Doctrines
of Propitiation; Unlimited Atonement; 1 John 2:2
1
John 2:2 NASB “and He Himself is the propitiation for our sins; and
not for ours only, but also for {those of} the whole world.” John emphasises
the fact that it is Jesus Christ Himself. The use of the reflexive pronoun
there is to give emphasis to the person of Jesus Christ: that it is He who is
the propitiation for our sins—not just His work on the cross but it is
Christ Himself who is the propitiation. He was the propitiatory sacrifice. This
introduces a couple of extremely crucial doctrines to understand the person and
work of Jesus Christ.
The doctrine of propitiation
- Definition: Propitiation is that aspect of the
saving work of God through the substitutionary spiritual death of Jesus
Christ on the cross whereby the justice and righteousness of God are
satisfied concerning the sins of mankind. Satisfaction is the key word.
This is seen in two other verses. Romans 3:25 NASB “whom God
displayed publicly as a propitiation in [by means of] His blood through
faith. {This was} to demonstrate His
righteousness, because in the forbearance of God He passed over the sins
previously committed.” The shedding of blood throughout Scripture is used
to emphasise death. Hebrews 2:17 NASB “Therefore, He had to be
made like His brethren in all things, so that He might become a merciful
and faithful high priest in things pertaining to God, to make propitiation
for the sins of the people.” So Jesus Christ is the one who propitiates
God.
- A key word we have to look at is hilasmos. It means propitiation or
satisfaction and it translates the Hebrew word in the Old Testament, kapporeth,
from the verb kaphar which means to atone. Kapporeth
is a noun, and it is a fascinating noun because it refers to a specific
location and that is the mercy seat on the Ark of the Covenant. The ark of
the covenant was a box made of acacia wood which was overlaid with gold
and it had a lid, on top of which were two gold cherubim which looked down
to the centre point on the lid. That place was called the mercy seat
because that was where the high priest of the day
of Atonement brought the blood to indicate the sacrifice done the nation
Israel. Exodus 25:17 NASB “You shall make a mercy seat of pure
gold, two and a half cubits long and one and a half cubits wide. [18] You
shall make two cherubim of gold, make them of
hammered work at the two ends of the mercy seat. [19] Make one cherub at
one end and one cherub at the other end; you shall make the cherubim {of
one piece} with the mercy seat at its two ends. [20] The cherubim shall
have {their} wings spread upward, covering the mercy seat with their wings
and facing one another; the faces of the cherubim are to be {turned}
toward the mercy seat. [21] You shall put the mercy seat on top of the ark,
and in the ark you shall put the testimony which I will give to you.”
Inside the ark were three objects: the Ten Commandments, showing that
Israel had broken God’s standards; Aaron’s rod which
had budded. And the purpose for that was that the Israelites had rebelled
against the Aaronic priesthood, and God was showing that Aaron was the
chosen one by causing Aaron’s staff to bud; manna, because God had
provided physical sustenance for them and they had rejected and rebelled
against that because they wanted tastier food and wanted to go back to the
garlic and leeks of Egypt. These were placed in the box to indicate their
sinfulness. Over the top of that was the mercy indicating that God is
going to deal with the sin and cover the sin of Israel. The two cherubs
represented the righteousness and justice of God and they looked down on
the shed blood on the mercy seat. The picture there is that the holiness
of God, His righteousness and justice, is satisfied by the sacrifice. The
sacrifice, then, has covered and paid the price the sins. So this is a
tremendous visual teaching us about what would happen at the cross.
- Propitiation is then related to the work of
Christ on the cross. The death of Christ covered or paid for our sins, satisfying
the righteousness and justice of God. Leviticus 16:13-16.
- Propitiation is then appropriated to the believer
by faith in Christ and is the basis for the imputation of divine
righteousness. Propitiation occurred at the cross. God’s righteousness and
justice were actually satisfied on the cross for every single believer. So
the barrier is removed at the cross. But there is a problem. Man has three
problems at least to keep him out of heaven. Problem # 1 is sin and the
sin penalty. There has to be a death for that sin. Problem # 2 is that man
is minus life. He does not have the life of God. Problem # 3 is that man
is minus righteousness. When Jesus Christ died on the cross as our
substitute He paid the sin penalty, 2 Corinthians 5:17. On the cross Jesus
remained perfectly righteous but all of man’s sins are poured out on Him.
That takes care of the sin penalty. The problem is that man still lacks
righteousness. Somehow we have to receive +R, so at the instant
of faith alone in Christ alone God credits to our account the perfect
righteousness of Jesus Christ. That is called imputation. Now we possess
perfect righteousness so that when God’s righteousness looks at us He
approves of us. The justice of God is then free to bless us. God declares
us to be just (justification) and then He imputes to us eternal life, so
that by faith alone in Christ alone we receive the imputation of +R
and the imputation of His eternal life. The result is that we can now be
saved and can spend eternity in heaven. But because Christ paid the
penalty for sin, sin is no longer the issue; all sins have been paid for.
That point is important to understand the doctrine of unlimited atonement.
- Propitiation resolves the problem of the demands
of God’s righteousness and justice. He is always propitiated so that those
demands are always met for all time and eternity, therefore our sins, even
post-salvation sins, are no longer an issue.
1
John 2:2 NASB “and He Himself is the propitiation for our sins…”
First person plural, referring primarily to John, it is an editorial “we”;
secondarily it refers to his apostolic partners, and then by application we can
see that it applies to us. Then he says, “and not for ours only, but also for
{those of} the whole world.” The way it is constructed is for emphasis. He is
the propitiation for our sins. If we are believers Christ has
been propitiated, but it is not just for our sins, it is also for the sins of
the whole world. What does he mean by the whole world?
1
John 5:4 NASB “For whatever is born of God overcomes the world; and
this is the victory that has overcome the world—our faith.” That shows a
distinction: who we are and the world. We have to see that John makes the
distinction that the world is not the elect. The idea that the world refers only
to the elect is totally contrary to John’s use of the word world.
1
John 4:1 NASB “Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the
spirits to see whether they are from God, because many false prophets have gone
out into the world.” Notice the world is set apart as something distinct, it is
not where the believer is, it is in opposition to the
believer. [2] “By this you know the Spirit of God: every spirit that confesses
that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is from God; [3] and every spirit that
does not confess Jesus is not from God; this is the {spirit} of the antichrist,
of which you have heard that it is coming, and now it is already in the world.”
The world is something outside of the realm of where the believer should be. So
for John, world is not the world of the believer.
So
back to 1 John 2:2 NASB “and He Himself is the propitiation for our
sins; and not for ours only, but also for {those of} the whole world.” So there
is a juxtaposition here between the believer and the
world. John carries that all through the epistle. The words “for” in this verse
translate the Greek preposition peri.
Normally what we find in constructs like this is the Greek preposition huper, clearly the preposition of
substitution. But peri can mean
concerning sin, and it can also have the idea of substitution and is virtually
a synonym for huper. Ardnt and
Gingrich: When used with hamartia,
which it is in this case, the word “for” (peri)
has the sense of to take away, to atone for, and emphasises substitution.
Kittle in his Theological Dictionary says: “To some degree the distinction
between peri and huper fades in the Hellenistic period,
and the result is that peri with the genitive can be used in the sense of on
behalf of or as a substitution for, and this is particularly common in the
epistles.” So the thrust here is substitution: “He Himself is a propitiation as
a substitute for our sins; and not as a substitute for ours only, but also as a
substitute for the whole world.”
The doctrine of unlimited atonement
- Definition: The judgment of Christ on the cross
as a substitute for every sin committed in human history by every member
of the human race. But just because the penalty is paid for doesn’t mean
they go to heaven. They still don’t have eternal life and they still lack
perfect righteousness. But sin is actually and truly paid for; this is the
emphasis in unlimited atonement. The work of Christ made salvation
available to all but did not actually assure the
salvation of anyone. Only those who express faith alone in Christ alone
are eternally saved.
- Historical background to this doctrine. There are
people who believe in something called limited atonement, sometimes called
limited redemption. It means that Christ’s death was only for the elect
and that Christ did not die for the unbeliever. This is part of a system
called Calvinism. John Calvin did not hold to this, it was a system
developed by his successors, specifically by Beza who systematised
Calvin’s theology after his death. Around 1610 there was a man by the name
of Jacob Arminius who taught theology in Holland and he could not go along
with extreme Calvinism because there wasn’t enough room there for
individual volition, responsibility and freedom of choice in relation to
salvation. So he began to teach a theological system which emphasised
human responsibility and free will. His followers set forth five points
which emphasised that every human being has the ability live a perfect
life, to please God by his works, that election was conditional on what
man did, that Christ died for everyone—unlimited atonement. They
believed that grace was resistible and that salvation was losable. They
did not believe in eternal security. In response to their five points the
Calvinists reacted with their five points that have come to be known
through the acronym TULIP. T = total depravity, total inability; U =
unconditional election; L = limited atonement; I = irresistible grace; P =
perseverance of the saints (nothing more than Lordship salvation).
- 1 Peter 2:24 emphasises the reality of Christ’s
substitution. NASB “and He Himself bore our sins in His body on
the cross, so that we might die to sin and live to righteousness; for by
His wounds you were healed.” Romans 5:8 NASB “But God
demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners,
Christ died [as a substitute: u(per + genitive] for us.” 1 Corinthians 11:24 NASB
“and when He had given thanks, He broke it and said, ‘This is My body,
which is for you [u(per +
genitive]; do this in remembrance of Me’.” 2 Corinthians 5:21 NASB
“He made Him who knew no sin {to be} sin on our behalf [u(per + genitive], so that we might become the
righteousness of God in Him.”
- There are several key passages in Scripture that
Christ clearly state that Christ died for all, not the least of which is
John 3:16 NASB “For God so loved the world, that He gave His
only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have
eternal life.” Acts 10:43 NASB “Of Him all the prophets bear
witness that through His name everyone who believes in Him receives
forgiveness of sins”—subjunctive mood: anyone who might believe; it
is open to all. 1 Timothy 2:6 NASB “who gave Himself as a
ransom for all, the testimony {given} at the proper time.” 1 Timothy 4”10 NASB
“For it is for this we labor and strive, because we have fixed our hope on
the living God, who is the Savior of all men, especially of believers.”
Notice, believers are a sub-category of all men. 2 Corinthians 5:14 NASB
“For the love of Christ controls us, having concluded this, that one died
for all, therefore all died.” So the issue now isn’t sin, the issue is
whether or not you possess the life of God, eternal life, and the
righteousness of God, and that comes at the instant of faith alone in
Christ alone.
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