Christus Victor

Christus Victor

The term Christus Victor refers to a Christian understanding of the atonement which views Christ's death as the means by which the powers of evil, which held humankind under their dominion, were defeated.[1] It is a model of the atonement that is dated to the Church Fathers,[2] and it, or the related ransom theory, was the dominant theory of the atonement for a thousand years, until it was removed in the West by the eleventh-century Archbishop of Canterbury, Anselm, and replaced with his "satisfaction" model.[3]

The term comes from the title of Gustaf Aulén's groundbreaking book, first published in 1931, in which he drew attention back to this classic early Church understanding of the atonement.[4]

Contents

Aulén's book, Christus Victor

In it Aulén identifies three main types of Atonement Theories:

  • The earliest was what Aulén called the "classic" view of the Atonement, more commonly known as Ransom Theory or since Aulén's work known sometimes as the "Christus Victor" theory: this is the theory that Adam and Eve made humanity subject to the Devil during the Fall, and that God, in order to redeem humanity, sent Christ as a "ransom" or "bait" so that the Devil, not knowing Christ couldn't die permanently, would kill him, and thus lose all right to humanity following the Resurrection.
  • A second theory is the "Latin" or "objective" view, more commonly known as Satisfaction Theory, beginning with Anselmian Satisfaction (that Christ suffered as a substitute on behalf of humankind satisfying the demands of God's honor) and later developed by Protestants as penal substitution (that Christ is punished instead of humanity, thus satisfying the demands of justice so that God can justly forgive). Some have argued that the penal substitution theory of the atonement was expressed by the early church fathers, such as Justin Martyr c.100-165, Eusebius of Caesarea c.275-339 , and Augustine of Hippo 354 430.[5]
  • A third is the "subjective" theory, commonly known as the Moral Influence view, that Christ's passion was an act of exemplary obedience which affects the intentions of those who come to know about it: it is often wrongly claimed that the moral influence view originated with Abelard. In fact, Abelard restated Augustine's view on the subject, who in turn was articulating the Christian doctrine current in his time.

Aulén's book consists of a historical study, beginning with the early church, tracing Atonement theories up to the Protestant Reformation. Aulén argues that Christus Victor (or as Aulén called it the "classic view") was the predominant view of the early church and for the first thousand years of church history and was supported by nearly every Church Father including Irenaeus, Origen of Alexandria, and Augustine of Hippo to name a few. A major shift occurred, Aulén says, when Anselm of Canterbury published his “Cur Deus Homo” around 1097 AD which marked the point where the predominant understanding of the Atonement shifted from the classic view (Christus Victor) to the Satisfaction view in the Roman Catholic Church, and later within Protestantism. The Orthodox Church still holds to the Christus Victor view, based upon their understanding of the Atonement put forward by Irenaeus, called "recapitulation" Jesus became what we are so that we could become what he is. (see also Theosis).

Aulén argues that theologians have misunderstood the view of the early Church Fathers in seeing their view of the Atonement in terms of a Ransom Theory arguing that a proper understanding of their view is not concerned with the payment of ransom to the devil, but with the motif of the liberation of humanity from the bondage of sin, death, and the devil. As the term Christus Victor (Christ the Victor) indicates, the idea of “ransom” should not be seen in terms (as Anselm did) of a business transaction, but more in the terms of a rescue or liberation of humanity from the slavery of sin.

Aulén states that the chief distinction between Christus Victor and the Satisfaction view is the contrary emphasis given to the Trinity and the Law. The Satisfaction view, Aulén claims, contains a divine discontinuity and a legal continuity while Christus Victor emphasizes a divine continuity and a legal discontinuity. He points to the emerging theology of penance in the Latin church as the root of Anselm's ideas. God is unable to pardon humanity without having his Kingship honored by a payment of blood and suffering (later this would take the form of "penal substitution", the Reformation ideal that God's justice, not his honor, is at stake in the Atonement.) Since only a man can fulfill man's obligations to the Law and to God's honor, Christ must become a man in order to offer perfect penance to God. He does this by satisfying the demands of the Law for a sinless life and a victim to punish for past sins. By making Law and Honor the stabilizing fact of the Atonement, Anselmian Satisfaction and its theological forbears inserts an opposition into the Divine relationship between Father and Son that does not exist in Christus Victor. By contrast, Christus Victor, by interpreting the New Testament teaching through a lens of Trinitarian unity, depicts Christ's sacrifice not as a legal offering to God in order to placate his honor or justice, but as the decisive moment in a war against the powers of darkness; ironically, the Law included.

Aulén points to the writings of Paul and the Church Fathers as examples of early Christianity's view of the Law as an enemy which must be defeated in order for mankind's salvation to be secured. He seeks to demonstrate that the penance systems of Satisfaction Theory and Penal Substitution place an undue emphasis on man's obligation to offer payment to God and on God's obligation to Law. Instead by suffering a death that, before the Law, meant an accursed status, Christ, instead of satisfying an obligation, overthrew the power of the Law, since its condemnation of a perfect man was unjust. Furthermore, Death, Sin, and the Devil, (personalized forces in Christus Victor), are overthrown since Jesus' subsequent Resurrection breaks the dominion they once held over human life. Since the Resurrection is a mark of the Father's favor despite the Law's curse on crucified men, the Atonement, far from reinforcing the Law, deprives and subverts the Law of its ability to condemn. Thus God the Father and God the Son are not set at odds by the Cross with the first in the role of Judge and the second in the role of Sinner, but are united in seeking the downfall of the Devil's system of sin, death, and Law that enslaves humanity. This view, Aulén maintains, keeps from the errors of penance systems emphasizing Law and man, and reveals the unity within the Trinity's redemptive plan and the freedom of the forgiveness shown to us by God through Christ.

Unlike the Satisfaction Doctrine view of the Atonement (the “Latin” view) which is rooted in the idea of Christ paying the penalty of sin to satisfy the demands of justice, the “classic” view of the Early church (Christus Victor) is rooted in the Incarnation and how Christ entered into human misery and wickedness and thus redeemed it. Aulén argues that the Christus Victor view of the Atonement is not so much a rational systematic theory as it is a drama, a passion story of God triumphing over the Powers and liberating humanity from the bondage of sin. As Gustav Aulén writes,

The work of Christ is first and foremost a victory over the powers which hold mankind in bondage: sin, death, and the devil [6]

Development of the Christus Victor view after Aulén

While largely held only by Eastern Orthodox Christians for much of the last one thousand years, the Christus Victor theory is becoming increasingly popular with both paleo-orthodox evangelicals because of its connection to the early Church fathers, and with liberal Christians and peace churches such as the Anabaptist Mennonites because of its subversive nature, seeing the death of Jesus as an exposure of the cruelty and evil present in the worldly powers that rejected and killed him, and the resurrection as a triumph over these powers. As Marcus Borg writes,

for [the Christus Victor] view, the domination system, understood as something much larger than the Roman governor and the temple aristocracy, is responsible for the death of Jesus… The domination system killed Jesus and thereby disclosed its moral bankruptcy and ultimate defeat[7].

The Mennonite theologian J. Denny Weaver, in his book “The Nonviolent Atonement” and again recently in his essay "The Nonviolent Atonement: Human Violence, Discipleship and God," traces the further development of the Christus Victor theory (or as he calls it “Narrative Christus Victor”) into the liberation theology of South America, as well as feminist and black theologies of liberation.[8]

This trend towards the Christus Victor view of the Atonement is also taking place among advocates of liberal Christianity, who traditionally espoused the Moral Influence view of theologians like Schleiermacher.

Notes

  1. ^ Leon Morris, 'Theories of the Atonement' in Elwell Evangelical Dictionary.
  2. ^ H. N. Oxenham, The Catholic doctrine of the atonement (London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, and Green, 1865), p. xliv,114
  3. ^ H. N. Oxenham, The Catholic doctrine of the atonement (London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, and Green, 1865), p. 114
  4. ^ Gustav Aulén (transl. by A. G. Hebert SSM) Christus Victor: An Historical Study of the Three Main Types of the Idea of Atonement (London: SPCK, 1931; New York: Macmillan, 1969)
  5. ^ http://www.search.com/reference/Penal_substitution#Justin_Martyr.2C_Eusebius_of_Caeserea.2C_Augustine
  6. ^ Gustav Aulén (transl. by A. G. Hebert SSM) Christus Victor: An Historical Study of the Three Main Types of the Idea of Atonement (London: SPCK, 1931; New York: Macmillan, 1969), p 20
  7. ^ Marcus Borg. The Heart of Christianity. San Francisco: Harper. p. 95. ISBN 9780060526764. 
  8. ^ J Denny Weaver (2007). The Nonviolent Atonement: Human Violence, Discipleship and God. Eerdmans. ISBN 9780802849083. 

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