"I think the 'loss of communion' view has almost the same issue by implication that Clarke points out about the 'loss of divinity' view."
I don't agree Bones, if Christ only suffered physical death rather than both physical and spiritual death (separation from His Father) then we have something wrong in our understanding of the atonement.
We need to ask what did the atonement accomplish? If it was only to suffer physical death for every man "he by the grace of God should taste death for every man" Heb 2:9 then why do we as Christians die if the penalty for sin is only physical death?
There are only two answers really - the atonement was not sufficient to prevent the physical death of a Christian, or no Christian ever had enough faith for the atonement to be effective for each and every one of them
But if the atonement was to correct spiritual death (separation from God) then Christ also tasted that spiritual "death for every man".
I don't agree Bones, if Christ only suffered physical death rather than both physical and spiritual death (separation from His Father) then we have something wrong in our understanding of the atonement.
We need to ask what did the atonement accomplish? If it was only to suffer physical death for every man "he by the grace of God should taste death for every man" Heb 2:9 then why do we as Christians die if the penalty for sin is only physical death?
There are only two answers really - the atonement was not sufficient to prevent the physical death of a Christian, or no Christian ever had enough faith for the atonement to be effective for each and every one of them
But if the atonement was to correct spiritual death (separation from God) then Christ also tasted that spiritual "death for every man".
i have been thinking about some things which i think we have to also consider:
that in places like Romans 8:3-4, 1 Peter 3:18-20 and elsewhere where His death is spoken of it is only in terms of death of the body, thus condemning sin in the flesh. one may bring up Hebrews 2:17-18 and say, He is made like us in every way and knows our suffering in every way, so that He can succor us - but also in Hebrews 4:14-15 this basis He has of empathy ((beyond sympathy)) is spoken of because though He was tempted as we are, yet without sin. Paul tells us in Romans that we have life because we have it in Him, sharing in His death and also His life through the Spirit. that the life of the spirit over comes the death of the flesh - if we through His spirit share in His life, can that spirit be dead? where the scripture speaks of us being spiritually dead, it says that we were dead in trespasses and sin, before He through His Spirit quickened us: what we know share with Him is life in the spirit and death in the flesh, even His crucifixion. if He died in the spirit, is it something we share with Him? or is our spiritual death strictly that time before we came to know and believe?
and of the life in Him:
For it is clear that our Lord descended from Judah, and in regard to that tribe Moses said nothing about priests. And what we have said is even more clear if another priest like Melchizedek appears, one who has become a priest not on the basis of a regulation as to his ancestry but on the basis of the power of an indestructible life.
(Hebrews 7:14-16)
He appeared, a priest like Melchizedek, on the basis of an indestructible life.
is He priest before He hung on the cross? i think, of course. now and always. He said no one takes His life from Him, but He lays it down and picks it up - and He said, destroy the temple of His body, and He Himself will raise it up again.
is it ever at any time and for any interval of time possible for an indestructible life to die? how can it be possible that He lays down His own life and that He is the one who raises Himself? indestructible life, which persists despite physical death. is that life spiritual life, or something greater that persists beyond spiritual death? is it a spirit that cannot die - and is there anyone who can possess such a spirit, in which there is no death and cannot be, but God Himself? we know, He is good, and no one is good but God alone. and we also know, "He cannot deny Himself" ((2 Tim. 2:13))
i know, these things don't quite address your point about atonement - i hope to meditate on it all more and continue on later. but just to post a waypoint, where i am at the moment.
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