Wednesday, April 1, 2009


“For with my own eyes I saw the real Cumaean Sibyl hang in a basket, and when the boys asked her, 'What do you want, Sibyl?' she responded, 'I want to die.'”
~Satyricon, as quoted in T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land

At the service today Rev. de Beer delivered his lecture on the necessity of Christ's death. It was one of the best lectures I've heard him give. I'll briefly list the three reasons he posited for Christ's death, and then I'll talk about which I think is the most correct (A brief note: the reasons he gave seem to be limited to Western theology only; the concept of theoria, which is integral to the theology of the Eastern Orthodox, was not mentioned).

Before I actually start quoting Scripture, I suppose here is as good a place as any to mention that unless I specify otherwise, all Bible verses given will be from the New American Standard Version. I mistrust the accuracy and despise the informality of the New International Version, and the King James Version, while in my opinion some of the most beautiful English ever written, unfortunately sacrifices accuracy for that beauty.

Apologies for the rant. Onto the reasons.

Legalistic Interpretation (Substitutionary atonement, specifically Penal substitution). If God is infinitely just, then all are found guilty. Christ accepts the ultimate punishment of sin—death (see Romans 6:23—“For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord”) for sinners, freeing us from that punishment. The crucifixion thereby reconciles the infinitely just aspect of God with His infinitely benevolent aspect.

Ransom (Classic view). We are held by our sin in the thrall of an evil force. As the worth of a soul is infinite, only the death of God Himself provides sufficient ransom for us.

Moral teacher (Moral influence). ...I am forced to admit that I either am suffering from some sort of amnesia, or my mind began to wander during this part of the lecture (this is rather more likely). Thankfully, Wikipedia exists, and I will simply quote its article on the subject [from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atonement_(Moral_influence_view)].

“The moral influence view of the atonement is a doctrine in Christian theology that explains the effect of Jesus Christ's death as an act of exemplary obedience which affects the intentions of those who come to know about it. This understanding dates back to the early fathers, and can be found in biblical sources as well as in the teachings of St. Augustine....

The moral influence view can be contrasted with the objective views that Christ affected human nature by His death, the various penal substitution views, and the classic view that Christ's death was a ransom or redemption paid to free human kind from its bondage to sin.”

Well. Thank you, Wiki, for an admirable summary.

Of these three options, I am inclined towards penal substitution, possibly because of my interest in law. The concept of ransom seems silly to me—at best, it's toeing the line of dualism. The idea of a force other than ourselves separating us from God is, to my mind, somewhat incompatible with free will—in this situation we certainly could be restored to God through our free will. St. Augustine (I apologize, but I'm writing two papers about him, so he's on my mind fairly constantly, and yes, I realize I'm using someone who supported the moral influence view as an authority) had an excellent comment on this very issue:

“I still thought that it is not we who sin but some other nature that sins within us. It flattered my pride to think that I incurred no guilt and, when I did wrong, not to confess it so that you might 'bring healing to a soul that had sinned against you.' I preferred to excuse myself and blame this unknown thing which was in me but was not part of me. The truth, of course, was that it was all my own self...” (Confessions 5.10).

The moral influence view simply confuses me. Yes, the crucifixion is “an act of exemplary obedience,” but it seems remarkably perverse of God to tell His Son “You must die, so that people will obey Me.”

So those are the reasons I reject the latter two points. The reason I like the legalistic interpretation is that it allows for both God's justice and mercy to be fulfilled completely—all are judged guilty by virtue of their sin (by virtue of sin? wat), and all are forgiven through the death and resurrection of Christ.

...this is a fairly atrocious post. I rambled everywhere. I blame it on the fact that I wrote it late at night over the space of several days. A most inauspicious start, but I shall improve.

Pax vobiscum,
Cavillator

Monday, March 30, 2009

Masks

With regards to theological posts.

I'm in the middle of writing my first serious business post (it's on why the death of Christ was necessary for salvation), and it occurs to me that I look something like a rabid Christian. And so I realize that I need to make a point very clear.

That point is this: I do not know exactly what I believe. I'm somewhere between agnosticism and an incredibly heretical brand of quasi-Christian Universalism (more on this on another post). The liturgy of the Episcopalian church works for me, so I operate through that. I don't think it's the only right tradition. Often times I wonder if it's the right tradition at all. But I'm not going to make any theological progress if I don't make some basic assumptions. So for most of my posts, just assume that I have posited the existence of God, and please understand that while I may have put on a mask of devout faith so that I can explore Christianity and religion, in reality I am likely far more confused than you.

TL;DR NOT A FUNDIE.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

First posts, as a rule, should be auspicious.

This one will not follow that rule. Instead, I'm going to be honest about a few things. The first thing is why in the world I would want to have a blog. The second is what I intend to do with this blog. The third is completely imaginary and does not, in fact, exist.

So. Why in the world would I want to have a blog?

Two reasons. I have heard from various respectable sources that keeping a journal greatly helps focus one's mind. And the second--there was a (not very) remarkable coincidence today. Earlier in the evening, I idly considered having a blog. And then a certain friend of mine, who for the sake of privacy I will simply call "James M. Kane," asked me--and I shall quote verbatim--"do you have a blog? i feel like that would be worth reading, haha."

In short? Blame him.

And what do I plan to do with this blog?

Any damned thing I please. An excellent sentence to end this first post with, if I wanted to be snarky and cool and just like I am in real life (by which I mean fully awesome and/or totally hardcore). That's actually fairly vague, though, so I'll try to clarify.

What you shouldn't expect a lot of in this blog:
  • Internet humor (I am totally lying. There is no way I can keep this promise).
  • Politics
  • The sort of writing style that characterizes this post. Just writing this has shown me the extent to which silliness pervades my writing, and I need to stamp that out (not completely. Just to within the limits of manageability).
  • Any more of these bullet things (once more in this post, and that's it).
  • moping, whiny, emo nonsense.
What you should expect a fair amount of in this blog:
  • my thoughts on religion, especially Anglicanism/Episcopalianism
  • the classics
  • writing, sans moping, whiny, emo nonsense.
At the very least, I will have a notepad for my thoughts. And if someone gets something out of this, I will have surpassed my goal.