John Owen & Double Payment in the Atonement
Authoring more than 80 books in his lifetime, John Owen the Puritan (1616-83) was arguably the mightiest Reformed theologian the world has ever seen. He applied his brilliant mind to the question “For whom did Christ die?” and concluded “the elect only”.
He saw in scripture no provision made at the cross for the sins of the non-elect. Any who disagreed with him met with the following argument: “God imposed His wrath due unto, and Christ underwent the pains of hell for, either all the sins of all men, or all the sins of some men, or some sins of all men. If the last...then have all men some sins to answer for, and so shall no man be saved. If the second...Christ in their stead and room suffered for all the sins of the elect in the world. If the first, why then are not all freed from the punishment of all their sins? You will say, ‘Because of their unbelief ’...But this unbelief, is it a sin or not?...If it be, then Christ underwent the punishment due to it...then why must that hinder them more than their other sins for which He died…”1
Augustus M. Toplady (1740-78), who shared Owen’s views, taught that the non-elect were predestined to hell before the world began. He penned a hymn in which he described the atonement Christ made for the elect only, two verses of which read as follows:
“Complete atonement Thou hast made
And to the utmost farthing paid whate’er Thy people owed;
How, then, can wrath on me take place,
Now standing in God’s righteousness and sprinkled by Thy blood?
“If Thou hast my discharge procured,
And freely in my place endured the whole of wrath divine,
Payment God will not twice demand,
First at my bleeding surety’s hand and then again at mine.” (emphasis added)
The power and seeming invincible logic of this ‘double payment’ argument still holds sway today, even among many who would strongly disavow the label ‘Calvinist’ and fervently proclaim their belief in ‘unlimited atonement’. They rightly hold that the propitiatory sacrifice of Christ has answered the claims of God’s throne on behalf of all men without exception. Indeed, they say, there’s enough in the death of Christ to save a million worlds. However, because they see no escape from the ‘double payment’ argument, when it comes to individual sins, they claim that the sins (plural) of the elect only were actually borne by Christ. They are unable to see any provision in the work of Christ for the individual sins of those who will be in hell because, if Christ has already borne the punishment for those sins, a second payment in hell would be unjust. They therefore understand the work of Christ as having two aspects. By design - here they part company with traditional 5-point Calvinists - He accomplished different ends for different groups. He was the propitiation for all, but the substitute and sin-bearer for the elect only. In other words, they hold to universal propitiation but limited sin-bearing. That is, limited, by God’s design, not in essence but in scope (i.e. to the elect only).
Fatal Flaw
A simple analysis reveals that the entire ‘double payment’ argument is holed below the water-line. Indeed, it collapses under the weight of its own logic. Consider: did the wrath of God abide on the apostle Paul before he believed (John
In what sense then has Christ borne sins? Is there an alternative to the faulty logic of the double payment argument? The key is to realise that scripture neither views the ‘propitiation made’ nor the ‘ransom paid’ as an exact like-for-like payment by Christ of an individual sinner’s ‘sin-debt’. Note what is outlined in Exod 21:30. A sum of money was taken as a satisfaction instead of a life. In other words, ‘atonement money’ was a legal penalty demanded and accepted by the law, which enabled the righteous suspension of the literal penalty (capital punishment). When a sinner is saved, his individual debt is forgiven and cancelled, on the basis of Christ’s infinite sacrificial payment on the cross. But if a sinner refuses to accept the legal penalty Christ paid on the cross, he will suffer the literal penalty himself in hell. It must be recognized that a sinner’s suffering in hell is different both in nature and value to Christ’s atoning suffering on the cross. Christ’s infinite sacrificial payment cannot be understood as a commercially equivalent ‘eye for an eye’ transaction (so many stripes for so many sins). Charles Smith explains: “We are not to view this [Christ’s cross-work] as involving an individual and separable penalty for each sin of each individual. Due to the infinite value of His person, He bore a penalty which was more than equal to the penalty that could be paid by all humans throughout all eternity. Exact equivalence of punishment was unnecessary and impossible. The infinite God paid a greater price in those moments on the cross than all men could ever pay. He did not pay the payment which we would otherwise be required to pay, He made a greater payment which may be applied to our account instead of the penalty that we would have to pay.”2 (emphasis added)
Many vs. All
The Bible says Christ bore believers’ sins (1 Pet
Comparing Matt
The Day of Atonement
Those who limit substitution to the elect frequently make reference to Leviticus 16 to support their view. They claim the first goat died to deal with ‘the principle of sin’ without reference to any persons in particular (it was Godward); whereas the live goat bore ‘specific acts of sin’ committed by specific individuals (it was manward). After all, does not the passage actually say of the first goat, “one lot for the LORD” (v8)? If all of this were true, one would have expected the Bible to say “One lot for the Lord and the other lot for the people,” whereas it actually says, “One lot for the Lord and the other lot for Azazel.”7 Again, the Bible specifically states concerning the first goat: “Then shall he kill the goat of the sin offering, that is for the people, and bring his blood within the veil.” (Lev
It is essential to note that despite the use of two goats on the day of atonement, it was considered one offering; “Two goats for a sin offering” (Lev 16:5). Both goats, as we have seen, were for the people (v15/v21), but both goats were also for atonement (v16-17/v10). But, it is claimed, no hands were laid on the head of the first goat for the transfer of guilt; it was not identified with any individual sins. This supposition is flawed. A sin offering dying in limbo would have been contrary to the entire sacrificial order. It would have been the only sin offering so treated. Why then is the procedure not mentioned? Because in Lev 16, what is not mentioned is assumed from the earlier instructions for sin offerings given in chapter 4, whereas what is unique is supplied.8 Unless otherwise stated, the normal procedure for a sin offering always applied.
If both goats dealt with the same sins, why then were two goats needed? As with the two birds for the cleansing of the leper (Lev 14), the reason for making use of two animals was simply the physical impossibility of combining all the features of the sacrificial picture in one single animal. The death of the first goat set forth cleansing from the defilement of sin. The second goat set forth the removal of the burden of sin. However, the same sins that had produced the defilement, requiring the death of the first goat, were seen as borne by the second goat (v16/v21). Both goats acted for exactly the same defined group of people (to a man) and exactly the same sins. Furthermore, the defilement dealt with by the first goat was not merely that of the Tent of meeting, but the actual the defilement of the people themselves (Lev
Substitution & Propitiation
It is unwise therefore to divide up the one sin offering into two compartments, one representing propitiation only and the other substitution only. “The living goat...is not to be regarded merely as the bearer of sin to be taken away, but as quite as truly a sin-offering as the one that was slaughtered. It was appointed to make atonement with it (v10).”9 Together the goats provided atonement and propitiated God with regard to the sins of the people. The propitiation was substitutionary in character (did not the first goat die instead of the people?). True, it was Godward, but the blessings it made possible flow manward.
In this regard the commentator F. W. Grant is most helpful: “In general, the Lord’s lot is said to illustrate propitiation: the scape-goat, substitution: but we must inquire how far this is true...The goat which is the Lord’s lot, moreover, as explicitly speaks of substitution as it does of propitiation...Propitiation it proclaims to be by substitution and for the people therefore for whom the substitution is, and for no other. Let us mark these things, for they are of great importance, if we would see clearly the relation between these thoughts. If substitution is for a certain people, then propitiation is for a certain people only: if propitiation has a universal aspect, then substitution must have the same...Propitiation is, then, by substitution, and only so; yet the substitution itself is not for a fixed number before determined, but for a people to whom men can be freely invited to join themselves, because of the infinite value of the work accomplished and of the infinite grace which that work expresses.”10 So, nothing different was done on the cross for those who will be in heaven as opposed to those who will be in hell.
The procedures of the day of atonement provided no guarantee of salvation for any Israelite. The fact of the atonement cleansed no one. Until the individual Israelite afflicted his soul he was not clear before God (Lev
Salvation is not propitiation—it is the blessing that flows from propitiation. Similarly, Christ has not ransomed all men by His death, but He has given Himself a ransom for all men, which ransom will redeem any who come to Him. The Bible is clear: “He is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole world ” (1 John 2:2). While the words ‘the sins of ’ are not in the original, commentator Henry Alford in his Greek Text explains, “in the latter clause there is an ellipsis very common in ordinary speech in every language: ‘for the whole world’ = ‘ for the sins of the whole world ’.”12 Appeased by the atonement of Christ, God has been rendered merciful (propitious—Luke
God loves the whole world (John
Summary of Leviticus 16
Similarities: 1st 2nd
1. Both goats are said to be ‘for atonement’. v17 v10
2. Together they are designated one single sin offering v5 v5
3. Both acted on behalf of exactly the same group of people v15 v21
4. Both were substitutionary in nature v15 v21-22
5. Both had hands laid on them for the transfer of guilt (
6. Both dealt with exactly the same sins and transgressions v16-17 v21
7. Neither accomplished automatic individual salvation (
Differences:
Goat 1—the Lord’s
Goat 2—the scapegoat, Burden taken out, The fruit of propitiation, Burden of sin removed
Summary of the purpose of the day of atonement:
“To make an atonement for the children of
Notes:
1. The Death of Death in the Death of Christ, Banner,
2. Did Christ Die Only for the Elect? BMH Books,
3. Kittel’s Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, Vol 6, p. 536-545.
4. Calvin’s NT Commentaries, Vol 12, Paternoster Press, Carlisle, 1963, p. 131.
5. Prepositions & Theology in the Greek NT, M. Harris, NIDNTT, p. 1196-7.
6. Ibid, p. 1180.
7. Azazel means ‘complete removal’.
See C.L. Feinberg, Bibliotheca Sacra, 115:460, Oct 1958, pp. 321-333.
8. Commentary on the Old Testament, Keil & Delitzsch, Vol 1, p. 589.
9. Ibid, p. 589.
10. From The Atonement, F.W. Grant, Loizeaux Bros., Neptune, 1956, p. 104-110.
11. Nature of the Atonement, Simpkin Marshall Hamilton Kent, 1890, p. 75-76.
12. Greek New Testament, Alford, Vol 4, Moody Press, Chicago, 1958, p. 433.
