Douglas Wilson’s Letter From Moscow

Seven Theses on Penal Substitution

Douglas Wilson
Blog and Mablog
June 27, 2014 
Glancing around the Internet, I have recently noticed higher levels of interest than usual in the doctrine of penal substitution, and thought it might be worthwhile to set down a few basic principles concerning the doctrine. So here they are:

1. Penal substitution defined is the doctrine that the salvation of God’s people is secured through a propitiatory blood sacrifice that He provided for us, doing this through the death of Jesus on the cross. The holy wrath of an infinitely perfect God was propitiated in the death of Jesus Christ on that cross. We are saved from the wrath of God by the love of God as these two attributes of God collided in the agony of Jesus Christ. In that collision, the wrath was satisfied, and the love entered into resurrection joy. The wrath was punctiliar and the love is everlasting.

2. Penal substitution is human sacrifice, and is a scandal. Nothing whatever can be done about this, and it is sinful to try to undo or fix the scandalous aspects of it. God made it scandalous on purpose, in order to keep our number of refined theologians to a minimum.

3. Penal substitution can be badly represented by its friends. As with the Trinity, Sunday School illustrations of the doctrine can be dangerous. With the Trinity, the illustrations, if followed out, land us in the midst of various trinitarian heresies (e.g. ice, liquid, steam is modalism, etc.) But with illustrations of the atonement, the logic of them, if followed out, frequently will land us in heretical atrocities. The cross is a scandal, but not every scandal is the cross. If the illustration is using someone as a Christ figure who is not readily identifiable as an Adam, then it is an inadequate illustration.

4. Penal substitution requires a covenantal anthropology, which brings with it issues of identification, headship. representation, solidarity, and imputation. If someone has an individualistic anthropology, the atonement of Christ will seem to him absurd or grotesque, or both. Dismissal of the atonement as absurd or grotesque is usually a fair tell that someone is in the grip of individualism.

5. Penal substitution can be instinctively understood in distorted and appalling ways by unbelievers, who then try to provide their own propitiatory sacrifices. The substitutionary sacrifice of Christ is the answer to and refutation of all such sacrifices, not a crowning example of one. The cruelty of the Aztecs, for example, is a simultaneous testimony to the depravity of man, as well as to the deep instinctive knowledge we have that something must be done, and that this something must be bloody. In Till We Have Faces, Lewis shrewdly contrasts the grim priest of Ungit, crusted with blood and holiness, with the Fox, who was the advocate of cool rationalism — the kind of cool rationalism that never saw a sin forgiven or a soul saved.

6. Preaching Christ crucified is a mortal offense to the natural man. The Greeks think it is stupid and the Jews think it is offensive, and so we think it is a good way to identify natural men.

7. The doctrine is as clear and simple as the truth (1 Cor. 1:18-23; Rom. 3:25; 1 Jn. 2:2; 4:10; 2 Cor. 5:21; Heb. 9:22; Lev. 8:19; Rom. 5:12,15; Matt. 26:28; Mark 14:24; Luke 22:20; 1 Cor. 11:25; Heb. 10:19; 1 Jn. 1:7; Rev. 1:5; Rev. 5:9). In Jesus Christ we received the fullness of the wrath of God, and in Jesus Christ we receive the fullness of God’s pleasure in His well-beloved Son. This exchange, this glorious transaction, occurred on the Mercy Seat in the Great Heaven, between the cherubim, and it is a mercy covered in blood. Trying to clean the blood off does us no favors at all.

Unbelieving Distaste, Christian Joy

The Parting of the Ways

Christmas can have a certain sentimental pull for those who are perishing.  After all, only the most depraved cannot be moved at the sight and joy of a newborn baby.  Motherhood, fatherhood, birth, poverty, rejection–all of these pull at the sentiments of most men.  The world has an emotional attachment to Christmas.

Easter not so much.  Here is the divine commentary upon how non-Christians view Easter versus Christians:

For the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.  . . . For Jews demand signs and Greeks seek wisdom, but we preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles, but to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God.  (I Corinthians 1: 18-24)

Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God.  We Christians know intuitively to what the apostle refers.  First, amongst many other aspects the Cross displays the wisdom of God.  Long we lived in sin and darkness, condemned by Adam’s sin, a condemnation ratified by our own daily transgressions and lack of conformity to God’s holy law.  God’s wisdom is manifested in sending a holy human substitute, not born of Adam and without sin.  Angels could not have conceived such a plan of redemption, let alone carried it out. 

The cross also displays the power of God.  The power of creating out of nothing, sustaining, keeping, empowering one who was tempted in all points such as we are and yet remaining steadfast, although born bearing the fruit of sin (disease, hunger, exhaustion, and temptations of all kinds).  And on that terrible cross, in the hours of darkness whilst the wrath and vengeance of God against us was poured forth upon our penal substitute, the power of God also sustained him so that he withstood the most acute temptation of all: the temptation to doubt, to despair, to distrust, and to deny his heavenly Father. 

Therefore God highly exalted him and bestowed upon him a name which is above very name that at the name of Jesus all creatures in heaven and upon the earth and under the earth should bow. 

The cross: the wisdom of God and the power of God.  About these things Unbelief can know nothing.  For Unbelief the Cross ever remains a stumbling block and folly.  But to those who are called it is a radically different story.  At this juncture the ways part.  Two peoples separate and can never come together. 

For the called, Easter is like birth pangs: we experience terrible pain and grief arising from what we were and who we are; but in the morning, shouts of great joy.  Christ: the wisdom of God and the power of God.  Thanks be to God for his indescribable gift.