Let's peel off the fluff and get to some of the bottom line issues.
Point 1.
Penal Substitution is a doctrine which was birthed out of the Protestant Reformation when certain Reformers added a Judicial Aspect to the Anselmian Satisfaction Model of the Atonement.
(a) References: The Idea of Atonement in Christian Theology, Rashdall Hastings, 1919. Full text available at The idea of atonement in Christian theology : Rashdall, Hastings, 1858-1924 : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive
(b) Wikipedia. While it is true that anyone can write an article on wikipedia the articles are reviewed by the community to ensure a semblance of accuracy. The articles one the Atonement clearly represent an accurate portrayel of the development of Atonement theories through history.
Atonement in Christianity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Satisfaction theory of atonement - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Penal substitution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(c) Theopedia. This is a website similar to Wikipedia but the content is more related to Theology in general.
http://www.theopedia.com/Atonement_of_Christ
Extract
(d) Penal Substitution in Church History, Michael J. Vlach, 2009.
http://www.tms.edu/tmsj/tmsj20i.pdf
This fourth reference is an interesting work because the author attempts to prove that the Patristic era of the church upheld the Penal Substition view of the atonement. What makes it interesting is that if one actually reads the quotes he provides from early church fathers one will find that none of those quotes clearly state anything close to the Penal Substition. That Jesus "died on behalf of sinners" or that He "bore our sins" does not mean that Jesus "bore the full wrath of God in the place of the sinner."
Point 2.
Penal Substitution clearly teaches that Jesus Christ bore the "wrath of God" as the "sinners substitute" (ie. a Penal Substitute) and due to this the wrath of God no longer abides on those He died for because the justice of God was "satisfied." One of the problems with this theory is that the Bible teaches that the wages of sin is death and that the punishment due to the sinner is being cast into hell which in turn is cast into the Lake of Fire. If Jesus bore the full wrath of God for sin then Jesus would have to be presently in hell, outer darkness where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth, the end of which is to eventually be cast into the Lake of Fire.
Jesus suffered an excrutiating death on the cross at the hands of sinful men and then rose from the dead three days later. It is clearly evident that Jesus did not bear the literal penalty due the wicked.
This second point alone is clearly enough to thoroughly destroy any notion that the Penal Substitution view of the Atonement is factual.
Point 3.
If Jesus literally bore the penalty due the sinner and thus satisifed the wrath of God then it would clearly mean that the atonement is Limited in that Jesus died only for those who would be saved. If the Atonement is Universal in application then that would mean that the penalty of sin was satisifed on behalf of all sinners and thus could not be due again. Therefore under Penal Substitution the Atonement is either limited in scope or universal salvation is true.
Therfore it is a logical necessity that anyone who holds to the Penal Substitution view of the atonement must consistently hold to the view that Jesus did not die for all men lest universalism be true. Here is a quote from the Reformed Theologian John MacArthur who makes this very point...
A Ministry of Integrity, Part 3
While John Macarthur may teach that there are some "universal aspects" related to the death of Christ he is forced to logically conclude that Jesus only really died for the elect and not for the entire world. This is clearly an example of where a doctrine forces the Theologian to redefine scriptures to fit a preexisting belief. What John MacArthur needs to do is throw out the writings of Augustine, Luther and Calvin and yield to what the Scripture actually teaches. Yet I fear that he (and those like him) have too much invested in the lie to do such a thing.
Point 4.
Penal Substitution denies that God forgives sins. It teaches that sin is a literal transferable property and that God literall transferred sin to an innocent (Christ) and then punished Him in the place of the sinner. It was through this that God's wrath was satisfied and thus with the sins paid for the sinner could now be excused. Thus the sins are not actually forgiven they were simply transferred to another and still punished.
This in and of itself paints God as unjust due to punishing an innocent in order to excuse the guilty. Yet the Bible states...
Eze 18:20 The soul that sinneth, it shall die. The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the son: the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him.
Point 5.
Penal Substitution logically concludes that salvation is purely forensic and that unconditional eternal security is true.
Penal Substitution serves to redefine salvation as a mere book-keeping entry where the problem between God and man is rectified through a legal transaction as opposed to repentance and faith whereby the actual motivation for rebellion is dealt with once and for all. Due to the "penalty being paid" under Penal Substitution it cannot be "made due again" thus if it has been paid for on your behalf then there is no sin you can do which would forfeit your right standing before God which means you now have a license to sin. Many on these forums believe this very tenet and while they deny that they have a license to sin and will this say you "should" not sin, they simply cannot say you "cannot" sin, because in their minds salvation is merely forensic in nature and is totally disconnected from deeds.
Point 6.
Penal Substitution completely negates the release from the bondage of sin. Under Penal Substitution salvation is merely "being set free from condemnation" as opposed to "being set free from condemnation and bondage." Penal Substitution gives people a false assurance of salvation whilst they remain in bondage to their sins. That is why those beholden to this error take so much offense to the message of "go and sin no more" because in their minds "going and sinning no more" has NOTHING to do with salvation. To imply that "going and sinning no more" is related to "being saved" is basically a direct attack upon their assurance of salvation.
This is why those who cling to the doctrine of Penal Substitution are so opposed to the message of "the sin must stop." To imply that a cessation of sin must result from a genuine repentance is a direct attack on the premise of a salvation based on an abstract judicial exchange. This is why Penal Substitution theology is so dangerous for it innoculates the mind against the truth of Biblical repentance and Biblical faith having replaced them with "abstract and passive notions."
Point 7.
If the sins of all men were literally transferred to the account of Jesus (if He bore the guilt) then He would not have been without spot. The Bible clearly teaches that Jesus offered Himself without spot to God (Heb 9:14). Yet Penal Substitution teaches that Jesus offered Himself up "with our spots." If Penal Substitution is true then Jesus was spotted with sin when He offered Himself. This view is probably the reason why the translators of the King James Bible concluded with "He was made sin" in 2Cor 5:21 as opposed to "sin offering" which would be more in line with the Septuagint (see Adam Clarke's Commentary on 2Cor 5:21 2�Corinthians 5:1 - Adam Clarke Commentary - Commentaries - StudyLight.org )
Each of the above points clearly and logically refute any notion that Penal Substitution can be true. Taken together they completely destroy the doctrine at the foundation level and those who wish to uphold the doctrine must put their head in the sand and simply ignore the logical inconsistencies of their framework.
Now the other aspect often connected to Penal Substitition is that of the doctrine of the "Imputed Righteousness of Christ" whereby the literal obedience and righteousness of Christ is credited to the account of the believer. Thus, according to this view, when God looks at the believer He does not see their wretchedness but rather He sees Jesus.
I have previously written quite extensively on the problems of the Reformed View of Imputed Righteousness. Note I don't deny imputed righteousness (God imputes faith as righteousness), I deny the imputed righteousness OF CHRIST.
http://christianchat.com/bible-discussion-forum/40982-biblical-view-imputed-righteousness.html
http://christianchat.com/bible-discussion-forum/58397-imputed-righteousness-christ.html#post922511
One challenge that has been issued to my words is right here...
http://christianchat.com/bible-disc...ransom-not-penal-substitution.html#post896383
Yet a point to note in that challenge is that this person has not truly addressed the fundamental objections I have with the Reformed Doctrine of the "Imputed Righteousness of Christ."
Namely that the doctrine originated with Martin Luther who called it the "Blessed Exchange." The early Church NEVER TAUGHT this doctrine and this is why those who teach it will not cite early writings teaching it. They don't exist as far as I can tell.
Rom 4 teaches that it is "faith" that God counts as righteousness and there is a "walk" associated with that faith and this faith is also said to "establish the law." If the righteousness that God credits a believer with is a judicial transaction of the literal righteousness of Christ (ie. teahcing that virtue is a transferable property) then the walk in Rom 4:12 would have NOTHING to do with it nor would "faith establish the law" (Rom 3:31).
Yet if God reckoning one righteous by a faith that works by love (Gal 5:6) apart from the works of the law (Gal 5:4-5) then "walking in the steps of faith" (Rom 4:12) makes perfect sense. "Faith establishing the law" also makes perfect sense.
Whenever the Reformers expound on the "Imputation of Christ's Righteousness" they will ALWAYS skip over Romans 4:11-13. That alone ought to give people pause. Their doctrine can only be established by isolating scriptures out of context whilst rejecting the whole counsel of God.
Now to the questions of Elin and Rom 3:25-26...
Instead of Elin addressing the fundamentals of my objections she has presented a diversion and put it on me to "explain this" and that "if I don't" then she is "justified in ignoring my fundamental objections." All Elin has done is try to obfuscate the issue by subtly changing the subject.
Let's examine the passage in question...
Rom 3:22 Even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe: for there is no difference:
Rom 3:23 For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God;
Rom 3:24 Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus:
Rom 3:25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God;
Rom 3:26 To declare, I say, at this time his righteousness: that he might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus.
So what of that passage? Does it teach that the righteousness of Jesus Christ is credited to the believers account? No. It does not say anything of the sort. Notice how those who preach this doctrine cannot provide a SINGLE SCRIPTURE which states or even implies IN CONTEXT that the obedient track record of Jesus is credited to a believers account by faith. Not a single passage. All they can do is quote a passage and then use RHETORIC and try and imply that teaching WHILST CONTRADICTING what the Bible says elsewhere.
Rom 3:22 Notes...The righteousness of God is by the the faith of Jesus Christ. What was the faith of Jesus Christ? It was a faith that worked by love which established the law in the heart and thus the righteousness of the law was fulfilled as He walked after the Spirit. If we believe in Jesus (ie. we trust and obey) then we become partakers of the righteousness of God.
Rom 3:24 Notes... This is the free gift of God which Paul references in Rom 6:23
Rom 6:23 For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
It is through "abiding in Christ" that we have access to eternal life. Hence redemption (redeemed by payment of ransom ie. the blood of Christ) is IN Christ (Rom 3:24).
Rom 3:25 Notes... Jesus was the propitiatory (mercy seat) offering whose blood purges the sacrifice of sin thus making it acceptable to God. We are the living sacrifice offered up to God which is made clean by the blood. The righteousness of Jesus (without spot) was declared (through His sin offering) for the remission of PAST SINS. Basically our past rebellion is wiped out and thus we can be restored to fellowship with God. There is no restoration to God within the framework of ongoing rebellion which is why the Bible teaches "repentance for remission." The rebellion ceases hence their is no remission of present or future sin (hence Heb 10:26). Acts 3:19 states...
Act 3:19 Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord;
Rom 3:26 notes... Jesus justifies those who believe (trust and yield) as opposed to those who do not believe (reject His counsel and thus refuse to yield). When we abide in Christ the light of God is manifest THROUGH us and the result is the production of good fruit.
John confirms this when he says, "hereby we know that we are in him" in the context of keeping the words of Jesus.
1Jn 2:3 And hereby we do know that we know him, if we keep his commandments.
1Jn 2:4 He that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him.
1Jn 2:5 But whoso keepeth his word, in him verily is the love of God perfected: hereby know we that we are in him.
1Jn 2:6 He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked.
One of the greatest fallacies of the purely forensic "Imputed Righteousness of Christ" is that by disconnecting manifest conduct from righteousness it excuses the presence of ongoing sin in justification. Therefore one does not have to "walk as he walked" nor "walk in the steps of a faith that works by love." The "walk" is taught as something that is "subsequent" to salvation, the "walk" is something that occurs later (which one reason why the church congregations are full of sin).
Point 1.
Penal Substitution is a doctrine which was birthed out of the Protestant Reformation when certain Reformers added a Judicial Aspect to the Anselmian Satisfaction Model of the Atonement.
(a) References: The Idea of Atonement in Christian Theology, Rashdall Hastings, 1919. Full text available at The idea of atonement in Christian theology : Rashdall, Hastings, 1858-1924 : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive
(b) Wikipedia. While it is true that anyone can write an article on wikipedia the articles are reviewed by the community to ensure a semblance of accuracy. The articles one the Atonement clearly represent an accurate portrayel of the development of Atonement theories through history.
Atonement in Christianity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Satisfaction theory of atonement - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Penal substitution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(c) Theopedia. This is a website similar to Wikipedia but the content is more related to Theology in general.
http://www.theopedia.com/Atonement_of_Christ
Extract
The Penal-Substitution Theory: This view was formulated by the 16th century Reformers as an extension of Anselm's Satisfaction theory. Anselm's theory was correct in introducing the satisfaction aspect of Christ's work and its necessity, however the Reformers saw it as insufficient because it was referenced to God's honor rather than his justice and holiness and was couched more in terms of a commercial transaction than a penal substitution. This Reformed view says simply that Christ died for man, in man's place, taking his sins and bearing them for him. The bearing of man's sins takes the punishment for them and sets the believer free from the penal demands of the law: The righteousness of the law and the holiness of God are satisfied by this substitution.
http://www.tms.edu/tmsj/tmsj20i.pdf
This fourth reference is an interesting work because the author attempts to prove that the Patristic era of the church upheld the Penal Substition view of the atonement. What makes it interesting is that if one actually reads the quotes he provides from early church fathers one will find that none of those quotes clearly state anything close to the Penal Substition. That Jesus "died on behalf of sinners" or that He "bore our sins" does not mean that Jesus "bore the full wrath of God in the place of the sinner."
Point 2.
Penal Substitution clearly teaches that Jesus Christ bore the "wrath of God" as the "sinners substitute" (ie. a Penal Substitute) and due to this the wrath of God no longer abides on those He died for because the justice of God was "satisfied." One of the problems with this theory is that the Bible teaches that the wages of sin is death and that the punishment due to the sinner is being cast into hell which in turn is cast into the Lake of Fire. If Jesus bore the full wrath of God for sin then Jesus would have to be presently in hell, outer darkness where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth, the end of which is to eventually be cast into the Lake of Fire.
Jesus suffered an excrutiating death on the cross at the hands of sinful men and then rose from the dead three days later. It is clearly evident that Jesus did not bear the literal penalty due the wicked.
This second point alone is clearly enough to thoroughly destroy any notion that the Penal Substitution view of the Atonement is factual.
Point 3.
If Jesus literally bore the penalty due the sinner and thus satisifed the wrath of God then it would clearly mean that the atonement is Limited in that Jesus died only for those who would be saved. If the Atonement is Universal in application then that would mean that the penalty of sin was satisifed on behalf of all sinners and thus could not be due again. Therefore under Penal Substitution the Atonement is either limited in scope or universal salvation is true.
Therfore it is a logical necessity that anyone who holds to the Penal Substitution view of the atonement must consistently hold to the view that Jesus did not die for all men lest universalism be true. Here is a quote from the Reformed Theologian John MacArthur who makes this very point...
And Christ died as your substitute and He bore your sins on the cross, therefore you died with Him there. This is a limiting aspect of the death of Christ. It necessarily limits the application of the atonement. The atonement, listen carefully, can only be a real substitution for those who died in Christ. I'll say that again. The atonement can only be a real substitution for those who died in Christ on the basis of those statements in that verse. The all is everyone who died in Christ, everyone for whom Christ was the substitute. That is the sense of the atonement which is limited.
...
But when you talk about substitution, you now are talking about the limited aspect of it. It is limited to those who died in Christ. Now you have to ask the question...who are those who died in Christ? To answer that, look at Romans chapter 3--Romans chapter 3. In Romans chapter 3 this is very important, verse 25, well verse 24 talks about the gift of God's grace which is the salvation or redemption in Christ. In verse 25 God displayed publicly as a propitiation, a satisfaction, a covering, appeasing the wrath of God, He displayed Christ as that. So He's talking about Christ's redeeming work, His justifying work, His work of salvation. And then in verse 26 we get right down to it. The middle of the verse, "All this that Jesus Christ and that God whose purpose it is might be just and the justifier of the one who...what?...has faith in Jesus." There's the qualifier.
...So He is the substitute only for those who believe. That's the point. Otherwise you've got a major problem because you've got Christ dying as a substitute for the whole world, that means He was bearing the sins of the whole world in a substitutionary sense. And if, in fact, He was carrying Himself to the cross as a substitute for the sins of every person who ever lived, He would therefore have done away with the wrath of God and procured for them eternal life, and we'd all be universalists. So there has to be a limiting feature.
...
But when you talk about substitution, you now are talking about the limited aspect of it. It is limited to those who died in Christ. Now you have to ask the question...who are those who died in Christ? To answer that, look at Romans chapter 3--Romans chapter 3. In Romans chapter 3 this is very important, verse 25, well verse 24 talks about the gift of God's grace which is the salvation or redemption in Christ. In verse 25 God displayed publicly as a propitiation, a satisfaction, a covering, appeasing the wrath of God, He displayed Christ as that. So He's talking about Christ's redeeming work, His justifying work, His work of salvation. And then in verse 26 we get right down to it. The middle of the verse, "All this that Jesus Christ and that God whose purpose it is might be just and the justifier of the one who...what?...has faith in Jesus." There's the qualifier.
...So He is the substitute only for those who believe. That's the point. Otherwise you've got a major problem because you've got Christ dying as a substitute for the whole world, that means He was bearing the sins of the whole world in a substitutionary sense. And if, in fact, He was carrying Himself to the cross as a substitute for the sins of every person who ever lived, He would therefore have done away with the wrath of God and procured for them eternal life, and we'd all be universalists. So there has to be a limiting feature.
While John Macarthur may teach that there are some "universal aspects" related to the death of Christ he is forced to logically conclude that Jesus only really died for the elect and not for the entire world. This is clearly an example of where a doctrine forces the Theologian to redefine scriptures to fit a preexisting belief. What John MacArthur needs to do is throw out the writings of Augustine, Luther and Calvin and yield to what the Scripture actually teaches. Yet I fear that he (and those like him) have too much invested in the lie to do such a thing.
Point 4.
Penal Substitution denies that God forgives sins. It teaches that sin is a literal transferable property and that God literall transferred sin to an innocent (Christ) and then punished Him in the place of the sinner. It was through this that God's wrath was satisfied and thus with the sins paid for the sinner could now be excused. Thus the sins are not actually forgiven they were simply transferred to another and still punished.
This in and of itself paints God as unjust due to punishing an innocent in order to excuse the guilty. Yet the Bible states...
Eze 18:20 The soul that sinneth, it shall die. The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the son: the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him.
Point 5.
Penal Substitution logically concludes that salvation is purely forensic and that unconditional eternal security is true.
Penal Substitution serves to redefine salvation as a mere book-keeping entry where the problem between God and man is rectified through a legal transaction as opposed to repentance and faith whereby the actual motivation for rebellion is dealt with once and for all. Due to the "penalty being paid" under Penal Substitution it cannot be "made due again" thus if it has been paid for on your behalf then there is no sin you can do which would forfeit your right standing before God which means you now have a license to sin. Many on these forums believe this very tenet and while they deny that they have a license to sin and will this say you "should" not sin, they simply cannot say you "cannot" sin, because in their minds salvation is merely forensic in nature and is totally disconnected from deeds.
Point 6.
Penal Substitution completely negates the release from the bondage of sin. Under Penal Substitution salvation is merely "being set free from condemnation" as opposed to "being set free from condemnation and bondage." Penal Substitution gives people a false assurance of salvation whilst they remain in bondage to their sins. That is why those beholden to this error take so much offense to the message of "go and sin no more" because in their minds "going and sinning no more" has NOTHING to do with salvation. To imply that "going and sinning no more" is related to "being saved" is basically a direct attack upon their assurance of salvation.
This is why those who cling to the doctrine of Penal Substitution are so opposed to the message of "the sin must stop." To imply that a cessation of sin must result from a genuine repentance is a direct attack on the premise of a salvation based on an abstract judicial exchange. This is why Penal Substitution theology is so dangerous for it innoculates the mind against the truth of Biblical repentance and Biblical faith having replaced them with "abstract and passive notions."
Point 7.
If the sins of all men were literally transferred to the account of Jesus (if He bore the guilt) then He would not have been without spot. The Bible clearly teaches that Jesus offered Himself without spot to God (Heb 9:14). Yet Penal Substitution teaches that Jesus offered Himself up "with our spots." If Penal Substitution is true then Jesus was spotted with sin when He offered Himself. This view is probably the reason why the translators of the King James Bible concluded with "He was made sin" in 2Cor 5:21 as opposed to "sin offering" which would be more in line with the Septuagint (see Adam Clarke's Commentary on 2Cor 5:21 2�Corinthians 5:1 - Adam Clarke Commentary - Commentaries - StudyLight.org )
Each of the above points clearly and logically refute any notion that Penal Substitution can be true. Taken together they completely destroy the doctrine at the foundation level and those who wish to uphold the doctrine must put their head in the sand and simply ignore the logical inconsistencies of their framework.
Now the other aspect often connected to Penal Substitition is that of the doctrine of the "Imputed Righteousness of Christ" whereby the literal obedience and righteousness of Christ is credited to the account of the believer. Thus, according to this view, when God looks at the believer He does not see their wretchedness but rather He sees Jesus.
I have previously written quite extensively on the problems of the Reformed View of Imputed Righteousness. Note I don't deny imputed righteousness (God imputes faith as righteousness), I deny the imputed righteousness OF CHRIST.
http://christianchat.com/bible-discussion-forum/40982-biblical-view-imputed-righteousness.html
http://christianchat.com/bible-discussion-forum/58397-imputed-righteousness-christ.html#post922511
One challenge that has been issued to my words is right here...
http://christianchat.com/bible-disc...ransom-not-penal-substitution.html#post896383
Yet a point to note in that challenge is that this person has not truly addressed the fundamental objections I have with the Reformed Doctrine of the "Imputed Righteousness of Christ."
Namely that the doctrine originated with Martin Luther who called it the "Blessed Exchange." The early Church NEVER TAUGHT this doctrine and this is why those who teach it will not cite early writings teaching it. They don't exist as far as I can tell.
Rom 4 teaches that it is "faith" that God counts as righteousness and there is a "walk" associated with that faith and this faith is also said to "establish the law." If the righteousness that God credits a believer with is a judicial transaction of the literal righteousness of Christ (ie. teahcing that virtue is a transferable property) then the walk in Rom 4:12 would have NOTHING to do with it nor would "faith establish the law" (Rom 3:31).
Yet if God reckoning one righteous by a faith that works by love (Gal 5:6) apart from the works of the law (Gal 5:4-5) then "walking in the steps of faith" (Rom 4:12) makes perfect sense. "Faith establishing the law" also makes perfect sense.
Whenever the Reformers expound on the "Imputation of Christ's Righteousness" they will ALWAYS skip over Romans 4:11-13. That alone ought to give people pause. Their doctrine can only be established by isolating scriptures out of context whilst rejecting the whole counsel of God.
Now to the questions of Elin and Rom 3:25-26...
"God presented Jesus as a sacrifice of propitiation through faith in his blood.
He did this to demonstrate his justice, because in his forbearance he had passed over
(left unpunished) the sins committed beforehand (OT)--he did it to demonstrate his justice
at the present time,so as to be just and the one who justifies." (Ro 3:25-26)
1) What "passed over" the sins committed beforehand (OT)?
2) The "what passed over" consisted precisely of?
3) How did the "what passed over" demonstrate God's justice?
4) For what did Jesus' sacrificial death atone?
5) How does Jesus' sacrificial death atone (make reparation, amends) for it?
6) What is the connection between his atonement and my faith in it (his blood)?
Until you present a consistent and Biblical explanation of the two sets of questions above,
"You are in error because you do not know the Scriptures." (Mt 22:29)
"Go and learn what they mean." (Mt 9:13)
He did this to demonstrate his justice, because in his forbearance he had passed over
(left unpunished) the sins committed beforehand (OT)--he did it to demonstrate his justice
at the present time,so as to be just and the one who justifies." (Ro 3:25-26)
1) What "passed over" the sins committed beforehand (OT)?
2) The "what passed over" consisted precisely of?
3) How did the "what passed over" demonstrate God's justice?
4) For what did Jesus' sacrificial death atone?
5) How does Jesus' sacrificial death atone (make reparation, amends) for it?
6) What is the connection between his atonement and my faith in it (his blood)?
Until you present a consistent and Biblical explanation of the two sets of questions above,
"You are in error because you do not know the Scriptures." (Mt 22:29)
"Go and learn what they mean." (Mt 9:13)
Let's examine the passage in question...
Rom 3:22 Even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe: for there is no difference:
Rom 3:23 For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God;
Rom 3:24 Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus:
Rom 3:25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God;
Rom 3:26 To declare, I say, at this time his righteousness: that he might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus.
So what of that passage? Does it teach that the righteousness of Jesus Christ is credited to the believers account? No. It does not say anything of the sort. Notice how those who preach this doctrine cannot provide a SINGLE SCRIPTURE which states or even implies IN CONTEXT that the obedient track record of Jesus is credited to a believers account by faith. Not a single passage. All they can do is quote a passage and then use RHETORIC and try and imply that teaching WHILST CONTRADICTING what the Bible says elsewhere.
Rom 3:22 Notes...The righteousness of God is by the the faith of Jesus Christ. What was the faith of Jesus Christ? It was a faith that worked by love which established the law in the heart and thus the righteousness of the law was fulfilled as He walked after the Spirit. If we believe in Jesus (ie. we trust and obey) then we become partakers of the righteousness of God.
Rom 3:24 Notes... This is the free gift of God which Paul references in Rom 6:23
Rom 6:23 For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
It is through "abiding in Christ" that we have access to eternal life. Hence redemption (redeemed by payment of ransom ie. the blood of Christ) is IN Christ (Rom 3:24).
Rom 3:25 Notes... Jesus was the propitiatory (mercy seat) offering whose blood purges the sacrifice of sin thus making it acceptable to God. We are the living sacrifice offered up to God which is made clean by the blood. The righteousness of Jesus (without spot) was declared (through His sin offering) for the remission of PAST SINS. Basically our past rebellion is wiped out and thus we can be restored to fellowship with God. There is no restoration to God within the framework of ongoing rebellion which is why the Bible teaches "repentance for remission." The rebellion ceases hence their is no remission of present or future sin (hence Heb 10:26). Acts 3:19 states...
Act 3:19 Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord;
Rom 3:26 notes... Jesus justifies those who believe (trust and yield) as opposed to those who do not believe (reject His counsel and thus refuse to yield). When we abide in Christ the light of God is manifest THROUGH us and the result is the production of good fruit.
John confirms this when he says, "hereby we know that we are in him" in the context of keeping the words of Jesus.
1Jn 2:3 And hereby we do know that we know him, if we keep his commandments.
1Jn 2:4 He that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him.
1Jn 2:5 But whoso keepeth his word, in him verily is the love of God perfected: hereby know we that we are in him.
1Jn 2:6 He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked.
One of the greatest fallacies of the purely forensic "Imputed Righteousness of Christ" is that by disconnecting manifest conduct from righteousness it excuses the presence of ongoing sin in justification. Therefore one does not have to "walk as he walked" nor "walk in the steps of a faith that works by love." The "walk" is taught as something that is "subsequent" to salvation, the "walk" is something that occurs later (which one reason why the church congregations are full of sin).