• THE DEATH OF CHRIST

    From Wes Thomas to All on Monday, January 26, 2026 06:46:54
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    THE DEATH OF CHRIST.

    by
    Charles Watts
    (Vice-President of the National Secular Society)

    Price Twopence

    LONDON:

    WATTS & CO., 17, JOHNSON'S COURT, FLEET ST.

    1896

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    THE DEATH OF CHRIST

    THE sermons preached on Good Friday last, as reported in the
    various newspapers, afforded strange and peculiar reading to the non-theological mind. The one theme dwelt upon in all the pulpits
    was the death of christ with its complete and sublime scheme of
    redemption for fallen man." It was urged that Eve and Adam fell
    from a state of purity and perfection by an act of transgression in
    the Garden of Eden, and thereby involved the whole of the human
    family in sin and depravity. To remove the consequences of this
    alleged act of transgression, it was contended that the death of
    Christ was necessary in order to atone to God, against whom a sin
    had been committed. It was further urged that, through our "first
    parents" partaking of the forbidden fruit, God became estranged
    from his children, and that the sacrifice of his Son was required
    to reconcile the Father to his children. As it is put in the
    Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England, "Christ was
    crucified to reconcile his Father to us. To be a sacrifice for sins
    of men" (Article 2). It is also stated in the Confession of Faith
    that Christ's death "purchased reconciliation " (chap. viii.). The
    Biblical authority, as accepted by orthodox believers, for this
    view of the death of Christ is as follows: "Behold the Lamb of God,
    which taketh away the sins of the world" (John i. 29) he is the
    propitiation for the sins of the whole world" (I John ii. 2); "the
    Son of man came to give his life a ransom for many" (Matt. xx.);
    "through our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom we have now received the
    atonement" (Romans v.); "this is my blood of the New Testament
    which is shed for many for the remission of sins" (Matt. xxvi. 28);
    "Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many" (Hebrews ix.
    28); and "For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be
    made alive" (i Cor. xv.). Upon these and a few other texts in the
    New Testament orthodox Christians base their theory of the
    Atonement.

    It may be interesting to note the conflicting character of the
    theories which professed Christians have held concerning the
    atonement, which is supposed to have been made through the death of
    Christ. The Augustinian school taught that mankind were doomed to
    hell through the fall of Adam, and that Christ's death canceled the
    sin committed, and thus saved them from being utterly lost. The
    Calvinists believe that God foresaw that Adam would fall, and that
    posterity would thereby be damned; and therefore he selected a few,


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    who are termed the "elect," to be saved, while the many are
    deprived of this special provision for their salvation. It seems to
    us that if God possessed the foreknowledge here ascribed to him,
    and if he were all-powerful, it would have been more to his credit
    if he had included the entire human family among his "elect." The
    evangelical Christians suppose that the vicarious sufferings of
    Christ secures conditional pardon, the condition being the belief
    that Christ died as a substitute for sinners -- that is, that an
    avowed innocent person was made to suffer for those alleged to be
    guilty. The Universalists consider that no one is damned beyond his
    personal sin in this world. If an individual be ever so bad in the
    present life, all evil will depart at death, and he will be ushered
    into heaven pure and spotless, The Unitarians, rejecting all the
    above theories, contend that the object of Christ's life, rather
    than of his death, was to reconcile man to God, not God to man.
    Relying upon such statements in the Bible as "Every man shall die
    for his own sin," (,To punish the just is not good," they consider
    the popular view of the Atonement fallacious. Such are a few of the
    conflicting notions held by the Christian sects as to the nature of
    the simple plan of salvation."

    Some of the early Christian Fathers taught that the death of
    Christ was a satisfaction to the Devil. The Rev. Scott Porter, in
    his 'History of the Doctrine, of the Atonement, says: "The doctrine
    of satisfaction, when it was plainly broached, which was not till
    about two hundred years after the death of Christ, did not
    represent his blood as satisfying the claims of divine justice, but
    as a payment made to the Devil!" This was the doctrine advocated by
    the celebrated Origen, who wrote: "It was the Devil who held us in
    bondage: for to him we had been given over for our sins. Wherefore,
    he demanded the blood of Christ as the price of our redemption" (p.
    19). St. Ambrose states "We were in pledge to a bad creditor for
    sin; but Christ came and offered his blood for us." Optatus says:
    "The souls of men were in the possession of the Devil till they
    were ransomed by the blood of Christ." According to St. Augustine,
    "the blood of Christ is given as a price that we might be delivered
    from the Devil's bonds." He regards the death of Christ, "not as a
    payment of a debt due to God, but as an act of justice to the Devil
    in discharge of his fair and lawful claims" (ibid).

    Other eminent Christian divines taught that it was not merely
    the man Jesus who died, but God himself. Osiander, a friend and
    fellow-laborer of Luther, maintained that Christ died and satisfied
    divine justice, not as man, but as God. Hooper, a venerable name in
    the Christian Church, states that he cares "for no knowledge in the
    world but this, that man hath sinned, and God hath suffered"
    (Porter's Lectures on the Atonement, p. 68). The same belief is
    expressed by Dr. Watts, who in his hymns exclaims: --

    Well might the sun in darkness hide,
    And shut his glories in,
    When God, the mighty Maker, died
    For man, the creature's, sin.

    Behold a God descends and dies
    To save my soul from gaping hell.



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    Wesley also exclaims: --

    Sinners, turn! why will ye die?
    God your Savior asks you why;
    God, who did your souls retrieve,
    Died himself that ye might live.

    Is it not evident, from the diversity of opinions which is
    here shown to have existed (and much of that diversity still
    obtains) in the Christian world as to the character and meaning of
    the death of Christ, how perplexing any scheme must be that is
    based upon it?

    The fact is, apart from all sectarian and forced
    interpretations, it appears to us that the Bible plan of redemption
    through the death of Christ is simply this: About six thousand
    years ago an all-wise, all-powerful, and beneficent God made man
    and woman, and placed them in a position surrounded by temptations
    it was impossible for them to withstand. For instance, he implanted
    within them desires which, as God, he must have known would produce
    their downfall. He next caused a tree to bear fruit that was
    adapted to harmonies with the very desires which he had previously
    imparted to his children. God, all-good, then created a serpent of
    the worst possible kind, in order that it might be successful in
    tempting Eve to partake of the fruit. God commanded Adam and Eve
    not to eat of this fruit, under the penalty of death, knowing at
    the same time that they would eat of it, and that they would not
    die. The serpent is allowed to succeed in his plan of temptation,
    and then God curses the ground for yielding the tree which he
    himself had caused to grow; further, the Almighty Being dooms both
    man and woman to lives of pain and sorrow, and assures them that
    their posterity shall feel the terrible effects of their having
    done what it was impossible, under the circumstances, for them to
    avoid. Although at first God pronounced his creative work to be
    "very good," it proved to be quite the opposite. So bad did the
    human family become that God determined to bring a flood upon the
    earth and wash every member, one household excepted, out of
    existence. This "water-cure" was not, however, sufficient to
    correct the "divine" errors, for the people grew worse than ever.
    God now decided upon another plan -- namely, to send his son -- who
    was as old as himself, and, therefore, not his son -- to die, but
    who was invested with immortality and could not die, to atone for
    sins that had never been committed by people who were not then
    born, and who could not, therefore, have been guilty of any sin. As
    a conclusion to the whole scheme, this all-merciful God prepared a
    hell, containing material fire of brimstone, to burn the immaterial
    souls of all persons who should fail to believe the truth, justice,
    and necessity of this jumble of cruelty and absurdity.

    We now propose to show that this "sublime scheme of
    redemption" is not only illogical, but that it was unnecessary,
    supremely unjust, inconsistent, and has been an utter failure in
    achieving its avowed object.

    The Christian pretension, that the death of Christ provided a
    complete atonement for the alleged transgression in the Garden of
    Eden, is not supported by the details of the scheme as contained in


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    the Bible, or by the exposition of it as given by eminent
    theological writers. The orthodox position is that the Godhead "Is
    composed of three persons of one substance, power, and duration. If
    this be so, and if an atonement was really necessary, it should
    have been threefold, inasmuch as the Son and the Holy Ghost, being
    a part of the Trinity, required to be satisfied equally with the
    Father; but we do not read of any sacrifice having been. made to
    them. Besides, if the three persons were one in substance, etc., it
    is difficult to see how one part could be wrathful and another part
    merciful at the same time. The Now Testament speaks of God's wrath,
    and such Christian writers as the pious Flavel, Wesley, and Dr.
    Watts state that it was from this wrath that the death of Christ
    was intended to save the human race. Flevel, who was an exponent of
    the evangelical school, writes: "To wrath -- to the wrath of an
    infinite God, without mixture -- to the very torments of hell, was
    Christ delivered; and that by the hand of his own Father. God stood
    upon full satisfaction, and would not remit one sin without it"
    (Works, folio edition, p. 10). Dr. Watts speaks of Jesus's blood
    turning God's "wrath to grace," and, Wesley writes "Jesus speaks
    and pleads his blood. He disarms the wrath of God."

    It is folly to claim, as Christians do, that this priestly-
    invented scheme of the Atonement manifests a spirit of divine
    forgiveness. Instead of being a forgiving plan, it is one of
    exaction and vengeance. According to the story, God demands and
    receives payment before he grants pardon; Christ exacts belief in
    himself as the condition of salvation; and he who sins against the
    Holy Ghost is never to be forgiven. Stockel admits that, "in a
    strict and proper sense, God does not forgive sin, for Christ hath
    given him full satisfaction. How, then, can it be justly said that
    God pardoneth sins and transgressions? Surely that debt can never
    be forgiven that is paid" (cited by Dr. Bruce, Sermons, 2nd
    edition, p. 354). From a rational point of view, the matter
    resolves itself into this Christ either paid the "debt" or he did
    not. If he did pay it, that should settle the account, and we ought
    not to be the bothered with it any further; whereas, if he did not
    pay the "debt," the whole scheme is a sham and a delusion.

    The absurdity of the orthodox view of the death of Christ is
    further manifested in the supposition that it was a part of the
    indivisible Godhead that died. This is theological conjecture run
    mad; for, if it were Christ alone who died and remained lifeless in
    the grave for three days and three nights, he was not equal in
    internity with his father; while, on the other hand, if the whole
    of the deity expired, then we have the curious spectacle of a dying
    and a dead God, and the world for a time existing without any
    "divine" aid in its government. To say that it was only the manhood
    of Christ which suffered and died is but raising another difficulty
    in allying humanity with what is termed divinity; thus adding a
    fourth part to the Trinity, and thereby destroying the perfection
    of the whole, for where the human element is there can be no
    perfection. Moreover, according to the orthodox theory, a mere
    human death was not enough to redeem humanity from the effects of
    the sin committed against an infinite God. Of course, we do not
    admit that any such sin ever occurred, for the simple reason that,
    if a person is compelled to perform an act, it is no sin upon his
    part. And, as we have shown in a previous page, Adam add Eve acted


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    as they did under compulsion. As to enmity existing between God and
    man as the result of partaking of the fruit, the question arises:
    Where did the enmity come from? Did God implant it in the minds of
    his children? If so, he was responsible for the consequences which
    followed. If, however, man acquired it independently of God, then
    he was not the creator of all things, as the Bible states he was --
    even of evil. We are aware it is said that God gave man a free
    will; but this is only another theological error. There can be no
    freedom where circumstances impel in one direction, as, according
    to the account, they did in the Garden of Eden. Besides, we read
    that the plan was arranged "before the foundation of the world"
    (Ephesians i. 4; 1 Peter i. 19, 20).

    Not only is the theory that the world was redeemed through the
    death of Christ utterly absurd, but it came too late. If the
    Atonement were at all necessary, it should have been made
    immediately after Adam's alleged transgression, so as to have
    prevented a single generation from going to the grave with the
    curse of original sin unremoved. But, according to the Bible
    theory, God allowed four thousand years to elapse, and millions of
    his children to die, ere the Atonement was made. This, to say the
    least, was not either just or merciful upon the part of "the Great
    Father of all." If it be true that no one can be saved except
    through belief in Christ, then it may be fairly asked, What became
    of the numberless human beings who died prior to his birth? And,
    further, what will be the fate of those who are now living who have
    not heard, and probably never will hear, of the mission of Jesus of
    Nazareth? To say that the former were saved by anticipation, and
    that the latter will be excused on account of their lack of
    knowledge, is oddly to represent the scheme as being still more
    absurd, and altogether useless. If a portion of mankind could be
    saved without the Crucifixion, what necessity was there for Christ
    to have suffered at all? His sorrow, agony, and bloody sweat might
    all have been avoided, and many saints might have been spared the
    tortures of the stake and the rack. Surely, if for thousands of
    years people could go to heaven without the supposed advantages of
    the death of Christ, it was superfluous to introduce the "sign of
    the Cross" to secure an object which had already been achieved.

    Besides, if the ignorance of the existence of this "atoning
    scheme" will exempt a person from "punishment hereafter," is it not
    cruel and futile to send missionaries to the heathens with the
    "glad tidings"? Let them not know of it, and there would be no
    danger of their being punished for rejecting it; but let them be
    informed of the scheme, and their happiness in another world
    becomes very doubtful. Considering the diversity of the perceptive
    powers, even among "heathens," we cannot reasonably suppose that
    all to whom the scheme is expounded will be able to receive it as
    true. Thus the salvation, which was secure in a blissful state of
    ignorance, is placed in jeopardy by missionary efforts. The truth
    is, that if the death of Christ were really necessary to redeem a
    "fallen race," it was unjust upon the part of God to permit so many
    centuries to pass before the people had the alleged benefit of his
    atoning blood. If, on the other hand, the death of Christ was not
    required to restore a "lost race," then it was a reckless and an
    unnatural act for a father to give his son to a wild mob, to be
    executed amidst the exaltations of a disappointed and fanatical
    people.

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    Moreover, if it were desirable upon the part of God to send
    his son to save the world from eternal perdition, why was it that,
    when be did arrive, so many nations were kept in ignorance of his
    mission? Even the Jews, God's chosen people, had no knowledge that
    an incarnate deity was to expire on the Cross. If the regeneration
    of the world had been the object of Christ, would it not have been
    better, instead of ascending to heaven, for him to have remained on
    earth, teaching practical truths, and showing by his own personal
    example how the world could be rescued from that moral and
    intellectual darkness and despair to which it had been reduced by
    the influence of a degrading theology?

    The orthodox idea of the object of Christ's death involves the
    committal of a gross act of injustice upon the part of God in
    making the declared innocent suffer for the avowed guilty. Justice
    has been defined to "consist in rendering to everyone according to
    his moral deserts; good if he be good, and evil if evil -- for the
    purpose of promoting goodness and discouraging guilt." If this be
    a recognized standard of right in human affairs, surely it should
    not be ignored in dealing with "divine" actions. Suppose,
    therefore, that Christ was "without sin," as stated in the New
    Testament (Hebrews iv. 15), was it not unjust to punish him for the
    wrong-doing of others? Let us take the case of an earthly father,
    who had, say, seven children, six of whom were thoroughly bad, and
    the seventh as good as human nature could possibly be. Now, would
    it be considered just upon the part of that father to punish the
    one good child for the misdeeds of the six bad ones? Such conduct
    would ensure for its perpetrator a general and an emphatic
    condemnation. If a judge were knowingly to sentence to death an
    innocent man as a substitute for a criminal, the act would provoke
    universal detestation, and the judge's judicial position would in
    all probability be forfeited. No Christian would think it just to
    imprison and torture priests to-day simply because their
    predecessors, under the influence of fanaticism, defiled portions
    of the earth with human slaughter. Is it consistent for Christians
    to ascribe an act to their God which good men would refuse to
    perform? We think not.

    Besides, the alleged redeeming feature in the death of Christ
    manifests cruelty to the human race in asserting that, although its
    members had no control over the acts of Eve and Adam, still, in
    consequence of what they did, we are all "born in sin and shapened
    in iniquity." Upon what principle of justice can such merciless
    treatment be defended? According to this orthodox notion, the
    moment we enter life, in our infantile helplessness and childish
    innocence, we are thought to be deserving of the wrath of God. Even
    if it were true that sin was committed in the Garden of Eden, will
    that justify wrong being done to us? Are we on that account to be
    rendered liable to be doomed to eternal torment? If so, a God who
    could either arrange or permit such cruel injustice will never be
    recognized by Secularists as a kind and loving father. We know that
    the Bible, on more than one occasion, represents its God as
    punishing the innocent for the guilty. For instance, we read that
    he is "a jealous God, visiting the iniquities of the fathers upon
    the children" (Exodus xx. 5); that he cut off seventy thousand men
    in Israel by a pestilence, on account of the sin of David in
    numbering the people (2 Samuel xxiv. 15); and that he deprived an


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    innocent child of life to show his displeasure of a crime committed
    by this "man after God's own heart" (2 Samuel xii. 14). It is such
    actions as these, which, contrary to all true standards of right,
    are performed by the Christian Deity, that impel us to prefer
    Atheism to the belief in a being who could inflict such wrongs upon
    the human family.

    Attempts have been made to palliate these "divine acts" by
    asserting that in the coarse of nature the innocent have to suffer
    for the guilty, as in the case of drunkards and debauchees, who
    transmit disease and debility to their offspring. But two wrongs
    cannot make one right; besides, if God was the author of Nature,
    could he not have so arranged her operations that this evil of
    transmission would have been avoided? The two cases, however are
    not analogous, inasmuch as the children referred to do not suffer
    for, but through, the vices of their parents; and, moreover, in
    such suffering there is no punishment intended; it is a
    consequence, not a penalty. The children of criminal parents are
    not blamed, but are rather pitied, for being innocent victim,, of
    others. This was not the case, according to orthodox teaching, with
    Christ, who was punished for the sins of others.

    The theory that the death of Christ was an atonement to God
    for actual sins committed is so glaringly inconsistent that it is
    really marvelous how it can be regarded as true by sensible men and
    women. It is stated that the death of Christ was ordained before
    the foundation of the world, and, at the same time, we are informed
    that man was created perfect and immortal. If it were ordained that
    Christ should die for the redemption of the world, the
    transgressions of Eve and Adam were Only a part of God's plan, and
    certainly did not deserve any curse, but rather merited a blessing.
    As we have already pointed out, there was no free-will in the case,
    for it was originally arranged that but one course had to be
    followed -- namely, the one that led to the sacrifice of Christ. If
    Adam and Eve had adopted any other course, God's plans would have
    been thwarted, for we read in the fourth Gospel that Christ knew
    from the beginning that he would be betrayed; and this betrayal was
    the first act in the tragedy of the cross. Now, if the death of
    Christ were preordained, so also was the "Fall of Man," for the one
    depends upon the other, as the Bible says: "For as in Adam all
    died, so in Christ shall all be made alive." Assuming this to be
    true, man could not have been created perfect but the very fact of
    his "falling," or giving way to temptation, was a proof of his
    imperfection. The truth is, the Bible story of the fall of man is
    a phase of an ancient myth; and, as Dr. Kalisch observes, it is "no
    exclusive feature of the Hebrews." Professor Jowett considered the
    account, as given in the Bible, "a grand Hebrew poem." Similar
    stories were current among the Greeks, the Egyptians, and the
    Persians. The Hindoos had a "tree of life," which was said to be
    guarded by spirits, and contained a juice that was thought to
    impart immortality to those who partook of it. It is time that the
    belief in this fiction of the Fall as being a reality should cease.
    The lesson of history and experience is that the career of man has
    been one of ascent, not descent of progression, not retrogression.





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    Further inconsistencies in this scheme of redemption through
    the death of Christ are the allegation that he came to save the
    whole world, and his reported conduct while on earth. If universal
    salvation were the object of his mission, it proved a decided
    failure. But Christ did not attempt to achieve such a result, for
    he stated himself that he came to the Jews, and to the Jews alone;
    and even among them his labors were not crowned with success.
    Following Christ to the close of his career, we behold the
    culmination of inconsistency in the manner in which he acted in the
    garden of Gethsemane. Here was a man who had preached upon the
    utility of a faith which, it was said, not only afforded
    consolation through life, but was capable of robbing death of its
    terrors; yet when the hour of death approached, when the period had
    arrived for him to prove to the world the efficacy of this faith,
    he was tortured with doubt and racked with fear. In that scene,
    which was not only to rivet the attention of an amazed multitude,
    but was also to consecrate a life of divinity -- a scene which was
    not only to be the great climax to the scheme of redemption, but
    was to afford an example that should remain as a lasting monument
    of greatness to a wondering people; at this moment, when it was
    expected that the hopes of his followers were about to be sealed,
    when he should have maintained his position with unsurpassed
    bravery he was weak and vacillating, and in bitter despair he
    prayed that the cup might pass from him. Where can we recognize
    consistency and heroism in the death of Christ? Is it in the
    conduct of one who came to die for man, yet, when about to fulfil
    his destiny, implored to be allowed to escape the death? Is it in
    teaching that Christ came as a voluntary sacrifice, yet had to be
    betrayed by man? Is it in a Father of reputed love and kindness
    inflicting unnecessary torture upon his sensitive son? Is it in the
    statement that Christ, by asking, could obtain an answer to any
    request made to his father; yet his fervent supplications were
    unheeded, and his dying prayers were unanswered? Finally, is it in
    the act of a God who, having allowed his son to be placed upon a
    felon's cross, permits him to yield up a sorrowful life, after
    uttering unavailing reproaches in those memorable words: My God! my
    God! why hast thou forsaken me?"

    in conclusion, let us remember that from the Christian's
    standpoint the object of the death of Christ has not been attained.
    That object was to make a complete satisfaction for all sin, and to
    remove such sin from the world. But these objects have not been
    attained, for mankind has still to secure its own exemption from
    the supposed effects of sin; and, further, sin still surrounds us.
    If Christ, by his death, paid the debt that is said to have been
    incurred through sin entering into the world, why should man be
    required to make a second payment? As to the boasted victories of
    the cross, where are they? We have still misery, pain, folly,
    ignorance, crime, and injustice in the world. The erection of the
    cross has not frightened the miscreant nor appalled the tyrant. The
    voice from the height of Calvary has not destroyed error nor
    cemented truth; neither has the death of Christ produced that
    condition of society in which it is impossible for man to be
    depraved and poor. If, as we are told, the Savior has come, it may
    be fairly asked, "Whence comes salvation?"

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