Christ, the human being, willingly paid the price of God's wrath on the sin of those redeemed from that wrath through faith in Jesus and his atoning work.Well, I could go along with those descriptions ... but my point that it is impossible to punish Christ per the following premises:
Premise 1: Christ was sinless
1 Pe 2:24 - He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree.
Gal 3:13 - Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us (he was cursed for us).
Ro 8:32 - God did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us.
"Gave him up" to what?. . .subjection to the Father's wrath on sin.
What did Jesus mean on the cross when he cried out in anguish that the Father had forsaken him?
He was referring to that separation from the Father which was part of the wrath poured out on him as payment for our sin.
Heb 10:29 - "How much more punishment (timoria--vengeance) do you think will be deserved by the man who has spurned the Son of God and profaned the covenant by which he was sanctified. . . ?Premise 2: The definition "PUNISH" is defined as: inflict a penalty or sanction on (someone) as retribution for an offense, especially a transgression of a legal or moral code. It is not just to punish someone for another's offense. Now, you can demand payment from person "A" for the offense of person "B".
In short, I don't believe the verb PUNISH is suitable.
Is this fastfreddy?Well, I intentionally gave the biblical 7x70 verse show that forgiveness did not require atonement so unless you can show my proof to be invalid I would say you premise has been shown to be incorrect.
That verse is about man-to-man, not about man-to-God.
???????
Because God commanded it be so. I am not here to lay of a theory about WHY.... a previous post gave 6 or 7 different theories. In just saying forgiveness doesn't necessarily require atonement and gave 7x70 verse as an example.
I have no issue with the description of Christ as our substitute. I just don't think one can say Christ incurred a PENALTY be that means Christ did something immoral by definition.
I use the word "impute" instead of "transfer".
"Impute" ... represent as being done, caused, or possessed by someone ... Christ caused us to be righteous judiciously
"Transfer" ... to move from one place to another .... we can never be made righteous should that Jesus can do something and it will mean we never sinned
Aside: I think we are in basic agreement. I just don't like the work PUNISH being applied to God. Maybe you see the definition of the word PUNISH differently than I.