Objective Gospel vs. Subjective Spirituality

This AI-generated video is based on Pastor John Samson’s teachings: The church today is being drawn toward a spirituality rooted not in the Reformation but in medieval mysticism and Pietism, movements that shifted the Christian life away from the objective gospel accomplished for us in Christ toward a subjective search for God within our own interior experience. The Reformers gave us something far better: a piety grounded in what God does for us through the publicly proclaimed Word, baptism, and the Lord’s Supper, looking upward to Christ in faith and outward to neighbors in love rather than endlessly inward to the self. The Bible is not a starting point to be supplemented by personal revelations and inner voices but the complete, sufficient, and entirely trustworthy Word of the God who has already spoken his final word in his Son.

Easter Orthodoxy (articles by Craig Ireland)

Craig Ireland (https://craigireland.substack.com/) has recently written three articles on Eastern Orthodoxy:

1. Eastern Unorthodoxy (1): Six Doctrinal Ruptures Beneath the Patristic Claim

Why Eastern Orthodoxy Fails Its Own Appeal to Scripture and the Fathers

Eastern Orthodoxy drapes itself in incense, gilded icons, and the pomp of antiquity, claiming to be the one true, unbroken, Apostolic Church. Yet beneath the very impressive marble and gold are serious doctrinal ruptures revealing human tradition has ascended where Scripture alone must rule (Matt. 23:27). Like the Pharisees Jesus rebuked, Orthodoxy’s outward splendour masks inward corruption. Many of its cherished and distinctive doctrines are non-apostolic deviations, condemned by Scripture and the earliest Fathers.

A necessary caveat: Much of what follows devotes close attention to the testimony of the early church, the so-called “patristic consensus.” This is deliberate. Eastern Orthodoxy claims this “consensus” as her greatest strength, insisting their communion alone preserves the faith of the Fathers. Yet, when the Fathers are permitted to speak for themselves, their voice and message often rebuke Orthodoxy’s innovations and novelties. The very ground EO appeals to most loudly proves to be quicksand beneath its feet.

A second necessary caveat: this critique addresses official claims and dominant EO theological commitments, not the sincerity or piety of individual Orthodox believers.

Here are six of its deadly corruptions, exposed and demolished.


1. Icons: From Apostolic Simplicity to Painted Idolatry

The Second Commandment thunders: “You shall not make for yourself a carved image, any likeness of anything… you shall not bow down to them nor serve them” (Exod. 20:4–5).1 The earliest and apostolic churches practised a Word-centred worship without an icon cultus. Jesus Himself declared that true worshippers worship “in spirit and truth” (John 4:24).

Origen (c. 184–253), responding to pagan critics who accused Christians of impiety, argued that Christians deliberately avoid temples, altars, and images as objects of cultic devotion, grounding this practice in obedience to the divine commandment.2 Epiphanius of Salamis (c. 315–403), as reported by Jerome, saw a curtain with an image of Christ or a saint in a church and tore it down, calling it “contrary to the authority of Scripture.”3 Some scholars debate whether this curtain was a liturgical vestment rather than an icon proper, but at minimum it testifies to early discomfort with religious images. A fragment attributed to Eusebius of Caesarea (c. 260–340), preserved by Epiphanius, ridiculed attempts to depict Christ: “What was the likeness of Christ? … He has so changed His form, that none could trace Him.”4 Though the authenticity of this attribution is contested, it reflects an icon-sceptical current in early Christianity. Tertullian (c. 160–225) defined eidolon as “form,” concluding that “every form or formling, therefore, claims to be called an idol,” and that idolatry consists in the religious “attendance and service about every idol.”5

Archaeological evidence shows that some Christian art existed in the early centuries. Frescoes in the Dura-Europos house church (c. 240s) and catacomb paintings in Rome portray biblical scenes, yet these were illustrative and didactic, not cultic. That distinction is everything. Some early Christians adorned spaces with art but these were not objects of obedience or invocation. Far from undermining the case, this reinforces the point: representation in early Christianity was distinct from cultic use; later Orthodoxy normalised cultic gestures toward images as part of devotion, a practice without clear warrant in the earliest sources and defended at scale only in the iconoclastic era.

Eastern Orthodoxy appeals especially to John of Damascus (c. 675–749), whose treatise On the Divine Images defended icon veneration during the Iconoclastic Controversy. EO often calls him “the last of the Fathers,” but by any standard historical timeline, he was a medieval figure, writing centuries after the fall of Rome in 476. To call him “patristic” masks the fact that the earliest Fathers (Tertullian, Origen, Epiphanius) knew nothing of icon veneration and, in fact, resisted it. The very need for John’s defence and, even more damning, his historic misidentification proves the novelty of the practice. By draping medieval innovations with patristic robes, EO presents development as though it were continuity.

No recognised Western historian, patristics scholar, or standard academic reference work treats the 8th century as part of the patristic period. Calling John of Damascus “patristic” reflects Eastern Orthodoxy’s internal theological taxonomy and overt biases, not a shared historical conclusion.

Orthodoxy insists it does not “worship” icons, distinguishing between latreia (worship, due to God alone) and proskynesis (veneration, directed to images). The Second Council of Nicaea (787) formalised this distinction, decreeing that icons receive “honourable reverence” but not “true worship, which pertains to the divine nature alone.”6 The distinction sounds precise in conciliar prose. It collapses in liturgical practice. Moreover, Nicaea II is not patristic but medieval, representing a late doctrinal development rather than the settled consensus of the early Church.

Orthodox believers bow before icons, kiss them, light candles before them, process them through the streets, and address prayers in their presence. The faithful are taught that the honour paid to the icon “passes to the prototype,” a formula derived from Basil’s On the Holy Spirit, though Basil himself was speaking of the relation between the Son and the Father, not between painted wood and a depicted saint.7 When a worshipper prostrates before an image, weeps before it, and addresses petitions in its presence, by what biblical warrant does kissing and bowing before an image escape the charge the Second Commandment attaches to such acts? Scripture itself supplies a decisive test case. In the Book of Revelation, when John falls down to worship (proskynēsai) the angel who mediates divine revelation, he is immediately and sharply rebuked: “See that you do not do that… Worship God” (Rev. 19:10; 22:8–9). John’s intention was not idolatrous; his posture was reverent, grateful, and religious. Yet the act itself was strictly forbidden. The distinction between latreia and proskynesis thus proves irrelevant. It is a distinction of intention invisible to the observer and, more critically, unrecognised by Scripture. The Second Commandment does not say, “You shall not bow down to them with latreia. It says, “You shall not bow down to them” (Exod. 20:5). The prohibition is absolute. It addresses the act, not the interior taxonomy of the worshipper.

Scripture gives the same rebuke elsewhere. When Cornelius “fell down at his feet and worshiped him,” Peter picked him up: “Stand up; I myself am also a man” (Acts 10:25–26).8 The act is refused, not because Cornelius had carefully parsed latreia.and proskynesis, but because religious prostration belongs to God.

Israel’s golden calf is the decisive biblical test case. Aaron called it “a feast to the Lord” (Exod. 32:5). The calf was not presented as a rival deity. It was presented as a means of approaching the true God, a visible mediator of invisible worship. Yet God condemned it as apostasy. The intention was orthodox. The act was idolatry. If the golden calf’s “veneration” could not be distinguished from worship in God’s eyes, by what principle does the kissing and bowing before icons escape the same verdict?

Development that contradicts prior biblical prohibition is not development but reversal. Nicaea II’s decree of icon veneration is not continuity with apostolic teaching, but a betrayal of it.


2. Exclusivism: Salvation Shackled to an Institution

The gospel proclaims an exclusive salvation through faith in Christ alone: “Whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life” (John 3:16).9 Orthodoxy, however, shackles salvation to its hierarchy, implying no true life outside its sacramental walls.

Cyprian of Carthage (c. 200–258) wrote, “Whoever is separated from the Church… shall not attain to the rewards of Christ,”10 but his “Church” was the universal body of Christ-confessors, not an Eastern sect. Augustine (c. 354–430) corrected such excess, declaring, “Many who seem to be outside are within, and many who seem within are outside.”11

Orthodoxy often appeals to economia to admit that God may save beyond her visible boundaries, yet offers no principled assurance grounded in the gospel promises themselves, only an appeal to mystery and exception. In practice, EO treats herself as the only “ark of salvation,” the sole safe place to find grace. Cornelius received the Spirit before baptism (Acts 10:44–47). The thief on the cross needed no bishop apart from Christ (Luke 23:43).12 Any church that treats its priesthood and sacraments as necessary channels without which Christ cannot be trusted to save does not serve His body but supplants it.

A church need not anathematise outsiders formally to functionally deny assurance outside its walls.


3. Tradition Over Scripture: The Commandments of Men

Jesus condemned those who “make the word of God of no effect through your tradition” (Mark 7:13).13 Orthodoxy exalts “Holy Tradition,” conciliar decrees, mystical speculations, and patristic opinions as equal to Scripture, dethroning God’s Word.

Athanasius of Alexandria (c. 296–373) pronounced, “The holy and inspired Scriptures are sufficient of themselves for the preaching of the truth.”14 Basil the Great (c. 329–379) urged, “Let God-inspired Scripture decide between us, and on whichever side be found doctrines in harmony with the word of God, in favour of that side will be cast the vote of truth.”15 Gregory of Nyssa (c. 335–395) ratified, “We make the Holy Scriptures the rule and measure of every tenet.”16 Chrysostom (c. 347–407) likewise insisted, “All things are clear and plain that are in the divine Scriptures, the necessary things are all plain.”17

So much for patristic continuity. In practice, the Eastern Orthodox Church elevates the Fathers to an authority functionally coequal with Scripture, in direct contradiction of the Fathers’ own explicit insistence on the supremacy and sufficiency of the written Word.

The New Testament Bereans tested even apostolic preaching against Scripture (Acts 17:11).18 If apostolic teaching was commendably tested by Scripture, how much more must the voices of later centuries, whether patristic or medieval, be subjected to the Word of God. Orthodoxy claims her tradition merely interprets Scripture, citing Paul’s exhortation to “hold fast the traditions” (2 Thess. 2:15). Yet Paul’s “traditions” were his own apostolic teaching, not later inventions. EO’s tradition functions as an independent source, smothering the sufficiency of Scripture with speculative accretions.

EO theologians will inevitably respond by accusing me of “cherry-picking” patristic sources. Yet this objection only sharpens the problem rather than solving it. The patristic corpus does not speak with a single, monolithic voice on many of the doctrines that most clearly distinguish Eastern Orthodoxy today. In an age when primary sources are readily accessible, any reader can survey the Fathers directly and discover a wide spectrum of positions on authority, justification, images, grace, and tradition. The Orthodox claim to an infallible interpretive authority thus bears a weight it cannot sustain, for it depends upon a uniformity of patristic doctrine that history itself simply cannot provide.

A tradition that cannot be corrected by Scripture no longer interprets Scripture; it governs it. In this regard, Eastern Orthodoxy appeals to the Fathers while refusing to follow them. Go figure.


4. Justification by Faith Alone vs. Synergistic Theosis

Paul’s razor-sharp gospel: “To him who does not work but believes on Him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is accounted for righteousness” (Rom. 4:5).19 Orthodoxy does not permit Paul’s forensic verdict to function as the controlling category, folding justification into an ongoing transformational ascent through human cooperation with divine energies. Orthodox theologians typically insist that all is grace, and that human response is itself enabled by divine power, not meritorious. Yet, however carefully defined, synergism clouds the apostolic verdict.

The most sophisticated Orthodox account of theosis comes from Maximus the Confessor (c. 580–662), who distinguished between the logos of human nature (its created purpose) and the tropos of its existence (its mode of living). Grace, in this account, does not override nature but fulfils it. Human “cooperation” is not a meritorious contribution but a receptivity enabled by divine initiative. Vladimir Lossky (1903–1958) similarly insisted that in theosis, “it is God who acts, but man who co-operates,” and that this cooperation is itself a gift of grace; never a work.20

This is the strongest form of the Orthodox position, and it must be answered at its strongest, not its weakest. The answer is this: even grace-enabled receptivity, if it is the factor that distinguishes the saved from the unsaved, becomes the decisive human contribution to salvation. If two people receive the same prevenient grace, and one cooperates while the other resists, the cooperating individual possesses something the resisting individual lacks. Call it receptivity. Call it non-resistance. Call it yielding. Whatever one calls it, it functions as the decisive variable, and Paul’s argument in Romans 3–4 exists precisely to eliminate any such variable. “Where is boasting then? It is excluded” (Rom. 3:27). If the decisive difference between the justified and the condemned is located in the human response, however grace-enabled, boasting is not excluded. It is relocated.

At this point the objection is often raised that Reformed theology likewise locates salvation in human response, for faith itself is described as the empty hand that receives, the open ear that hears, or the open mouth that feeds upon Christ. The difference, however, is decisive. In Reformed soteriology, faith does not function as a distinguishing condition between persons but as the God-given instrument by which Christ’s righteousness is received. Faith contributes nothing; it receives everything. It does not explain why one sinner is justified and another is not, for faith itself is the gift of God, effectually bestowed by the Spirit upon those whom the Father has given to the Son (Eph. 2:8–9; Phil. 1:29; John 6:37). The decisive difference, therefore, is not located in the human response but in divine sovereign action. By contrast, any account in which grace is universally given and salvation finally turns on whether one cooperates or resists inevitably reduces the decisive distinction to human willing, however gently described. The Reformed doctrine of faith excludes boasting not by redefining it, but by removing the sinner altogether from the causal explanation of his justification.

Once again, the patristic witness is not monolithic, nor should it be forced into later systematic categories. Yet on the question of justification, several early Fathers speak in ways that resonate strongly with the apostolic logic later recovered at the Reformation. Clement of Rome (c. 96), while exhorting believers to obedience, nevertheless grounds justification not in human merit but in faith and divine grace, insisting that believers are “not justified by ourselves… nor by works… but by that faith through which Almighty God has justified all.”21 John Chrysostom (c. 347–407), commenting on Abraham, presses the point further, arguing that even a life adorned with good deeds does not justify apart from faith: “For a person richly adorned with good deeds, not to be made just from hence, but from faith, this is the thing to cause wonder, and to set the power of faith in a strong light.”22

Truth is, theosis obscures Christ’s finished work: “It is finished” (John 19:30).23 Justification declares the ungodly righteous in Christ. Orthodoxy replaces this with an endless ascent, however beautifully described, that robs believers of the certainty purchased at Calvary. The question is not whether theosis sounds profound. The question is whether a sinner standing before the holy God can say, “It is done,” or must say, “It is in process.” Paul’s gospel demands the former. Orthodoxy, at its most honest, can only offer the latter.


5. Apophatic Theology: From Mystery to Muzzled Revelation

Eastern Orthodox apophatic theology teaches that because God’s essence entirely transcends human understanding, all positive descriptions of God are limited and must finally give way to silence and negation. For example, instead of saying “God is wise” or “God is powerful,” apophatic theology would say that God is not ignorant, not weak, and not limited, emphasising that even our best positive descriptions fall short of who God truly is.

Orthodoxy makes much of apophatic theology, knowing God by negation, as superior, rooted in mystics like Pseudo-Dionysius. Orthodox apologists often claim they balance apophatic and kataphatic approaches, affirming positive statements such as “God is love” while stressing His incomprehensibility. Yet, in practice the balance skews toward negation, making revelation turbid.

Scripture reveals God positively: “God is light” (1 John 1:5), “God is love” (1 John 4:8), “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts” (Isa. 6:3).24 Irenaeus of Lyons (c. 130–202) insisted, “The things which are in heaven He has Himself revealed and shown.”25 Justin Martyr (c. 100–165) declared, “God revealed Himself through His Son, who is His Word.”26 Christ is “the brightness of His glory and the express image of His person” (Heb. 1:3).27

Apophaticism becomes destructive when it is used not to humble reason but to evade doctrinal clarity. The Fathers wisely balanced mystery with clarity. Orthodoxy’s privileging of negation obscures the face of Christ, replacing revelation with vague mysticism.

The problem is not that apophatic theology exists, but that it reverses the methodological priority set by Christ and the apostles, who taught God overwhelmingly by affirmation rather than negation. No church or theologian, regardless of rhetorical gifting, can improve upon the teaching style, form, and content of Jesus.


6. Apostolic Succession Without Apostolic Truth

Orthodoxy stakes its legitimacy on apostolic succession, an unbroken line of bishops, as proof of its exclusive claim. But the apostles warned, “Savage wolves will come in among you” (Acts 20:29–30).28 Succession without truth is succession in apostasy.

Jerome (c. 347–420) concedes Peter’s prominence, yet insists that what is said of Peter is elsewhere said of all the apostles, “and the strength of the Church depends upon them all alike.”29 Tertullian (c. 160–225) mocked empty succession: “Show doctrines like the apostles, or it avails nothing.”30 Ignatius of Antioch (c. 110) defined the church: “Where Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church.”31 Irenaeus of Lyons (c. 130–202) appealed to succession, but only as evidence of preserved doctrine: “We are in a position to reckon up those who were by the apostles instituted bishops in the churches… but they neither taught nor knew of anything like what these [heretics] rave about.”32

Succession mattered to Irenaeus only insofar as it preserved apostolic teaching. Orthodoxy’s rival patriarchates and schisms betray its boast.

The strongest modern Orthodox response comes from Nicholas Afanasiev (1893–1966) and those who follow his eucharistic ecclesiology. On this account, the Church is not defined primarily by episcopal succession but by the celebration of the Eucharist: where the Eucharist is celebrated in fullness, there is the Church in fullness. This is a more sophisticated claim than the simple chain-of-hands argument, and it deserves engagement rather than dismissal. But it creates as many problems for Orthodoxy as it solves. If the Church is constituted by the Eucharist rather than the episcopate, then the competing claims of rival patriarchates (Moscow, Constantinople, Antioch) become even more damning, not less. Each celebrates the Eucharist. Each claims fullness. If the Eucharist alone constitutes the Church, then schism between eucharistic communities is schism within the body, and Orthodoxy’s unity is exposed as a fiction maintained by jurisdictional politics, not by sacramental reality. Afanasiev’s ecclesiology was, in fact, developed partly as a critique of Orthodox institutionalism. The tool Orthodoxy reaches for to defend itself was forged to diagnose its disease.

More fundamentally, the eucharistic model still cannot answer the apostolic question: what happens when the Eucharist is celebrated by those who teach what the apostles did not teach? A bishop who denies justification by faith, venerates icons in defiance of the Second Commandment, and subordinates Scripture to human tradition may celebrate a valid Eucharist by Orthodox standards, but he does not preserve apostolic truth. And succession without apostolic truth is precisely what Paul warned against: wolves in shepherds’ clothing (Acts 20:29).

A succession that cannot survive schism between its own patriarchates is not a mark of the true Church but an argument against its own claims.


Conclusion

Eastern Orthodoxy trades heavily on its antiquity and compelling aesthetic power. Yet when measured by Scripture and the witness of the early Fathers, its distinctive doctrines of icon veneration, sectarian exclusivism, tradition elevated over Scripture, synergistic theosis, apophatic obfuscation, and apostolic succession prove to be corruptions rather than continuities.

The gospel thunders: salvation is in Christ alone, by grace alone, through faith alone, according to Scripture alone. Orthodoxy is not the timeless Church but a gilded tomb, its bones crumbling before the eternal Word (1 Pet. 1:25).33

In the next two articles I will press the matter where it is most decisive: the cross and the verdict. A church can survive aesthetic errors; it cannot survive a defective gospel. We will test Orthodoxy’s atonement theology and its modern anti-penal polemic against Scripture and the Fathers themselves.
1

The Holy Bible, Exod. 20:4–5.

2

Origen, Against Celsus 7.64, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 4, ed. Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 668.

3

Jerome, Letter 51.9, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 6, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 101.

4

Eusebius, Letter to Constantia, fragment preserved in Epiphanius, Letter 51, in Patrologia Graeca, vol. 41, col. 1037.

5

Tertullian, On Idolatry 3, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 3, 61.

6

Second Council of Nicaea (787), Definition of the Holy and Ecumenical Synod, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 14, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 550.

7

Basil the Great, On the Holy Spirit 18.45, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 8, 28. Basil’s original statement concerns the honour shown to the image of the king ascending to the king himself, but the context is explicitly Trinitarian (the honour paid to the Son ascending to the Father), not iconographic.

8

The Holy Bible, Acts 10:25–26.

9

The Holy Bible, John 3:16.

10

Cyprian, On the Unity of the Catholic Church 6, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 5, 423.

11

Augustine, On Baptism 5.27.38, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, vol. 4, ed. Philip Schaff (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 475.

12

The Holy Bible, Acts 10:44–47; Luke 23:43.

13

The Holy Bible, Mark 7:13.

14

Athanasius, Against the Heathen 1.3, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 4, 4.

15

Basil, Letter 189.3, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 8, 223.

16

Gregory of Nyssa, On the Soul and Resurrection, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 5, 430.

17

Chrysostom, Homilies on 2 Thessalonians, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, vol. 13, 389.

18

The Holy Bible, Acts 17:11.

19

The Holy Bible, Rom. 4:5.

20

Vladimir Lossky, The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church (Cambridge: James Clarke, 1957), 196–197. Lossky’s formulation that grace “does not act upon the will as an external or irresistible force” while remaining “the source of all that is good” captures the Orthodox synergistic position at its most careful.

21

Clement of Rome, First Epistle to the Corinthians 32, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 1, 13.

22

Chrysostom, Homilies on the Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Romans, Homily 8, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, vol. 11, ed. Philip Schaff (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 386.

23

The Holy Bible, John 19:30.

24

The Holy Bible, 1 John 1:5; 1 John 4:8; Isa. 6:3.

25

Irenaeus, Against Heresies 2.28.6, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 1, 401.

26

Justin Martyr, First Apology 63, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 1, 184.

27

The Holy Bible, Heb. 1:3.

28

The Holy Bible, Acts 20:29–30.

29

Jerome, Against Jovinianus 1.26, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 6, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 366.

30

Tertullian, Prescription Against Heretics 32, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 3, 258.

31

Ignatius, Letter to the Smyrnaeans 8.2, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 1, 90.

32

Irenaeus, Against Heresies 3.3.1, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 1, 415.

33

The Holy Bible, 1 Pet. 1:25.


Article 2: The Eastern Orthodox Rejection of Penal Substitutionary Atonement

A Reformed Evangelical Critique of Eastern Orthodox Atonement Theology

Eastern Orthodox apologists have become increasingly strident in their critique of Reformed evangelical soteriology. We are told we reduce salvation to “legal fiction,” by mistaking healing for ledger-tracking, and that we subordinate resurrection to courtroom allusions. In its strongest form, modern Orthodox apologetics charge the Reformed atonement with failing to truly save human nature at all.

So serious a charge calls for an equally serious response.
This essay argues that the innovative Orthodox framing of the atonement commonly under-specifies the biblical problem of guilt and divine judgement, and therefore cannot finally explain either the necessity of the Cross or confer assurance of salvation. What it does offer is not a fuller gospel, but a palsied one, reducing to resurrection without justification, healing without satisfaction, and victory without verdict.

And before someone calls this “post-Reformation private interpretation”: the argument here is not merely “my exegesis versus yours.” The New Testament’s juridical grammar is not a later Romance add-on. It is apostolic. And the Fathers did not excise it. They held healing and verdict together. Modern Orthodox polemic often pulls them apart and calls the amputation “tradition.”


I. The Orthodox Reframing: Death Without Judgement

What we can all agree on is that humanity has suffered such a disastrous fall, such a degradation, such an irrevocable plummet into sin, that only divine remedy could initiate a salvation spectacular enough to require Incarnation, bloodshedding, and the God-man put to death on a Roman cross. Clarifying precisely what humanity needs saving from is one of the most significant moves in formulating a faithful atonement theology.

Modern Orthodox presentations often frame the fundamental human problem as corruption and mortality. Sin is described primarily as disease; death as the enemy; salvation as ontological healing; the Cross as medicinal before it is juridical.

Of course, there is truth here. Death is an enemy. Sin is corruption and salvation is healing.

But Scripture does not treat death as a neutral pathology that simply happens to afflict humanity. Death reigns as the judicial outcome of condemnation. Paul is explicit:

“The judgement which came from one offence resulted in condemnation … through one man’s offence judgement came to all men, resulting in condemnation” (Rom. 5:16, 18).

Death is not merely biological. It is penal exile from the life of God. Mortality is covenantal curse. Corruption flows from judgement. To reverse that order is not a matter of biblical depth; it is theological revision and obfuscation.

A sophisticated Orthodox respondent will push back: “We do not deny juridical categories; we deny their primacy.” But Paul does not subordinate verdict to healing. He grounds healing in verdict. Romans 5 orders condemnation before death, not the reverse. The judgement produces the curse. The curse produces the corruption. The sequence is not negotiable. Reverse it, and you are no longer merely “emphasising different themes.” You are redesigning the architecture of salvation, leaving the foundation unsupported by removing the judicial ground on which everything else rests.

The system begins to fracture precisely here: where judgement is made secondary to the very consequence judgement produces.


II. Resurrection Does Not Solve Condemnation

Modern Orthodox polemical presentations often speak as if the Resurrection itself is the ultimate saving act, with the Cross functioning primarily as the means by which Christ enters death in order to destroy it.

The Apostles will not permit that:

“And if Christ is not risen, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins!” (1 Cor. 15:17).

Notice what Paul does not say. He does not say “you are still mortal.” He does not say “you are still corrupt.” He insists, “still in your sins.”

The Resurrection is necessary, but it is not sufficient of itself. A resurrection without atonement would immortalise sinners without justifying them. It would grant endless existence to those still under condemnation and still sunken in sin. That is not salvation. That is judgement with indefinite extension.


III. The Cross Must Do What Resurrection Alone Cannot

If the Resurrection is the victory, the Cross is the ground of that victory. And the ground is irreducibly juridical:

“Much more then, having now been justified by His blood, we shall be saved from wrath through Him” (Rom. 5:9).

Paul does not say “healed by His blood.” He says justified. He does not say “saved from corruption.” He says saved from wrath. These categories are irreducibly forensic and indisputably Apostolic.

The Cross accomplishes what the Resurrection alone cannot: it bears the curse (“Christ has redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us,” Gal. 3:13), it propitiates (“whom God set forth as a propitiation by His blood,” Rom. 3:25), and it removes condemnation (“There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus,” Rom. 8:1). Without these, the Resurrection becomes a display of power over death without an explanation of how the condemned were ever freed from the sentence that put them there.


IV. The Hermeneutical Escape Route Closed

The strongest Orthodox counter here is not pastoral but hermeneutical. Drawing selectively on the New Perspective on Paul, a sophisticated respondent will argue that dikaiosyne theou (“the righteousness of God”) in Romans 3:21 is not forensic acquittal but the revelation of God’s covenant faithfulness.1 On this reading, hilasterion in Romans 3:25 is mercy-seat imagery pointing to God’s own faithful initiative, not a wrath-absorbing sacrifice. The juridical framework, they will say, is imposed on Paul by post-Reformation readers, not organically derived from Paul himself.

Even if you grant the covenantal emphasis, it does not evacuate judgement. A covenant that explicitly establishes blessings and curses (Deut. 27-28) and then encounters wholesale violation does not resolve the crisis by “displaying faithfulness” while ignoring sanction. It resolves it by executing the covenant curse on the covenant head. That is precisely what Paul describes in Galatians 3:13: Christ became a curse “for us,” bearing the Deuteronomic curse that the covenant unflinchingly imposed. Covenant faithfulness and forensic judgement are not alternative readings of Paul. The forensic is the mechanism by which the covenantal is fulfilled.

It is worth noting that even N.T. Wright, who did more than anyone to popularise the covenantal reading of dikaiosyne, still retains forensic categories within his framework. In The Day the Revolution Began (2016), Wright insists that the Cross deals with sin as sin, not merely as corruption, and that Paul’s language of condemnation, curse-bearing, and sacrificial blood cannot be collapsed into a general narrative of divine faithfulness without remainder.2 The covenantal reading, properly understood, intensifies the forensic claim rather than dissolving it. God is faithful to His covenant precisely by executing its sanctions on the covenant substitute.

The Orthodox appropriation of the New Perspective is therefore doubly ironic. The framework they borrow to avoid juridical categories is itself built on a covenant theology that still demands them.


V. Even the Victory Texts Demand a Verdict

Modern Orthodox apologists frequently appeal to Christus Victor as a self-sufficient atonement paradigm that renders juridical categories inessential and secondary. Christ defeats death and the devil. Victory, not verdict, is the biblical centre.

There are two problems to expose with this.

  1. The Aulen move does not carry the Fathers. The intellectual pedigree behind this play is typically traced to Gustaf Aulen’s Christus Victor (1931), which argued that the “classic” patristic view was a dramatic-victory motif fundamentally distinct from both Anselmian satisfaction and Reformation penal substitution.3 But Aulen’s historical flattening has been widely challenged, including by scholars sympathetic to victory imagery, precisely because the Fathers do not separate “victory” from “satisfaction” as modern polemic requires. The appeal to “the classic view” often smuggles in a modern dichotomy that the Fathers themselves would not recognise or support. Section VIII of this article will demonstrate this directly.
  2. The New Testament’s own victory texts are juridically loaded. Colossians 2:13-15 is the decisive test case. Paul says the triumph over the powers follows from the cancellation of what stood “against us”:

“And you, being dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, He has made alive together with Him, having forgiven you all trespasses, having wiped out the handwriting of requirements that was against us, which was contrary to us. And He has taken it out of the way, having nailed it to the cross” (Col. 2:13-14).

The term χειρόγραφον (cheirographon) has been the subject of much scholarly discussion. Some interpreters define it narrowly as a “certificate of debt,” while others argue for a broader sense: a handwritten legal document or record of obligation.4 The broader reading does not help the Orthodox case. Whether you translate it as a debt certificate or a written record of legal obligation standing “against us,” the logic is unchanged: the powers are disarmed because the legal ground of their accusation is eliminated at the Cross. Paul describes the victory of 2:15 (”Having disarmed principalities and powers, He made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them in it”) as the consequence of the cancellation of a legal instrument. The victory is judicial before it is martial.

Hebrews 2:14-15 follows the same logic. Christ destroys the devil’s power through death. But Hebrews does not leave this as a bare power encounter. Two verses later, it supplies the mechanism:

“Therefore, in all things He had to be made like His brethren, that He might be a merciful and faithful High Priest in things pertaining to God, to make propitiation for the sins of the people” (Heb. 2:17).

The victory over the devil is accomplished through propitiation. The power of death is broken because the guilt that gave death its rightful claim has been addressed at the mercy seat. Victory and verdict are not competing paradigms. The verdict is the ground of the victory. Separate them, and you have a triumph with no explanation of what was won or why the enemy’s claim was overturned.

Strip the juridical centre out of Christus Victor, and you do not get “the early Church.” You get a parade with no explanation of why the enemy lost.


VI. The Greek Text Against Therapeutic Reduction

Modern Orthodox apologists frequently claim that substitutionary atonement is a Western imposition on Scripture, arising from medieval legalism rather than apostolic teaching. This claim cannot survive contact with the apostolic vocabulary.

1. ἱλαστήριον (Romans 3:25): The Mercy Seat

“Whom God set forth as a propitiation by His blood, through faith, to demonstrate His righteousness” (Rom. 3:25).

The noun ἱλαστήριον (hilasterion) is the term the Septuagint uses for the kapporeth, the mercy seat atop the Ark of the Covenant (Exod. 25:17-22 LXX; Lev. 16:14-15 LXX).5 On the Day of Atonement, the high priest sprinkled blood on the kapporeth because God’s holy presence dwelt above it, between the cherubim. Without the blood, divine wrath would break out against sinful Israel. The blood on the mercy seat was the barrier between God’s just wrath and a guilty people.

Paul declares that Christ Himself is the mercy seat. God “set Him forth” publicly, and His blood is the means of propitiation. The Day of Atonement typology could not be more explicit. Whatever else Romans 3 is doing, it is doing this: God sets forth Christ in blood-shedding, cultic, substitutionary categories. This is not therapeutic language. It is tabernacle/temple language. It is priesthood language. It is sacrifice language directed God-ward.

C.H. Dodd famously attempted to strip hilasterion of its wrath-bearing meaning, arguing that it signifies only “expiation” (the cleansing of sin) rather than “propitiation” (the turning aside of wrath). Leon Morris demonstrated in The Apostolic Preaching of the Cross that the hilaskomai word group in both secular Greek and the Septuagint consistently carries the idea of appeasing wrath, and that the sacrificial contexts in which the term appears naturally carry both God-ward (wrath/justice) and sin-ward (cleansing) dimensions.6 The standard lexicons support this range: BDAG lists both the “mercy-seat” and “means of expiation/propitiation” senses for ἱλαστήριον, thereby retaining the propitiatory context of the Day of Atonement.7 Reducing the term to one dimension by fiat is driven by theological discomfort and personal bias, not lexical evidence.

2. κατάκριμα (Romans 5:16, 18; 8:1): Condemnation as Sentence

“The judgement which came from one offence resulted in condemnation” (Rom. 5:16).

“Through one man’s offence, judgement came to all men, resulting in condemnation” (Rom. 5:18).

“There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus” (Rom. 8:1).

The noun κατάκριμα (katakrima) denotes a judicial sentence of condemnation. It is a formal legal term: a sentence pronounced by a court, not a disease, deficiency, or internalised dereliction.

Paul’s argument in Romans 5:12-21 is explicitly forensic. He is not comparing Adam and Christ as sources of corruption and healing. He is comparing them as sources of condemnation and justification:

  • παράπτωμα (trespass) → κατάκριμα (condemnation) → θάνατος (death)
  • χάρισμα (gift) → δικαίωμα (justification) → ζωή (life)

Notice the order. Death follows condemnation. Life follows justification. That is Paul’s logic. Not Calvin’s. Not Luther’s. Paul’s. He does not permit the Orthodox inversion where death is the primary problem and condemnation is a secondary metaphor.

Romans 8:1 then announces the gospel verdict: no condemnation for those in Christ. This is not therapy. It is acquittal.

3. ἀναφέρω (1 Peter 2:24; Hebrews 9:28): Substitutionary Bearing

“Who Himself bore our sins in His own body on the tree” (1 Pet. 2:24).

“So Christ was offered once to bear the sins of many” (Heb. 9:28).

The verb ἀναφέρω (anaphero) means “to carry up” or “to offer up.” In both texts, the language of Christ bearing sins is drawn directly from Isaiah 53:12 (LXX: ἀνήνεγκεν). This is sacrificial substitution. The sin-bearer carries what belongs to others. The sins are not merely healed or cleansed; they are borne away in the person of the substitute.

Hebrews 9:28 makes the substitutionary logic explicit by echoing the Day of Atonement typology: Christ is offered once (ἅπαξ) to bear sins, just as the high priest entered the Holy of Holies once a year with blood not his own. Orthodox apologists often cite Hebrews for its heavenly intercession and inaugurated eschatology. But Hebrews is drenched in substitutionary sacrifice. You cannot have the ascended High Priest without the slain Lamb whose blood speaks better things than Abel’s (Heb. 12:24). Whatever therapeutic dimensions you add, and you should, you do not get to erase the substitutionary core without rewriting the text.

Summary: The Text Refuses Reduction

These three terms are not isolated proof-texts. They are structural load-bearing elements in Paul’s and Peter’s soteriological architecture.

  • ἱλαστήριον locates salvation at the mercy seat, where divine wrath is propitiated.
  • κατάκριμα names the problem as judicial condemnation, not merely corruption.
  • ἀναφέρω identifies Christ as the sin-bearer who carries guilt away.

Eastern Orthodox theology must either explain these terms within its own therapeutic framework (which it cannot do without semantic abuse) or acknowledge that substitutionary logic is not Western corruption but apostolic grammar.


VII. Romanides and the Therapeutic Narrowing

John Romanides remains enormously influential in modern Orthodox soteriology, particularly in popular Anglophone apologetics. His central move, developed most fully in The Ancestral Sin (1957), is to redefine sin as inherited disease rather than inherited guilt.8 According to Romanides, the Western Augustinian tradition “confused” the juridical category of guilt with the patristic category of corruption. The East, he claims, never held that humanity inherits Adam’s guilt, only Adam’s mortality and corruption. Guilt is a later Western import.

Whatever one’s assessment of Romanides’ historical claims, the contemporary effect of his framework is clear: the juridical problem is functionally marginalised in popular Orthodox presentation. The therapeutic model of sin and salvation that pervades popular Orthodox YouTube channels, podcasts, blog posts, and social media commentary is Romanides filtered through a generation of clout-chasers. When an Orthodox apologist tells you that “sin is a disease, not a crime” or that “the West turned the gospel into courtroom drama,” they are repeating Romanides, whether they know his name or not.

This move suffers three catastrophic failures.

  1. Scripture refuses the reduction. Paul does not oppose guilt and corruption. He orders them. Condemnation precedes death. Curse precedes corruption. Judgement precedes exile. Romans 5:16 is explicit: “the judgement which came from one offence resulted in condemnation.” The condemnation is the ground of the death, not the other way around. Romanides inverts this order, not because Scripture demands it, but because juridical categories offend his therapeutic framework.
  2. Romanides’ own patristic appeal is selective. He claims that the Eastern Fathers never taught inherited guilt. But the Fathers are not so tidy. Gregory of Nazianzus speaks of Christ becoming “a curse” to destroy “my curse” (Oration 30, §5),9 language that presupposes transferred liability, not merely shared mortality. Eusebius of Caesarea, writing in the fourth century, states that Christ “suffered a penalty He did not owe, but which we owed” and “transferred to Himself the scourging, the insults, and the dishonour, which were due to us” (Demonstratio Evangelica 10.1).10 These are Eastern Fathers using penalty language, transferred liability language, and substitutionary language centuries before Anselm was born. The Fathers held therapeutic and juridical categories together. Romanides amputates one to preserve the other.
  3. Healing without judgement is not salvation. Romanides’ model cannot account for curse language (Gal. 3:13), wrath language (Rom. 1-3), or sacrificial blood language (Hebrews). If sin is only disease, why does Paul speak of condemnation? How can the diseased be culpable? If death is only corruption, why does the writer of Hebrews insist that “without shedding of blood there is no remission” (Heb. 9:22)? Remission is a legal term. Blood addresses guilt, not merely sickness. The Cross becomes wellness-remedy without verdict, therapy without justice. That is not apostolic Christianity. It is selective reading elevated to the status of dogma.

VIII. The Fathers Do Not Support the Reduction

The decisive blow against the Orthodox therapeutic reduction is this: the very Fathers they claim as their own do not teach what modern Orthodox apologists claim they teach.

The claim here is not that the Fathers explicitly taught penal substitutionary atonement in its developed Reformed formulation. That’s absurd, and no serious Reformed scholar claims that. The claim is sharper: they refuse the modern Orthodox separation of healing from verdict. They held both categories together. Modern Orthodox polemic pulls them apart and calls the amputation “tradition.”

Athanasius: The Just Claim That Repentance Cannot Guard

Athanasius approaches the problem of salvation not merely as corruption but as a divine dilemma (On the Incarnation, §7):

“But repentance would, firstly, fail to guard the just claim of God. For He would still be none the more true, if men did not remain in the grasp of death.”11

God’s truthfulness and justice are at stake. The sentence of death was pronounced, and it must be satisfied. Repentance alone, however sincere, cannot address this. The problem is not merely that humanity is sick. The problem is that God’s judicial word stands, and it must be honoured.

Athanasius continues (On the Incarnation, §8):

“Thus, taking a body like our own … He surrendered His body to death in place of all, and offered it to the Father.”12

“In place of all.” “Offered it to the Father.” This is substitutionary, God-ward sacrificial logic embedded in incarnational soteriology. Athanasius does not oppose the two. He holds them together. Orthodox apologists love to cite Athanasius as the champion of incarnational soteriology. Which he certainly is. But his incarnational soteriology is built on the problem of divine justice that repentance cannot resolve, and that only substitutionary death can satisfy. You cannot claim Athanasius for your healing model without acknowledging that Athanasius himself grounds that healing in a juridical problem.

Gregory of Nazianzus: Curse-Bearing Without Apology

Gregory is often cited for rejecting ransom-to-Satan theories. But in the Fourth Theological Oration (Oration 30, §5), Gregory states plainly:

“For my sake He was called a curse, who destroyed my curse; and sin, who taketh away the sin of the world.”13

“For my sake.” “Called a curse.” That is Pauline substitution language, not mere therapeutic metaphor. Gregory is not describing ontological healing. He is describing a representative who bears a teleological curse that belonged to another. The Cappadocian Father most often invoked against penal categories is himself using them.

Cyril of Alexandria: Forensic Categories in an Incarnational Frame

Cyril integrates incarnational healing with explicitly forensic categories when he expounds the Cross and its redemptive effects. He does not treat judgement language as a latter Western intrusion but as part of Scripture’s own explanation of what the Cross accomplishes.14

The point isn’t that Cyril uses later Reformed technical vocabulary. The point is that he does not permit the modern Orthodox separation of “healing” from “verdict.” In Cyril’s treatment, the Cross is not merely the place where death is entered and overturned; it is also the place where sin is comprehensively dealt with in categories of condemnation, accusation, and acquittal. The same Cyril who speaks of Christ restoring human nature also speaks of Christ addressing the sentence that stood against humanity. The therapeutic reading of Cyril requires ignoring half of what Cyril actually wrote.

Augustine: Not a Medieval Corruption

Orthodox apologists routinely dismiss Augustine as the originator and source of Western legalism. But Augustine writes (On the Trinity, IV.13):

“He offered for us that one and most real sacrifice … He bore what was ours, to purge what was ours … He bore our punishment that He might cancel our guilt.”15

“Bore our punishment.” “Cancel our guilt.” This is penal substitution stated plainly, centuries before Anselm, centuries before the Reformation, and from a Father whose influence on both East and West is undeniable. The standard Orthodox dismissal is to treat Augustine as a purely Western figure whose theology corrupted the Latin tradition. But Augustine was read, cited, and engaged throughout the East. To dismiss him is not to recover the patristic tradition. It is to edit that tradition and subsequently betray a controlling bias.

Eusebius of Caesarea: Penalty Language Before the Medieval Period

Lest it be said that such language belongs only to the compromised Latin West, Eusebius of Caesarea writes in the Demonstratio Evangelica (10.1):

“The Lamb of God … was chastised on our behalf, and suffered a penalty He did not owe, but which we owed because of the multitude of our sins; and so He became the cause of the forgiveness of our sins, because He received death for us, and transferred to Himself the scourging, the insults, and the dishonour, which were due to us.”16

“Chastised on our behalf.” “Suffered a penalty He did not owe.” “Which we owed.” “Received death for us.” “Transferred to Himself.” Five distinct penal-substitutionary phrases in a single sentence from a fourth-century Eastern Father. This is not Western corruption. This is not medieval legalism. This is the undivided Church.

If these themes and descriptions do not lend their support to a penal substitutionary atonement motif, then language itself is vacated of meaning.

Summary

The therapeutic reduction proposed by modern Orthodox theology is not a recovery of patristic Christianity. It is an amputation of it. It keeps the healing and discards the verdict. It preserves the Resurrection yet cannot explain the Cross.

The Fathers knew better.

They did not oppose victory and substitution. They held them together, because Scripture holds them together, and because the conscience requires both.


IX. What Therapeutic Soteriology Cannot Give the Conscience

Here, the debate turns pastoral and decisive.

Therapeutic salvation is progressive by nature. Healing takes time. Theosis is a journey. Sanctification is never complete in this life. The Orthodox account is often honest about this: the believer is always being healed, always being purified, always moving toward fullness of life in God. The cross is working its transformative effects for life.

There is beauty in that. Yet, if misapplied, there is also an abyss.

If salvation is fundamentally healing, then the question the troubled conscience asks is: Am I healed enough? And the therapeutic model has no mechanism to answer that question with finality. There is no moment at which the verdict is declared and never revisited. There is no point at which the sinner can say with certainty: “I have been justified. The sentence has been borne. There is no condemnation for me.” There is only the ongoing process of becoming, which may or may not be sufficient, and which the believer can never be certain has progressed far enough.

Reformed theology does not deny progressive sanctification. It has always insisted on it. But it grounds progressive sanctification in a definitive justification that has already been declared. The believer’s standing before God is not contingent on the degree of healing achieved. It is contingent on the finished work of Christ, applied by faith, declared once, and never revisited.

“There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus” (Rom. 8:1).

That “now” is not aspirational. It is declarative. It is a verdict, not a prognosis.

The conscience that rests on a prognosis has not yet found rest. A guilty conscience knows it is not merely sick. It knows it stands condemned before the justice of a Holy God. And condemned sinners need more than a physician. They need a judge who has already ruled in their favour because the sentence has already been satisfied and served by another.


X. Theosis Does Not Replace Justification

At this point, the Orthodox respondent will say, “You keep reducing salvation to a courtroom. We are talking about something far greater. Theosis. Union with God. Participation in the divine nature. Your forensic categories are a small corner of the biblical story.”

Reformed theology is not embarrassed by union with Christ. Calvin arguably wrote more extensively on union with Christ than on any other soteriological theme. The Westminster Confession speaks of effectual calling, adoption, sanctification, and glorification. The Reformed tradition has always affirmed that the believer is united to Christ by the Holy Spirit and that this union is the source of every saving benefit including ongoing renewal and consecration.

But union with Christ is not an undifferentiated concept. Within that union, Scripture distinguishes gifts received by different mechanisms. Justification is forensic: it is the declaration that the believer is righteous in Christ. Sanctification is transformative: it is progressive as the believer is conformed into the image of Christ. Both flow from union. Neither replaces the other. And critically, justification is the legal ground on which participation is established. Without it, participation is presumption.

Consider the logic. On what basis does the sinner participate in divine life? If the answer is “by being healed,” then participation is conditional on the degree of transformation achieved, and the question of assurance returns with force. If the answer is “by being justified,” then the sinner’s access to God rests on a finished work, and participation in divine life flows from a settled legal standing rather than from an uncertain therapeutic process.

Theosis, biblically understood, is not an alternative to justification. It is the eschatological goal toward which the justified believer is being sanctified. The Reformed tradition affirms this trajectory. What it refuses to do is collapse the forensic ground into the transformative process, because the moment you do that, the ground itself disappears, and the believer is left standing on a process that is, by definition, never completed in this life.

Peter himself puts it in forensic-participatory order. He writes that God has given us “exceedingly great and precious promises, that through these you may be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust” (2 Pet. 1:4). The participation follows the escape. The escape is from corruption, which Paul has already grounded in condemnation (Rom. 5:16-18). The order holds: verdict, then escape, then participation. Reverse the order, and you have participation without ground, escape without basis, and a divine nature shared with those whose guilt has never been addressed.


XI. The Central Question Orthodoxy Cannot Answer

Here is the unavoidable question Eastern Orthodox atonement theology repeatedly leaves underspecified:

On what grounds does God forgive sins while remaining just?

This is not a Western obsession. It is Paul’s stated problem. Romans 3:26 states that God set forth Christ as a propitiation “that He might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus.” The problem Paul identifies is not how God heals. It is how God can be simultaneously just and forgiving. Justice demands condemnation. Mercy desires pardon. How are both satisfied?

Victory over death cannot answer it. Death is the consequence of condemnation, not its resolution. Healing cannot answer it. A healed sinner is still a guilty sinner unless the guilt has been addressed. Participation does not answer it. Participation in divine life does not explain on what basis the participant was admitted or sustained. Theosis does not answer it. Deification describes the believer’s destiny, not the judicial ground that makes that destiny accessible to those who deserve the opposite.

Only substitution answers it. Christ bears the condemnation in His body on the killing tree. Justice is terminally satisfied. The sinner is justified. And God is shown to be both just and the justifier.

Until Orthodoxy can answer this question without borrowing (whether consciously or unconsciously) from the substitutionary categories it claims to reject, its atonement theology remains what it has always been: a beautiful but incomplete account of what happened at the Cross.


Conclusion: Healing Requires Judgement to Be Resolved

Reformed theology does not deny healing, resurrection, or participation in divine life. It insists that none of these are possible unless guilt has been decisively addressed first and foremost.

Modern Orthodox polemic often offers resurrection without verdict, medicine without diagnosis, and victory without satisfaction. It rightly recoils from caricatures of penal substitution (don’t we all?). But in reacting against caricature, it empties the Cross of all biblical necessity.

The gospel is not that God heals us instead of judging sin. The gospel is that God heals us because He has judged sin in Christ.

“For He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him” (2 Cor. 5:21).

Anything less is not a fuller salvation. It is an incomplete one. And the conscience that rests in an incomplete gospel has not yet found rest. It has been offered a process where it needed a verdict, a journey where it needed an anchor, and a physician where it needed a judge who has already ruled.

The Reformation did not narrow the gospel. It recovered the ground on which everything else stands.
1

This hermeneutical move draws on James D.G. Dunn, The Theology of Paul the Apostle (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998), 340-346, and more broadly on the New Perspective on Paul as developed by E.P. Sanders and N.T. Wright. Some Orthodox scholars appropriate this framework selectively to argue against forensic readings of Paul, though the New Perspective itself was not developed for Orthodox purposes.

2

N.T. Wright, The Day the Revolution Began: Reconsidering the Meaning of Jesus’s Crucifixion (San Francisco: HarperOne, 2016). Wright’s discussion of sin, treated “as sin” rather than merely as corruption, runs through chapters 6-9, with the most concentrated treatment at 147-151 and 237-244. His insistence that Paul’s sacrificial language retains its force within the covenantal framework is developed at length in chapter 11. Wright’s project is not identical to Reformed penal substitution, but his retention of forensic categories within the covenantal frame directly undercuts the Orthodox attempt to use the New Perspective as an escape from juridical soteriology.

3

Gustaf Aulen, Christus Victor: An Historical Study of the Three Main Types of the Idea of Atonement, trans. A.G. Hebert (London: SPCK, 1931). Aulen’s thesis that the “classic” patristic view was a purely dramatic victory motif has been challenged by, among others, Henri Blocher, “Agnus Victor: The Atonement as Victory and Vicarious Punishment,” in What Does It Mean to Be Saved? Broadening Evangelical Horizons of Salvation, ed. John G. Stackhouse Jr. (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2002), 67-91, and by Hans Boersma, Violence, Hospitality, and the Cross: Reappropriating the Atonement Tradition (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2004), who demonstrates that the Fathers consistently integrated victory and satisfaction motifs. Even J. Denny Weaver’s sympathetic treatment acknowledges that Aulen oversimplifies the patristic evidence.

4

The term χειρόγραφον (cheirographon) appears only here in the New Testament. In the documentary papyri, it is widely attested as a handwritten record of obligation or indebtedness. See Adolf Deissmann, Light from the Ancient East, 4th ed., trans. Lionel R.M. Strachan (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1927), 332-334. Recent scholarship has debated whether “certificate of debt” captures the full semantic range, with some arguing for a broader sense of “handwritten legal document” or “written record of obligation.” The juridical sense is retained on either reading: the cheirographon is a legal instrument that stands “against us” and is cancelled at the Cross.

5

Exod. 25:17-22; Lev. 16:14-15. The Septuagint renders the Hebrew kapporeth as ἱλαστήριον in both texts, establishing the term’s cultic and sacrificial meaning in Greek-speaking Judaism long before Paul’s use of the term.

6

Leon Morris, The Apostolic Preaching of the Cross, 3rd ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1965), 144-213. Morris’s analysis of the hilaskomai word group remains the most thorough treatment in English. His demonstration that the word group in both secular Greek and the Septuagint carries the idea of appeasing divine wrath has shaped the subsequent debate, even among those who qualify his conclusions.

7

Walter Bauer, Frederick William Danker, William F. Arndt, and F. Wilbur Gingrich, A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, 3rd ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000), s.v. “ἱλαστήριον.” BDAG lists both the “mercy-seat” and “means of expiation/propitiation” senses, retaining the propitiatory context of the Day of Atonement backdrop.

8

John S. Romanides, The Ancestral Sin, trans. George S. Gabriel (Ridgewood, NJ: Zephyr, 2002; Greek original, 1957). Romanides’ central thesis is that the Western Augustinian tradition introduced the concept of inherited guilt, which the Eastern patristic tradition never held. Sin, on his account, is inherited as disease and mortality, not as legal liability.

9

Gregory of Nazianzus, Fourth Theological Oration (Oration 30), §5, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 7, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 310.

10

Eusebius of Caesarea, Demonstratio Evangelica 10.1, trans. W.J. Ferrar (London: SPCK, 1920). The full passage reads: “And the Lamb of God not only did this, but was chastised on our behalf, and suffered a penalty He did not owe, but which we owed because of the multitude of our sins; and so He became the cause of the forgiveness of our sins, because He received death for us, and transferred to Himself the scourging, the insults, and the dishonour, which were due to us, and drew down upon Himself the appointed curse, being made a curse for us.”

11

Athanasius, On the Incarnation, §7, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 4, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 40.

12

Athanasius, On the Incarnation, §8, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 4, 40.

13

Gregory of Nazianzus, Fourth Theological Oration (Oration 30), §5, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 7, 310.

14

Cyril of Alexandria’s soteriology across his commentaries on Romans, John, and Hebrews repeatedly integrates incarnational and juridical categories rather than opposing them. The argument here does not rest on a single disputed Cyril quotation; it rests on the broader patristic pattern demonstrated above from Athanasius, Gregory, Augustine, and Eusebius, a pattern Cyril’s corpus confirms rather than contradicts. Where specific Cyril quotations are cited in this debate, they should be referenced to immediately verifiable primary-source editions (page and column) to prevent citation disputes from obscuring the substantive theological argument.

15

Augustine, On the Trinity, IV.13, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, vol. 3, ed. Philip Schaff (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 78. Cf. Augustine, Contra Faustum, XIV.4: “Christ, though guiltless, took our punishment, that He might cancel our guilt, and do away with our punishment.”

16

Eusebius of Caesarea, Demonstratio Evangelica 10.1, trans. W.J. Ferrar (London: SPCK, 1920).

Article 3. The Brilliance That Cannot Save

Hart, Behr, and the Orthodox Atonement That Explains Everything Except the One Thing That Must Be Explained

This is the third and final article in a series examining Eastern Orthodox theology from a confessional Reformed evangelical standpoint. The first article, “The Six Corruptions of Eastern Orthodoxy,” addressed icons, exclusivism, tradition, theosis, apophatic theology, and apostolic succession. The second article, “Healing Without Judgement Is Not the Gospel,” demonstrated that Scripture’s atonement categories are irreducibly juridical, that the Greek text refuses therapeutic reduction, and that the Fathers held verdict and victory together. This article takes the argument directly to the two most influential Orthodox voices on atonement today.


Eastern Orthodox polemic against Reformed soteriology increasingly ossifies around two modern figures: David Bentley Hart and John Behr. Hart is easily the most formidable English-language critic of penal substitutionary atonement writing today (read my article defending PSA against EO theology here). Behr is among the most influential Orthodox patristic scholars alive. Together, they represent the finest that contemporary Orthodoxy has to offer in response to the Reformed doctrine of the Cross.

And, they are both wrong. Wrong in ways that expose not a minor disagreement but the structural failure at the heart of Orthodox atonement theology. This is not a squabble over emphasis. It is a fracture at a foundational level.

Hart’s critique fails because it attacks a position classical Reformed theology doesn’t hold, evades the exegetical texts that demand juridical categories, and never answers the question that Reformed theology exists to answer. Behr’s reframing fails because it offers a gospel in which the Resurrection is the saving event and the Cross is its necessary but under-explained prelude, a paschal theology that cannot deliver what the sin-shamed conscience requires: a verdict.

What follows is not a defence of caricature. It is a direct engagement with both theologians at their strongest, showing where they collapse under their own weight. Orthodox readers are welcome to test every claim, verify every citation, and produce the exegetical counter-argument they are convinced exists. I will wait.

A necessary clarification before we proceed. The argument of this article is not that the Fathers were proto-Calvinists. Of course, they were not. The argument is that the Fathers held juridical and therapeutic categories together, because Scripture holds them together, and because the conscience requires both. The modern Orthodox reduction to therapeutic categories alone is the novelty. We are not importing a foreign category into patristic theology. We are restoring one that modern Orthodoxy has amputated. If that claim enrages, the remedy is not intimidation. It is exegesis. Produce the counter-reading of Romans 3:25–26 that answers the judicial question without juridical categories. Until then, the rage is confession, not refutation.

The dispute can be reduced to a single controlling question, and everything else is secondary:

By what means, at the Cross, does God deal with guilt in a way that upholds His justice while actually forgiving the sinner?

Any account that does not answer that question in the terms Paul sets in Romans 3:25–26 is, by definition, incomplete, regardless of how much else it explains. That is the standard. That is the jurisdiction. And that is where the case will be tried.

Three responses are common at this point, and none of them answer the question.

  1. Appeal to the multiplicity of metaphors. Scripture uses many images, but Paul does not treat justification as one image among many. He treats it as a verdict (Rom. 8:1). A verdict is not a metaphor. It is a determination.
  2. Appeal to mystery. Mystery is appropriate where Scripture is silent. It is not appropriate where Scripture asks and answers a specific question (Rom. 3:26).
  3. Appeal to participation. Participation in Christ’s life presupposes that the problem of guilt has already been addressed. It does not explain how it is addressed.

None of these responses, individually or integrated, explain how God remains just while justifying the ungodly. If the reader encounters them in the comments below this article, they will know they have heard a deflection, not a reply (and trust me, all three of these responses will indeed appear in droves).


Part One: David Bentley Hart Has No Answer

David Bentley Hart writes like an angel and argues like a magician. His sentences are beautiful. His confidence is absolute. His dismissals are devastating. He has persuaded a generation of unsettled evangelicals that penal substitution is unworthy of serious theological consideration. Ecclesial anxiety is real, and Hart has made it his stock in trade.

Yet, for all his brilliance, he is fatally wrong about the most important question in Christian theology. And the evangelicals who were swayed by his summons did not check his exegesis before they packed their bags.

Hart has spent decades telling evangelicals that penal substitutionary atonement is a moral obscenity, a philosophical embarrassment, and a patristic aberration. He writes as though the matter is settled. He mocks those who disagree as theological illiterates clinging to medieval corruption.

But Hart has never answered the only question that matters.

What happens to guilt at the Cross?

Not symbolically. Not aesthetically. Not eschatologically.

What happens to it?

Hart cannot say. And until he can, his critique is not scholarship. It is evasion dressed in prose so beautiful you almost forget to notice he never answered the question.


I. Hart’s Case, Precisely Stated

Before demolishing a position, one ought to state it fairly. Hart’s rejection of penal substitution can be summarised in five interlocking claims:

  1. Penal substitution depends on nominalism, treating justice as an arbitrary product of divine will rather than a perfection grounded in divine nature.
  2. It presupposes voluntarism, implying God could forgive without the Cross but chose violence instead.
  3. It treats guilt as transferable property, a philosophical absurdity since guilt is personal and cannot be moved from one subject to another.
  4. It depicts the Father punishing the Son, rendering God morally monstrous.
  5. It is a Western corruption, derived from Anselm, medieval penance theology, and early modern legal frameworks rather than from Scripture or the Fathers.

These are the particulars. Let the reader note them very carefully, because not one of them will survive cross-examination. Admittedly, they are rhetorically powerful. They are also, without exception, false when applied to classical Reformed orthodoxy. The burden of proof lies with the one who brings the charge. Hart has brought it (time and again). I intend to show that he cannot sustain it.

And, let that burden be clearly located from this point forward. The burden of proof is not on the Reformed account to demonstrate that Scripture contains juridical categories. That is already established by the language of condemnation, justification, propitiation, and curse. Nothing is more certain than this. The burden is on the Orthodox account to explain those categories without reducing them to metaphor or relocating them to something other than the Cross. Until that burden is discharged, the Orthodox critique of penal substitution is an objection without an alternative.


II. The Nominalism Charge Collapses

Hart’s philosophical centre of gravity is the claim that penal substitution presupposes nominalism. If justice is merely willed rather than grounded in divine nature, then punishment becomes arbitrary, and the Cross becomes gratuitous violence.1

But this objection does not touch classical Reformed orthodoxy.

Francis Turretin, the most precise of the Reformed scholastics, states the position unambiguously in his Institutes of Elenctic Theology (XI.ii):

“Punitive justice is not a free act of the divine will, but a natural property flowing necessarily from God’s holiness.”2

God does not choose to be just. He is just necessarily, eternally, essentially. The Cross is not arbitrary. It is necessary, not because some external law compels God, but because God cannot deny Himself. To forgive without satisfaction would be for God to act against His own nature.

John Owen argues identically in The Death of Death in the Death of Christ:

“The justice of God is not a thing arbitrary, which He may use or not use at His pleasure; but it is a holy, essential property of His nature.”3

This is the opposite of nominalism. It is moral realism of the most rigorous kind.

Hart never engages these texts. He merely assumes that “Reformed” means “voluntarist” and proceeds accordingly. That is not scholarship. It is a caricature. And a slew of converts has been built on it.

A note of clarification is warranted here. The Reformed doctrine of penal substitution is not identical with Anselm’s satisfaction theory (easily the most common factual error of EO apologists). Anselm framed the Cross as a payment of a debt to divine honour. The Reformed scholastics, following Turretin and Owen, frame the Cross as the Son voluntarily bearing the Father’s just wrath against sin in the place of the elect. The necessity arises not from offended honour but from the holiness of God’s nature. Hart frequently conflates Anselm with the Reformed tradition as though they were the same position. They are not. The distinction matters because Hart’s caricature depends on the conflation. Anyone continuing to collapse the two outs themselves as attention farming and not serious about atonement scholarship.4


III. Hart’s Concrete Misrepresentation

It is not enough to say Hart attacks a straw man. Let me demonstrate it.

In The Beauty of the Infinite (2003), Hart frames the satisfaction tradition as presupposing a competitive relationship between divine justice and mercy, as though they were rival attributes requiring an external mechanism of reconciliation imposed on the divine life from outside.5 On his reading, satisfaction theology implicitly treats justice and mercy as separable perfections in tension, violating divine simplicity. God, on classical theist grounds, does not negotiate between rival attributes. His justice is His mercy in the simplicity of the divine being.

The philosophical point is sophisticated. The historical claim is false.

Turretin explicitly and repeatedly addresses this. He distinguishes between justice as a perfection essential to God’s nature (which is necessary) and the exercise of justice in particular acts (which is free in its mode).6 God is not compelled by an external law, nor does He negotiate between rival attributes. He acts in accordance with His own being. The necessity of satisfaction arises from within the divine life, not from above it. Justice and mercy are not in competition. They meet at the Cross because the Cross is God’s own provision: the same God whose justice demands satisfaction provides the Lamb who makes it. The Cross does not resolve a tension between two divine attributes. It is the single act in which both are perfectly expressed.

The distinction is standard in the very tradition Hart critiques, yet his published treatment bypasses it consistently in favour of the weakest popular version. A reader of Hart alone would never know that Turretin’s doctrine of divine justice is a form of moral realism more rigorous than anything Hart himself delivers.

This is not a peripheral misreading. It is the foundation of his entire case. If the nominalism charge falls, Hart’s philosophical critique has no ground to stand on. And it falls the moment one opens Turretin. Every Orthodox YouTuber, every Facebook apologist, every convert who parrots the “nominalism” line is repeating a charge that was answered over four centuries ago by a theologian Hart pretends does not exist.


IV. Guilt, Covenant, and the Logic of Representation

Hart’s claim that guilt cannot be transferred is philosophically intuitive but theologically naive. It assumes a modern, individualist account of personhood that Scripture does not share.

Paul’s argument in Romans 5:12–21 depends entirely on the transferability of guilt and righteousness through covenantal representation:

“Therefore, as through one man’s offence judgement came to all men, resulting in condemnation, even so through one Man’s righteous act the free gift came to all men, resulting in justification of life” (Rom. 5:18).7

Adam’s guilt is imputed to his descendants by virtue of his Federal Headship. Christ’s righteousness is imputed to His people (by the same virtue). The logic is not modern property transfer. It is covenantal headship: the representative acts, and the represented receive the consequences.8

Hart dismisses this, out of hand, as incoherent. But he never engages the covenantal structure that makes it intelligible. Federal headship is not an arbitrary legal fiction (as some arbitrarily claim). It is the pattern by which God has always administered His relationship with humanity. In Adam, all die. In Christ, all are made alive. The symmetry is Paul’s, not ours. If Hart finds it philosophically embarrassing, his quarrel is not with Geneva. It is with the Spirit-inspired text of Romans.


V. The “Divine Violence” Charge and the Trinitarian Atonement

Hart’s most emotionally potent objection is that penal substitution depicts the Father punishing the Son, making God a moral monster who tortures the innocent to satisfy His own wounded honour (the foolishness of this charge is demonstrated in a more developed form here).

The charge fails because it misunderstands the Trinitarian structure of the atonement.

On the Reformed account, the Son is not a third-party victim conscripted into bearing a punishment He did not choose. He is the divine agent of His own sacrifice. Christ states this explicitly:

“Therefore My Father loves Me, because I lay down My life that I may take it again. No one takes it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again” (John 10:17–18).9

The author of Hebrews makes the Trinitarian structure more explicit:

“How much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered Himself without spot to God, cleanse your conscience from dead works to serve the living God?” (Heb. 9:14).10

Father, Son, and Spirit act in perfect concert. The Father sends. The Son offers Himself. The Spirit is the medium of the offering. There is no division of interest, no reluctant victim, no coerced sacrifice. The atonement is a single Trinitarian act (inseparably operated) in which the Godhead absorbs the judgement that justice demands and mercy desires to remove.

Hart’s “divine violence” charge depends on importing a division between Father and Son that the New Testament explicitly denies. It is, ironically, a sub-Trinitarian objection: it can only work if one imagines the Son as somehow separate from the divine will that demands satisfaction. But if the Son is consubstantial with the Father, then the will that demands satisfaction and the will that provides it are one will. The Cross is not the Father’s violence against the Son. It is God’s costly self-giving for the salvation of His people.


VI. Hart’s Evasion of Paul

Here is where Hart’s brilliance becomes a liability. He is so gifted at philosophy that he forgets he is supposed to be doing exegesis.

Romans 3:25–26:

“Whom God set forth as a propitiation by His blood, through faith, to demonstrate His righteousness, because in His forbearance God had passed over the sins that were previously committed, to demonstrate at the present time His righteousness, that He might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus.”11

Paul’s argument is brilliant in its succinctness. God’s righteousness was in question because He had been passing over sins. The Cross resolves this by demonstrating that God is both just (sin is punished) and the justifier (sinners are pardoned). The mechanism is propitiation, a mercy-seat sacrifice that addresses wrath through blood.

This text is non-negotiable and its conclusions inescapable. Any proposed account of the atonement must be able to answer, in explicit terms, Paul’s stated purpose: “to demonstrate His righteousness… that He might be just and the justifier.” If an account cannot specify what occurs at the Cross that resolves the problem created by God’s prior “passing over” of sins, then it has not explained the atonement. It has described something else. The debate is no longer about “models of atonement.” It is about compliance with Paul’s stated purpose.

Hart does not give a sustained verse-level account of Romans 3:25–26 that actually answers Paul’s “just and justifier” logic.12 He never explains how God can be simultaneously just and the justifier without something happening to guilt at the Cross. He dismisses “forensic” readings of Paul as Western anachronisms, but he does not replace them with an alternative exegesis of this text. He simply walks past it. In any court, the failure of a party to address the strongest evidence against their case invites an adverse inference. The inference here is unavoidable: Hart does not engage Romans 3:25–26 because he cannot engage it on terms that leave his position standing.

Hebrews 9:22 is equally devastating:

“And according to the law almost all things are purified with blood, and without shedding of blood there is no remission.”13

No blood, no remission. The author of Hebrews does not say, “without participation in risen life there is no healing.” He says without blood there is no forgiveness. This is sacrificial, substitutionary, and cultic language rooted in the Day of Atonement. Hart’s wafer-thin framework has no place for it.

And here the charge of “Latin captivity” collapses under the weight of its own language. The forensic vocabulary Hart dismisses as Western corruption is native Greek. Δικαιοσύνη, κατάκριμα, ἱλαστήριον, λογίζομαι, χειρόγραφον: these are Greek words, written by Greek authors, to Greek audiences, in the Greek New Testament. Paul was not a medieval Latinist. Chrysostom was not reading Anselm. The accusation of Latin imposition is linguistically absurd when the juridical grammar is the mother tongue of the texts themselves.

The Septuagint confirms this beyond all dispute. Isaiah 53, the premier Old Testament atonement text, uses unambiguously substitutionary and juridical language in the Greek translation that Athanasius, Gregory, and Chrysostom all read: παρεδόθη διὰ τὰς ἁμαρτίας ἡμῶν, “handed over on account of our sins” (Isa. 53:12 LXX); τῷ μώλωπι αὐτοῦ ἡμεῖς ἰάθημεν, “by his wound we were healed” (Isa. 53:5 LXX); κύριος παρέδωκεν αὐτὸν ταῖς ἁμαρτίαις ἡμῶν, “the Lord delivered him up for our sins” (Isa. 53:6 LXX).14 This is not a New Testament innovation, much less a medieval Latin one. It is prophetic. It is in the Greek Old Testament that the Eastern Fathers themselves read, memorised, and preached. Juridical substitution is not a Western import. It is embedded in the Scriptures that Eastern Orthodoxy claims to venerate above all traditions.


VII. The Universalism Connection

There is a further problem that Hart and his devotees seldom acknowledge.

Hart’s rejection of penal substitution is not independent of his universalism. In That All Shall Be Saved (2019), Hart argues that eternal damnation is logically and morally impossible, that all rational creatures will eventually be reconciled to God.15 This is apokatastasis, a position soundly rejected by the mainstream of patristic and conciliar tradition.16 And it is structurally linked to his rejection of penal substitution.

If all are eventually saved, there is no ultimate condemnation. If there is no ultimate condemnation, there is no condemnation that needs to be borne at the Cross. Penal substitution becomes unnecessary in principle, not merely philosophically awkward. Hart does not simply find PSA distasteful. He needs it to be false because if guilt is real and condemnation is permanent, then either a substitute bears it or the sinner does. There is no third option on which Hart’s universalism can survive.

This matters because Hart presents his critique of PSA as a disinterested philosophical evaluation. It is not, and it is dishonest to suggest so. It is the testimony of an interested witness. Hart’s universalism requires the elimination of permanent condemnation, and the elimination of permanent condemnation requires the elimination of any atonement theory that takes condemnation seriously. His philosophical objections are real, but they are not neutral. They are advocates in the service of a conclusion he reached before the argument began. In any proceeding, the tribunal considers whether a witness has a material interest in the outcome. Hart does. His entire soteriology depends on PSA being false.

The reader should ask: Does Hart reject penal substitution because it is philosophically incoherent, or because his universalism requires him to? And the Orthodox apologist who shares Hart’s critique of PSA while quietly distancing themselves from his universalism should ask whether they can have one without the other. Hart, at least, is honest enough to see that they are a package deal.


VIII. Brilliance Is Not Exegesis

That David Bentley Hart is brilliant is beyond question. He is also, on this question, evasive.

He attacks positions that classical Reformed theology does not hold. He ignores texts that demand engagement. He replaces argument with aesthetic judgement. Most revealing is that he never explains how God can be both just and the justifier.

Hart writes as if beauty were a sufficient criterion for theological truth. It certainly is not. The gospel is beautiful because it is true, not true because it is beautiful.

The Cross is not an icon of divine love floating free from judgement. It is the place where the just God justifies the ungodly by bearing their condemnation in Himself.

“For He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him” (2 Cor. 5:21).17

That is not Western corruption. That is Paul. Again, that is the gospel.

Until Hart answers what happens to guilt at the Cross, his critique remains what it has always been: a clever evasion of the question Scripture will not let us avoid.

A final note on what will happen next. When this article is published, watch carefully. If Hart or his defenders respond, observe whether they answer the judicial question on its own terms or (predictably) restate the therapeutic framework more eloquently. Observe whether they produce an alternative exegesis of Romans 3:25–26 or simply reassert that forensic categories are “Western.” Observe whether they engage Turretin and other Reformed scholastics or pretend he does not exist. Aesthetic contempt is not exegetical engagement. Mockery is not argument. The question remains: what happens to guilt at the Cross? If the response does not answer that question, the response has not answered anything. And if the response is anger, threats, or appeals to “the Tradition” without textual engagement, the reader will know exactly what that means.

Hart is not an isolated voice. He is the most articulate form of a broader pattern: a refusal to answer Paul’s inspired question in Paul’s own categories while insisting that the question itself is misguided. The issue is not stylistic. It is structural. Anyone who defends Hart’s position inherits the same unanswered question. And anyone who distances themselves from Hart while repeating his arguments inherits the question without his eloquence to disguise the silence.


Part Two: Resurrection Without Verdict

John Behr and the Cross That Explains Nothing

John Behr is among the most influential Orthodox theologians writing today. As a patristics scholar of impressive depth, he commands a respect that David Bentley Hart’s provocations do not. Where Hart mocks, Behr instructs. Where Hart dismisses, Behr reframes. He is the more dangerous of the two, because he sounds more coherent. But “more reasonable” is not the same as “right.”

His project, articulated most fully in The Mystery of Christ: Life in Death (SVS Press, 2006) and developed across Irenaeus of Lyons: Identifying Christianity (OUP, 2013) and his multi-volume Formation of Christian Theology, is to recover what he calls “the paschal shape” of Christian theology, reading everything backward from the Resurrection, which alone reveals who Christ is and what His death accomplishes.18

This sounds profound. It is also, as an account of atonement, fatally incomplete and futile by its paucity.

Behr offers a gospel in which the Resurrection is the saving event and the Cross is its necessary but under-explained prelude. What he cannot explain is why the Cross was necessary at all, or what it accomplished that Resurrection alone could not.

The question Reformed theology asks, “How is guilt removed?”, receives no clear answer. And without that answer, Behr’s paschal theology, for all its beauty, cannot deliver what the conscience requires: a verdict.


IX. Behr’s Hermeneutical Move

Behr’s central claim is methodological. We cannot understand the Cross except through the Resurrection. The disciples did not grasp who Jesus was until Easter. The Scriptures were not “opened” until the risen Christ opened them. Therefore, all Christian theology must begin from the end, from the Resurrection, and read backward.19

This produces a distinctive account of atonement:

  1. The Cross is where Christ enters fully into human death.
  2. The Resurrection is where death is destroyed from within.
  3. Salvation is participation in the risen life of Christ.

Notice what is missing: any clear account of how the Cross addresses guilt, wrath, or condemnation. The Cross becomes the doorway through which Christ passes into death. It is not the place where judgement falls.


X. Kenosis Is Not Atonement

A careful reader of Behr will object that he does not ignore the Cross. He discusses it at length as kenotic self-offering, the moment of supreme self-emptying in which Christ’s identity is fully revealed. The Cross, for Behr, is the place where we see who God truly is: a God who gives Himself utterly, even unto death.20

This must be acknowledged. Behr is not dismissive of the Cross. He interprets it differently.

But the acknowledgment only sharpens the problem. A kenotic self-offering that reveals divine identity is not the same thing as a substitutionary sacrifice that removes penal condemnation. These are not two perspectives on the same event. They are two different soteriologies. One explains who God is. The other explains what God does about judicial guilt.

Behr’s Cross reveals. Paul’s Cross accomplishes.

Revelation is not remission. Disclosure is not discharge.

A sympathetic reader might respond that the distinction is artificial: that kenotic self-giving is how God deals with sin, because sin is fundamentally a turning away from self-giving love, and the Cross is God entering into the consequences of that turning to reverse it from within. This is the strongest version of Behr’s position, and it deserves a clear and direct answer.

The answer is this: “entering into the consequences of sin” is not the same as “bearing the condemnation for sin.” Death as consequence and death as judicial sentence are different categories. A physician who contracts a patient’s disease has entered into the consequences of illness. He has not thereby paid the patient’s debt. Behr conflates these categories. Paul distinguishes them. Christ did not merely enter into the human condition. He bore the curse (Gal. 3:13). He was made sin (2 Cor. 5:21). He was delivered up for our trespasses (Rom. 4:25). That is not participation in consequence. That is substitution under sentence.

“But He was wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement for our peace was upon Him, and by His stripes we are healed” (Isa. 53:5).21

“He bore the sin of many” (Isa. 53:12).22

These are not revelation texts. They are substitution texts. They describe something that happens at the Cross, not something disclosed after the Resurrection. If the Resurrection is the saving event, why does Paul say we are “justified by His blood” (Rom. 5:9)?23 Why does Hebrews say “without shedding of blood there is no remission” (Heb. 9:22)?24 Why does Peter say Christ “bore our sins in His own body on the tree” (1 Pet. 2:24)?25

Behr’s hermeneutic cannot generate answers to these questions. His Cross reveals love. Paul’s Cross bears wrath. And the sinner needs the latter before the former can mean anything.


XI. Resurrection Without Satisfaction Is Incoherent

Here is the real fault line with Behr’s account.

If the Cross does not address guilt as guilt, then the Resurrection does not solve the problem Paul identifies.

Paul’s argument in 1 Corinthians 15 is instructive:

“And if Christ is not risen, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins!” (1 Cor. 15:17).26

Behr loves this verse. It proves, he thinks, that the Resurrection is the centre. But notice what Paul actually says. He does not say “you are still mortal.” He does not say “you are still corrupt.” He says, “you are still in your sins.”

The Resurrection is necessary. It is never sufficient.

A resurrection without atonement would immortalise sinners, not justify them. It would grant endless existence to those still under condemnation. God Himself prevented exactly this when He stationed the cherubim at the tree of life, lest fallen man “take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever” (Gen. 3:22). The sword was placed to guard against immortality without acquittal. Behr’s soteriology offers what the angel was sent to prevent. That is not salvation. That is condemnation with lungs. That is hell with a pulse.

The logic is inescapable. A Resurrection-centred account that does not specify how guilt is addressed at the Cross faces a problem that no amount of theological sophistication can evade: resurrection does not remove guilt. It overcomes death. Those are not identical. If guilt remains, resurrection does not justify. It merely perpetuates existence under judgement. Therefore, any account that places the decisive saving act in the Resurrection without specifying the judicial function of the Cross leaves the central problem not merely unresolved but structurally unresolvable within its own framework.

Behr’s paschal theology cannot explain how the Resurrection delivers from sins unless something happens to sins before or at the Cross. And that is precisely what he refuses to specify. The silence is not modesty. It is a theological system that has no answer and has learned to treat the absence of an answer as profundity.


XII. The Judicial Language Behr Cannot Accommodate

Scripture persistently uses judicial categories that Behr’s framework can neither accommodate nor account for.

  • Condemnation and Justification. Romans 5:16–18 contrasts Adam and Christ in explicitly forensic terms: “The judgement which came from one offence resulted in condemnation, but the free gift which came from many offences resulted in justification.”27 The categories are legal: judgement, condemnation, justification. The movement is from verdict to verdict, not from sickness to healing. Behr’s paschal lens has no place for this. He does not deny these texts exist. He simply does not let them govern his account.
  • Propitiation. Romans 3:25 says God put Christ forward as a hilasterion, a propitiation, a mercy seat, the place where wrath is turned aside through blood.28 This is not resurrection language. This is Day of Atonement language. It describes something that happens when blood is applied, not when the tomb is empty. Behr’s hermeneutic cannot make sense of propitiation. So he does not try.
  • Curse-Bearing. Galatians 3:13 says Christ “became a curse for us.”29 The curse is covenantal and judicial. It is the sentence pronounced on lawbreakers. Christ does not merely defeat the curse or reveal its powerlessness. He bears it. Behr’s system has no mechanism for this. A curse is not healed. It is exhausted. It falls on someone. Paul says it fell on Christ.

And here, the “one metaphor among many” dodge must be addressed. Orthodox apologists repeatedly argue that juridical language is simply one metaphor among many, that therapeutic, participatory, martial, and sacrificial images all sit alongside the juridical, and that Reformed theology erroneously privileges one over the others. But Paul does not treat justification as a metaphor. Romans 8:1 states: “There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus.”30 That is not a metaphor. It is a verdict. You are either condemned or you are not. Condemnation is not a “lens” or a “model” or a “perspective among many.” It is a divine judicial determination. Treating it as one image among many is not theological sophistication; it is the domestication of a verdict into a suggestion. And a domesticated verdict cannot save anyone.


XIII. The Absence of Verdict

Here is where Behr’s account fails the conscience. And here is where I submit that there is no case to answer.

The gospel announces a verdict: “There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus” (Rom. 8:1).

That is an acquittal. It is not a prognosis. It is not a process. It is a declaration. Behr’s paschal theology offers participation, transformation, and resurrection. It does not offer acquittal.

But acquittal is precisely what the guilty conscience needs. The Reformation did not arise because Luther was confused about ontology. It arose because the medieval system could not tell him, with certainty, that he was forgiven.

Behr’s system cannot tell him either.

It offers healing without verdict. It offers resurrection without justification. It offers life without the prior question, on what grounds?, ever being answered.


XIV. The Question Behr Evades

The question is simple and unavoidable: If guilt is real and God is just, what happens to guilt at the Cross?

Behr’s answer, insofar as he gives one, is that Christ enters into death and destroys it from within. But that does not answer the question. Guilt is not a power to be defeated. It is a status to be addressed. It is not a disease to be healed. It is a verdict to be overturned.

What overturns it?

Behr gestures toward participation in Christ’s risen life. But participation in risen life does not explain how the legal problem is solved. It presupposes that the legal problem has been solved and never explains how.

And here the retreat to mystery must be named for what it is. Mystery is certainly a legitimate theological category. The Christian faith is replete with mysteries that exceed human comprehension. But mystery is not a card one plays to avoid answering apostolic questions. It is the theological equivalent of a submission of “no comment” when the evidence demands a response. Paul asks in Romans 3:26 how God can be both “just and the justifier.” That is not an invitation to contemplative silence. It is a question put to the witness, and it demands an answer. Paul gives one: propitiation through blood. An apophatic theology that cannot explain why the Cross was necessary, not merely fitting, not merely beautiful, but necessary, has not preserved mystery. It has entered a plea of silence, even as the apostle demands testimony. And the difference between the two is the difference between a tradition that trusts its own texts and one that hides from them.


Part Three: The Tradition They Claim Does Not Teach What They Teach

Hart and Behr both claim to speak for the patristic tradition against Western juridical corruption. The Fathers, we are told, knew nothing of penal substitution. The juridical framework is medieval Latin, not apostolic Greek.

This claim does not survive a reading of the Fathers themselves. And I say that knowing that every Orthodox apologist reading this sentence is already composing a rebuttal in their head. Read the quotations first. Then compose the rebuttal. See if it still works.

What follows is the equivalent of calling the respondent’s own witnesses and watching them testify for the prosecution. The point is not that the Fathers taught penal substitutionary atonement in its developed Reformed formulation. The point is that they refuse to let victory and healing erase curse-bearing, condemnation, and sacrificial satisfaction. They held both categories together. Modern Orthodox polemic pulls them apart and calls the amputation “tradition.”

The argument here does not depend on isolated quotations. It depends on a recurring pattern across multiple Fathers, in different regions, writing in different centuries and contexts, all of whom integrate juridical and restorative categories without treating them as mutually exclusive. To dismiss this pattern requires not reinterpretation but systematic omission. And systematic omission is not scholarship. It is the suppression of evidence.

What follows are the very Fathers that Hart and Behr invoke most frequently, saying what Hart and Behr refuse to hear. Their own witnesses. Their own authorities. Their own tradition turned against their own case.


Athanasius: The Just Claim That Repentance Cannot Guard

Hart and Behr both claim Athanasius as the supreme example of therapeutic, non-juridical atonement theology. They are half right. Athanasius does emphasise healing and restoration. But he does not stop there.

Athanasius frames the problem of salvation not merely as corruption but as a divine dilemma (On the Incarnation, §7):

“But repentance would, firstly, fail to guard the just claim of God. For He would still be none the more true, if men did not remain in the grasp of death.”31

God’s truthfulness and justice are at stake. The sentence of death was pronounced, and it must be satisfied. Repentance alone, however sincere, cannot address this. The problem is not merely that humanity is sick. The problem is that God’s judicial word stands, and it must be honoured.

Athanasius continues (On the Incarnation, §8):

“Thus, taking a body like our own … He surrendered His body to death in place of all, and offered it to the Father.”32

“In place of all.” “Offered it to the Father.” This is substitutionary language embedded in incarnational theology. Athanasius does not oppose the two. He holds them together.

Hart and Behr cite Athanasius constantly (as they ought, he is brilliant). They never quote these sentences. Having claimed Athanasius as their primary authority, they are now estopped from denying the juridical language he employs. You cannot call a witness and then suppress portions of their testimony that don’t fit your narrative.


Gregory of Nazianzus: Substitution Without Apology

Gregory is often cited for his rejection of ransom-to-Satan theories, and rightly so. But in the Fourth Theological Oration (Oration 30, §5), Gregory states plainly:

“For my sake He was called a curse, who destroyed my curse…”33

“For my sake.” “Called a curse.” That is Pauline substitution language, not a therapeutic metaphor. Gregory is not describing ontological healing. He is describing one who bears a curse that belonged to another.

Behr invokes Gregory regularly for his paschal hermeneutics. He does not quote this passage.


Irenaeus: Recapitulation Includes Justice

Orthodox apologists frequently appeal to Irenaeus’s recapitulation theory as proof that patristic soteriology was non-juridical. Irenaeus’s emphasis on Christ “recapitulating” every stage of human life to reverse the Adamic fall is genuine and significant. But Irenaeus himself does not separate recapitulation from justice.

In Against Heresies (5.21.3), Irenaeus writes that Christ achieved redemption “justly turning against the apostasy, and redeeming from it his own property, not by violent means, as the apostasy had obtained dominion over us at the beginning, but by means of persuasion, as became a God of counsel, who does not use violent means to obtain what He desires.”34

The key phrase is “justly.” Recapitulation, for Irenaeus, is not merely an ontological reversal. It is a just reversal, one that satisfies the demands of righteousness. The Father of recapitulation theology did not oppose recapitulation to justice. He grounded recapitulation in it. The modern Orthodox separation of the two is, once again, selective reading of their own tradition.


Cyril of Alexandria: Forensic Categories in an Incarnational Frame

Cyril of Alexandria is the premier theologian of the Alexandrian tradition, the tradition Hart himself claims to inhabit. His soteriological corpus presents a consistent pattern across commentaries on Romans, John, and Hebrews: incarnational and juridical categories are integrated rather than opposed. Cyril’s language repeatedly moves between therapeutic and forensic registers, speaking of acquittal and condemnation alongside healing and restoration, without treating these as rival frameworks.35 The argument here does not rest on a single disputed quotation from Cyril. It rests on the broader patristic pattern established above from Athanasius and Gregory, and below from Chrysostom, Eusebius, and Augustine, a pattern Cyril’s corpus confirms rather than contradicts.

The significance is this: the premier Eastern Christologian, writing in the tradition Hart claims as his own, does not separate incarnational soteriology from juridical categories. If Cyril integrates them, the claim that forensic categories are Western corruptions cannot be sustained even on Orthodoxy’s own terms.


Maximus the Confessor: The Crown Jewel Who Will Not Cooperate

If any single figure deserves the title of Orthodoxy’s definitive soteriological voice, it has to be Maximus the Confessor. His cosmic Christology, his distinction between the gnomic and natural will, and his account of Christ’s voluntary assumption of the consequences of the fall are central to every serious Orthodox account of salvation. Hart and Behr both depend heavily on Maximus more than on any other single post-Nicene thinker.

But Maximus does not cooperate with their therapeutic reduction.

In the Ambigua, Maximus describes Christ as voluntarily taking on the κατάκριμα, the condemnation, attached to fallen human nature.36 This is not therapeutic language. Κατάκριμα is the Pauline term for judicial condemnation (Rom. 5:16, 18; 8:1). If Maximus meant only healing, the Greek language offered him a dozen therapeutic terms. He chose a legal one. The modern claim that juridical categories are alien to Eastern soteriology cannot survive the vocabulary of the East’s own definitive theologian.

The Orthodox theologian most central to their soteriology uses the juridical vocabulary that Hart and Behr insist is foreign to the East. Maximus is not a Western interloper. He is the very crown jewel of Eastern patristic theology, and he will not cooperate with the reductionism that claims juridical categories are Latin corruption. If Orthodox apologists wish to dismiss Maximus, they are welcome to try. They will find it costs them more capital than they can afford to lose.


John Chrysostom: The Eastern Father Who Speaks Like Paul

Hart and Behr both claim the Greek-speaking Fathers as allies against Western juridical theology. But John Chrysostom, the most celebrated preacher in the Eastern tradition, will not cooperate with this narrative.

On 2 Corinthians 5:21, Chrysostom writes in his Homilies on Second Corinthians (Homily 11.5):

“Him who knew no sin, He made to be sin for us. For He made Him a culprit as it were for all these. That is, He suffered Him to be condemned as a sinner … For as He died as though condemned, though He had done no sin, so He was treated as a sinner, though He was righteous.”37

“Condemned as a sinner.” “Treated as a sinner, though He was righteous.” Chrysostom does not reach for therapeutic or participatory language. He reaches for judicial language: condemnation, culprit, sinner, righteous. This is imputation stated in patristic terms.

And, neither does Chrysostom stop there. In the same homily, he makes what amounts to an admission against interest for the entire Orthodox polemical project. He explicitly frames justification as gracious rather than earned: “For this is the righteousness of God, when we are justified not by works, (in which case it were necessary that not a spot even should be found,) but by grace, in which case all sin is done away.”38

Chrysostom is not a marginal figure. He is the most widely read Father in the Eastern tradition. His liturgy is the standard liturgy of the Orthodox Church. Every Orthodox priest who serves the Divine Liturgy of St John Chrysostom is serving the liturgy of a man who taught that Christ was “condemned as a sinner” and that justification comes “by grace, in which case all sin is done away.” And, every Orthodox apologist who repeats the claim that juridical categories are foreign to the East is contradicted by the man whose liturgy they celebrate every single Sunday.

“He Himself, through suffering punishment, did away with both the sin and the punishment, and He was punished on the Cross.”39

“Suffering punishment.” “Punished on the Cross.” Chrysostom reads Paul’s victory over the powers (Col. 2:15) as grounded in the judicial act of Christ bearing punishment (Col. 2:14). The victory is not opposed to the verdict. The victory depends on the verdict. The triumph over the principalities and powers is accomplished through the destruction of the legal ground on which they held humanity captive: the χειρόγραφον, the handwritten record of legal obligation, nailed to the Cross. Chrysostom understands what modern Orthodox polemicists are phobic to admit: the Christus Victor is built on juridical foundations. Strip the verdict from the victory, and the victory has no ground to stand on.


Eusebius of Caesarea: Penalty Language Before the Medieval Period

Lest it be said that such language belongs only to the Latin West, Eusebius of Caesarea writes in the Demonstratio Evangelica (10.1):

“The Lamb of God … was chastised on our behalf, and suffered a penalty He did not owe, but which we owed because of the multitude of our sins; and so He became the cause of the forgiveness of our sins, because He received death for us, and transferred to Himself the scourging, the insults, and the dishonour, which were due to us.”40

Five distinct penal-substitutionary phrases in a single sentence from a fourth-century Eastern Father: “chastised on our behalf,” “suffered a penalty He did not owe,” “which we owed,” “received death for us,” “transferred to Himself.”

Whether one labels this ‘penal substitution’ in its later scholastic precision is beside the point. The categories of penalty, substitution, and vicarious bearing are plainly present. This is not Western corruption. This is the undivided Church. Hart’s claim that penal categories are a post-Anselmian Latin invention cannot survive this text. It is a claim refuted by the respondent’s own documentary evidence, and no amount of rhetoric can rehabilitate it. Neither can the YouTube apologist who parrots the claim without ever having read the primary sources.


Augustine: The Western Father the East Cannot Dismiss

Augustine, in On the Trinity (IV.13), argues:

“By His death, that one most true sacrifice offered on our behalf, He purged, abolished, and extinguished whatever guilt there was, by which the principalities and powers lawfully detained us to pay the penalty.”41

“Guilt.” “Lawfully detained.” “Pay the penalty.” “Purged, abolished, extinguished.” Augustine’s atonement theology is simultaneously Christus Victor (the wicked principalities are truly defeated) and penal substitution (the defeat is accomplished by extinguishing the guilt that gave the powers their legal claim). Victory and verdict are not alternatives. They are the same event described from two angles.

The therapeutic reduction Hart and Behr propose is not a recovery of patristic Christianity. It is an amputation of it. It keeps the healing and discards the verdict. It preserves the Resurrection and cannot explain the Cross. It claims the Fathers while gutting what the Fathers actually said.

The Fathers knew better.

They did not oppose victory and substitution. They held them together, because Scripture holds them together, and because the conscience requires both. The claim here is not that the Fathers articulate penal substitution in its later Reformed precision. It is that they employ irreducibly juridical categories that cannot be excluded without distorting their own language.

Those who deny this face a constrained set of possibilities: either the texts have not been read with sufficient care, or they have been read, and their implications have been declined. There is no coherent third option in which the categories simply vanish.


Conclusion: The Tradition They Betray

Hart and Behr claim to speak for the patristic tradition against Western juridical corruption.

  • The Fathers do not support them.
  • Athanasius does not support them.
  • Gregory does not support them.
  • Irenaeus does not support them.
  • Maximus does not support them.
  • Cyril does not support them.
  • Chrysostom does not support them.
  • Eusebius does not support them.
  • Augustine does not support them.

The tradition they invoke is not the tradition they represent. The Fathers that they claim do not teach what they teach. The patristic witness they selectively quote does not survive a full reading. Every name on that list is a name Orthodox theology claims as its own. And every name on that list teaches what Hart and Behr deny.

The issue is now sharply defined. Either Scripture’s juridical categories, condemnation, justification, propitiation, and curse describe something real that occurs at the Cross, or they do not. If they do, they must be explained. If they do not, they must be reinterpreted in a way that preserves Paul’s argument without those categories. To date, no Orthodox account has done the latter to anyone’s satisfaction but their own. Hart does not attempt it. Behr does not attempt it. The Orthodox apologists who fill YouTube, Facebook, and X with confident dismissals of penal substitution do not attempt it. The question is not whether they disagree with the Reformed answer. The question is whether they have an answer at all.

The gospel of the undivided Church was never healing without verdict, resurrection without justification, or victory without satisfaction.

It was always both.

And it still is.

The evidence has been heard. The witnesses have testified. The texts have been read. The case is closed.

“For He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him” (2 Cor. 5:21).42

That is not Western corruption. That is Paul. That is the gospel. And it is the gospel that Hart’s brilliance cannot answer, and Behr’s hermeneutic cannot preach.

The verdict is in. And it is not in their favour.

This series is now complete. Three articles. Three arguments. One question that Orthodox theology has not answered and cannot answer without borrowing capital from the very tradition it despises: what happens to guilt at the Cross?

The question has been asked in the terms Scripture itself provides. Until it is answered in those terms, the objection stands: the brilliance explains much, but not the one thing it must explain.

The offer remains open. Produce the exegesis. Answer the question. Engage the texts.

Until then, the silence is the verdict.


1

David Bentley Hart, The Beauty of the Infinite: The Aesthetics of Christian Truth (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003), 360–394; cf. Hart, “A Gift Exceeding Every Debt: An Eastern Orthodox Appreciation of Anselm’s Cur Deus Homo,” Pro Ecclesia 7, no. 3 (1998): 333–349.

2

Francis Turretin, Institutes of Elenctic Theology, trans. George Musgrave Giger, ed. James T. Dennison Jr. (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R, 1992), XI.ii.

3

John Owen, The Death of Death in the Death of Christ (1647; repr., Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 2007), 159.

4

On the distinction between Anselmian satisfaction and Reformed penal substitution, see Turretin, Institutes, XIV.x–xi; Owen, Death of Death, Book I, ch. 3; cf. Garry J. Williams, “Penal Substitution: A Response to Recent Criticisms,” Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 50, no. 1 (2007): 71–86.

5

Hart, Beauty of the Infinite, 360–394. Hart’s specific characterisation frames the satisfaction tradition as operating within what he calls a “forensic calculus” that reduces the drama of redemption to a transactional exchange between offended honour and compensating obedience.

6

Turretin, Institutes, XI.ii.4–8. Turretin distinguishes between justitia as an essential divine attribute and exercitium justitiae as a free act. God is necessarily just; the particular mode of satisfaction is freely determined.

7

The Holy Bible, Rom. 5:18.

8

On federal headship and the covenantal structure of imputation, see Owen, Death of Death, Book I, ch. 4; cf. Herman Witsius, The Economy of the Covenants Between God and Man, trans. William Crookshank (1677; repr., Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R, 2010), II.ix.

9

The Holy Bible, John 10:17–18.

10

The Holy Bible, Heb. 9:14.

11

The Holy Bible, Rom. 3:25–26.

12

Hart’s published works contain scattered references to Romans 3 and Pauline sacrificial language, but nowhere does he provide a sustained verse-level exegesis of Romans 3:25–26 that answers the question Paul raises: how can God be both just and the justifier? See Beauty of the Infinite, 360–394; That All Shall Be Saved (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2019), passim.

13

The Holy Bible, Heb. 9:22.

14

LXX references to Isaiah 53: Isa. 53:5, 53:6, 53:12 in Alfred Rahlfs, ed., Septuaginta (Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 2006). The substitutionary grammar is native to the Greek text and predates the entire Latin theological tradition.

15

David Bentley Hart, That All Shall Be Saved: Heaven, Hell, and Universal Salvation (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2019).

16

The historiography of the anathemas against Origenism at the Second Council of Constantinople (553) is contested. Some historians argue that the anathemas were issued at a pre-conciliar session rather than by the Council itself, and the precise scope of what was condemned remains debated. However, the substantive point is not affected: the anathemas were received as authoritative in both East and West, and the mainstream patristic tradition from Augustine (City of God XXI.17, 23) through John of Damascus (On the Orthodox Faith II.1) rejected universal salvation. Hart’s universalism stands against the received tradition on any reading of the conciliar evidence. See Richard Price, The Acts of the Council of Constantinople of 553, 2 vols. (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2009).

17

The Holy Bible, 2 Cor. 5:21.

18

John Behr, The Mystery of Christ: Life in Death (Crestwood, NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2006); Irenaeus of Lyons: Identifying Christianity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013); The Formation of Christian Theology, 3 vols. (Crestwood, NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2001–2013). Behr’s paschal hermeneutic is developed most fully in Mystery of Christ, chs. 3–5.

19

Behr, Mystery of Christ, 89–112. Behr’s methodological claim is that pre-Easter Christology is necessarily incomplete and that the full significance of Christ’s person and work is disclosed only in the Resurrection.

20

Behr, Mystery of Christ, 115–140. The kenotic self-offering is central to Behr’s account of the Cross: the Crucifixion reveals God’s identity as self-giving love.

21

[The Holy Bible, Isa. 53:5.

22

The Holy Bible, Isa. 53:12.

23

The Holy Bible, Rom. 5:9.

24

The Holy Bible, Heb. 9:22.

25

The Holy Bible, 1 Pet. 2:24.

26

The Holy Bible, 1 Cor. 15:17.

27

The Holy Bible, Rom. 5:16–18.

28

The Holy Bible, Rom. 3:25. On ἱλαστήριον as propitiation rather than mere expiation, see Leon Morris, The Apostolic Preaching of the Cross, 3rd ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1965), 144–213; BDAG, s.v. “ἱλαστήριον,” which lists both mercy-seat and propitiation senses.

29

The Holy Bible, Gal. 3:13.

30

The Holy Bible, Rom. 8:1.

31

Athanasius, On the Incarnation, §7, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 4, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 40.

32

Athanasius, On the Incarnation, §8, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 4, 40.

33

Gregory of Nazianzus, Fourth Theological Oration (Oration 30), §5, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, vol. 7, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 310.

34

Irenaeus of Lyons, Against Heresies, 5.21.3, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 1, ed. Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 549.

35

Cyril of Alexandria’s soteriological framework, as articulated in his commentaries on Romans, John, and Hebrews, consistently integrates incarnational and juridical categories. See his Commentary on John, on John 19:16–18, in Philip E. Pusey, ed., Sancti Patris Nostri Cyrilli Archiepiscopi Alexandrini in D. Joannis Evangelium, vol. 3 (Oxford: Clarendon, 1872). The argument here does not rest on a single disputed Cyril quotation; it rests on the broader patristic pattern demonstrated from Athanasius, Gregory, Chrysostom, Eusebius, and Augustine, a pattern Cyril’s corpus confirms. Where specific Cyril quotations are cited in this debate, they should be referenced to immediately verifiable primary-source editions (page and column) to prevent citation disputes from obscuring the substantive theological argument.

36

Maximus the Confessor, Ambigua 42, in PG 91:1316–1321; cf. Ambigua 41 (PG 91:1304–1316). On Maximus’s use of κατάκριμα in the context of Christ’s voluntary assumption of fallen human conditions, see Adam G. Cooper, The Body in St Maximus the Confessor: Holy Flesh, Wholly Deified (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005), 124–148.

37

John Chrysostom, Homilies on Second Corinthians, Homily 11.5 (on 2 Cor. 5:21), in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, vol. 12, ed. Philip Schaff (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 334.

38

John Chrysostom, Homilies on Second Corinthians, Homily 11.5 (on 2 Cor. 5:21), in NPNF, First Series, vol. 12, 334.

39

John Chrysostom, Homilies on Colossians, Homily 6 (on Col. 2:14–15), in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, vol. 13, ed. Philip Schaff (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994). The full context discusses the χειρόγραφον (a handwritten record of legal obligation) being nailed to the Cross, and Christ suffering punishment to do away with both sin and its penalty.

40

Eusebius of Caesarea, Demonstratio Evangelica 10.1, trans. W.J. Ferrar (London: SPCK, 1920).

41

Augustine, On the Trinity, IV.13, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, vol. 3, ed. Philip Schaff (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 78.

42

The Holy Bible, 2 Cor. 5:21.

We Who Are Alive (Refuting Hyper-Preterism)

Article by Jason L Bradfield – source here – https://www.reformation.blog/p/we-who-are-alive-is-not-a-time-text?

Among hyper-preterists, one of the more popular arguments for a first-century fulfillment of the resurrection is that Paul’s language in 1 Thessalonians 4:15 functions as a “time text.” The claim runs like this: when Paul wrote, “we who are alive, who are left until the coming of the Lord,” he was asserting that he personally expected to be among the living when Christ returned. Since Paul was alive in the mid-first century, the parousia must have been a mid-first-century event. Hyper-preterists Gary DeMar and Kim Burgess, among others, have pressed this reading.

At this point in time, Paul still fully expected to be alive in his earthly body at the parousia of Christ as based on the direct warrant of Christ Himself in texts like Matthew 10:23, 16:27-28, and 24:34. This is precisely why Paul deliberately used “we” language in both 1 Thessalonians 4 and 1 Corinthians 15.1

The argument sounds intuitive on the surface. But it collapses under the weight of Greek grammar, Paul’s own broader testimony, and, most critically, what Paul says in the very next verse. What we are dealing with in 1 Thessalonians 4:15 is not a prophetic time indicator at all. It is a category identification, and the difference matters enormously.

The key phrase in Greek is hemeis hoi zontes hoi perileipomenoi (ἡμεῖς οἱ ζῶντες οἱ περιλειπόμενοι). The pronoun hemeis (”we”) is followed by two articular present participles: hoi zontes (”the ones living”) and hoi perileipomenoi (”the ones remaining”). The participles function substantivally, which means they describe a class of people defined by their condition at the time of the event, not at the time of writing. Paul is saying, in effect, “those among us believers who are in the state of being alive and remaining when the Lord comes.” The present tense of the participles is relative to the main action of the sentence (the coming of the Lord), not to the moment Paul picked up his pen. This is a standard use of the articular participle in Koine Greek and there is nothing in the grammar that restricts the referent to Paul and his immediate contemporaries.

To appreciate why this matters, consider the broader context of the passage. Paul is writing to a grieving church. Believers in Thessalonica had died, and the remaining congregation was distraught, apparently worried that their departed brothers and sisters would miss out on the parousia. Paul’s entire argument is pastoral comfort:

But we do not want you to be uninformed, brothers, about those who are asleep, that you may not grieve as others do who have no hope. For since we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so, through Jesus, God will bring with him those who have fallen asleep. For this we declare to you by a word from the Lord, that we who are alive, who are left until the coming of the Lord, will not precede those who have fallen asleep. For the Lord himself will descend from heaven with a cry of command, with the voice of an archangel, and with the sound of the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first. Then we who are alive, who are left, will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we will always be with the Lord.” (1 Thessalonians 4:13-17 ESV)

The structure of Paul’s argument is to divide all believers into two groups: the dead in Christ and the living who remain. He uses “we” because he and his readers are currently alive and naturally fall, as things presently stand, into the latter group. But the whole point of the passage is that the timing is open-ended enough for some believers to have already died. If Paul “knew” the parousia would occur within his lifetime, the Thessalonians’ grief over a few recently deceased believers would be a remarkably trivial crisis to warrant apostolic correspondence. The passage only makes full pastoral sense if the timing genuinely remains unresolved.

But here is where the “time text” reading suffers its most decisive blow, and it comes from Paul himself in the very next breath. Without skipping a beat, Paul transitions into chapter 5:

Now concerning the times and the seasons, brothers, you have no need to have anything written to you. For you yourselves are fully aware that the day of the Lord will come like a thief in the night. (1 Thessalonians 5:1-2 ESV)

The thief metaphor is entirely about unpredictability. A thief does not send you a letter telling you when he is coming. The whole point of the image is that the timing is unknown and unknowable. Jesus used the same metaphor in Matthew 24:43 for exactly that reason, and Peter picks it up in 2 Peter 3:10 the same way. If Paul had just planted a time text in 4:15 telling the Thessalonians that the parousia would occur within their lifetime, why would he immediately pivot to telling them the timing is as unpredictable as a break-in? You cannot have it both ways. You cannot say “I’ve just told you it will happen while we’re alive” and then say “but you have no need for me to write about the timing because it comes when no one expects it.” Those two claims work against each other if the first one is really a time indicator. But on the categorical reading, the sequence is perfectly coherent: Paul is saying that whenever this happens, the dead will not miss out, and whoever among us is alive at the time will be caught up with them. As for when that will be, you already know the answer: you don’t know, and you can’t know.

What makes this connection even more devastating to the hyper-preterist “time text” claim is the phrase Paul uses. “The times and the seasons” in 1 Thessalonians 5:1 is τῶν χρόνων καὶ τῶν καιρῶν (ton chronon kai ton kairon). This is the same word pair that Jesus himself used in Acts 1:7 when the disciples asked him about the timing of the restoration: “He said to them, ‘It is not for you to know times or seasons (χρόνους ἢ καιρούς) that the Father has fixed by his own authority’” (Acts 1:7 ESV). The only differences are the grammatical case (accusative in Acts, genitive in 1 Thessalonians, because of their different syntactic positions) and the conjunction (”or” in Acts, “and” in 1 Thessalonians). But it is unmistakably the same phrase.

Paul is not just making a general point about unpredictability. He is echoing the Lord’s own words. And he is doing it immediately after the passage that hyper-preterists want to turn into a chronological marker. Jesus told the disciples that the timing of these events is not for them to know. Paul then tells the Thessalonians, using the same phrase, that they have no need for him to write about the times and seasons, because they already know the answer: it comes like a thief. They know this because Jesus already told them so. That is not what you write ten seconds after dropping a time text. That is what you write after deliberately not giving one.

The parallel passage in 1 Corinthians 15 reinforces all of this. There Paul writes: “Behold! I tell you a mystery. We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet” (1 Corinthians 15:51-52 ESV). The hyper-preterist wants to read “we shall not all sleep” as a chronological prediction: “not all of us in this generation will die before Jesus returns.” But that is not what Paul is saying. He is not making a statement about the timing of anyone’s death relative to the parousia. He is making a statement about the mechanics of the resurrection event itself. “We shall not all sleep” means that not every believer will go through death, because whoever happens to be alive when Christ returns will bypass death entirely and be transformed on the spot. “But we shall all be changed” means that whether you are dead or alive at that moment, every believer receives a transformed, resurrected body. The dead get raised. The living get changed. Nobody is left out.

This is the exact same argument Paul made to the Thessalonians, just from a different angle for a different pastoral situation. In Thessalonica, the concern was that the dead would miss out or be at a disadvantage. Paul’s answer: no, the dead in Christ rise first, and then whoever is alive gets caught up with them. In Corinth, the topic is the nature of the resurrection body, so Paul approaches it differently, but the underlying logic is identical. There are two categories of believers at the time of Christ’s return: those who have died and need to be raised, and those who are still alive and need to be changed without dying. Both groups are fully accounted for. The “mystery” Paul is revealing is not when this will happen but how it will happen, specifically that the living will not need to die first but will be instantaneously transformed. The “we” in both passages functions identically: it places Paul and his readers among the living for the sake of illustration, without foreclosing the possibility that they might die before the event occurs.

Notice too the qualifier in 1 Corinthians 15:51: “not all.” If “we” is a time text asserting that Paul expected the parousia during his generation, then “we shall not all sleep” concedes that some in his generation would die before it happened. That already weakens the “time text” claim considerably, since it admits the “we” is flexible enough to include people who will die. But more than that, it confirms that the “we” is a category that encompasses believers across an indefinite period, some of whom will die and some of whom will be alive when the event occurs. The qualifier only makes sense on the categorical reading.

What makes the “time text” reading truly untenable beyond the immediate context is that Paul himself undermines it in his later writings. If “we who are alive” is a firm prophetic assertion that Paul would be personally alive at the parousia, then Paul is a failed or confused prophet, because he clearly contemplated and eventually expected his own death prior to Christ’s return.

In Philippians, written from prison, Paul is genuinely torn: “For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain…I am hard pressed between the two. My desire is to depart and be with Christ, for that is far better” (Philippians 1:21-23 ESV). No one who has received a prophetic guarantee of survival until the parousia speaks like this. Paul treats death as a real and even attractive possibility, not as something foreclosed by divine promise.

In 2 Corinthians, Paul speaks of the prospect of being “away from the body and at home with the Lord” (2 Corinthians 5:8 ESV), openly contemplating the intermediate state between death and resurrection. And in 2 Timothy, written near the end of his life, Paul knows exactly what is coming: “For I am already being poured out as a drink offering, and the time of my departure has come. I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Henceforth there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, will award to me on that day” (2 Timothy 4:6-8 ESV). Paul expects to die, and he still looks forward to “that day” when the Lord will award his crown. He does not panic over the fact that he will not be among “the living who remain.” He simply shifts, quite naturally, from one side of his own earlier category to the other, because the categories were never about him personally.

It is also worth noting what genuine time texts in the New Testament actually look like. When Jesus says, “Truly, I say to you, there are some standing here who will not taste death until they see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom” (Matthew 16:28 ESV), or “Truly, I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all these things take place” (Matthew 24:34 ESV), these are explicit temporal statements with definite subjects, definite verbs, and definite time horizons. Paul’s articular participial clause in 1 Thessalonians 4:15 is grammatically nothing like these. It describes a class of people defined by a condition (”being alive and remaining”), not a temporal prediction (”this will happen before you die”). Calling it a “time text” is a category error.

Every generation of Christians that reads 1 Thessalonians 4 is invited to place itself among the “we who are alive, who are left.” That is the whole force of the pastoral comfort Paul offers: whether you are alive or dead when Christ returns, you will be with the Lord. The passage is designed to work across centuries precisely because the “we” is not anchored to a single generation. To treat it as a time text is to flatten a beautifully open-ended pastoral assurance into a failed prediction, and to do so against the grammar, against Paul’s own usage of the identical phrase elsewhere, against his broader testimony in his later letters, against the immediate context of 1 Thessalonians 5, against the words of Jesus himself in Acts 1:7, and against the very mechanics of the resurrection event as Paul describes them in 1 Corinthians 15.

1

Kim Burgess and Gary DeMar, The Hope of Israel and the Nations: New Testament Eschatology Accomplished and Applied, vol. 2 (Powder Springs, GA: American Vision, 2024), 129.