|
Home | About Us | Articles | Membership | Contact Us | Links | Site Map
ATHEIST FOUNDATION OF
AUSTRALIA INC

EASTER
AND THE DOCTRINE OF ATONEMENT
by Keith S Cornish
The
Easter celebration has its beginning in the Northern European festival to
honour Eostre the goddess of Spring. As with the Yuletide festivities the
Christian church moved in and claimed it as their celebration.
In the
synoptic gospels of all the words which are supposed to have been spoken by
Jesus there are very few which give the impression that he considered his
death as necessary for the redemption of souls, yet the Christian Church has
made 'salvation' the central fundamental doctrine. Salvation through the
death on the cross is propounded in the gospel of John and the so-called
Pauline epistles. It is a doctrine conceived by the early church and follows
logically from the Old Testament rites which derive from primitive
concepts.
To early humans natural phenomena was a profound mystery
and they used their imagination to explain earth quakes, volcanoes,
fertility, change of seasons etc. as the work of supernatural beings. These
deities were seen as extensions of men with the same good and bad
characteristics - they could be antagonised or appeased therefore it was
essential to do obeisance and offer sacrifices.
The system of
priests arose before long with particular people claiming special affinity
with the gods. They received the sacrificial offerings and performed the
rites which they ordained but claimed that the deity imposed them. When
calamity struck the blame often fell on a particular person and the offender
was punished. It appears that under the Hebrew system it was customary to
select a scapegoat. Occasionally it was a son or daughter but usually it was
a bird or animal which was substituted to pay the price of the perceived
wrong-doing.
The victim was slain in order that its life, regarded as
being in the blood, could be set free as an offering to Yahweh. The basic
idea of the sin-offering was to make atonement - the blood of the martyrs
became a "ransom for the remission of sins" (4 Maccabees) and the blood of
righteous men was thought to deliver Israel. In all sacrifices the blood of
the victim was forbidden to the Israelites because it was considered holy
and to be the property of Yahweh but the drinking of the victim's blood was
a common practice among primal tribes. (This practice is still preserved by
Christians in the ceremonial Eucharist.)
The origin of sacrifices
stemmed from two motives: (1) Believing they had offended their deity
people endeavoured to appease and win favour by offering as a sacrifice
something of value to themselves. (2) Believing they were dependent on
the deity they expressed it in paying homage.
The primary element in
religion is delivery from evil either against the clan or the
individual.
It was only during the time of Exile in the 6th century
B.C.E. that the Hebrews developed the idea of individual immortality. It is
evident therefore that all prior sacrifices were to satisfy the
aforementioned two motives and were not performed as personal atonements to
secure forgiveness and eternal life.
The idea that the death of Jesus
was an atonement for sin was due primarily to the prevailing attitude to
blood sacrifices and the belief, particularly in Greek and Roman culture,
that gods were deliverers and saviours. Yahweh's ordained way of forgiving
required the death of Jesus and his death was the price paid for the
redemption of humankind by an expiation sacrifice for the sins of
humans.
The doctrine of atonement begins with the idea of sin and
'sin' - a purely religious term bearing little relationship to moral values
or social responsibility - is tied to the folk myth of Adam and Eve and the
'fall of man'. Augustine (354-430) taught that after 'the fall' man was
totally depraved and only through the Church could humans acquire a measure
of merit. By devotion, observance of duty and penance it was considered
possible to acquire a super abundance of merit and it was this concept which
led to much abuse and ultimately sparked the Reformation.
The idea of
transmitted merit was tied to the concept of transmitted guilt but both
sides are equally unethical. However, the proposition was further enlarged
to impute that through the death of Jesus humans were not only
considered to be righteous but were actually righteous. It is
being realised today that such conceptions are ethically unjustifiable and
psychologically impossible. The goodness of human beings may influence and
benefit others and their example may stimulate the moral perception of those
whom they contact but this does not constitute transference of
merit.
A major obstacle for theologians is the fact that, though they
accept the impossibility of the transfer of guilt from the transgressor to
the innocent, they still are obliged to maintain that Jesus endured the full
penalty of the individual and collective sin of humankind even though a
major element of that penalty is considered to be the consciousness of
guilt. The guiltless cannot be conscious of guilt and Jesus is always
projected as perfect. It is axiomatic that a perfect being cannot be
conscious of imperfection.
The doctrine of penal substitution or
vicarious suffering is central to the Pauline letters but the idea of the
innocent paying the penalty of the guilty (the scapegoat principle) is
morally unacceptable. The transfer of punishment to an innocent person would
not be allowed by any national government but was ordained by Yahweh
(according to scripture) in the case of Jesus. It is possible for a third
party to pay a fine or make recompense but that does not transfer
guilt.
To kill an innocent person instead of the guilty is a crime
and calling it 'vicarious sacrifice' is an attempt at whitewashing. In the
words of Canon Storr "Nothing is more central to Christianity than the cross
yet creates more difficulties."
Let us continue to list these
difficulties:
What is the condition that makes the atoning death
necessary? Theologically humankind is regarded as having rebelled against
the authority of Yahweh and therefore come under 'the wrath of God' who is
morally bound to inflict punishment. Why must an omnipotent being be
offended by another person exercising their free will? Why must the
punishment be death? Why must the penalty be handed down generation after
generation? If someone creates something, by what strange reason does he
then have the audacity to be angry and condemn the imperfections of his own
creation? Is not anger a sign of imperfection in the creator?
How is
it possible for a human to commit an offence against a spirit? Surely the
idea is ridiculous.
Human beings offend against other human beings
and the logical person to whom restitution or expression of regret should be
offered is to the one who has been hurt. It cannot and should not be an
uninvolved third person and yet theologians and purveyors of religion
continue to insist that humankind has sinned against Yahweh and can only be
reconciled by the death of Jesus. Debts can be transferred but moral
obligations cannot.
To Christians the death of Jesus fulfilled the
condition of total filial obedience and was therefore supremely satisfactory
to Yahweh but doing what one perceives as his or her duty cannot be
construed as a means of divine influence. Total submission and obedience to
the perceived will of Yahweh is still advocated as the supreme goal for
Christians.
In regard to the crucifixion theologians stress that
Jesus was not only man but the second person of the Trinity. This places
them in another predicament, for by definition a god cannot die and, as a
god, Jesus would have no fear of even a bodily death. On a purely physical
level the death of Jesus as told in the gospels was comparatively
blood-free, speedy and far less painful than the long drawn-out torment
which many people have had to suffer.
What sort of a deity could gain
satisfaction from the death of Jesus? The answer is surely that it is the
type of god depicted in the Old Testament, a deity worthy of contempt and
rejection by moral humankind. Were such a being to exist it would be a
betrayal of the dignity of humankind to ask forgiveness for failure to pay
homage to such a disgusting person.
It is not possible for an
innocent person to be guilty of a crime which they did not commit although
they may be punished for it.
Similarly it is not possible to be sorry
or 'penitent' instead of or on behalf of someone else. There are some things
that cannot be transferred to anyone else. A person who is innocent cannot
be penitent for a crime they did not commit.
There are people who
argue that suffering has a moral value and carries within it the potential
for good but it is difficult to see how physical or mental suffering and
death can, of itself, bring benefit, yet this is an aspect of atonement
which is strongly propagated by Christians. Pain as such has no power of
atonement - it cannot obliterate guilt. To demand that someone has to suffer
to expiate a transgression is not our concept of justice or
ethics.
Those who take the Bible literally have another problem for
they believe that the sentence of physical death was passed on Adam for
disobedience and handed down to all subsequent generations. It would
therefore follow that Jesus being 'without sin' could not
die.
Finally the idea of being 'washed in the blood of the Lamb of
God' is the backbone of the evangelists followed up by the doctrine of
salvation through repentance from the everlasting torments of hell.
Thousands have been frightened into Christianity and Islam and the advocates
of these movements argue that it is better to gain converts through fear
than no converts at all. Thinking people recognise that fear is never
productive of the best and in terms of religion it breeds
servility.
The Church has been forced to quietly discard the doctrine
of everlasting torment in hell.
How much longer can the Church
continue to hold as its central doctrine a concept which is ethically
bankrupt?
If the Atonement doctrine had any validity surely the feast
of the Atonement in October would have been much more appropriate for the
death of Jesus than the feast of the Passover in April!

|