement in Christ, there are four basic theories of the how the atonement works in Christianity; every theory is simply a derivation of one of these major four.
1 - Ransom
2 - Moral Influence
3 - Satisfaction
Divine satisfaction
Penalty or Punishment satisfaction
4 - Governmental
- Hugo Grotius, James Arminius, John Miley
- Substitutionary atonement & Atonement (Governmental view)
- Jonathan Edwards & Charles Grandison Finney
See also
- Divine mercy
- Atonement (Governmental view)
- Forgiveness
- Justification
- Mercy seat
- Pardon
- Propitiation
- Scapegoat
- Sin
- Substitutionary atonement
External links
- Biblical Atonement: The Governmental View (Arminian/Wesleyan)
- The Christian Doctrine of the Atonement (Arminian/Wesleyan)
- Historical Opinions as to the Nature of Christ's Atoning Death (Arminian/Wesleyan)
- The Biblical Doctrine of the Atonement (Calvinist/Reformed)
- Definite Atonement, Limited Atonement, Particular Redemption (Calvinist/Reformed)
- Anselm's Satisfaction model (Roman Catholic)



