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Home/Featured/Jesus, the Propitiation of God’s Wrath

Jesus, the Propitiation of God’s Wrath

God himself makes the offering that turns away his own wrath

Written by Steve DeWitt | Tuesday, January 29, 2013

God propitiates his own wrath. Know anybody else like that? Will China pay off the US debt? Will any of the victims of Bernie Madoff personally pay his financial debts? When does the offended personally provide the means to take away his own offense? Only God. This is why he is love. Not that his love contradicts his wrath; his love provides the means to satisfy his own wrath and Jesus was that propitiation for our sins.

 

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)

He is the propitiation for our sins. What does it mean? Propitiation is a common religious word used over the centuries to describe something—an offering or religious duty or whatever—that turns away the wrath of a god toward me.

The gods of the ancient religions were unpredictable, so it was believed. The ancients would do all sorts of things trying to manipulate the emotions of the gods, to avoid their wrath and gain their favor so they would bring rain for the crops, keep their livestock healthy, and increase the number of children in their home. But how could you know one way or the other? Is Zeus angry or not? Do I have Athena’s favor or not? Of course these gods were not true gods at all, but this word propitiation was used for the offering that turned the anger of the gods into favor.

Here is where more liberal theologians get uncomfortable with the word because they say the God of the Bible is not a God of wrath, but of love. Propitiation cannot mean an offering that turns away the wrath of God because God doesn’t have wrath toward us. So it must mean simply removing the offense in the sinner, not in the god. The RSV goes so far as to use the word expiation to cover for that. It is not God’s wrath that is removed; rather it is our sin that is expiated.

Here is where the word and its definition are so important and why one commentator says, “If we are wrong here, nothing else is right.” (Jackman) The love of God does not contradict the wrath of God. Paul begins his entire explanation of the gospel in Romans, not with the love of God but with his wrath of God. Romans 1:18 says, The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men.

God’s wrath is less an emotion and more a holy opposition and hostility toward both the sin and the sinner. As evidence of this, he does not put sin in hell, he puts sinners in hell. God’s love begins with his commitment to the glory of his own person and glorious character. His wrath is part of his love, like a husband who loves his wife so much as to be righteously jealous for her. God is jealous for his glory and angry at all who fall short of that glory (Romans 3:23).

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Related Posts:

  • Why Did Jesus Die? Propitiation and the Wrath of God
  • Love on Display
  • Is God Still Angry at Sin After the Cross?
  • How Did Jesus Escape Eternity in Hell When He Died…
  • All My Sins Are Washed Away

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