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by Benjamin Wheaton
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For theologians and students of church history
Challenges misconceptions about Christ's atonement
You will gain deeper insight into early Christian beliefs
Correcting a popular view of the atonement.
Was Christ's death a victory over death or a substitution for sin? Many today follow Gustav Aulén's Christus Victor view, which portrays Christ's death as primarily a victory over the powers of evil and death. According to Aulén, this was the dominant view of the church until Anselm reframed atonement as satisfaction and the Reformers reframed it as penal substitution.
In Suffering, Not Power, Benjamin Wheaton challenges this common narrative. Sacrificial and substitutionary language was common well before Anselm's Cur Deus Homo. Wheaton displays this through a careful analysis of three medieval figures whose writings on the atonement are commonly overlooked: Caesarius of Arles, Haimo of Auxerre, and Dante Alighieri. These individuals come from different times and contexts and wrote in different genres, but each spoke of Christ's death as a sacrifice of expiation and propitiation made by God to God.
Let history speak for itself, read the evidence, and reconsider the church's belief in Christ's substitutionary death for sinners.
Title
Suffering, Not Power: Atonement in the Middle Ages
Book Format
Paperback
Publisher
Lexham Press
Published
June 2022
Weight
341g
Dimensions
13.8 x 21.4 x 1.8 cm
ISBN
9781683595991
ISBN-10
1683595998
Eden Code
5632305
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£14.79
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