Barefoot in the wilderness
in search of understanding

For one and all?

I’ve occasionally been involved in discussions about the nature of the atonement – specifically, whether Jesus died for everyone, or just for a few (the elect). Usually, one finds Calvinists and other folks who believe in predestination going for the latter, and Arminians and other folks who believe in the primacy of the human will going for the former. The debate is, essentially, about whether Jesus’ death accomplished the potential for anyone to be saved, or whether it accomplished the salvation of a few.

Today is Trinity Sunday in the Church of England calendar, and the Gospel reading this morning was John 3:1-19, which is the story of Nicodemus’ visit to Jesus. It’s also the source for the well-known verse: For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life. It’s also a passage the comes up fairly often in the discussions I mentioned above – but for the wrong reasons. The focus is usually on this well-known verse, with the focus on God’s love for the world and on the meaning of “believe in Him”. Although this is undeniable, it allows the debate to get sidetracked into analysing what God’s love and our belief mean. And this passage has a far more relevant lesson for this debate in the very next verse: Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him. It requires quite a lot of juggling to make that passage apply to anything other than the world as a whole – which rather implies that salvation is for the whole world. (And, be it noted, not just for humanity. For the whole of Creation!)

What’s more, there’s another verse that I’ve rarely seen used in the debates I’ve witnessed. And it’s odd because, again, it argues very strongly indeed against any limitation on salvation. 1 Cor 15:21-22: For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive. (KJV) It’s extremely hard, it seems to me, to argue in the light of this passage against the position that salvation is open to all (indeed, that salvation might even be obtained by all!). The only option is to argue that “resurrection” here isn’t equivalent to salvation but merely talks about the dead being raised in order to be condemned. However, this won’t do. The passage itself is clearly talking about salvation – Paul is offering assurance to the believers that there is, indeed, a resurrection to eternal life. Indeed, later in this chapter, Paul clearly talks about the resurrection body being perfect and imperishable. In this passage, resurrection and salvation are equivalent, and Paul explicitly says that Christ will rule over all things, eventually destroying even death itself.

Anyway, what irritates me about this debate is that is too often portrayed as being between “Bible-believing” and “liberal” – implying that, if you argue against limited atonement, you are ignoring the Bible. But the truth is that one cannot easily extract the idea of limited atonement from the Bible. The Bible is much too messy for that. At various places, it suggests both that everyone (indeed, the whole of Creation) will be saved and transformed. At others, it suggests that there are a few who God chose for salvation. This is a problem – but it’s not one we can solve by ignoring the Bible while claiming that we’re not!

Personally, I am neither Calvinist nor Arminian. I believe neither that our salvation is entirely random, depending on nothing in us at all (and, consequently, that even our response is not our own), nor that salvation is a human choice, with God merely passively reaching out to us. I believe that both positions must be incorrect, because both ignore part of the Bibilical witness. The problem, I think, isn’t so much that they’ve made mistakes in answering the questions as in that they are answering the wrong questions. To ask, “Is human choice or divine choice more important?” is to assume a mechanistic process, and to assume that the reductionist, analytical approach is the best approach. Better to say, with the Bible, that God in Christ has accomplished the salvation of the world, defeated death and the devil, and brought us into the Kingdom of God. Better to say, with the Bible, that we escape the fire only barely, snatched from it at great cost. Better to say, with the Bible, that God knew before the foundation of the world, that He would redeem us for His own pleasure.

Better, I think, to acknowledge the paradox.

pax et bonum