Options on Atonement in Christian Thought

Front Cover
Liturgical Press, 2007 - Religion - 147 pages

In his previous book, Problems with Atonement, Stephen Finlan compellingly argues that the doctrine of atonement has been more a stumbling block to a true understanding of the relationship between God and humanity than a genuine explanation of how we relate to God and God to us. Options on Atonement reprises these arguments briefly, then looks more closely at the solutions to the problem offered by a variety of modern interpreters. Finlan's focus in this volume is on revelation, on the gradual human absorption of and interpretation of revelation received from God, the maturing of human cultures, and especially the light shed by modern family systems psychology.

At a time when public debates rage over the notion of evolution in the natural world, this book asserts that our understanding of divine revelation is likewise subject to evolution. If religion itself does not evolve, the author asserts, we are left only with an unsatisfactory choice: to remain mired in the past, or to repudiate all that is past, including our Scriptures. Will that be our choice? Or can we resolve to examine our traditions, including that of the atonement, in the light of new knowledge? Stephen Finlan chooses to do just that.

 

Contents

The Roots of Atonement
7
Pauls Cultic Metaphors
18
After Paul
43
Defenses of Atonement
70
1B Is Healing Power in the Cross?
85
2B Postmodern Cynicism
95
Critiques of Atonement
103
Compassion Not Atonement
109
2B The Slide into AntiBiblicism
111
A Theory of Revelation and Evolution
120
Bibliography
133
Index of Modern Authors
139
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Stephen Finlan, PhD, is an adjunct professor at Drew University and has taught at Fordham. He is also author of Problems with Atonement and Options on Atonement in Christian Thought (both published by Liturgical Press) as well as The Background and Content of Paul's Cultic Atonement Metaphors (SBL and Brill, 2004).

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