THCT600 – Creation, Grace & Salvation
Joseph W. Moloney
S00152525
Final Essay
In consultation with one of the lecturers, choose one of the major topics of the unit (salvation) and:
(a) summarise the approach of two theologians to this topic [900 words];
(b) discuss the strengths and limitations of their approaches [300 words]; and
(c) reflect on how at least one of these theological approaches could contribute to the transformation of
your professional, pastoral, or personal context [300 words].
In this essay, I will look at Ransom Theory based on Origen’s work and then briefly St Anselm’s model of
Satisfaction. I will analyse certain misconceptions about Ransom Theory, especially the idea that Satan has
any explicit legal claim over mankind, and also that this model of atonement in its fullness is the model that
St Paul teaches. I conclude by looking to Pope Benedict and how he calls for these traditional models like
Ransom Theory and Satisfaction Theory to be reconciled by complimenting them with a generous
discussion about the nature of love, sacrifice and the Holy Trinity.
The Ransom Theory of Atonement
The Ransom Theory of Atonement proposes that Jesus’s passion and death on the cross was needed as a
ransom to be paid so that mankind could be freed:
...there is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself as
a ransom for all...1
Thus, the idea of a ransom is credible insofar as St Paul and even Christ in His own words2 clearly affirm.
However, idea of Christ as a ransom has two divergent conclusions. The first troubling conclusion is that
this ransom must be paid to satiate God. The other conclusion, almost equally as dire, is that the ransom
is actually paid to Satan, who is constructed as a kind of legal captor of mankind. Proponents of both
1
1 Tim 2:5-6 (RSV).
Mark 10:45 – “For even the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom
for many”.
2
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THCT600 – Creation, Grace & Salvation
Joseph W. Moloney
S00152525
versions of this theory rely on the work of Origen’s writing about spiritual combat and Satan’s captivity of
mankind. For Origen, it was because of this spiritual warfare that God the Son became incarnate to join
with mankind in a battle against Satan and his angels that we could not win otherwise:
[Jesus Christ] being not only an example of death endured for the sake of piety, but also
the first blow in the conflict which is to overthrow the power of that evil spirit the devil,
who had obtained dominion over the whole world.3
Jesus’s passion, death and resurrection therefore signalled Christ’s final victory, and Origen appeals to
Colossians to emphasise this:
Having cancelled the bond which stood against us with its legal demands; this he set
aside, nailing it to the cross. He disarmed the principalities and powers and made a public
example of them, triumphing over them in him.4
Here in Colossians we can see Origen’s assertion that Satan has some kind of legal claim or victory over
mankind. Origen builds on this idea of a legal relationship between the three parties – being God, mankind
and Satan:
And, on this account, “the Father spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us
all.”… [Yet] contrary to their expectation, it was to the destruction of their own kingdom
and power, that they received from the Father the Son.5
The question is, then, who was the recipient of the ransom of Christ’s life? Generally, it is argued that
Origen was proposing that Satan received the ransom, however, I disagree. Yes, Origen clearly says that
Jesus was “delivered” to Satan, who then delivered Jesus to men to destroy; but that does not necessarily
equate to a payment/transaction by God to Satan. The difference between God making payment to Satan
and God delivering Jesus to him is crucial, because it is the difference between God actively willing the
destruction of His Son on Calvary, or on the contrary, believing that Jesus was permitted to be delivered to
3
Origen, Contra Celsius, Ch. 7, 17. Translated by Frederick Crombie. From Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. 4. Eds.:
Alexander Roberts, James Donaldson, and A. Cleveland Coxe, (Buffalo, NY: Christian Literature Publishing Co.,
1885.). http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/04167.htm
4
Col 2:14-15.
5
Origen, Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew, Ch. 13, 9. Translated by Frederick Crombie. From AnteNicene Fathers, Vol. 4. Eds.: Alexander Roberts, James Donaldson, and A. Cleveland Coxe, (Buffalo, NY:
Christian Literature Publishing Co., 1885.). http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/101613.htm
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THCT600 – Creation, Grace & Salvation
Joseph W. Moloney
S00152525
Satan and men by God’s passive will. Even understanding God’s passive and active will, both conclusions
are really rather grim pastorally and made worse in the theological isolation they are normally received
within.
A God with no alternative? Pastoral problems and the pitfalls of Ransom Theory
The first obvious pastoral problem with payment to Satan is in explaining why God would permit man to
be bonded to Satan in the first place. From another angle, the questions become why an all sovereign God
was somehow in debt or bound to Satan at all for us? The idea that Jesus died and was ultimately sacrificed
to appease or fulfil a contract with Satan is doubly troubling. 6 God needs nothing, especially not to do
business with Satan. Thankfully, we can rest assured that nowhere in Scripture is there evidence of any kind
of payment to Satan or this perversion of the Ransom Theory. The tradition and teaching of the Church
echo the sentiments of St Gregory Nazianzen in deriding such a suggestion7:
Since a ransom belongs only to him who holds in bondage, I ask to whom was this offered,
and for what cause? If to the Evil One, fie upon the outrage! If the robber receives ransom,
not only from God, but a ransom which consists of God Himself, and has such an
illustrious payment for his tyranny.8
Clearly the bond is not held by Satan, but then what is the nature of this bond? A more careful reading of
St Paul in Colossians above makes it clear that the legal bond was cancelled or null – and therefore not paid
out to anyone. An almighty God does not bargain, make agreements, or transact with Satan. Rather, Satan’s
only claim was to knowing that “nothing impure”9 shell enter Heaven or the Presence of God and so
mankind would be left to join him in eternal damnation by default of the legal bond of sin. St Paul in
Romans 6:18 is clear that we have not been set free from Satan, but have “been set free from sin” and its
legal default if we choose, by the Grace of God.
6
Robert D. Culver, “The Doctrine of Atonement Before Anselm”, Global Journal of Classical Theology, Vol. 4.
No. 3, 2004, (Houston, MN: Patrick Henry College), 1. http://phc.edu/gj_1_toc_v4n3.php
7
Culver, Robert D., “The Doctrine of Atonement Before Anselm”, 2.
8
Gregory Nazianzen, Second Oration on Easter, XXII, Translated by Charles Gordon Browne and James Edward
Swallow. From Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, Vol. 7. Eds. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace.
(Buffalo, NY: Christian Literature Publishing Co., 1894). http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/310245.htm
9
Rev 21:27 – “But nothing unclean will ever enter it, nor anyone who does what is detestable or false”
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THCT600 – Creation, Grace & Salvation
Joseph W. Moloney
S00152525
From a catechumenate’s perspective, it’s not hard to see the importance of the difference – in one scenario
God is evidently left with no alternative but to submit to the conditions of a creature, no less, Satan. While
on the other hand, we have a God who upholds the free will of all creatures to the point of dying on a
cross.
St Anselm and God’s Honour
The alternative is that the sacrifice of Jesus on Calvary, was paid to God the Father – but isn’t this troubling
in itself? Doesn’t this mean that God was then our bondsman and our oppressor in some indirect way? In
isolation, this idea is still troubling and difficult to reconcile with an all loving and an all-powerful God. St
Anselm criticised Ransom Theory in Cur Deus Homo? by explaining that because of man’s sin, justice
demanded satisfaction for the debt incurred against God’s honour by our sins, which otherwise leaves us
deserving God’s wrath. St Anselm says no sin can be forgiven without satisfaction, and that a debt to
Divine justice has been incurred – and that debt must be paid. For God to ignore sin would be unjust and
create a cosmological imbalance affecting all creation, which would be neither just nor loving. The problem,
however, is that man could never make this satisfaction for himself because God is infinite and his offence
is therefore infinite. Thus, only an infinite could repay such a debt, which is why only Jesus, being both
human and divine, could possibly make satisfaction and redeem mankind, saving us from God’s eternal
wrath. He proposes that we participate and benefit in the great redeeming act of satisfaction to the Father
when we are united to Christ and die in Him. While this solution of St Anselm’s comes from a different
angle, ultimately this theory is still deficient, because we have a God who demands satisfaction (or in
Aquinas’s variation - punishment). Pope Benedict highlights:
[I]t is an unworthy concept of God to imagine a God who demands the slaughter of his
Son to pacify his wrath. God must not be thought of in this way. Such a concept of God
has nothing to do with the idea of God to be found in the New Testament.10
10
Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, Introduction to Christianity, San Francisco: St. Ignatius Press, 1968, 233.
Reprint: 2004. In: Dwyer, The Radical Theology of Benedict XVI,
http://www.rcda.org/offices/deacons/PDF/Dwyer/4-6-15.pdf
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THCT600 – Creation, Grace & Salvation
Joseph W. Moloney
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Even while St Anselm proposes that is not God’s wrath that is placated, but his honour that is restored, we
still have the problem of a Father who restores His honour and is ultimately “satisfied” by the slaughter of
His Son – which is ultimately a Pagan notion as James Allison argues, not a Jewish or Christian one.11 So,
in fact, the worst problem with Satisfaction Theory is that satisfaction is demanded at all, because it reveals
a God who is so concerned with his own honour and justice that He requires His Son to suffer and die –
or does it?
A Satisfying Theory?
Anyone can quickly realise the weaknesses inherent in the two models, and hence quite often Christians are
mocked for speaking of a Father who sends His Son to be slaughtered. Yet, does all this mean that Ransom
and also Satisfaction Theory are of no use to us? No, because what is most important to consider is that
all the theories have their extremes and become unworkable at some point, especially in theological
isolation. As an example, the atheist caricature of the argument of the Son being destroyed to satisfy the
Father equally applies as an extreme objection to all of our theories of atonement. However, the error of
this approach should be obvious to the Trinitarian - it overemphasises the diversity of the Holy Trinity
while neglecting the oneness of the Trinity. The fact that the Son died and not the Father does not mean
that one God sent another, but that one God descended in love to die for us.12
Pope Benedict instead talks about how reconciliation is something God does for us in Christ, and not
something done to restore the divine order, much less God’s honour.13 For him, the cross reveals our
weakness but it tells us to glory in our weakness because God Himself has shared in it, descending from
11
James Alison, “An Atonement Update,” Australian eJournal of Theology, October 2006, 4.
http://aejt.com.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0008/378656/AEJT_8.1_Alison_Atonement.pdf
12
Gerald O'Collins, “Redemption as Transforming Love”, in Jesus Our Redeemer: A Christian Approach to
Salvation, (Oxford University Press, UK, January 2007), 188.
http://www.oxfordscholarship.com/view/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199203130.001.0001/acprof9780199203130
13
Alison, James, “An Atonement Update,” 3.
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THCT600 – Creation, Grace & Salvation
Joseph W. Moloney
S00152525
His Heavenly throne to live amongst us and die with us – but not out of an absolute necessity, but as a
Revelation to the Church and as a testimony to the true nature of His love, which is self-sacrificial.
Therefore, it is in order that the true nature of love, humility and obedience could be revealed that required
that Calvary be a sacrifice which was “the expression of that foolish love of God’s that gives itself away to
the point of humiliation”.14 This view is known as the Moral Influence Theory, and it emphasises the
example and revelation of the life and death of Jesus. This model agrees with Scripture better when
complimenting Ransom or Satisfaction Theory, especially to balance out an overemphasis on the sacrificial
nature of Calvary or God demanding or requiring the death of His Son, by showing how mankind “does
nothing needful for God; the direction is all the other way”.15
Conclusion
In this essay, I have demonstrated how Ransom Theory and Satisfaction Theory are inadequate in
theological isolation and too often lend themselves to parody. Soteriology is nuanced and it is vital that we
understand and explain the Truth to the world in the light of the fullness of Tradition and Scripture. We
must avoid reducing these central mysteries of our faith to a counterfeit caricature of half-truths where
Calvary looks like just an accumulation of pain or God seems to demand sacrifice and/or will the suffering
of His Son (to name a few common errors). All of these conclusions are terrible distortions of the Gospel
and God’s love and triumph on Calvary. Pope Benedict challenges us to discover new and engaging ways
of proclaiming our faith – a faith based on the paradox of and great mystery of a God who died. So, while
it is true that sin incurs the righteous anger of the Just Judge, and that anger is averted by the satisfaction
made by Christ, it must not be thought that God is only moved to mercy and reconciliation because of this
satisfaction. Rather, God's merciful love is the cause, not the result of that satisfaction.
14
Ratzinger, Joseph Cardinal, Introduction to Christianity, 283.
Eric Osborn, "Love of enemies and recapitulation,” Vigiliae Christianae, Vol. 54, No. 1, 2000, 24.
https://login.ezproxy1.acu.edu.au/login?url=https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=rfh&A
N=ATLA0000006263&site=ehost-live
15
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THCT600 – Creation, Grace & Salvation
Joseph W. Moloney
S00152525
Bibliography
Alison, James, “An Atonement Update,” Australian eJournal of Theology, October 2006, 4.
http://aejt.com.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0008/378656/AEJT_8.1_Alison_Atonement.pdf
Dwyer, John, “The Radical Theology of Benedict XVI”, Deacons of the Diocese of Albany Theological Program,
May 2009, http://www.rcda.org/offices/deacons/PDF/Dwyer/4-6-15.pdf
Hahn, Scott, and Curtis Mitch, “When Did Jesus Celebrate the Last Supper,” The Ignatius Catholic Study
Bible - The New Testament. Vol. RSV Second Edition. San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2010.
Nazianzen, Gregory, Second Oration on Easter, XXII, Translated by Charles Gordon Browne and James
Edward Swallow. From Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, Vol. 7. Eds. Philip Schaff and
Henry Wace. (Buffalo, NY: Christian Literature Publishing Co., 1894).
http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/310245.htm
O'Collins, Gerald, “Redemption as Transforming Love”, in Jesus Our Redeemer: A Christian Approach to
Salvation, (Oxford University Press, UK, January 2007), 188.
http://www.oxfordscholarship.com/view/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199203130.001.0001/acprof9780199203130
Origen, Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew, Ch. 13, 9. Translated by Frederick Crombie. From Ante-Nicene
Fathers, Vol. 4. Eds.: Alexander Roberts, James Donaldson, and A. Cleveland Coxe, (Buffalo, NY:
Christian Literature Publishing Co., 1885.). http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/101613.htm
Origen, Contra Celsius, Ch. 7, 17. Translated by Frederick Crombie. From Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. 4. Eds.:
Alexander Roberts, James Donaldson, and A. Cleveland Coxe, (Buffalo, NY: Christian Literature
Publishing Co., 1885.). http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/04167.htm
Osborn, Eric, "Love of enemies and recapitulation,” Vigiliae Christianae, Vol. 54, No. 1, 2000, 12-31.
https://login.ezproxy1.acu.edu.au/login?url=https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=tru
e&db=rfh&AN=ATLA0000006263&site=ehost-live
Ratzinger, Joseph Cardinal, Introduction to Christianity, San Francisco: St. Ignatius Press, 1968, 233. Reprint:
2004. In: Dwyer, The Radical Theology of Benedict XVI,
http://www.rcda.org/offices/deacons/PDF/Dwyer/4-6-15.pdf
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