Was He Punished? | Michał Paluch, OP

Was He Punished? | Michał Paluch, OP

Re-evaluating Penal Substitution and Vicarious Sa…
46 Minuten
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The Thomistic Institute Angelicum encourages the …

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vor 1 Monat
Re-evaluating Penal Substitution and Vicarious Satisfaction This
talk addresses the central soteriological question: "Was Jesus
Punished?" While it is undisputed that Jesus was punished by human
authorities, this presentation argues against the proposition that
He was punished by God. It critically examines the dominant theory
of penal substitution (substitutio penalis) and advocates for a
return to the classical model of vicarious satisfaction
(satisfactio vicaria). The presentation traces the problem’s origin
to the post-Anselmian theological shift, which was radicalized by
the Reformers into penal substitution. Extreme interpretations of
this doctrine (e.g., L. Bourdaloue) portray God the Father as a
"persecutor" discharging "divine hatred" onto His Son, creating a
"toxic" image of a sadistic God while ignoring the Son's will.
Three strategies for resolving this impasse are analyzed, rejecting
"finding depth in penal substitution", which introduces "darkness"
into the image of God, and the concept of Stellvertretung as a
dialectical evasion. The preferred strategy is to restore the
Anselmian distinction between involuntary punishment and voluntary
satisfaction. The talk argues that Christ did not receive
punishment but offered satisfaction. Defending this model
biblically, it shows that "ransom" (lutron, Mk 10:45) is rooted in
OT law (Ex 21:30) as a payment instead of punishment to avoid
violence. It also refutes key penal substitution "proof texts":
"made sin" (2 Cor 5:21) means "sin offering" (hattā’t); "became a
curse" (Gal 3:13) means "cursed in the eyes of Israel"; and
"bearing guilt" (Isa 53) signifies non-retaliation. The talk also
analyzes the position of St. Thomas Aquinas. It highlights that
although Aquinas, unlike Anselm, uses the term "punishment" (poena)
to describe Christ's act, he understands it as voluntarily accepted
satisfaction. This is structurally distant from later penal
substitution, as for Thomas: God's wrath is directed solely at sin,
never at the Son, and Both act from supreme love; God the Father
only permits the Passion (not positively willing it), which is the
work of human freedom; and the formal, decisive element of
salvation is love, not suffering itself. The talk concludes with a
negative answer to the titular question, affirming a soteriology of
love and voluntary satisfaction, not divine retributive punishment.

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