
For
Whom Did Christ Die?
by
Charles Hodge
(1823-1886)
The following presentation
is extracted from Charles Hodge's Systematic Theology, Vol. II,
originally published in 1871 (Charles Scribner & Co). The electronic edition of this
article was scanned and edited by Shane Rosenthal for Reformation
Ink. It is in the public domain and may be freely copied and
distributed. Original pagination has been kept for purposes of
reference.
CHARLES
HODGE, SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 544
1. State
of the Question
- This is a question between Augustinians
and Anti-Augustinians. The former believing that God from all
eternity having elected some to everlasting life, had a special
reference to their salvation in the mission and work of his Son.
The latter, denying that there has been any such election of
a part of the human family to salvation maintain that the mission
and work of Christ had an equal reference to all mankind.
-
- The question, therefore,
does not, in the first place, concern the nature of Christ's
work. It is true, if it be denied that his work was a satisfaction
for sin, and affirmed that it was merely didactic; that his life,
sufferings, and death were designed to reveal and confirm truth;
then it would follow of course that it had no reference to one
class of men more than to another, or to men more than to angels.
Truth is designed for the illumination of all the minds to which
it is presented. But admitting the work of Christ to have been
a true satisfaction for sin, its design may still be an open
question. Accordingly, Lutherans and Reformed, although they
agree entirely as to the nature of the atonement, differ as to
its design. The former maintain that it had an equal reference
to all mankind, the latter that it had special reference to the
elect.
-
- In the second place,
the question does not concern the value of Christ's satisfaction.
That Augustinians admit to be infinite. Its value depends on
the dignity of the sacrifice; and as no limit can be placed to
the dignity of the Eternal Son of God who offered Himself for
our sins, so no limit can be assigned to the meritorious value
of his work. It is a gross misrepresentation of the Augustinian
doctrine to say that it teaches that Christ suffered so much
for so many; that He would have suffered more had more been included
in the purpose of salvation. This is not the doctrine of any
Church on earth, and never has been. What was sufficient for
one was suffcient for all. Nothing less than the light and heat
of the sun is sufficient for any one plant or animal. But what
is absolutely
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 545
-
- necessary for each
is abundantly sufficient for the infinite number and variety
of plants and animals which fill the earth. All that Christ did
and suffered would have been necessary had only one human soul
been the object of redemption; and nothing different and nothing
more would have been required had every child of Adam been saved
through his blood.
-
- In the third place,
the question does not concern the suitableness of the atonement.
What was suitable for one was suitable for all. The righteousness
of Christ, the merit of his obedience and death, is needed for
justification by each individual of our race, and therefore is
needed by all. It is no more appropriate to one man than to another.
Christ fulfilled the conditions of the covenant under which all
men were placed. He rendered the obedience required of all, and
suffered the penalty which all had incurred; and therefore his
work is equally suited to all.
-
- In the fourth place,
the question does not concern the actual application of the redemption
purchased by Christ. The parties to this controversy are agreed
that some only, and not all of mankind are to be actually saved.
-
- The whole question,
therefore, concerns simply the purpose of God in the mission
of his Son. What was the design of Christ's coming into the world,
and doing and suffering all He actually did and suffered? Was
it merely to make the salvation of all men possible; to remove
the obstacles which stood in the way of the offer of pardon and
acceptance to sinners? or, was it specially to render certain
the salvation of his own people, i.e., of those given to Him
by the Father? The latter question is affirmed by Augustinians,
and denied by their opponents. It is obvious that if there be
no election of some to everlasting life, the atonement can have
no special reference to the elect. It must have equal reference
to all mankind. But it does not follow from the assertion of
its having a special reference to the elect that it had no reference
to the non-elect. Augustinians readily admit that the death of
Christ had a relation to man, to the whole human family, which
it had not to, the fallen angels. It is the ground on which salvation
is offered to every creature under heaven who hears, the gospel;
but it gives no authority for a like offer to apostate angels.
It moreover secures, to the whole race at large, and to all classes
of men, innumerable, blessings, both providential and religious.
It was, of course, designed to produce these effects; and, therefore,
He died to secure them. In view of the effects which the death
of Christ produces on the relation of all mankind to God, it
has in all ages been customary
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 546
-
- with Augustinians
to say that Christ died "sufficienter pro omnibus, efficaciter
tantum pro electis;" sufficiently for all, efficaciously
only for the elect. There is a sense, therefore, in which He
died for all, and there is a sense in which He died for the elect
alone. The simple question is, Had the death of Christ a reference
to the elect which it had not to other men? Did He come into
the world to secure the salvation of those given to Him by the
Father, so that the other effects of his work are merely incidental
to what was done for the attainment of that object?
-
-
- 2.
Proof of the Augustinian Doctrine.
-
- That these questions
must be answered in the affirmative, is evident,
-
- 1. From the nature
of the covenant of redemption. It is admitted that there was
a covenant between the Father and the Son in relation to the
salvation of men. It is admitted that Christ came into the world
in execution of that covenant. The nature of the covenant, therefore,
determines the object of his death. According to one view, man
having by his fall lost the ability of fulfilling, the conditions
of the covenant of life, God, for Christ's sake, enters into
a new covenant, offering men salvation upon other and easier
terms; namely, as some say, faith and repentance, and others
evangelical obedience. If such be the nature of the plan of salvation,
then it is obvious that the work of Christ has equal reference
to all mankind. According to another view, the work of Christ
was designed to secure the pardon of original sin and the gift
of the Holy Spirit for all men, Jews or Gentiles, and those are
saved who duly improve the grace they severally receive. The
former is the doctrine of the ancient Semi-Pelagians and modern
Remonstrants; the latter of the Wesleyan Arminians. The Lutherans
hold that God sent his Son to make a full and real legal satisfaction
for the sins of all mankind; and that on the ground of this perfect
satisfaction the offer of salvation is made to all who hear the
gospel; that grace is given (in the word and sacraments) which,
if unresisted, is sufficient to secure their salvation. The French
theologians at Saumur, in the 17th century, taught also that
Christ came into the world to do whatever was necessary for the
salvation of men. But God, foreseeing that, if left to themselves,
men would universally reject the offers of mercy, elected some
to be the subjects of his saving grace by which they are brought
to faith and repentance According to this view of the plan of
salvation, election is subordinate to redemption. God first redeems
all and then
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 547
-
- elects some. This
is the view extensively adopted in this country. According to
Augustinians, men, by their fall, having sunk into a state of
sin and misery, might justly have been left, as were the fallen
angels, to perish in their sins. But God, in his infinite mercy,
having determined to save a multitude whom no man could number,
gave them to his Son as his inheritance, provided He would assume
their nature and fulfil all righteousness in their stead. In
the accomplishment of this plan Christ did come into the world,
and did obey and suffer in the place of those thus given to Him,
and for their salvation. This was the definite object of his
mission, and therefore his death had a reference to them which
it could not possibly have to those whom God determined to leave
to the just recompense of their sins. Now this plan only supposes
that God determined from eternity to do what in time He has actually
accomplished. If it were just that all men should perish on account
of their sin it was just to leave a portion of the race thus
to perish, while the salvation of the other portion is a matter
of unmerited favour. It can hardly be denied that God did thus
enter into covenant with his Son. That is, that He did promise
Him the salvation of his people as the reward of his incarnation
and sufferings; that Christ did come into the world and suffer
and die on that condition, and, having performed the condition,
is entitled to the promised reward. These are facts so clearly
and so repeatedly stated in the Scriptures as not to admit of
their being called into question. But if such is the plan of
God respecting the salvation of men then it of necessity follows
that election precedes redemption; that God had determined whom
He would save before He sent his Son to save them. Therefore
our Lord said that those given to Him by his Father should certainly
come to Him, and that He would raise them up at the last day.
These Scriptural facts cannot be admitted without its being also
admitted that the death of Christ had a reference to his people,
whose salvation it rendered certain, which it had not to others
whom, for infinitely wise reasons, God determined to leave to
themselves. It follows, therefore, from the nature of the covenant
of redemption, as presented in the Bible, that Christ did not
die equally for all mankind, but that He gave Himself for his
people and for their redemption.
-
-
- Argument
from the Doctrine of Election.
-
- 2. This follows also
almost necessarily from the doctrine of election. Indeed it never
was denied that Christ died specially for the elect until the
doctrine of election itself was rejected. Augustine,
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 548
-
- the follower and expounder
of St. Paul, taught that God out of his mere good pleasure had
elected some to everlasting life, and held that Christ came into
the world to suffer and die for their salvation. He purchased
them with his own precious blood. The Semi-Pelagians, in denying
the doctrine of election, of course denied that Christ's death
had more reference to one class of men than to another. The Latin
Church, so long as it held to the Augustinian doctrine of election,
held also to Augustine's doctrine concerning the design and objects
of Christ's death. All through the Middle Ages this was one of
the distinctive doctrines of those who resisted the progress
of the Semi-Pelagian party in the Western Church. At the time
of the Reformation the Lutherans, so long as they held to the
one doctrine held also to the other. The Reformed, in holding
fast the doctrine of election, remained faithful to their denial
of the doctrine that the work of Christ had equal reference to
all mankind. It was not until the Remonstrants in Holland, under
the teaching of Arminius, rejected the Church doctrine of original
sin, of the inability of fallen man to anything spiritually good,
the sovereignty of God in election, and the perseverance of the
saints, that the doctrine that the atonement had a special reference
to the people of God was rejected. It is, therefore, a matter
of history that the doctrine of election and the Augustinian
doctrine as to the design of the work of Christ have been inseparably
united. As this connection is historical so also is it logical.
The one doctrine necessarily involves the other. If God from
eternity determined to save one portion of the human race and
not another, it seems to be a contradiction to say that the plan
of salvation had equal reference to both portions; that the Father
sent his Son to die for those whom He had predetermined not to
save, as truly as, and in the same sense that He gave Him up
for those whom He had chosen to make the heirs of salvation.
-
-
- Express
Declarations of Scripture.
-
- 3. We accordingly
find numerous passages in which the design of Christ's death
is declared to be, to save his people from their sins. He did
not come merely to render their salvation possible, but actually
to deliver them from the curse of the law, and from the power
of sin. This is included in all the Scriptural representations
of the nature and design of his work. No man pays a ransom without
the certainty of the deliverance of those for whom it is paid.
It is not a ransom unless it actually redeems. And an offering
is no sacrifice unless it actually expiates and propitiates.
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 549
-
- The effect of a ransom
and sacrifice may indeed be conditional, but the occurrence of
the condition will be rendered certain before the costly sacrifice
is offered.
-
- There are also very
numerous passages in which it is expressly declared that Christ
gave Himself for his Church (Ephesians v. 25); that He laid down
his life for his sheep (John x. 15); that He laid down his life
for his friends (John xv. 13); that He died that He might gather
together in one the children of God that are scattered abroad
(John xi. 52); that it was the Church which He purchased with
his blood (Acts xx. 28). When mankind are divided into two classes,
the Church and the world, the friends and the enemies of God,
the sheep and the goats, whatever is affirmed distinctively of
the one class is impliedly denied of the other. When it is said
that Christ loved his Church and gave Himself for it, that He
laid down his life for his sheep, it is clear that something
is said of the Church and of the sheep, which is not true of
those who belong to neither. When it is said that a man labours
and sacrifices health and strength for his children, it is thereby
denied that the motive which controls him is mere philanthropy,
or that the design he has in view is the good of society. He
may indeed be a philanthropist, and he may recognize the fact
that the well-being of his children ill promote the welfare of
society, but this does not alter the case. It still remains true
that love for his children is the motive, and their good his
object. It is difficult, in the light of Ephesians v. 25, where
the death of Christ is attributed to his love of his Church,
and is said to have been designed for its sanctification and
salvation, to believe that He gave Himself as much for reprobates
as for those whom He intended to save. Every assertion, therefore
that Christ died for a people, is a denial of the doctrine that
He died equally for all men.
-
-
- Argument
from the Special Love of God.
-
- 4. By the love of
God is sometimes meant his goodness, of which all sensitive creatures
are the objects and of whose benefits they are the recipients.
Sometimes it means his special regard for the children of men,
not only as rational creatures, but also as the offspring of
Him who is the Father of the spirits of all men. Sometimes it
means that peculiar, mysterious, sovereign, immeasurable love
which passes knowledge, of which his own people, the Church of
the first-born whose names are written in heaven, are the objects.
Of this love it is taught, (1.) That it is infinitely great.
(2.) That it is discriminating, fixed on some and not upon others
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 550
-
- of the children of
men. It is compared to the love of a husband for his wife; which
from its nature is exclusive. (B.) That it is perfectly gratuitous
and sovereign, i.e., not founded upon the special attractiveness
of its objects, but like parental affection, on the mere fact
that they are his children. (4.) That it is immutable. (5.) That
it secures all saving blessings, and even all good; so that even
afflictions are among its fruits intended for the greater good
of the sufferer. Now to this love, not to general goodness, not
to mere philanthropy, but to this peculiar and infinite love,
the gift of Christ is uniformly referred. Herein is love, not
that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent his Son to
be the propitiation for our sins. (1 John iv. 10.) Hereby perceive
we the love of God (or, hereby we know what love is), because
He (Christ) laid down his life for us. (1 John iii. 16.) God
commendeth his love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners,
Christ died for us. Romans v. 8.) Greater love hath no man than
this, that a man lay down his life for his friends. (John xv.
13.) Nothing shall be able to separate us from the love of God
which is in Christ Jesus. (Romans viii. 35-39.) He that spared
not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall he
not with him also freely give us all things? (Romans viii. 32.)
The whole argument of the Apostle in Romans v. 1-11, and especially
throughout the eighth chapter, is founded upon this infinite
and immutable love of God to his people. From this he argues
their absolute security for time and eternity. Because He thus
loved them He gave his Son for them; and, having done this, He
would certainly give them everything necessary for their salvation.
No enemy should ever prevail against them; nothing could ever
separate them from his love. This whole argument is utterly irreconcilable
with the hypothesis that Christ died equally for all men. His
death is referred to the peculiar love of God to his people,
and was the pledge of all other saving gifts. This peculiar love
of God is not founded upon the fact that its objects are believers,
for He loved them as enemies, as ungodly, and gave his Son to
secure their being brought to faith, repentance, and complete
restoration to the divine image. It cannot, therefore, be explained
away into mere general benevolence or philanthropy. It is a love
which secured the communication of Himself to its objects, and
rendered their salvation certain; and consequently could not
be bestowed upon all men, indiscriminately. This representation
is so predominant in the Scriptures, namely, that the peculiar
love of God to his people, to his Church, to the elect, is the
source of the gift of Christ,
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 551
-
- of the mission of
the Holy Spirit, and of all other saving blessings, that it cannot
be ignored in any view of the plan and purpose of salvation.
With this representation every other statement of the Scriptures
must be consistent; and therefore the theory which denies this
great and precious truth, and which assumes that the love which
secured the gift of God's eternal Son, was mere benevolence which
had all men for its object, many of whom are allowed to perish,
must be unscriptural.
-
-
- Argument
from the Believer's Union with Christ.
-
- 6. Another argument
is derived from the nature of the union between Christ and his
people. The Bible teaches, (1.) That a certain portion of the
human race were given to Christ. (2.) That they were given to
Him before the foundation of the world. (3.) That all thus given
to Him will certainly come to Him and be saved. (4.) That this
union, so far as it was from eternity, is not a union of nature,
nor by faith, nor by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. It was
a federal union. (5.) That Christ, therefore, was a federal head
and representative. As such He came into the world, and all He
did and suffered was as a representative, as a substitute, one
acting in the place and for the benefit of others. But He was
the representative of those given to Him, i.e., of those who
were in Him. For it was this gift and the union consequent upon
it, that gave Him his representative character, or constituted
Him a federal head. He was therefore the federal head, not of
the human race, but of those given to Him by the Father. And,
therefore, his work, so far as its main design is concerned,
was for them alone. Whatever reference it had to others was subordinate
and incidental. All this is illustrated and proved by the Apostle
in Romans v. 12-21, in the parallel which he draws between Adam
and Christ. All mankind were in Adam. He was the federal head
and representative of his race. All men sinned in him and fell
with him in his first transgression. The sentence of condemnation
for his one offence passed upon all men. In like manner Christ
was the representative of his people. He acted for them. What
He did and suffered in their place, or as their representative,
they in the eye of the law, did and suffered. By his obedience
they are justified. As all in Adam died, so all in Christ are
made alive. Such is the nature of the union in both cases, that
the sin of the one rendered certain and rendered just the death
of all united to Adam, and the righteousness of the other rendered
certain and just the salvation of all who are in Him. The sin
of Adam did not make
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 552
-
- the condemnation of
all men merely possible; it was the ground of their actual condemnation.
So the righteousness of Christ did not make the salvation of
men merely possible, it secured the actual salvation of those
for whom He wrought. As it would be unreasonable to say that
Adam acted for those who were not in him; so it is unscriptural
to say that Christ acted for those who were not in Him. Nevertheless,
the act of Adam as the head and representative of his race, was
fruitful of evil consequences, not to man only, but to the earth
and all that it contains; and so the work of Christ is fruitful
of good consequences to others than those for whom He acted.
But this does not justify anyone in saying that Adam acted as
much as the representative of the brute creation, as of his posterity;
neither does it justify the assertion that Christ died for all
mankind in the same sense that He died for his own people. This
is all so clearly revealed in Scripture that it extorts the assent
of those who are decidedly opposed to the Augustinian system.
One class of those opponents, of whom Whitby may be taken as
a representative, admit the truth of all that has been said of
the representative character of Adam and Christ. But they maintain
that as Adam represented the whole race, so also did Christ;
and as in Adam all men die, so in Christ are all made alive.
But they say that this has nothing to do with spiritual death
in the one case, or with the salvation of the soul in the other.
The death which came on all men for the sin of Adam, was merely
the death of the body; and the life which comes on all through
Christ, is the restoration of the life of the body at the resurrection.
The Wesleyans take the same view of the representative character
of Christ and of Adam. Each stood for all mankind. Adam brings
upon all men the guilt of his first sin and corruption of nature.
Christ secures the removal of the guilt of original sin and a
seed of grace, or principle of spiritual life, for all men. So
also one class of Universalists hold that as all men are condemned
for the sin of Adam, so all are actually saved by the work of
Christ. Rationalists also are ready to admit that Paul does teach
all that Augustinians understand him to teach, but they say that
this was only his Jewish mode of presenting the matter. It is
not absolute truth, but a mere transient form suited to the age
of the Apostles. In all these cases, however, the main fact is
conceded. Christ did act as a representative; and what He did
secured with certainty the benefits of his work for those for
whom He acted. This being conceded, it of course follows that
He acted as the representative and substitute of those only who
are ultimately to be saved.
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 553
-
- 6. There is another
argument on this subject generally presented, which ought not
to be overlooked. The unity of the priestly office rendered the
functions of the priesthood inseparable. The high-priest interceded
for all those for whom he offered sacrifice. The one service
did not extend beyond the other. He bore upon his breast the
names of the twelve tribes. He represented them in drawing near
to God. He offered sacrifices for their sins on the great day
of atonement, and for them he interceded, and for no others.
The sacrifice and the intercession went together. What was true
of the Aaronic priests, is true of Christ. The former, we are
told, were the types of the latter. Christ's functions as priest
are in like manner united. He intercedes for all for whom He
offered Himself as a sacrifice. He himself, however, says expressly,
"I pray not for the world, but for them which thou hast
given me." (John xvii. 9.) Him the Father heareth always,
and, therefore, He cannot be assumed to intercede for those who
do not actually receive the benefits of his redemption.
-
-
- The
Church Doctrine Embraces All the Facts of the Case.
-
- 7. The final test
of any theory is its agreeing or disagreeing with the facts to
be explained. The difficulty with all the Anti-Augustinian views
as to the design of Christ's death, is that while they are consistent
with more or less of the Scriptural facts connected with the
subject, they are utterly irreconcilable with not less clearly
revealed and equally important. They are consistent, for example,
with the fact that the work of Christ lays the foundation for
the offer of the gospel to all men, with the fact that men are
justly condemned for the rejection of that offer; and with the
fact that the Scriptures frequently assert that the work of Christ
had reference to all men. All these facts can be accounted for
on the assumption, that the great design of Christ's death was
to make the salvation of all men possible, and that it had equal
reference to every member of our race. But there are other facts
which this theory leaves out of view, and with which it cannot
be reconciled. On the other hand it is claimed that the Augustinian
doctrine recognizes all the Scriptural assertions connected with
the subject, and reconciles them all. If this be so, it must
be the doctrine of the Bible. The facts which are clearly revealed
concerning the death or work of Christ are,
-
- (1.) That God from
eternity gave a people to his Son.
- (2.) That the peculiar
and infinite love of God to his people is declared to be the
motive for the gift of his Son; and their salvation the design
of his mission.
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 554
-
- (3.) That it was as
their representative, head, and substitute, He came into the
world, assumed our nature, fulfilled all righteousness, and bore
the curse of the law.
- (4.) That the salvation
of all given to Him by the Father, in thus rendered absolutely
certain.
-
- That the Augustinian
scheme agrees with these great Scriptural facts, is readily admitted,
but it is denied that it accounts for the fact that on the ground
of the work of Christ, salvation may be offered to every human
being; and that all who hear and reject the gospel, are justly
condemned for their unbelief. That these are Scriptural facts
cannot be denied, and if the Augustinian doctrine does not provide
for them, it must be false or defective. There are different
grounds on which it is assumed that the Augustinian doctrine
does not provide for the universal offer of the gospel. One is,
the false assumption that Augustinians teach that the satisfaction
of Christ was in all respects analogous to the payment of a debt,
a satisfaction to commutative or commercial justice. Hence it
is inferred that Christ suffered so much for so many; He paid
so much for one soul, and so much for another, and of course
He would have been called upon to pay more if more were to have
been saved. If this be so, then it is clear that the work of
Christ can justify the offer of salvation to those only whose
debts He has actually cancelled. To this view of the case it
may be remarked,
-
- 1. That this doctrine
was never held by any historical church and the ascription of
it to Augustinians can only be accounted for on the ground of
ignorance.
-
- 2. It involves the
greatest confusion of ideas. It confounds the obligations which
arise among men as owners of property, with the obligations of
rational creatures to an infinitely holy God. A debtor is one
owner, and a creditor is another. Commutative justice requires
that they should settle their mutual claims equitably. But God
is not one owner and the sinner another. They do not stand in
relation to each other as two proprietors. The obligation which
binds a debtor to pay a creditor, and the principle which impels
a just God to punish sin, are entirely distinct. God is the absolute
owner of all things. We own nothing. We cannot sustain to Him,
in this respect, the relation of a debtor to his creditor. The
objection in question, therefore, is founded on an entire mistake
or misrepresentation of the attribute of justice, to which, according
to Augustinians, the satisfaction of Christ is rendered. Because
the sin of Adam was the ground of the condemnation of his race,
does
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 555
-
- any man infer that
He sinned so much for one man and so much for another? Why then
should it be said that because the righteousness of Christ is
the judicial ground of our salvation, that He did and suffered
so much for one man and so much for another?
-
- 3. As this objection
is directed against a theory which no Church has ever adopted,
and as it attributes to God a form of justice which cannot possibly
belong to Him, so it is contrary to those scriptural representations
on which the Augustinian doctrine is founded. The Scriptures
teach that Christ saves us as a priest, by offering Himself as
a sacrifice for our sins. But a sacrifice was not a payment of
a debt, the payment of so much for so much. A single victim was
sometimes a sacrifice for one individual; sometimes for the whole
people. On the great day of atonement the scape-goat bore the
sins of the people, whether they were more or less numerous.
It had no reference at all to the number of persons for whom
atonement was to be made. So Christ bore the sins of his people;
whether they were to be a few hundreds, or countless millions,
or the whole human family, makes no difference as to the nature
of his work, or as to the value of his satisfaction. What was
absolutely necessary for one, was abundantly sufficient for all.
-
- The objection, however,
is at times presented in a somewhat different form. Admitting
the satisfaction of Christ to be in itself of infinite value,
how can it avail for the non-elect if it was not designed for
them? It does not avail for the fallen angels, because it was
not intended for them; how then can it avail for the non-elect,
if not designed for them? How can a ransom, whatever its intrinsic
value, benefit those for whom it was not paid? In this form the
objection is far more specious. It is, however, fallacious. It
overlooks the peculiar nature of the case. It ignores the fact
that all mankind were placed under the same constitution or covenant.
What was demanded for the salvation of one was demanded for the
salvation of all. Every man is required to satisfy the demands
of the law. No man is required to do either more or less. If
those demands are satisfied by a representative or substitute,
his work is equally available for all. The secret purpose of
God in providing such a substitute for man, has nothing to do
with the nature of his work, or with its appropriateness. The
righteousness of Christ being of infinite value or merit, and
being in its nature precisely what all men need, may be offered
to all men. It is thus offered to the elect and to the non-elect;
and it is offered to both classes conditionally. That condition
is a cordial acceptance of it as the only ground of justification.
If any of the elect (being adults)
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 556
-
- fail thus to accept
of it, they perish. If any of the non-elect should believe, they
would be saved. What more does any Anti-Augustinian scheme provide?
The advocates of such schemes say, that the design of the work
of Christ was to render the salvation of all men possible. All
they can mean by this is, that if any man (elect or non-elect)
believes, he shall, on the ground of what Christ has done, be
certainly saved. But Augustinians say the same thing. Their doctrine
provides for this universal offer of salvation, as well as any
other scheme. It teaches that God in effecting the salvation
of his own people, did whatever was necessary for the salvation
of all men, and therefore to all the offer may be, and in fact
is made in the gospel. If a ship containing the wife and children
of a man standing on the shore is wrecked, he may seize a boat
and hasten to their rescue. His motive is love to his family;
his purpose is to save them. But the boat which he has provided
may be large enough to receive the whole of the ship's company.
Would there be any inconsistency in his offering them the opportunity
to escape? Or, would this offer prove that he had no special
love to his own family and no special design to secure their
safety. And if any or all of those to whom the offer was made,
should refuse to accept it, some from one reason, some from another;
some because they did not duly appreciate their danger; some
because they thought they could save themselves; and some from
enmity to the man from whom the offer came, their guilt and folly
would be just as great as though the man had no special regard
to his own family, and no special purpose to effect their deliverance.
Or, if a man's family were with others held in captivity, and
from love to them and with the purpose of their redemption, a
ransom should be offered sufficient for the delivery of the whole
body of captives, it is plain that the offer of deliverance might
be extended to all on the ground of that ransom, although specially
intended only for a part of their number. Or, a man may make
a feast for his own friends, and the provision be so abundant
that he may throw open his doors to all who are willing to come.
This is precisely what God, according to the Augustinian doctrine,
has actually done. Out of special love to his people, and with
the design of securing their salvation, He has sent his Son to
do what justifies the offer of salvation to all who choose to
accept of it. Christ, therefore, did not die equally for all
men. He laid down his life for his sheep; He gave Himself for
his Church. But in perfect consistency with all this, He did
all that was necessary, so far as a satisfaction to justice is
concerned, all that is required for
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 557
-
- the salvation of all
men. So that all Augustinians can join with the Synod of Dort
in saying, "No man perishes for want of an atonement."
-
-
- If
the Atonement Be Limited in Design, It Must Be Restricted in
the Offer.
-
- There is still another
ground on which it is urged that Augustinians cannot consistently
preach the gospel to every creature. Augustinians teach, it is
urged, that the work of Christ is a satisfaction to divine justice.
From this it follows that justice cannot condemn those for whose
sins it has been satisfied. It cannot demand that satisfaction
twice, first from the substitute and then from the sinner himself.
This would be manifestly unjust, far worse than demanding no
punishment at all. From this it is inferred that the satisfaction
or righteousness of Christ, if the ground on which a sinner may
be forgiven, is the ground on which he must be forgiven. It is
not the ground on which he may be forgiven, unless it is the
ground on which he must be forgiven. If the atonement be limited
in design it must be limited in its nature, and if limited in
its nature it must be limited in its offer. This objection again
arises from confounding a pecuniary and a judicial satisfaction
between which Augustinians are so careful to discriminate. This
distinction has already been presented on a previous page (470).
There is no grace in accepting, a pecuniary satisfaction. It
cannot be refused. It ipso facto liberates. The moment
the debt is paid the debtor is free; and that without any condition.
Nothing of this is true in the case of judicial satisfaction.
If a substitute be provided and accepted it is a matter of grace.
His satisfaction does not ipso facto liberate. It may
accrue to the benefit of those for whom it is made at once or
at a remote period; completely or gradually; on conditions or
unconditionally; or it may never benefit them at all unless the
condition on which its application is suspended be performed.
These facts are universally admitted by those who hold that the
work of Christ was a true and perfect satisfaction to divine
justice. The application of its benefits is determined by the
covenant between the Father and the Son. Those for whom it was
specially rendered are not justified from eternity; they are
not born in a justified state; they are by nature, or birth,
the children of wrath even as others. To be the children of wrath
is to be justly exposed to divine wrath. They remain in this
state of exposure until they believe, and should they die (unless
in infancy) before they believe they would inevitably
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 558
- perish notwithstanding
the satisfaction made for their sins. It is the stipulations
of the covenant which forbid such a result. Such being the nature
of the judicial satisfaction rendered by Christ to the law, under
which all men are placed, it may be sincerely offered to all
men with the assurance that if they believe it shall accrue to
their salvation. His work being specially designed for the salvation
of his own people, renders, through the conditions of the covenant,
that event certain; but this is perfectly consistent with its
being made the ground of the general offer of the gospel. Lutherans
and Reformed agree entirely, as before stated, in their views
of the nature of the satisfaction of Christ, and consequently,
so far as that point is concerned, there is the same foundation
for the general offer of the gospel according to either scheme.
What the Reformed or Augustinians hold about election does not
affect the nature of the atonement. That remains the same whether
designed for the elect or for all mankind. It does not derive
its nature from the secret purpose of God as to its application.
-
-
- Certain
Passages of Scripture Considered.
-
- Admitting, however,
that the Augustinian doctrine that Christ died specially for
his own people does account for the general offer of the gospel,
how is it to be reconciled with those passages which, in one
form or another, teach that He died for all men? In answer to
this question, it may be remarked in the first place that Augustinians
do not deny that Christ died for all men. What they deny is that
He died equally, and with the same design, for all men. He died
for all, that He might arrest the immediate execution of the
penalty of the law upon the whole of our apostate race; that
He might secure for men the innumerable blessings attending their
state on earth, which, in one important sense, is a state of
probation; and that He might lay the foundation for the offer
of pardon and reconciliation with God, on condition of faith
and repentance. These are the universally admitted consequences
of his satisfaction, and therefore they all come within its design.
By this dispensation it is rendered manifest to every intelligent
mind in heaven and upon earth, and to the finally impenitent
themselves, that the perdition of those that perish is their
own fault. They will not come to Christ that they may have life.
They refuse to have Him to reign over them. He calls but they
will not answer. He says, "Him that cometh to me, I will
in no wise cast out." Every human being who does come is
saved. This is what is meant when it is said, or implied in Scripture,
that Christ gave Himself
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 559
-
- as a propitiation,
not for our sins only, but for the sins of the whole world. He
was a propitiation effectually for the sins of his people, and
sufficiently for the sins of the whole world. Augustinians have
no need to wrest the Scriptures. They are under no necessity
of departing from their fundamental principle that it is the
duty of the theologian to subordinate his theories to the Bible,
and teach not what seems to him to be true or reasonable, but
simply what the Bible teaches.
-
- But, in the second
place, it is to be remarked that general terms are often used
indefinitely and not comprehensively. They mean all kinds, or
classes, and not all and every individual. When Christ said,
"I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men
unto me," He meant men of all ages, classes, and conditions,
and not every individual man. When God predicted that upon the
advent of the Messiah He would pour out his Spirit upon all flesh,
all that was foretold was a general effusion of the Holy Ghost.
And when it is said that all men shall see (experience) the salvation
of God, it does not mean that all men individually, but that
a vast multitude of all classes shall be saved. The same remark
applies to the use of the term world. It means men, mankind,
as a race or order of beings. No one hesitates to call the Lord
Jesus the "Salvator hominum." He is so hailed and so
worshipped wherever his name is known. But no one means by this
that He actually saves all mankind. What is meant is that He
is our Saviour, the Saviour of men, not of angels, not of Jews
exclusively, nor yet of the Gentiles only, not of the rich, or
of the poor alone, not of the righteous only, but also of publicans
and sinners. He is the Saviour of all men who come unto Him.
Thus when He is called the Lamb of God that bears the sin of
the world, all that is meant is that He bears the sins of men;
He came as a sin-offering bearing not his own, but the sins of
others.
-
- In the third place,
these general terms are always to be understood in reference
to the things spoken of in the context. When all things, the
universe, is said to be put in subjection to Christ it is, of
course, to be understood of the created universe. In 1 Corinthians
xv. 27, Paul expressly mentions this limitation, but in Hebrews
ii. 8, it is not mentioned. It is, however, just as obviously
involved in the one passage as in the other. When in Romans v.
18, it is said that by the righteousness of Christ the free gift
of justification of life has come upon all men, it is of necessity
limited to the all in Christ of whom the Apostle is speaking.
So also in 1 Corinthians xv. 22, As in Adam all die, even so
in Christ shall
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 560
-
- all be made alive
(i.e., quickened with the life of Christ), it is in both members
of the sentence not absolutely all, but the all in Adam and the
all in Christ. This is still more obvious in Romans viii. 32,
where it is said that God gave up his own Son for us all. The
us refers to the class of persons of which the whole chapter
treats, namely, of those to whom there is no condemnation, who
are led by the Spirit, for whom Christ intercedes, etc. Ephesians
i. 10, and Colossians i. 20, are favorite texts with the Universalists,
for they teach that all in heaven and on earth are reunited unto
God by Jesus Christ. They are right in understanding these passages
as teaching the salvation of all men, if by all in this
connection we must understand all human beings. But why limit
the word to all men? Why not include angels and even irrational
creatures? The answer is, because the Bible teaches that Christ
came to save men, and neither angels nor irrational animals.
This is only saying that all must be limited to the objects of
redemption. Who they are is to be learned not from these general
terms, but from the general teaching of Scripture. The all
who are to be united in one harmonious body by Jesus Christ are
the all whom He came to save. The same remark applies to Hebrews
ii. 9, Christ tasted "death for every man." It is well
known that Origen understood this of every creature; others,
of every rational creature; others, of every fallen rational
creature; others, of every man; others, of every one of those
given to the Son by the Father. How are we to decide which of
these interpretations is correct? So far as the mere signification
of the words is concerned, one is as correct as another. It is
only from the analogy of Scripture that the meaning of the sacred
writer can be determined. Christ tasted death for every one of
the objects of redemption. Whether He came to redeem all created
sensuous beings, or all rational creatures, or all men, or all
given to Him in the councils of eternity, the Bible must decide.
The great majority of the passages quoted to prove that Christ
died equally for all men come, under one or other of the classes
just mentioned, and have no real bearing on the question concerning
the design of his death.
-
- There is another class
of passages with which it is said that the Augustinian doctrine
cannot be reconciled; such, namely, as speak of those perishing
for whom Christ died. In reference to these passages it may be
remarked, first, that there is a sense, as before stated, in
which Christ did die for all men. His death had the effect of
justifying the offer of salvation to every man; and of course
was designed to have that effect. He therefore died sufficiently
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 561
-
- for all. In the second
place, these passages are, in some cases at least, hypothetical.
When Paul exhorts the Corinthians not to cause those to perish
for whom Christ died, he merely, exhorts them not to act selfishly
towards those for whom Christ had exhibited the greatest compassion.
The passage neither asserts nor implies that any actually perish
for whom Christ died. None perish whom He came to save; multitudes
perish to whom salvation is offered on the ground of his death.
-
- As God in the course
of nature and in the dispensation of his providence, moves on
in undisturbed majesty, little concerned at the apparent complication
or even inconsistency of one effect or one dispensation with
another; so the Spirit of God in the Bible unfolds the purposes,
truths, and dealings of God, just as they are, assured that even
finite minds will ultimately be able to see the consistency of
all his revelations. The doctrines of foreordination, sovereignty,
and effectual providential control, go hand in hand with those
of the liberty and responsibility of rational creatures. Those
of freedom from the law, of salvation by faith without works,
and of the absolute necessity of holy living stand side by side.
On the same page we find the assurance of God's love to sinners,
and declarations that He would that all men should come unto
Him and live, with explicit assertions that He has determined
to leave multitudes to perish in their sins. In like manner,
the express declarations that it was the incomprehensible and
peculiar love of God for his own people, which induced Him to
send his Son for their redemption; that Christ came into the
world for that specific object; that He died for his sheep; that
He gave Himself for his Church; and that the salvation of all
for whom He thus offered Himself is rendered certain by the gift
of the Spirit to bring them to faith and repentance, are intermingled
with declarations of good-will to all mankind, with offers of
salvation to every one who will believe in the Son of God, and
denunciations of wrath against those who reject these overtures
of mercy. All we have to do is not to ignore or deny either of
these modes of representation, but to open our minds wide enough
to receive them both, and reconcile them as best we can. Both
are true, in all the cases above referred to, whether we can
see their consistency or not.
-
- In the review of this
subject, it is plain that the doctrine that Christ died equally
for all men with the purpose of rendering the salvation of all
possible, has no advantage over the doctrine that He died specially
for his own people, and with the purpose of rendering their salvation
certain. It presents no higher view of
-
CHARLES HODGE,
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. II, Page 562
-
- the love of God, or
of the value of Christ's work. It affords no better ground for
the offer of salvation "to every creature," nor does
it render more obvious the justice of the condemnation of those
who reject the gospel. They are condemned by God, angels, and
men, and by their own consciences, because they refuse to believe
that Jesus is the Son of God, God manifest in the flesh, and
to love, worship, trust, and obey Him accordingly. The opposite,
or anti-Augustinian doctrine, is founded on a partial view of
the facts of the case. It leaves out of view the clearly revealed
special love of God to his peculiar people; the union between
Christ and his chosen; the representative character which He
assumed as their substitute; the certain efficacy of his sacrifice
in virtue of the covenant of redemption; and the necessary connection
between the gift of Christ and the gift of the Holy Spirit. It
moreover leads to confused and inconsistent views of the plan
of salvation, and to unscriptural and dangerous theories of the
nature of the atonement. It therefore is the limited and meagre
scheme; whereas the orthodox doctrine is catholic and comprehensive;
full of consolation and spiritual power. as well as of justice
to all mankind.
This article was made available on the
internet via REFORMATION INK
(www.markers.com/ink).
Refer any correspondence to Shane Rosenthal: ReformationInk at mac.com (connect and write as @mac.com -- when I connect them I get a lot of junk mail).