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Why God Never Punishes Sin

By Jeremy Myers
15 Comments

Why God Never Punishes Sin

Does God punish sin?In Christian circles, we often hear a lot about three topics: Sin, death, and resurrection.

The basic message often preached goes something like this:

  1. You are a sinner.
  2. God must punish sin.
  3. The punishment for sin is death.
  4. Jesus died in our place on the cross.
  5. Jesus rose again from the dead proving that He paid the penalty for our sin.
  6. So you should ____________ (fill in the blank for whatever gospel invitation your church teaches).

I suppose in general I don’t really have much of a problem with this list.

Although …

I would prefer #6 to more closely follow the way Jesus Himself offered eternal life to people in the Gospel of John (“Believe in Me for eternal life”).

And #5 is not exactly nuanced properly. I don’t think the resurrection first and foremost proves that Jesus paid the penalty for sin. First and foremost, the resurrection proves that Jesus was the Son of God (cf. Wright, The Resurrection of the Son of God, p. 728, 730), and by inference AS the Son of God, Jesus dealt with the issue of sin.

#4 is true … kind of. It is not as if we would have had to die on a cross if Jesus had not done so. Nor is it true that because Jesus died, we don’t die. We all still die. But whatever.

#1 is true, of course. Although I am not a big fan of starting a Gospel presentation with this truth.

And #2 and #3, well, depending on what is meant by the word “punish,” I may or may not object to these points.

So I guess in general, I do have some problems with this list … Ha!

But let me focus on this concept of punishment, because it is here where the sort of “gospel” presentation as summarized above can get pretty far off base.

When most people think of “punishment” they think of an angry God dealing out fiery wrath on everybody who crosses Him. They feel that sin must be punished, that pain and suffering must be meted about by God on all who disobey His will.

As a result, many Christians feel that since God “punishes” sin, we too must punish people. The logic here breaks down pretty quickly, just as it does with us “judging” people.

But what if God doesn’t punish people? ⇦ Click here to ask that question on Twitter and see what people say.

In this post and the next post we will look at four reasons why I think God does NOT punish. Does he discipline? Yes. Does He judge? Of course. But punish? No.

Here is the first reason God never punishes sin:

1. The Bible Never Teaches that God “Punishes” Sin

Yes, yes, you may be able to find verses in your preferred English translation which says that God “punishes” sin.

But I agree with many others who say that there is none of these words in the Hebrew or Greek should be translated as “punishment.” These words instead should be translated as “discipline” or “judgment.”

Punishment of GodFor example, in some translations of Exodus 20:5, it says that God punishes children for the iniquity of their parents. This sounds terribly unjust. Why should children get punished for something their parents did? But if we understand the Hebrew terms used here and in other similar references as “discipline” or “judgment” we can begin to make a little more sense of these passages. My preference is “judgment.”

So Exodus 20:5 says that God judges children for the iniquity of their parents. This doesn’t sound much better than “punish” until we realize that judgment is not always negative.

Though judgment carries negative connotations in our minds, the biblical concept of judgment is not always negative. Judgment is little more than “deciding” or “announcing a verdict.” In a trial, a judge makes a judgment. Sometimes his judgment is in favor of the plaintiff, and sometimes not. But whether “punishment” is meted out or not, when a judge makes a judgment, he or she is simply making a decision about a case. So it might be best to think of “judgment” as “making a decision.”

God “judges” the righteous and the wicked, meaning He hears their cases and decides what do in each case. In this way, a “judgment” can be a good judgment, a granting of relief to one who has been treated unfairly. In judging children for the sins of their parents, God is making wise and loving decisions about how to treat children based on the poor decisions of their parents.

So, for example, in the Mosaic law, a parent might get their family into debt or slavery. But God set up the Israelite economy in such a way so that every so often, all debts were cancelled and all land reverted to the original landowners. In this way, God is making sure that children do not suffer for the poor decisions of their parents. In these cases God is making a judgment in favor of the children. That is a better way of understanding Exodus 20:5 (for a little more on this topic, see Creation Untamed, 51).

C. S. Lewis wrote masterfully (does he write any other way?) on this subject in his book Reflections on the Psalms. In the chapter on “Judgment in the Psalms” he wrote the following. It is a long quote, but worth reading:

The ancient Jews, like ourselves, think of God’s judgment in terms of an earthly court of justice. The difference is that the Christian pictures the case to be tried as a criminal case with himself in the .dock; the Jew pictures it as a civil case with himself as the plaintiff. The one hopes for acquittal, or rather for pardon; the other hopes for a resounding triumph with heavy damages. Hence he prays ‘judge my quarrel’, or ‘avenge my cause’ (35:23).

And though, as I said a minute ago, Our Lord in the parable of the Sheep and the Goats painted the characteristically Christian picture, in another place He is very characteristically Jewish. Notice what He means by ‘an unjust judge’. By those words most of us would mean someone like Judge Jeffreys or the creatures who sat on the benches of German tribunals during the Nazi régime: someone who bullies witnesses and jurymen in order to convict, and then savagely to punish, innocent men.

Once again, we are thinking of a criminal trial. We hope we shall never appear in the dock before such a judge. But the Unjust Judge in the parable is quite a different character. There is no danger of appearing in his court against your will: the difficulty is the opposite — to get into it. It is clearly a civil action.

The poor woman (Luke 18:1—5) has had her little strip of land — room for a pigsty or a hen-run — taken away from her by a richer and more powerful neighbor (nowadays it would be Town-Planners or some other ‘Body’). And she knows she has a perfectly watertight case. If once she could get it into court and have it tried by the laws of the land, she would be bound to get that strip back. But no one will listen to her, she can’t get it tried. No wonder she is anxious for ‘judgment’.

Behind this lies an age-old and almost world-wide experience which we have been spared. In most places and times it has been very difficult for the ‘small man’ to get his case heard. The judge (and, doubtless, one or two of his underlings) has to be bribed. If you can’t afford to ‘oil his palm’ your case will never reach court. Our judges do not receive bribes. (We probably take this blessing too much for granted; it will not remain with us automatically.)

We need not therefore be surprised if the Psalms, and the Prophets, are full of the longing for judgment, and regard the announcement that ‘judgment’ is coming as good news. Hundreds and thousands of people who have been stripped of all they possess and who have the right entirely on their side will at last be heard. Of course they are not afraid of judgment. They know their case is unanswerable — if only it could be heard. When God comes to judge, at last it will.

Dozens of passages make the point clear. In Psalm 9 we are told that God will ‘minister true judgment’ (v. 8), and that is because He ‘forgetteth not the complaint of the poor’ (v. 12). He ‘defendeth the cause’ (that is, the ‘case’) ‘of the widows’ (68:). The good king in Psalm 72:2 will ‘judge’ the people rightly; that is, he will ‘defend the poor’. When God ‘arises to judgment’ he will ‘help all the meek upon earth’ (76:9), all the timid, helpless people whose wrongs have never been righted yet. When God accuses earthly judges of ‘wrong judgment’, He follows it up by telling them to see that the poor ‘have right’ (82:2, 3).

The ‘just’ judge, then, is primarily he who rights a wrong in a civil case.

So “punish” is not the right word, and “judgment” does not necessarily mean something bad. It simply means “deciding.”

The judgment of God is simply to make a decision in a civil case, often in the favor of the one who was wronged.

So judgment is not punishment, and all places in the Bible which speak of “punishment” should probably be understood as discipline or judgment. There are three other reasons as well that God does not punish sin, which we will look at the other three in the next post.

Until then, what do you think this view of divine punishment does for how you think about God, and how you interact with other people?

God is Redeeming Theology Bible & Theology Topics: christus victor, Exodus 20:5, judgment, punishment, sin, Theology of Jesus, Theology of Sin

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Good God, Bad God (On the Penal Substitution Theory of the Atonement)

By Jeremy Myers
13 Comments

Good God, Bad God (On the Penal Substitution Theory of the Atonement)

good-cop-bad-copThe way many of us view the death of Jesus on the cross is like some poorly scripted “Good Cop, Bad Cop” scene from a crime thriller movie, except now it is “Good God, Bad God.”

You’ve seen these movies, right? Prior to questioning a suspect, the two cops agree that one will be the “Good cop” and the other will be the “bad cop.” Usually the bad cop starts questioning the suspect, and in the process gets a little unhinged and starts to threaten the suspect with death, torture, or a life sentence in prison. Then the good cop steps in with a soft voice and a soothing tone and says that he can rescue the suspect from the bad cop and all his threats if the suspect will just tell them what he knows.

In much of Christian theology, this is sort of what happened between God and Jesus as they prepared to send Jesus to earth for our deliverance. I imagine the scene to be somewhat like this:

In a back room of heaven (before the foundation of the world) God and Jesus realize that they need to get the bad guy in the interrogating room (all humans) to confess to our numerous crimes. Here is how the planning went:

God: I know what I’ll do. I’m going to tell him that although I’m only looking out for the good of the universe, and since I’m so holy and just, I just cannot stand evil and sin, and I’m gonna have to shoot him.

Jesus: Yeah! And then I’ll come in, all humble, meek, and mild, full of love and care, and say, “God loves you so much! But you are so sinful, He’s gonna have to shoot you if you don’t fix up your life and tell us all the bad stuff you’ve done.”

God: That’s good. And then maybe when he says that he is doing a pretty good job, and he doesn’t know why he’s been arrested since he hasn’t broken any law, you can raise the bar on him a bit. Blame it on me, though. Because I’m so holy.

Jesus: Okay. I could say that although you commanded them not to commit adultery, what you are really concerned about it lust. And although you said, “Don’t murder,” if they call someone a fool, it’s the same thing.

God: Right. Improvise a bit on that. Just make sure you blame it on me and my holiness. That’s key. And then, after this goes on for a while, I’ll step into the room, pull out my gun, and yell, “Enough! This man is evil. Stop beating around the bush and make him confess!” Then I’ll point the gun at his chest and pull the trigger. I’ll shoot him.

Jesus: Sounds good. That’s when I jump in front of the bullet, and die in a bloody mess right there in front of everybody. It will be great. I’ll get on the news. I’ll be the talk of the town for thousands of years. People will write books about me. Of course, you’re not going to leave me dead, right?

God: Don’t be silly. Of course not. The resurrection is the grand finale. After I shoot at the man, and then you step in front of the bullet, he will be so shocked at your love for him, especially after you laid all that guilt on him, that he will be amazed at your love. And then when I raise you from the dead — oh man, he’ll just drop down and start worshipping us. It will be awesome!

Is that how it went down? Not even close.

How it all went down

First of all, while there was a plan, the plan did not include God and Jesus playing off each other like this. They were of one mind and will toward humanity, with love as the primary motivation.

Second, while God is just and holy, and while the death of Jesus did satisfy the holiness of God in regard to our sin, this was not the only — or even the primary — reason for the death of Jesus on the cross. This is called the “appeasement theory” or “penal substitution theory” of the atonement, and is the idea that the death of Jesus appeased the wrath of God.

Such an idea comes more from Greek Pantheistic mythology than it does from Scripture. The Greeks believed (as do the people of most religions) that the gods are angry and need to be appeased (aka bribed) in order to act nicely toward humans. To appease the gods, we need to do great things for them or offer valuable possession to then, such as our prize cow, firstborn son, or virgin daughter. If the gods are impressed enough with our achievements or our sacrifice, they won’t be angry any more.

This sort of thinking has crept into Christian theology as well, so that many Christians today think that something similar went on in the death of Jesus on the cross. It goes like this: God was angry. We tried to appease Him by obeying the law and giving him bulls and goats, but it wasn’t good enough. He was still angry at our sin. Since He knew that we could never obey Him well enough or give Him a sacrifice good enough to fully satisfy our debt, He sent Jesus to pay the penalty instead. Jesus stepped in, died for us, and paid the debt. Now God loves us, just as He always wanted.

While this way of thinking fits well with pagan theology and pagan deities, it could not be further from the truth regarding the God of Scripture.

Why did Jesus die?

Jesus did not die to appease God, but to cleanse us from sin, and deliver us from its power. Jesus died to defeat sin, death, and devil.

The death of Jesus was a rescue operation where He broke into the prison of our bondage where we were rotting in filth and decay, and through His life, death, and resurrection, demolished our chains, picked us up on His shoulders, and carried us to freedom outside of the prison walls.

If we want to liken what Jesus did to a movie, it is not a “Good Cop, Bad Cop” scene we should imagine, but Chuck Norris breaking Prisoners of War out of a military prison camp — except without all the shooting and killing. On second thought … maybe Chuck Norris isn’t the best example, but you get the idea.

The death of Jesus on the cross was to break the power of sin in our lives, and recapture for us the relationship with God that they have always wanted with us. And that is something that is Oscar-worthy. Or worship-worthy.

The cross of Jesus is CENTRAL to everything!

Transform your life and theology by focusing on the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus:

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God is Redeeming Theology Bible & Theology Topics: atonement, christus victor, crucifixion, crucivision, death of Jesus, Easter, penal substitution, resurrection, Theology of Jesus, Theology of Sin

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