Atonement and Violence: A Theological Conversation

by John Sanders

66 Members 1 Review ½ (2.63)

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Recent years have witnessed a series of books, articles, and lectures raising serious questions about the Christian doctrine of the Atonement.   While coming from a variety of sources, the questions usually center around the central issue of atonement and violence. Doesn't the Atonement promote the idea of violence on the part of God? If so, isn't such violence incompatible with a God of love? Doesn't this doctrine send the wrong signal, excusing and perhaps even promoting such things as show more child abuse? Is it time to abandon what has become an outmoded and harmful doctrine?  The authors of this book claim that to abandon the Christian doctrine of the Atonement is to abandon the central witness of the gospel, for atonement speaks of nothing less than God's reconciliation of the world in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. However, to believe in the atoning death of Jesus Christ does not mean that one believes that God has engaged in cosmic child abuse. Drawing on the classical theories of the Atonement, engaging in creative theological construction, they present set of cogent, cohesive alternatives to either rejecting the doctrine out of hand, or uncritically accepting it. Contributors include: J. Denny Weaver, Bluffton University: "Narrative Christus Victor: The Answer to Anselmian Atonement Violence"; Thomas Finger, Associated Mennonite Seminary: "Christus Victor as Nonviolent Atonement"; Hans Boersma, Regent College, Vancouver, British Columbia: "Violence, the Cross, and Divine Intentionality: A Modified Reformed View"; and T. Scott Daniels, Pasadena First Church of the Nazarene: "Passing the Peace: Worship That Shapes Nonsubstitutionary Convictions." show less

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1 review
From the perspective of non-violent atonement, good articles giving an overview of the various positions. But no real defense of PSA (Boersma does not count, and he states in Hospitality and Violence that he does not hold to PSA).

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9+ Works 1,091 Members
John Sanders is professor of religious studies at Hendrix College, Conway, Arkansas. He is author of The God Who Risks (2007) and No Other Name (1992), and coauthor of The Openness of God (1994).

Classifications

Genres
Religion & Spirituality, Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
232.3ReligionChristianityJesus Christ and his familyAtonement
LCC
BT265.3 .A86Philosophy, Psychology and ReligionDoctrinal TheologyDoctrinal TheologyChristology
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66
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Reviews
1
Rating
½ (2.63)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
2
ASINs
1