The Atonement Debate, Zondervan
The Atonement Debate, Zondervan
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The Atonement Debate
Papers from the London Symposium on the Theology of Atonement

Author: Zondervan

Narrator: Simon Vance

Unabridged: 12 hr 1 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 01/10/2012


Synopsis

Recent days have seen a debate among evangelicals over how the death of Christ is to be interpreted. When a popular British evangelical leader appeared to denounce the idea that God was punishing Christ in our place on the cross as a "twisted version of events," "morally dubious," and a "huge barrier to faith" that should be rejected in favour of preaching only that God is love, major controversy was stirred. Many thought the idea of penal substitution was at the heart of the evangelical understanding of the cross, if not the only legitimate interpretation of the death of Christ. Yet for some time less popular evangelical theologians had been calling this traditional interpretation of the atonement into question. So, is the traditional evangelical view of penal substitution the biblical explanation of Christ’s death or one of many? Is it the non-negotiable heart of evangelical theology or a time-bound explanation that has outlived its usefulness? What does the cross say about the character of God, the nature of the law and sin, the meaning of grace, and our approach to missions? The public debate which resulted was often heated. In order to act as reconcilers, the Evangelical Alliance and the London School of Theology called for a symposium in which advocates of the different positions could engage with each other. The symposium, which was attended by some 200 participants, was held when the July 7th bombings took place in London and drew together many of Britain’s finest evangelical theologians. This book contains the collection of papers given at the symposium, supplemented by a few others for the sake of rounding out the agenda, and grouped in convenient sections.

About Derek Tidball

Derek Tidball (PhD, Keele University) has been principal of the London School of Theology since 1995. Previously Derek served as pastor of two Baptist Churches, as a tutor at LST, and as head of the mission department of the Baptist Union. He is currently chair of the UK Evangelical Alliance Council. He has authored numerous books including Skilful Shepherds: An Introduction to Pastoral Theology, previously published by Zondervan. He edits The Bible Speaks Today: Bible Themes series for IVP and has contributed the volumes on The Message of Leviticus and The Message of the Cross himself. He is married to Dianne, a Baptist pastor. They have one son.

About David Hilborn

David Hilborn (PhD, Nottingham University) is director of studies of the North Thames Ministerial Course, having served as head of theology for the UK Evangelical Alliance since 1997. In that role he was responsible for the publication of a number of significant books and reports on topics where evangelicals differ from each other, including reports on hell, the Toronto Blessing and homosexuality. Formerly a United Reformed Minister, David is now an ordained clergyman of the Church of England. He is married to Mia, a hospital chaplain. They have two children.

About Justin Thacker

Justin Thacker (PhD, King’s College London) is the head of theology at the Evangelical Alliance in the UK. His first book, Postmodernism and the Ethics of Theological Knowledge will be published by Ashgate in October 2007. He lives in the UK.


Reviews

The chapters on biblical foundations were good -- especially I. Howard Marshall's "The Theology of the Atonement" The chapters on historical perspectives were also especially good -- particularly "Bernard Clairvaux: Theologian of the Cross" The bulk of the papers included in this book favor retainin......more

At times dated, this becoming more of a history of theology book than a theology book, it nonetheless feels dated precisely because the original papers served their purpose in developing atonement doctrine to the next stages of discussion. Like most composite works, some are quite good, some are sig......more

Goodreads review by Steve

These papers, first delivered in 2005 in response to The Lost Message of Jesus (Steve Chalke and Alan Mann), remain relevant today as the debate about penal substitution continues. They vary in their perspective and stance on the atonement, but also in their readability - some are wonderfully clear,......more

Goodreads review by Joseph

An extraordinarily good introduction to penal substitution and some critical evaluations from theologians that are very well informed about the doctrine. The debate and the contributions are all (with some exceptions like Oliver Crisp and Anna Robbins, who has worked at LST though) within a British......more

Goodreads review by John

Though I am not a subscriber to the doctrine of Penal Substitutionary Atonement (PSA) and most of the essays were defending PSA, I still thoroughly enjoyed the book for the most part, I found most of the essays pretty interesting and insightful. By far, my favorite chapter was “The Logic of Penal Su......more