The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (288 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
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Granth 1153).
Atonement
Judaism
(Heb.,
kapparah
). Reconciliation with God. According to Jewish belief, human sin damages the relationship with God and only the process of atonement can restore it. According to biblical teaching,
sacrifice
was the outward form of atonement (Leviticus 5), provided human beings also purified themselves spiritually (e.g. Isaiah 1. 11–17). After the destruction of the
Temple
in 70 CE, (the only means of atonement were
prayer
, repentance, fasting,
charity
, and full restitution.See also
DAY OF ATONEMENT
.
Christianity
In Christian theology, atonement is the reconciliation (‘at-one-ment’) of men and women to God through the death of Christ. The word was introduced by W.
Tyndale
(in 1526) to translate
reconciliatio
.
Although there have been no official Church definitions of the doctrine of the atonement, there have been many accounts of how the life, death, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus effect for others the forgiveness and reconciliation with God which he clearly mediated to many during his lifetime and ministry: in other words, these accounts attempt to answer the questions of what the death of Jesus adds to his life, or of how the ‘atonements’ effected in his life are still achieved after his death. In general, these accounts claim that the death of Jesus universalizes what would otherwise have been a local and restricted transaction. There are five major accounts falling into two groups, objective and subjective theories. Objective theories claim that something factual has been done for us which has dealt with the reality of sin, and which we could not have done for ourselves. The penal (or juridical) theory claims that Christ has borne the penalty instead of us, so that God can now forgive freely: sin, being an infinite offence against God, required a correspondingly infinite satisfaction which only God could make (see
ANSELM
). Literally interpreted, this may lead to claims that Christ is a substitute for each individual who deserves the penalty, hence substitutionary theories of atonement. Equally objective are sacrificial theories, which claim that Christ is the sinless offering who makes a universal expiation of the stain of sin—or, with less biblical and religious warrant, that he propitiates the deserved wrath of God; in neither of these cases is Christ a substitute: the New Testament seems to think more in terms of Christ as the representative of human beings. Again objectively, the atonement has been understood as a victory (perhaps by way of being a ransom or a ‘bait’) against evil and sin personified in the Devil: this is often called the classic or dramatic theory, also the
Christus Victor
theory (the title, in English, of G. Aulén's influential article, subsequently book,
Den kristna forsonnigstanken
, 1930/1). Subjective theories, also known as moral or exemplary theories, claim that the extent of God's love revealed in Christ and especially in his acceptance of a brutal and unjust death, move us to repentance. This theory is especially associated with
Abelard
. All these theories have an individualistic emphasis, as has the missionary appeal based on them. The advent of the
sociology of religion
has led in the 20th cent. to an increasing stress on the corporate nature of atonement, on the death and resurrection of Christ, recapitulated in
baptism
and the
eucharist
, constituting people as his body. This social understanding of atonement has been expressed especially through
Liberation Theology
.
Attangika-magga
(Buddhist eightfold path)
:
‘A
r, Far
d al-D
n

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