William Lane Craig explains the doctrine of penal substitutionary atonement

Probably one of the most common questions that you hear from people who don’t fully understand Christianity is this question: “why did Jesus have to die?”. The answer that most Christians seem to hold to is that 1) humans are rebelling against God, 2) Humans deserve punishment for their rebellion, 3) Humans cannot escape the punishment for their rebellion on their own, 4) Jesus was punished in the place of the rebellious humans, 5) Those who accept this sacrifice are forgiven for their rebelling.

Are humans rebellious?

Some people think that humans are not really rebellious at all, but it’s actually easy to see. You can see it just by looking at how people spend their time. Some of us have no time for God at all, and instead try to fill our lives with material possessions and experiences in order to have happy feelings. Some of us embrace just the parts of God that make us feel happy, like church and singing and feelings of comfort, while avoiding the hard parts of that vertical relationship; reading, thinking and disagreeing with people who don’t believe the truth about God. And so on.

This condition of being in rebellion is universal, and all of us are guilty of breaking the law at some point. All of us deserve to be separated from God’s goodness and love. Even if we wanted to stop rebelling, we would not be able to make up for the times where we do rebel by being good at other times, any more than we could get out of a speeding ticket by appealing to the times when we drove at the speed limit, (something that I never do, in any case).

This is not to say that all sinners are punished equally – the degree of punishment is proportional to the sins a person commits. However, the standard is perfection. And worse than that, the most important moral obligation is a vertical moral obligation. You can’t satisfy the demands of the moral law just by making your neighbor happy, while treating God like a pariah. The first commandment is to love God, the second is to love your neighbor. Even loving your neighbor requires you to tell your neighbor the truth – not just to make them feel good. The vertical relationship is more important than the horizontal one, and we’ve all screwed up the vertical relationship. We all don’t want God to be there, telling us what’s best for us, interfering with our fun. We don’t want to relate to a loving God if it means having to care what he thinks about anything that we are doing.

Who is going to pay for our rebellion?

The Christian answer to the problem of our rebellion is that Jesus takes the punishment we deserve in our place.

However, I’ve noticed that on some atheist blogs, they don’t like the idea that someone else can take our punishment for us to exonerate us for crimes that we’ve committed. So I’ll quote from this post by the great William Lane Craig, to respond to that objection.

Excerpt:

The central problem of the Penal Theory is, as you point out, understanding how punishing a person other than the perpetrator of the wrong can meet the demands of justice. Indeed, we might even say that it would be wrong to punish some innocent person for the crimes I commit!

It seems to me, however, that in other aspects of human life we do recognize this practice. I remember once sharing the Gospel with a businessman. When I explained that Christ had died to pay the penalty for our sins, he responded, “Oh, yes, that’s imputation.” I was stunned, as I never expected this theological concept to be familiar to this non-Christian businessman. When I asked him how he came to be familiar with this idea, he replied, “Oh, we use imputation all the time in the insurance business.” He explained to me that certain sorts of insurance policy are written so that, for example, if someone else drives my car and gets in an accident, the responsibility is imputed to me rather than to the driver. Even though the driver behaved recklessly, I am the one held liable; it is just as if I had done it.

Now this is parallel to substitutionary atonement. Normally I would be liable for the misdeeds I have done. But through my faith in Christ, I am, as it were, covered by his divine insurance policy, whereby he assumes the liability for my actions. My sin is imputed to him, and he pays its penalty. The demands of justice are fulfilled, just as they are in mundane affairs in which someone pays the penalty for something imputed to him. This is as literal a transaction as those that transpire regularly in the insurance industry.

So, it turns out that the doctrine of substitionary atonement is not as mysterious or as objectionable as everyone seems to think it is.

8 thoughts on “William Lane Craig explains the doctrine of penal substitutionary atonement”

  1. Just recognize that in the insurance industry, imputation requires you to sign the insurance policy. You cannot have someone else’s fault imputed to you unless you sign the insurance policy and let someone else drive your car.
    Hence, the insurance example works for penal substitution, but not for original sin.

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  2. Hey, WK — I’m confused by this comment: “This is not to say that all sinners are punished equally – the degree of punishment is proportional to the sins a person commits.” Are you talking about something other than the final judgment? I don’t remember seeing this principle taught in Scripture. As far as I can tell, ultimately, all sinners end up in one place, where suffering is essentially the same for all.

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      1. Thanks, WK. Certainly have come across all these Scriptures, but they never registered with me in the face of the basic punishment awaiting all who reject Jesus. Even the least torment waiting for the unbeliever makes any gradation very difficult to imagine in terms of more or less bearable. Even the suggested reading you offered doesn’t, at first blush, make it much clearer, but seems like something worth studying that I’d never thought to bother with before.

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    1. Yes. When I look around my office, I see people who have been alive for decades, who have good jobs, plenty of leisure time, and yet have never lifted a finger to know God or to give him thanks for their blessings. That’s because they would rather not have to care about what he wants, as a person. They don’t want a relationship where they have to care about that other person, and work to find out the truth about that other person. That is what sin is. And we are all guilty of it. So that’s why we need someone to fix this problem – how are we going to be reconciled to God when we don’t want him and we are guilty before him? Someone has to solve the problem. Jesus solved the problem.

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  3. WK: I’m very confused in my Atonement theology. I’ve grown up hearing nothing but Penal Sub so I guess I’ve just sort of assumed it’s true and read my Bible with my PSA glasses on. But I have friends tell me that for PSA to be true, it’s makes God an angry ogre that makes it hard for people to come to.

    They usually give the following example: A father tells his young son to clean up his room and to get ready for dinner. The young son, however, continues to play with his toys. Some time later the father returns to the room to find the young son has disobeyed his instructions. When the boy sees his father, he becomes frightened, b/c the father’s face is beet-red with anger, the veins in his neck and forehead bulge, his eyes glare, his fists clench, and he seems to vibrate from the tension, and it seems as if he could explode at any moment. Just then, the boy’s older brother comes in the room, innocently saying “What’s up?” The younger brother quickly explains the situation. The older brother now catches a glimpse of the frightful state of his father, and is filled with compassion for his younger brother, and says “Dad, take out your anger on me.” In horror, the boy watched as the father swings around and cold-cocks the older brother, knocking him out with one punch. As he turns back to face the boy, the anger has drained from his face, he is relaxed, and he says to his young son, “Come, give your dad a hug. I forgive you.”

    So they ask me: Will the boy be overjoyed to come to his father?

    So I need help in understanding why this analogy doesn’t work for Penal Sub, if you have time.

    Thanks.

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