Since the time of Anselm (11th century), and especially since the
Reformation in the 16th century, the tendency of the Western church
has been to focus almost all of its attention on the anthropological dimension
of the atonement, usually to the neglect of the cosmic dimension that is central
to the NT. In the standard Protestant view, the chief thing God was
accomplishing when he had Jesus die on the cross was satisfying his perfect
justice and thereby atoning for our sins. The work of the cross is centered on
us.
While I do not minimize this aspect of Christ’s work, I cannot agree that the
primary significance of the cross is found here. From the perspective of the NT,
the anthropological significance of Christ’s death and resurrection is rooted in
something more fundamental and broad that God was aiming at: to defeat once and
for all his cosmic archenemy, Satan, along with the other evil powers under his
dominion, and thereby to establish Christ as the legitimate ruler of the cosmos,
and human beings as his legitimate viceroys upon the earth.
Whereas since Anselm the dominant way of thinking about the atonement focused
on what it accomplished for humanity (reconciliation to God), and thus viewed
what it accomplished against Satan and evil powers as a byproduct, the view that
I espouse is that the NT construes the relation between these two aspects of the
cross in the converse order. Christ’s achievement on the cross is first and
foremost a cosmic event—it defeats Satan.
Thus as Scripture portrays the matter, the foundational reason Christ
appeared was “to destroy the works of the devil” (1 Jn 3:8), to disarm “the
rulers and authorities” (Col 2:15), and to “destroy the one who has the power of
death, that is, the devil” (Heb 2:14). The consequence of this victory is that
he is seated on his rightful throne, the whole cosmos is liberated from a
tyrannical and destructive ruler, humanity is delivered “from the power of
darkness and transferred … into the kingdom of his beloved Son (Col 1:13), and
all who accept it are thereby reinstated to the original position and
responsibility of stewards of the creation that God had always intended for
us.
While Christ’s substitutionary death for sinful humans is central for
understanding what Christ did for us, therefore, this dimension of Christ’s work
is possible only because of the broader cosmic victory Christ won on the
cross.
Through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, God stripped Satan and
all levels of demons of all their power (Col 2:15). Therefore Christ now reigns
in the power of God far above all such demonic powers. Expressing the tension of
the “already/not yet” that characterizes the entire NT, Paul can say that “all
things” are already “under his feet,” (Eph 1:21-22) though the actual
manifestation of this truth is yet in the future. But the central point remains:
the work of the cross was about dethroning a cruel, illegitimate ruler and
reinstating a loving, legitimate one: Jesus Christ. When Jesus Christ is
reinstated, all who are aligned with his rule, all who are “in Christ,” all who
are his “bride” and part of his “body,” are reinstated to their appropriate
position of authority as well. In a word, we are saved because he is
victorious.
—Adapted from God at War, pages 240-246 - Greg Boyd
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