2018/04/18

함석헌의 생애와 한국 근대사 2

함석헌의 생애와 한국 근대사 2






함석헌의 생애와 한국 근대사 2
일본 유학과 감옥의 생활

김백형 (brother153@hanmail.net)
승인 2012.02.27 23:56
이 기사는 1번 공유됐습니다

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1923년 함석헌은 동경에 도착합니다. 그의 동경 생활은 처음부터 난관에 부딪혔습니다. 집 한 칸 구하는 것도 매우 힘들었지만, 일본인들은 한국 사람을 보면 "빠가야로, 더러운 조센징"이라고 욕을 하기 일쑤였습니다.


당시 동경고등사범에는 약 50명 정도의 조선 유학생들이 있었습니다. 그들 대부분은 어떤 식으로든 공산주의와 아나키즘 사상의 영향을 받고 있었습니다. 함석헌은 비공산주의계 기독교 학생으로서 급진적인 좌익계 학생 그룹으로부터 질시를 받았습니다. 이러한 가운데 그는 함흥농업학교 졸업생 김교신(1901~1945)을 만나게 됩니다.

김교신은 1919년에 동경으로 유학을 와서 1920년 11월부터 1927년 조선으로 돌아오기 전까지 '우치무라 간조'가 이끄는 성경 공부 모임에 정기적으로 참석하고 있었습니다. 그는 1922년에 이곳 동경고등사범학교 영문과에 입학했습니다. 김교신은 석헌에게 우치무라의 성경 공부 모임과 일본 무교회 운동 모임을 소개했습니다.

뒤이어 석헌은 우치무라를 직접 만나게 됩니다. 우치무라 간조는 일본 기독교 사상가이자 비평가였습니다. 1868년 메이지유신 이후 일본이 서구에 대해 개방 정책을 취하고 근대화 운동을 추진할 당시에 그는 이미 일본에서는 유명한 성서 해석자였습니다. 젊은 날의 우치무라는 언론인으로 일하며 기독교 평화주의의 입장에서 러일전쟁을 비판하고 반대하기도 했습니다.

우치무라의 그 추종자들은 다른 사람들로부터 '무교회주의자들'이라고 불렸는데, 우치무라는 스스로는 무교회 원칙에 입각한 기독교도라고 자신의 모임을 칭하였습니다. 우치무라의 무교회 운동은 표면적 형식주의와 교회만의 경건함을 부인했고, 예수의 십자가를 통한 대속 신앙을 강조했습니다.

특히 우치무라 간조의 무교회 운동은 교회를 거부하는 것이 아니라 다만 제도적인 기성 교회에 속하지 않고는 구원이 없다는 교리적인 고정 관념을 부인하는 특징을 가지고 있었습니다. 우치무라는 교회가 건물이나 제도는 아니라고 아님을 주장하며, 어떤 특정 교단이나 교회에 속하기를 거부하면서 성서의 믿음대로 헌신하는 삶을 살기를 열망했습니다.

함석헌은 이러한 우치무라와 무교회 운동 사상에 깊이 감화를 받았습니다. 석헌은 우치무라로부터 직접 세례를 받았고, 우치무라와 그의 퀘이커 친구인 '니토베 이나조'와 더불어 일본에 있는 '퀘이커 모임'에도 출석을 하게 되었습니다. 그러나 그 당시 퀘이커 모임에서 석헌은 별로 뚜렷한 인상을 받은 것이 없었습니다.

함석헌은 우치무라에게서 얻은 가르침을 두고 나중에 "나는 이따금은 우리가 일본에 36년간 종살이를 했더라도 적어도 내게는 우치무라 하나만을 가지고 바꾸고도 남음이 있다고 생각합니다"고 말할 정도였습니다.

김교신은 일본에서 귀국하면서 동경 유학 시절 우치무라가 이끌었던 것과 같은 성경 공부 모임, 무교회 운동 모임을 서울에 만들었습니다. 함석헌 역시도 무교회 기독교인으로서 이 모임에 열성적으로 참여했습니다. 그뿐만 아니라 김교신은 일본에서 귀국하자마자 1927년 7월에 <성서조선>이라는 잡지를 창간했습니다.

김교신은 <성서조선>을 자신의 몸처럼 아끼고 사랑했습니다. 잡지의 이름에서처럼 <성서조선>은 성서와 조선, 즉 하나님의 말씀과 나라를 사랑하는 마음을 담고자 한 잡지였습니다. 그러나 일본경찰로부터 <성서조선>은 검열을 받게 됩니다. 그리고 이들은 <성서조선>에 실린 함석헌의 글들을 삭제하는 일을 멈추지 않았습니다.

당시 일제는 조선인들의 황국신민 만들기 프로젝트의 하나로 '조선사편수회'를 조직하는데, 그 구성원 대부분은 동양 최고의 대학이라던 도쿄제국대학 출신이었습니다. 조선총독부에서는 조선사편수회를 위해 당시 일본 학계의 최고 두뇌들을 총동원하기에 이릅니다. 그리고 1916년 1월 중추원 산하 '조선반도사 편찬위원회'를 발족합니다. 그리고 1925년 6월에는 그 이름을 조선사편수회로 바꾸기에 이릅니다.

조선사편수회에서는 총 35권, 전체 2만 4000쪽에 이르는 방대한 분량의 조선사를 16년에 걸쳐 제작하였습니다. 제작 비용으로는 100만 엔이라는 거액을 들였습니다. 이 일은 일제에 있어서 조선 정신 죽이기를 시도한 최대의 국가사업이었습니다.

이와 같은 일제의 계략 아래 함석헌은 조선의 역사를 다시금 정립해야 할 필요성을 느끼게 되었습니다. 이 때문에 함석헌은 <성서적 입장에서 본 조선 역사>를 저술하게 됩니다. 석헌은 한국 역사 속에 나타난 절대자의 섭리를 찾으려 했고, 그 섭리를 통해서 조선인이 결코 열등한 존재가 아니라 오히려 고난의 아들 예수와 같이 세계사의 모든 짐을 지고 가는 수난의 여왕으로 보려 했습니다.

함석헌이 저술한 <성서적 입장에서 본 조선 역사>는 한국 역사를 일제의 무력사에 대항해 정신사를 중심으로 재해석한 것이었습니다. 그는 한국 역사를 비관적으로 바라보던 씨알들에게 낙관적으로 우리 민족의 역사를 보는 지혜와 눈을 뜨게 해 주고 싶은 마음이 있었습니다. 조선인이라는 존재가 경멸과 멸시의 대상이 되고 있던 시대에 함석헌은 이 책을 통해 조선인의 가능성과 자부심을 보여 줌으로써 한반도의 미래가 어떠해야 하는지를 웅변적이고 서사적으로 제시해 주었습니다.

일제는 1938년부터 모든 조선인에게 '신사참배'를 요구하기 직하여 일왕을 살아 있는 신으로 받드는 '신도주의'를 조선의 기독교인들도 받아들일 것을 강요하였습니다. 그뿐만 아니라 같은 해 일제는 한반도의 모든 학교와 교육기관에서 조선어 사용과 조선사 교육을 금지했습니다. 이로 말미암아 결국 함석헌은 오산학교의 교사 자리를 사임해야 했습니다.

오산학교에서 사임한 함석헌은 한동안 오산학교 인근의 과수원을 운영하면서 가족의 생계를 이어 나갔습니다. 그러던 어느 날 1940년 3월 함석헌의 후배인 김두혁은 자기가 경영하던 평양 근교 송산 농사학원의 경영 및 관리를 함석헌에게 부탁합니다. 석헌은 이를 받아들여 교육, 경영, 관리, 농사일 등 모든 일을 도맡아 하였습니다. 그곳에서 함석헌은 학생들에게 성경, 역사, 조선어를 가르쳤고 오후에는 모두 밖에 나가 농사를 짓도록 하였습니다. 이 시기에 함석헌은 세 가지 분야에 특히 노력을 기울였습니다.

'교육, 기독교 신앙, 농사일'

그런데 1940년 8월 김두혁이 공산주의 활동에 가담했다는 이유로 동경에서 경찰에 체포되는 사건이 발생합니다. 이 때문에 함석헌이 일하던 농사학원 역시도 일본 경찰로서는 공산주의 성격의 학교로 인식되었습니다. 게다가 함석헌은 1940년 2월부터 일제의 의해 시행된 '창씨개명'에도 협조를 하지 않고 있었습니다.

결국, 함석헌은 1940년 8월 공산주의 및 민족주의적 성향을 지녔다는 이유로 일본 헌병에게 체포되어 1년간 옥고를 치르게 됩니다. 그런데 그가 감옥에 있을 때에 그의 아버지가 세상을 떠나고 맙니다. 함석헌을 대신해 김교신, 송두용 두 친구가 상주가 되어 장례를 치러 주었습니다.

결국, 1년의 옥고를 치르고 함석헌은 석방됩니다. 그러나 그 후 1942년 3월 <성서조선>은 158호를 마지막으로 폐간을 당합니다. 그리고 두 달여 후 함석헌과 김교신 등은 성서조선의 발행 관계인으로 다시금 체포되어 구금을 당하게 됩니다. 그뿐만 아니라 장기려, 유달영 등을 포함한 <성서조선>의 독자들 역시도 붙잡혀 구속되었습니다.

그럼에도 함석헌은 감옥 내에서 많은 독서를 하면서 지식의 폭을 넓혀 갔습니다. 특히 '러스킨'과 '톨스토이'의 책들을 읽고 감동을 하였습니다. 또한, 그는 감옥 안에서 반야경, 법화경, 무량수경, 금강경 등 다양한 불경들을 읽었습니다. 흥미로운 것은 교도관에게 읽을 만한 책을 달라고 하니 그 교도관이 불교도였던 터라 불교 서적 등을 건네주어 불교 서적을 접할 수가 있었습니다.

함석헌은 감방 대학의 폭넓은 독서를 통해 기독교와 불교, 도교를 포함한 모든 종교가 그 근본에서 하나라는 나름의 확신을 하게 되었습니다. 그는 1년의 감옥 생활에서 석방된 이후에도 '노자'와 '장자'를 열심히 읽었습니다. 그와 동시에 그는 점차 자기중심적인 성향을 갖고 있던 무교회 운동에 대해 비판적인 시각을 갖기 시작했습니다.

함석헌은 이후 1940년대 초반에 와서 자신의 생각과 '우치무라 간조'의 기독교에 대한 생각이 크게 3가지 면에서 다르다는 사실을 자각하였습니다.

△ 첫째 그는 무교회 모임 회원들이 세속인과 일반 정치 문화에 대해 냉담한 반응을 보이는 것에 의문을 제기했습니다. 함석헌이 보기에 무교회 운동에서 회원들은 서로 수평적이고 동등한 인간관계를 결여하고 있었을 뿐 아니라 현실 세계나 세속의 사람들과의 관계도 소홀했습니다.

△ 둘째, 함석헌의 예수관과 속죄론에 관한 이해가 '우치무라 간조'의 시각과 달랐습니다. 예수가 인류의 죄를 대신 지고 하나님과 죄에 빠진 인류 사이에서 중개자가 된다는 것이 우치무라의 속죄론이었습니다. 반면 함석헌은 자유인으로서 사람들이 각자의 죄에 대해서 스스로 책임을 져야 한다고 힘주어 말했습니다. 즉 속죄란 하나님 앞에 회개하고 용서를 빌었다고 해서 자동으로 이루어지는 것이 아니라 개인이 예수의 인격적 일치 됨을 통해서만 가능하다는 것이었습니다.

함석헌은 신앙의 대상으로 주님을 그저 믿기만 하고 이름을 부르는 것에 만족할 것이 아니라 스스로 힘으로 내적인 신앙심을 길러야 할 것을 강조했습니다. 즉 그는 인위적으로 만들어 놓은 어떤 종교적 규칙이나 특정 종교 지도자의 생각을 그저 따라가거나 의지하지 않고 사람마다 스스로 예수와 독창적인 관계를 맺도록 노력해야 한다고 믿었습니다.

△ 셋째, 함석헌은 식민지 백성이 된 조선 민족과 식민 점령 세력으로서 일본인이 처한 역사적 입장이 다르다는 것을 인식했습니다. 우치무라는 일본인으로서 일본의 한반도 식민지화 정책에 반대하지 않았습니다. 또한, 그는 동경 대지진 직후 약 6000여 명의 조선인이 일본인들에 의해 학살되었음에도 그 문제에 대해서는 철저하게 침묵을 지켰습니다.

결국, 함석헌은 자신의 종교관이 무교회 운동과 같을 수 없다는 결론을 내리게 됩니다. 그리고 이때부터 기독교 중심주의 종교관이나 기독교만이 유일한 종교라는 시각에 회의를 품기 시작합니다.

당시 함석헌이 인류에게 새로운 길을 제시할 수 있는 고전 철학은 노장사상이었습니다. 특히 석헌은 노장사상의 연약함, 겸손함, 부드러움, 정념의 순화 같은 가치를 높이 평가하며 노장사상의 유연함과 초월성에 매력을 느끼게 되었습니다.

이러한 노장사상의 영향인지 함석헌은 종교 혹은 사상의 지나치게 기교적인 체계화 그리고 첨예하게 조직화한 힘이나 제도화된 인위적 권위를 거부했습니다. 그에게 있어서 조직화한 힘이나 첨예화된 권력은 언제나 잠재적인 폭력의 근원이었습니다. 그는 종교적 이해관계에 얽힌 당파심이 없었고 인류의 모든 주요 종교를 평등하고 포괄적으로 포용하고 이해하려 힘썼습니다.

그는 다양한 종교의 진리를 통해서 전체 진리의 세계를 파악하려고 노력을 기울였습니다. 그런 석헌에게 노장사상, 그리고 종교적 관용성은 아주 중요했습니다. 그에게 있어 노장사상의 본질은 현실 초월적인 경향과 정치권력의 간섭에서 각 개인의 자유스러운 삶을 추구하는 데 있었습니다.

1945년까지 함석헌은 일제에 의해 네 번에 걸쳐 옥고를 치르게 됩니

Atonement in Christianity - Wikipedia

Atonement in Christianity - Wikipedia





Atonement in Christianity
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Christ on the Cross, by Carl Heinrich Bloch (1870)
Part of a series on
Atonement in
Christianity

Types
Limited
(Scholastic / Reformed)
Unlimited
(Orthodox / Catholic /Arminian)
Theories
Christus Victor
(Patristic)
Governmental
(Arminian)
Moral influence
(Mixed)
Penal substitution
(Scholastic / Reformed / Arminian)
Ransom
(Patristic)
Recapitulation
(Patristic)
Satisfaction
(Scholastic / Anselmian)
Substitutionary
(Scholastic / Reformation)



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In western Christian theology, atonement describes how human beings can be reconciled to God through Christ's sacrificial suffering and death.[1] Atonement refers to the forgiving or pardoning of sin in general and original sin in particular through the suffering, death and resurrection of Jesus,[2] enabling the reconciliation between God and his creation. Within Christianity there are, historically, three[3] or four[4]main theories for how such atonement might work:
Ransom theory/Christus Victor (which are different, but generally considered together as Patristic or "classical", to use Gustaf Aulén's nomenclature, theories, it being argued that these were the traditional understandings of the early Church Fathers);
Satisfaction theory developed by Anselm of Canterbury (called by Aulén the "scholastic" view);
Moral influence theory, developed by the Enlightenment, which Aulén called the "subjective" or "humanistic" view and considered to have been anticipated—as a critique of the satisfaction view—by Peter Abelard.

Other theories include recapitulation theory, the "shared atonement" theory[5] and scapegoat theory.

The English word 'atonement' originally meant "at-one-ment", i.e. being "at one", in harmony, with someone.[6]It is used to describe the saving work that God did through Christ to reconcile the world to himself, and also of the state of a person having been reconciled to God.[2][7] Throughout the centuries, Christians have used different metaphors and given differing explanations of the atonement to express how the atonement might work. Churches and denominationsmay vary in which metaphor or explanation they consider most accurately fits into their theological perspective; however all Christians emphasize that Jesusis the Saviour of the world and through his death the sins of humanity have been forgiven.[8] The four most well known theories are briefly described below:

One of the earliest explanations for how atonement works is nowadays often called the moral influencetheory. In this view the core of Christianity is positive moral change, and the purpose of everything Jesus did was to lead humans toward that moral change. He is understood to have accomplished this variously through his teachings, example, founding of the Church, and the inspiring power of his martyrdom and resurrection. Some scholars suggest this view was universally taught by the Church Fathers in the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD,[9][10][11] along with what is called by Aulén the classical or patristic view, which can be variously interpreted as Ransom or Recapitulation, or under the general heading of "Christus Victor".[12] The moral influence theory also enjoyed popularity during the Middle Ages and is most often associated in that period with Peter Abelard. Since the Reformation it has been advocated by modern philosophers like Immanuel Kant, and many theologians such as Hastings Rashdalland Paul Tillich. It remains the most popular view of atonement among theologically liberal Christians. It also forms the basis for René Girard’s "mimetic desire" theory (not to be confused with meme theory). It would be a mistake, however, to read this theory, or any of the theories, in isolation from the others.

The second explanation, first clearly enunciated by Irenaeus,[13] is the "ransom" or "Christus Victor" theory. "Christus victor" and "ransom" are slightly different from each other: in the ransom metaphor Jesus liberates humanity from slavery to sin and Satan and thus death by giving his own life as a ransom sacrifice (Matthew 20:28). Victory over Satan consists of swapping the life of the perfect (Jesus), for the lives of the imperfect (humans). The "Christus Victor" theory sees Jesus not used as a ransom but rather defeating Satan in a spiritual battle and thus freeing enslaved humanity by defeating the captor. This theory 'continued for a thousand years to influence Christian theology, until it was finally shifted and discarded by Anselm'.[14]

The third metaphor, used by the 11th century theologian Anselm, is called the "satisfaction" theory. In this picture humanity owes a debt not to Satan, but to the sovereign God himself. A sovereign may well be able to forgive an insult or an injury in his private capacity, but because he is a sovereign he cannot if the state has been dishonoured. Anselm argued that the insult given to God is so great that only a perfect sacrifice could satisfy, and that Jesus, being both God and man, was this perfect sacrifice. Therefore, the doctrine would be that Jesus gave himself as a “ransom for many”, to God the Father himself.

The next explanation, which was a development by the Reformers[15][16][17][18] of Anselm's satisfaction theory,[19] is the commonly held Protestant "penal substitutiontheory," which, instead of considering sin as an affront to God’s honour, sees sin as the breaking of God’s moral law. Placing a particular emphasis on Romans 6:23 (the wages of sin is death), penal substitution sees sinful man as being subject to God’s wrath with the essence of Jesus' saving work being his substitution in the sinner's place, bearing the curse in the place of man (Galatians 3:13).[20] A variation that also falls within this metaphor is Hugo Grotius’ "governmental theory", which sees Jesus receiving a punishment as a public example of the lengths to which God will go to uphold the moral order.



Contents [hide]
1Compatibility of differing theories
2Confusion of terms
3Main theories in detail
3.1Moral influence
3.2Ransom and Christus Victor
3.2.1Recapitulation
3.3Satisfaction
3.3.1Penal substitution
3.3.2Governmental
3.3.3Scapegoating
4Denominational perspectives
4.1Eastern Christianity
4.2Methodist Christianity
4.3Roman Catholic views on atonement and reparation
5Non-trinitarian Christian theologies
5.1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
5.2Jehovah's Witnesses
5.3Emanuel Swedenborg
5.4The United Pentecostal Church
6See also
7References
8Further reading
9External links


Compatibility of differing theories[edit]

Some theologians say that "various biblical understandings of the atonement need not conflict".[21] Reformed theologian J. I. Packer, for example, although he maintains that "penal substitution is the mainstream, historic view of the church and the essential meaning of the Atonement... Yet with penal substitution at the center", he also maintains that "Christus Victor and other Scriptural views of atonement can work together to present a fully orbed picture of Christ's work".[21] J. Kenneth Grider, speaking from a governmental theory perspective, says that the governmental theory can incorporate within itself "numerous understandings promoted in the other major Atonement theories", including ransom theory, elements of the "Abelardian 'moral influence' theory", vicarious aspects of the atonement, etc.[22]

The Anglican theologian Oliver Chase Quick has said, 'if we start from the fundamental and cardinal thought of God's act of love in Jesus Christ ... I think we can reach a reconciling point of view, from which each type of theory is seen to make its essential contribution to the truth, although no one theory, no any number of theories, can be sufficient to express its fullness.'[23]

Others say that some models of the atonement naturally exclude each other. James F. McGrath, for example, talking about the atonement, says that 'Paul ... prefers to use the language of participation. One died for all, so that all died (2 Corinthians 5:14). This is not only different from substitution, it is the opposite of it.'[24] Similarly, Mark M. Mattison, in his article The Meaning of the Atonement says, 'Substitution implies an "either/or"; participation implies a "both/and." '[25] J. Kenneth Grider, quoted above showing the compatibility of various atonement models with the governmental theory, nevertheless also says that both penal substitution and satisfaction atonement theories are incompatible with the governmental theory.[26]
Confusion of terms[edit]

Some confusion can occur when discussing the atonement because the terms used sometimes have differing meanings depending on the contexts in which they are used.[27] For example:
Sometimes 'substitutionary atonement' is used to refer to 'penal substitution' alone,[28] when the term also has a broader sense including other atonement models that are not penal.[29]
Penal substitution is also sometimes described as a type of satisfaction atonement,[30] but the term 'satisfaction atonement' functions primarily as a technical term to refer particularly to Anselm's theory.[31]
Substitutionary and penal themes are found within the Patristic (and later) literature, but they are not used in a penal substitutionary sense until the Reformed period.[32]
'Substitution', as well as potentially referring to specific theories of the atonement (e.g. penal substitution), is also sometimes used in a less technical way—for example, when used in 'the sense that [Jesus, through his death,] did for us that which we can never do for ourselves'.[33]
The phrase 'vicarious atonement' is sometimes used as a synonym for 'penal substitution', and is also sometimes used to describe other, non-penal substitutionary, theories of atonement.[34][35]

Care needs to be taken to understand what is being referred to by the various terms used in different contexts.[27][36]
Main theories in detail[edit]
Moral influence[edit]
Main article: Atonement (moral influence view)
Pierre Abélard
Hastings Rashdall
Ransom and Christus Victor[edit]
Main articles: Atonement (ransom view), Atonement (Christus Victor view), and Recapitulation theory of atonement
Augustine of Hippo
Basil of Caesarea
Gregory of Nyssa
Gustaf Aulén
Irenaeus of Lyons ("Recapitulation")
Justin Martyr
Origen of Alexandria
Recapitulation[edit]
Main article: Recapitulation theory of atonement

An early theory of the atonement is the recapitulation view, first comprehensively expressed by Irenaeus.[37] In it, Christ succeeds where Adam failed,[38] undoing the wrong that Adam did and, because of his union with humanity, leads humanity on to eternal life, including moral perfection.[39]
Satisfaction[edit]
Main article: Atonement (satisfaction view)
Cyril of Jerusalem disputably
Anselm of Canterbury (See Roman Catholic soteriology)
Penal substitution[edit]
Main articles: Substitutionary atonement and Penal substitution
Penalty or punishment satisfaction: John Calvin, Calvinism, and imputed righteousness
Vicarious repentance, John McLeod Campbell and Robert Campbell Moberly
Governmental[edit]
Main article: Atonement (governmental view)
Hugo Grotius and John Miley
Jonathan Edwards the younger and Charles Grandison Finney
Scapegoating[edit]
Main article: Scapegoating
James Alison
Gerhard Förde
René Girard
Mark Heim
William Tyndale
Denominational perspectives[edit]
Eastern Christianity[edit]

Eastern Orthodoxy and Eastern Catholicism have a substantively different soteriology. Salvation is not seen as the acceptance of a legal exchange, but as participation in the renewal of human nature itself by way of the eternal Word of God assuming the human nature in its fullness. In contrast to Western branches of theology, Orthodox Christians tend to use the word "expiation" with regard to what is accomplished in the sacrificial act. In Orthodox theology, expiation is an act of offering that seeks to change the one making the offering. The Biblical Greek word which is translated both as "propitiation" and as "expiation" is hilasmos, which means "to make acceptable and enable one to draw close to God". Thus the Orthodox emphasis would be that Christ died, not to appease an angry and vindictive Father or to avert the wrath of God upon sinners, but to defeat and secure the destruction of sin and death, so that those who are fallen and in spiritual bondage may become divinely transfigured, and therefore fully human, as their Creator intended; that is to say, human creatures become God in his energies or operations but not in his essence or identity, conforming to the image of Christ and reacquiring the divine likeness (see theosis).[40]
Methodist Christianity[edit]
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Methodism falls squarely in the tradition of substitutionary atonement, though it is linked with Christus Victor and moral influencetheories.[41] The founder of the Methodist movement John Wesley, reflecting on Colossians 1:14, connects penal substitutionwith victory over Satan in his Explanatory Notes Upon the New Testament: "the voluntary passion of our Lord appeased the Father's wrath, obtained pardon and acceptance for us, and consequently, dissolved the dominion and power which Satan had over us through our sins."[41] In elucidating 1 John 3:8, Wesley says that Christ manifesting Himself in the hearts of humans destroys the work of Satan, thus making Christus Victor imagery "one part of the framework of substitutionary atonement."[41] The Church of England priest and follower of Methodism Charles Wesley's hymns "Sinners, Turn, Why Will You Die" and "And Can It be That I Should Gain" concurrently demonstrate that Christ's sacrifice is the example of supreme love, while also convicting the Christian believer of his/her sins, thus using the moral influence theory within the structure of penal substitution in accordance with the Augustinian theology of illumination.[41]Methodism also emphasizes a participatory nature in atonement, in which the Methodist believer spiritually dies with Christ and He dies for humanity; this is reflected in the words of the following Methodist hymn (122):[41]


"Vouchsafe us eyes of faith to see
The Man transfixed on Calvary,
To know thee, who thou art—
The one eternal God and true;
And let the sight affect, subdue,
And break my stubborn heart...
The unbelieving veil remove,
And by thy manifested love,
And by thy sprinkled blood,
Destroy the love of sin in me,
And get thyself the victory,
And bring me back to God...
Now let thy dying love constrain
My soul to love its God again,
Its God to glorify;
And lo! I come thy cross to share,
Echo thy sacrificial prayer,
And with my Saviour die."[41]

The Christian believer, in Methodist theology, mystically draws himself/herself into the scene of the crucifixion in order to experience the power of salvation that it possesses.[41] In the Eucharist, the Methodist especially experiences the participatory nature of substitutionary atonement as "the sacrament sets before our eyes Christ's death and suffering whereby we are transported into an experience of the crucifixion."[41]
Roman Catholic views on atonement and reparation[edit]

Early speculation regarding the nature of the atonement was couched in terminology drawn from custom and law. William Kent notes that the Atonement "...is represented as the payment of a price, or a ransom, or as the offering of satisfaction for a debt. But we can never rest in these material figures as though they were literal and adequate. As both Abelard and Bernard remind us, the Atonement is ...a sacrifice,... It was by this inward sacrifice of obedience unto death, ...that Christ paid the debt to justice."[42]

As expressed by Pope Pius XI in his encyclical Miserentissimus Redemptor, in the Roman Catholic tradition the concepts of atonement and redemption are often seen as being inherently related. And atonement is often balanced with specific Acts of Reparation which relate the sufferings and death of Christ to the forgiveness of sins.[43]

Moreover, in Miserentissimus Redemptor the Pontiff called acts of reparation a duty for Roman Catholics:"We are holden to the duty of reparation and expiation by a certain more valid title of justice and of love." ... "Moreover this duty of expiation is laid upon the whole race of men"[44]

Pope John Paul II referred to the concept as:"the unceasing effort to stand beside the endless crosses on which the Son of God continues to be crucified".[45]
Non-trinitarian Christian theologies[edit]
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints[edit]
See also: Plan of salvation (Latter Day Saints)

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints expands the doctrine of the atonement complementary to the substitutionary atonement concept, including the following:
Suffering in Gethsemane. The Atonement began in Gethsemane and ends with Christ's resurrection. (Christ's agony at Gethsemane Luke 22:44; Doctrine and Covenants 19:16-19; Mosiah 3:7; Alma 7:11-13. Christ described this agony in the Doctrine and Covenants as follows: "[The] suffering caused myself, even God [Christ], the greatest of all, to tremble because of pain, and to bleed at every pore, and to suffer both body and spirit..." (Doctrine and Covenants 19:18).
The relationship of justice, mercy, agency, and God's unconditional love. Christ's infinite atonement was required to satisfy the demands of justice based on eternal law, rendering Him Mediator, Redeemer, and Advocate with the Father. One eternal law states that "no unclean thing can enter into the Kingdom of God." To sin is to break God's law, symbolically leaving a "stain." Thus, he proffers divine mercy to the truly penitent who voluntarily come unto him, offering them the gift of his grace to "lift them up" and "be perfected in Him" through his merits (2 Nephi 2and 9; Alma 12, 34, and 42; Moroni 9:25; 10:33; compare Isaiah 55:1-9). We are made perfect, first, through justification, followed by sanctification.
No need for infant baptism. Christ's atonement completely resolved the consequence from the fall of Adam of spiritual death for infants, young children and those of innocent mental capacity who die before an age of self-accountability, hence all these are resurrected to eternal life in the resurrection. However, baptism is required of those who are deemed by God to be accountable for their actions (Moroni 8:10-22)
Empathetic purpose. Christ suffered pain and agony not only for the sins of all people, but also to experience their physical pains, illnesses, anguish from addictions, emotional turmoil and depression, "that His bowels may be filled with mercy, according to the flesh, that he may know according to the flesh how to succor his people according to their infirmities" (Alma 7:12; compare Isaiah 53:4).

"The word [atonement] describes the setting 'at one' of those who have been estranged, and denotes the reconciliation of man to God. Sin is the cause of the estrangement, and therefore the purpose of the atonement is to correct or overcome the consequences of sin" ("Atonement" entry of the Bible Dictionary in the LDS edition of the King James Bible).
Jehovah's Witnesses[edit]

According to Jehovah's witnesses, atonement for sins comes only through the life, ministry, and death of Jesus Christ. They believe Jesus was the "second Adam", being the pre-existent and sinless Son of God who became the human Messiah of Israel, and that he came to undo Adamic sin.[46][47][48][49][50][51]

Witnesses believe that the sentence of death given to Adam and subsequently his offspring by God required an equal substitute or ransom sacrifice of a perfect man. They believe that salvation is possible only through Jesus' ransom sacrifice,[52] and that individuals cannot be reconciled to God until they repent of their sins, and then call on the name of God through Jesus.[53] Salvation is described as a free gift from God, but is said to be unattainable without obedience to Christ and good works that are prompted by faith. According to their teaching, the works prove faith is genuine.[54][55] "Preaching the good news" is said to be one of the works necessary for salvation, both of themselves and those to whom they preach.[56] They believe that people in the "last days" can be "saved" by identifying Jehovah's Witnesses as God's theocratic organization, and by serving God as a part of it.[57]
Emanuel Swedenborg[edit]

According to the doctrine of The New Church, as explained by Emanuel Swedenborg, there is no such thing as substitutionary atonement as is generally understood. Swedenborg's account of atonement has much in common with the Christus Victordoctrine, which refers to a Christian understanding of the Atonement which views Christ's death as the means by which the powers of evil, which held humanity under their dominion, were defeated.[58] It is a model of the atonement that is dated to the Church Fathers,[18] and it, along with the related ransom theory, was the dominant theory of the atonement for a thousand years.
The United Pentecostal Church[edit]

Oneness Pentecostals teach that the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ are the only means by which atonement can be obtained for dying humanity, and which makes the free gift of God's salvation possible. They believe that all must put faith in the propitiatory work of Christ to gain everlasting life. According to United Pentecostal theology, this saving faith is more than just mental assent or intellectual acceptance, or even verbal profession, but must include trust, appropriation, application, action, and obedience. They contend that water baptism is one of the works of faith and obedience necessary for Christ's sacrificial atonement to be efficacious.[59]
See also[edit]


Acts of Reparation to Jesus Christ
Atonement in Judaism
Blood atonement
Divine grace
Divine mercy
Forgiveness
Justification
Mercy seat
Pardon
Propitiation
Sacrifice
Scapegoat
Substitutionary atonement

Christianity portal

References[edit]

Jump up^ "Atonement." Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005
^ Jump up to:a b atonement. CollinsDictionary.com. Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 11th Edition. Retrieved October 03, 2012: '2. (often capital) Christian theol a. the reconciliation of man with God through the life, sufferings, and sacrificial death of Christ b. the sufferings and death of Christ'
Jump up^ Christus Victor: An Historical Study of the Three Main Types of the Idea of Atonement, Gustaf Aulen, 1931
Jump up^ Vincent Taylor, The Cross of Christ (London: Macmillan & Co, 1956), p. 71-2
Jump up^ In which the atonement is spoken of as shared by all. To wit, God sustains the Universe. Therefore if Jesus was God in human form, when he died, we all died with him, and when he rose from the dead, we all rose with him. See Jeremiah, David. 2009. Living With Confidence in a Chaotic World, pp. 96 & 124. Nashville, Tennessee: Thomas Nelson, Inc.; Massengale, Jamey. 2013.Renegade Gospel, The Jesus Manifold. Amazon, Kindle.
Jump up^ Niels-erik A. Andreasen, 'Atonement/Expiation in the Old Testament' in W. E. Mills (ed.), Mercer dictionary of the Bible (Mercer University Press, 1990)
Jump up^ Matthew George Easton, 'Atonement' in Illustrated Bible Dictionary (T. Nelson & Sons, 1897).
Jump up^ Ward, K. (2007) Christianity – a guide for the perplexed. SPCK, London, p. 48- 51
Jump up^ A. J. Wallace, R. D. Rusk, Moral Transformation: The Original Christian Paradigm of Salvation (New Zealand: Bridgehead, 2011)
Jump up^ Michael Green, The Empty Cross of Jesus (Eastbourne: Kingsway, 2004; first published 1984), p. 64-5: 'The simplest and most obvious understanding of the cross is to see it as the supreme example....This is a favourite theme in the early Fathers, as H.E.W. Turner showed in The Patristic Doctrine of Redemption....It can scarcely be denied that much of the second century understanding of the cross was frankly exemplarist.'
Jump up^ J. F. Bethune-Baker, An introduction to the early history of Christian doctrine to the time of the Council of Chalcedon (London: Methuen & Co, 1903), p. 351-2 : 'From this review of the teaching of the Church it will be seen that... in the earliest centuries... the main thought is that man is reconciled to God by the Atonement, not God to man. The change, that is, which it effects is a change in man rather than a change in God. It is God's unchangeable love for mankind that prompts the Atonement itself, is the cause of it, and ultimately determines the method by which it is effected.'
Jump up^ Christus Victor: An Historical Study of the Three Main Types of the Idea of Atonement. Gustaf Aulén. "All satisfactory accounts of the atonement...begin, but do not end, with the moral influence theory..."
Jump up^ Oxenham, Henry (1865). The Catholic Doctrine of the Atonement. Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, and Green. pp. xliv,114.
Jump up^ H. N. Oxenham, The Catholic doctrine of the atonement (London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, and Green, 1865), p. 114
Jump up^ D. Smith, The atonement in the light of history and the modern spirit (London: Hodder and Stoughton), p. 96-7: 'THE FORENSIC THEORY...each successive period of history has produced its peculiar type of soteriological doctrine...the third period--the period ushered in by the Reformation.'
Jump up^ Vincent Taylor, The Cross of Christ (London: Macmillan & Co, 1956), p. 71-2: '...the four main types, which have persisted throughout the centuries. The oldest theory is the Ransom Theory...It held sway for a thousand years. [...] The Forensic Theory is that of the Reformers and their successors.'
Jump up^ L. W. Grensted, A Short History of the Doctrine of the Atonement (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1920), p. 191: 'Before the Reformation only a few hints of a Penal theory can be found.'
^ Jump up to:a b H. N. Oxenham, The Catholic doctrine of the atonement (London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, and Green, 1865), p. 112-3,119: '...we may pause to sum up briefly the main points of teaching on Christ's work of redemption to be gathered from the patristic literature of the first three centuries as a whole. And first, as to what it does not contain. There is no trace, as we have seen, of the notions of vicarious satisfaction, in the sense of our sins being imputed to Christ and His obedience imputed to us, which some of the Reformers made the very essence of Christianity; or, again, of the kindred notion that God was angry with His Son for our sakes, and inflicted on Him the punishment due to us ; nor is Isaiah s prophecy interpreted in this sense, as afterwards by Luther; on the contrary, there is much which expressly negatives this line of thought. There is no mention of the justice of God, in the forensic sense of the word; the Incarnation is in variably exclusively ascribed to His love; the term satisfaction does not occur in this connection at all, and where Christ is said to suffer for us, huper (not anti) is the word always used. It is not the payment of a debt, as in St. Anselm's Cur Deus Homo, but the restoration of our fallen nature, that is prominent in the minds of these writers, as the main object of the Incarnation. They always speak, with Scripture, of our being reconciled to God, not of God being reconciled to us.' [p. 112-3]; 'His [Jesus'] death was now [in the Reformation period], moreover, for the first time viewed as a vicarious punishment, inflicted by God on Him instead of on us.' [p. 119]
Jump up^ J. I. Packer, What did the Cross Achieve? The Logic of Penal Substitution (Tyndale Biblical Theology Lecture, 1973): '... Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, Melanchthon and their reforming contemporaries were the pioneers in stating it [i.e. the penal substitutionary theory]...What the Reformers did was to redefine satisfactio (satisfaction), the main mediaeval category for thought about the cross. Anselm’s Cur Deus Homo?, which largely determined the mediaeval development, saw Christ’s satisfactio for our sins as the offering of compensation or damages for dishonour done, but the Reformers saw it as the undergoing of vicarious punishment (poena) to meet the claims on us of God’s holy law and wrath (i.e. his punitive justice).'
Jump up^ See for example, John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, 3.15.5-8
^ Jump up to:a b Trammel, Madison, 'Cross Purposes' in Christianity Today, 2 Jul 2007. (accessed 20/12/10)
Jump up^ J. Kenneth Grider, The Governmental Theory.
Jump up^ Oliver Chase Quick, Doctrines of the Creed, London: Nisbet; New York: Scribners, 1938, p.222.
Jump up^ James F. McGrath, 'What's Wrong With Penal Substitution?' on Exploring Our MatrixFriday, December 14, 2007 (accessed 30/12/10)
Jump up^ Mark M. Mattison, The Meaning of the Atonement (accessed 30/12/10). See section entitled Substitution or Participation?
Jump up^ J. Kenneth Grider, The Governmental Theory: 'At the same time, [the governmental theory] is not so eclectic that it has any affinity for the main elements of two of the major Atonement theories: the payment of a debt in the `satisfaction' theory; and Christ's being punished, as in the `punishment' theory'; '...the governmental theory cannot incorporate into itself the understanding that Christ paid the penalty for us, or that He paid a debt for us...'.
^ Jump up to:a b J. K. Mozley, The doctrine of the atonement (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1916), p. 94-5: 'The same or similar words may point to the same or similar ideas; but not necessarily so, since a word which has been at one time the expression of one idea, may, to a less or greater extent, alter its meaning under the influence of another idea. Hence it follows that the preservation of a word does not, as a matter of course, involve the preservation of the idea which the word was originally intended to convey. In such respects no doctrine demands more careful treatment than that of the Atonement.'
Jump up^ Mark Dever and Michael Lawrence, It Is Well: Expositions on Substitutionary Atonement (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 2010), p. 15: 'What we hope to do in the fourteen expositional messages in this book is simply to show that the doctrine of penal substitution is clearly taught in the Bible' -- compare with title of book: Expositions on Substitutionary Atonement.
Jump up^ Mark David Baker (ed), Proclaiming the scandal of the cross (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2006): '...many assume that "substitutionary atonement" is merely a shorthand way to refer to "penal substitutionary atonement." [...] Substitution is a broad term that one can use with reference to a variety of metaphors.'
Jump up^ Derek Flood, Penal Substitution vs. Christus Victor (accessed 31/12/10): 'This hurtful image of God is largely based on a way of understanding the cross that is known as "Vicarious Atonement", "Penal Substitution", or "Satisfaction-Doctrine".'
Jump up^ John Launchbury, Change us, not God (WCF Publishing, 2009), p. 7: '...Anselm...introduced the Satisfaction Theory'
Jump up^ D. Flood, 'Substitutionary atonement and the Church Fathers' in Evangelical Quarterly 82.2 (2010), p. 141,143,153
Jump up^ Vincent Taylor, The Cross of Christ (London: Macmillan & Co, 1956), p. 31. Compare J. I. Packer: 'It would ... clarify discussion if all who hold that Jesus by dying did something for us which we needed to do but could not, would agree that they are regarding Christ’s death as substitutionary, and differing only on the nature of the action which Jesus performed in our place and also, perhaps, on the way we enter into the benefit that flows from it.' ('What did the Cross Achieve? The Logic of Penal Substitution' [1973])
Jump up^ D. W. Snyder Belousek, Atonement, Justice, and Peace (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2012), p. 96 n. 2: 'James states that "historic orthodox Christianity" rests upon the doctrine of "vicarious atonement." As such, we agree -- that Christ died "for us" is the ancient apostolic faith reflected in the orthodox creeds. But as to the vicarious character of this "for us," James narrows the idea of vicarious atonement to penal substitution...'.
Jump up^ Theology and Narrative (Oxford: OUP, 1993), p. 248: 'Nor does Frei ever explain what he means by the word "vicarious," which is especially puzzling in light of his apparent rejection of the notion (or at least one notion) of "penal substitution," with which the term "vicarious" is often synonymous...'
Jump up^ Cf. D. Flood, 'Substitutionary Atonement and the Church Fathers' in Evangelical Quarterly 82.2 (2010), p. 144: 'It is not enough to simply identify substitutionary or even penal themes in the writings of the church fathers, and assume that this is an endorsement of the Reformed understanding of penal substitution. Instead, one must look at how a patristic author is using these concepts within their own understanding of the atonement and ask: what salvic purpose does Christ bearing our suffering, sin, and death have for this author? Rather than simply ‘proof-texting’ we need to seek to understand how these statements fit into the larger thought-world of an author. In short, it is a matter of context. The main task of this essay, therefore, is to explore the context in which the church fathers understood substitutionary atonement.'
Jump up^ H. N. Oxenham, ‘‘The Catholic doctrine of the atonement’’ (London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, and Green, 1865), p. 114-118
Jump up^ E.g., James Bethune-Baker, An introduction to the early history of Christian doctrine to the time of the Council of Chalcedon (London: Methuen & Co, 1903), p. 334: 'Just as mankind in Adam lost its birthright, so in Christ mankind recovers its original condition'.
Jump up^ Robert S. Franks, A history of the doctrine of the work of Christ in its ecclesiastical development vol. 1 (London: Hodder and Stoughton), p. 37-38
Jump up^ Fr. James Bernstein, author of Surprised by Christ: My journey from Judaism to Orthodox Christianity, The Illumined Heart Podcast, May 22, 2008. See also Clark Carlton. The Faith: Understanding Orthodox Christianity - An Orthodox Catechism (Salisbury, MA) Regina Orthodox Press, 1997. 139-146.
^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h Wood, Darren Cushman (2007). "John Wesley's Use of Atonement". The Asbury Journal. 62 (2): 55–70.
Jump up^ Kent, William. "Doctrine of the Atonement." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 2. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1907. 30 August 2016
Jump up^ Ann Ball, 2003 Encyclopedia of Catholic Devotions and Practices ISBN 0-87973-910-X
Jump up^ Pius XI, Miserentissimus Redemptor (08/05/1928)
Jump up^ Vatican archives "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-05-02. Retrieved 2008-05-08.
Jump up^ Jehovah's Witnesses—Proclaimers of God's Kingdom. Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society. 1993. pp. 144–145.
Jump up^ What Does the Bible Really Teach?. Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society. 2005. p. 32.
Jump up^ "The Watchtower 1973, page 724" – "Declaration and resolution", The Watchtower, December 1, 1973, page 724.
Jump up^ Penton, M. James (1997) [1985]. Apocalypse Delayed (2nd. ed.). University of Toronto Press. pp. 26–29. ISBN 0802079733.
Jump up^ "Angels—How They Affect Us". The Watchtower: 7. January 15, 2006.
Jump up^ ADAM – jw.org. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
Jump up^ The Watchtower 6/1/00 p. 11 par. 6 Keep Your “Hope of Salvation” Bright!
Jump up^ The Watchtower, March 15, 1989, p. 31 Call on Jehovah’s Name and Get Away Safe! “The Way of Salvation”
Jump up^ "James Urges Clean and Active Worship,", The Watchtower 3/1/83 p. 13, "Faith that does not prompt us to do good works is not genuine and will not result in our salvation."
Jump up^ "Meetings to Help Us Make Disciples", Our Kingdom Ministry, January 1979, p. 2.
Jump up^ The Watchtower, May 15, 2006 pp. 28-29 par. 12
Jump up^ The Watchtower 2/15/83 p. 12 You Can Live Forever in Paradise on Earth—But How?
Jump up^ Leon Morris, 'Theories of the Atonement' in Elwell Evangelical Dictionary.
Jump up^ Our Doctrinal Foundation - United Pentecostal Church International. Retrieved 16 October 2013.
Further reading[edit]
Janowski, Bernd. "Atonement." In The Encyclopedia of Christianity, edited by Erwin Fahlbusch and Geoffrey William Bromiley, 152-154. Vol. 1. Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1999. ISBN 0802824137
Thomas, G. Michael. The Extent of the Atonement: a Dilemma for Reformed Theology, from Calvin to the Consensus, in series, Paternoster Biblical and Theological Monographs (Carlisle, Scotland: Paternoster Publishing, 1997) ISBN 0-85364-828-X
External links[edit]
Look up atonement in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Chalke, Steve. Cross Purposes: Biggest Christian conference splits amid growing atonement debate. In Christianity Today, July, 2007.
Chalke, Steve. The Lost Message of Jesus (London: Zondervan; 2003)
Chalke, Steve. The Redemption of the Cross. In The Atonement Debate: Papers From the London Symposium on the Theology of Atonement (eds. Tidball, Hilborn, and Thacker), 2008, pp. 34–45.
Denney, James. The Atonement and the Modern Mind. London: Hodder and Stoughton (1903).
Paul Fiddes, Past event and present salvation: the Christian idea of atonement(London: Darton, Longman, & Todd, 1989)
Finlan, Stephen. The Background and Content of Paul's Cultic Atonement Metaphors. (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature (SBL); 2004)
Finlan, Stephen. Options on Atonement in Christian Thought. (Minnesota: Liturgical Press; 2007)
Finlan, Stephen. Problems With Atonement. (Minnesota: Liturgical Press; 2005)
Finlan, Stephen. "Spiritualization of Sacrifice in Paul and Hebrew" in Ritual and Metaphor, edited by Christian A. Eberhart (Atlanta: SBL; 2011)
Kim, Jintae. The Concept of Atonement in 1 John: A Redevelopment of the Second Temple Concept of Atonement (2003)
Kim, Jintae. The Concept of Atonement in Hellenistic Thought and 1 John (2001)
Kim, Jintae. The Concept of Atonement in Early Rabbinic Thought and the New Testament Writings (2001)
Kim, Jintae. Targum Isaiah 53 and the New Testament Concept of Atonement(2008)
Kim, Jintae. The Concept of Atonement in the Gospel of John (2009)
Rashdall, Hastings. The Idea of Atonement in Christian Theology. (London: Macmillan, 1919)
Nonviolent Atonement and the Victory of Christ
Philosophy and Christian Theology > Atonement from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
"Atonement" in the Jewish Encyclopedia
"The Doctrine of Atonement" from the Catholic Encyclopedia
"Atonement" from the Christian Cyclopedia (Lutheran)
Articles on the Atonement (Calvinist/Reformed)
Historical Opinions as to the Nature of Christ's Atoning Death(Arminian/Wesleyan)
Holland, Jeffrey R. (1992), "Atonement of Christ", in Ludlow, Daniel H, Encyclopedia of Mormonism, New York: Macmillan Publishing, pp. 82–86, ISBN 0-02-879602-0, OCLC 24502140
Online academic articles on atonement
The Relationship of the Atonement
Wallace, A.J., Rusk, R.D. Moral Transformation: The Original Christian Paradigm of Salvation (New Zealand: Bridgehead, 2011) ISBN 978-1-4563-8980-2