The Penal Substitution theory of the atonement - the view that Christ had to suffer under the wrath of God in order to satisfy His justice on our behalf - is the very antithesis of Christianity.
Did that get your attention?
Good!
Why is such a doctrine Christianity's hostile opposite? Because it runs contradictory to Christianity's Christ, who taught that we look most like God the Father when we forgive with no expectation of or desire for vengeance, and when we do good to our enemies as opposed to harming them. Jesus told us explicitly that, in the Kingdom, eye for an eye methodology is strictly prohibited.
The god of penal substitution, however, demands not just an eye for an eye, but an eternity of suffering for one transgression, and can only let a guilty party off the hook if another suffers brutality in their place. He knows nothing of "turn the other cheek" or of loving His enemies...unless of course he's given the opportunity to crush someone else in the place of the guilty. He's not a god who can just shake off a grudge and move on. No. He demands retributive justice, and yet Jesus, who is said to be the Father's exact representation, taught just the opposite.
Regardless of how we interpret some of Paul's words or try to make a case for a violent, retributive God by piecing together obscure Old Testament passages, you can never square these things with the words and life of Jesus. If God the Father demanded Jesus' murder as the only means of satisfying His justice, then Jesus was wrong in nearly all that He taught us of His Father.
For this reason I say that the doctrine of Penal Substitution is Christianity's hostile opposite, as it presents a picture of God that is hostile and opposed to the message of Jesus, which was forgiveness and mercy without any expectation of vengeance or revenge.
Did that get your attention?
Good!
Why is such a doctrine Christianity's hostile opposite? Because it runs contradictory to Christianity's Christ, who taught that we look most like God the Father when we forgive with no expectation of or desire for vengeance, and when we do good to our enemies as opposed to harming them. Jesus told us explicitly that, in the Kingdom, eye for an eye methodology is strictly prohibited.
The god of penal substitution, however, demands not just an eye for an eye, but an eternity of suffering for one transgression, and can only let a guilty party off the hook if another suffers brutality in their place. He knows nothing of "turn the other cheek" or of loving His enemies...unless of course he's given the opportunity to crush someone else in the place of the guilty. He's not a god who can just shake off a grudge and move on. No. He demands retributive justice, and yet Jesus, who is said to be the Father's exact representation, taught just the opposite.
Regardless of how we interpret some of Paul's words or try to make a case for a violent, retributive God by piecing together obscure Old Testament passages, you can never square these things with the words and life of Jesus. If God the Father demanded Jesus' murder as the only means of satisfying His justice, then Jesus was wrong in nearly all that He taught us of His Father.
For this reason I say that the doctrine of Penal Substitution is Christianity's hostile opposite, as it presents a picture of God that is hostile and opposed to the message of Jesus, which was forgiveness and mercy without any expectation of vengeance or revenge.