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Pohle-PreussSoteriologyChapter 2

Part I Chapter II §2: The Properties of Christ's Vicarious Atonement

Theological note: de fide (adequacy — Council of Trent; universality — Trent, Sess. VI, can. 3)

book_5 Before you read

Christ's vicarious atonement is intrinsically adequate (fully equivalent to the offence), rigorous (satisfying strict justice), and superabundant — these are the sententia communis. The adequacy and superabundance are proved from Romans 5:15-20, 1 Peter 1:18-19, Hebrews 9:12-28, and the Fathers (Cyril of Jerusalem, Chrysostom). The Scotist/Nominalist error that the satisfaction is only of finite worth and becomes adequate solely through God's extrinsic acceptance is rejected (Suarez: 'neither probable, nor pious'); the Hypostatic Union gives every theandric act infinite moral value, since the infinite divine Person is the principium quod. The atonement also extends universally: Christ died for all the faithful (de fide, against Jansenius condemned by Innocent X) and for all men without exception (saltem fidei proxima, proved from 1 John 2:2; 1 Timothy 2:6; Trent Session VI), though not for the fallen angels (de fide, against Origen's apokatastasis).

§2: The Properties of Christ’s Vicarious Atonement

SECTION 2 THE PROPERTIES OF CHRIST’S VICARIOUS ATONEMENT INTRINSIC PERFECTION OF THE ATONEMENT Christ’s vicarious atonement is intrinsically perfect and comprises within its scope all sins and all sinners. The intrinsic perfection of Christ’s vicarious atonement manifests itself in three ascending stages, which are technically called adequacy, rigorousness, and superabundance. By adequate atonement we understand a satisfaction which completely and fully repairs the offence committed, or, at least, is accepted as a full reparation by the person offended. If the satisfaction rendered is of such high intrinsic merit that the offended person is in justice compelled to accept it, it is called rigorous. If it exceeds the offence committed, it is superabundant. Thesis I: The satisfaction which Christ made for our sins was adequate, i. e., fully sufficient. This thesis embodies the common teaching of a majority of Catholic theologians. Proof. The reality of Christ’s vicarious atonement is an article of faith, with which we

Article 1: Intrinsic Perfection of the Atonement

have already dealt {supra, Sect. i). In the present thesis we are merely concerned with its intrinsic properties. As the Church has never defined these, the Scotists were free to estimate them differently than the majority of Catholic divines. The Scotists and the Nominalists hold that Christ’s vicarious atonement derives its adequacy not from its own intrinsic merit, but from the accidental circumstance of its ” extrinsic acceptation ” by God. Suarez rejects this theory as * neither probable, nor pious, nor sufficiently in accordance with the faith.* 1 This is a perfectly just criticism, since both Holy Scripture and Tradition declare that the satisfaction which Christ made for us was equivalent to the offence inherent in sin. a) Holy Scripture distinctly declares that we were “bought” with a “price,” 2 and that this price was the Precious Blood of our Lord.* Cfr. i Pet. I, 18 sq. : . . you were not redeemed with corruptible things, … but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb unspotted and undefiled.” How could the blood of Christ be called “precious” if its value was not equivalent to the offence for the reparation of which it was shed? St. Paul says: “You are bought with a great price.” 8 This phrase likewise indicates that the satisfaction given by our Divine Redeemer was equivalent to the guilt of sin. l De Incarn., disp. 4, sect. 3, n. 11. zPretio magno, rifiijs. 1 Cor. 2Pretium, \irpov. VI, 20. Moreover, the Bible tells us that the Godman immolated Himself in expiation for our sins. Hence the satisfaction He gave to His Heavenly Father must be of equal value with Himself, and therefore, to say the least, adequate. Cfr. I Tim. II, 5 sq. : “There is one God, and one mediator of God and men, the man Christ Jesus : who gave himself a redemption for all (am’Avtp0*)-” The graphic term amAvr/oov which St. Paul here employs instead of plain Xvrpov9 shows that he conceives “the redemption for air’ as a full equivalent for sin. “Quanta iniuria, tanta satisfaction In fact, it is only in this hypothesis that we can understand why the Apostle attaches such tremendous importance to the singleness of our Lord’s sacrifice on the Cross, in contradistinction to the multiplicity of the ineffective offerings of the Levites. Cfr. Heb. IX, 12 and 28: “By his own blood he entered once 4 into the holies, having obtained eternal redemption. … So also Christ was offered once5 to exhaust the sins of many.” b) Patristic texts in support of our thesis will be found infra, p. 71. A convincing theological argument for the adequacy of the atonement may be deduced from the concept of our Lord’s natural mediatorship (supra, Ch. I, Sect. 1). 4 Semel, £ira£ . 6 Semel, &ira£. ADEQUACY OF THE ATONEMENT 63 o) By virtue of the Hypostatic Union all human actions of the Godman are infinitely valuable in the eyes of God, independently of their extrinsic acceptation, because a theandric merit derives its full value solely from the infinite dignity of the Logos.6 But an atonement, the expiatory power of which is, morally considered, infinite, cannot be conceived otherwise than as adequate. P) The Scotists and the Nominalists are consequently in error when they teach that the meritorious and expiatory value of Christ’s vicarious atonement, though extrinsically infinite because of its benevolent acceptation on the part of God,7 is not so intrinsically, i. e., on account of its own immanent worth.8 Scotus’ own teaching on this point is uncertain.9 But the great majority of Scotist theologians, including such later authors as Frassen, De Rada, and Henno, undoubtedly underestimated the meritoriousness of Christ’s theandric operation by asserting that it became infinitely valuable only through the condescension of God in deigning to accept it as such. The Scotists admit that Christ’s human actions, because performed by the exalted person of the Godman, were invested with a certain equitable claim to 6 Cfr. Pohle-Preuss, Christology, 9 Scotus, Comment, in Quatuor pp. i6x sqq. Libros Sent., Ill, dist. 19. Hauzeur 7 Infinites ext rinse ca ob benignant and a few other Scotists attempted Dei acceptationem. to reconcile their master’s teaching 8 Infinitas intrinseca ob valorem with the sententia communis, but in innatum. vain. be received as of infinite value by a loving God; but they deny that these actions can by their own power attain to infinitude. This they declare to be impossible because these actions are essentially the product of a finite (human) nature. As the intrinsic or bullion value of a coin need not equal the extrinsic valuation stamped upon its face, they say, so the human actions of our Saviour were in themselves of a merely finite value, but capable of being raised to a higher valuation by God. Mastrius and a few others restrict the Scotistic theory to the thesis (which no one denies) that, to render His atonement valid in actu secundo, our Divine Saviour had first to assure Himself of its acceptation on the part of God, not indeed per modum principii dignificantis, but per modum conditionis praeviae. This is beside the question. What the Scotists assert is that the satisfaction which Christ made for our sins was intrinsically insufficient or inadequate, and that what it lacked in intrinsic merit was supplied by God’s extrinsic acceptation. Their basic error consists in this that they fail to distinguish between the physical entity and the ethical value of Christ’s meritorious actions, confounding the finite character of the former with the infinity of the latter. Justly, therefore, do the Thomists 10 10 Cfr. Billuart, De Incarn., diss. 19, art. 5. insist that the Hypostatic Union endows a physically finite act with a morally infinite value, because it is the infinite Divine Person that performs that act as principium quod, employing the finite nature merely as principium quo. Were we to trace the Scotist theory to its sources, we should probably find that its originators had no clear conception of the character of theandric operation and misconceived the true nature and scope of the Hypostatic Union.11 Thesis II: The satisfaction which Christ made for our sins was not only adequate, but rigorous, according to the standard of strict justice. Proof. In the preceding thesis we saw that Christ’s vicarious atonement was quantitatively adequate, i. e., equivalent to all the sins of mankind. We have now to show that it was adequate also in quality, i. e.y measured by the standard of strict justice {secundum rigor em iustitiae). In other words, it was not necessary for God’s mercy to supply anything over and above the satisfaction rendered by Christ, since this satisfaction fully covered all just claims. This thesis does not embody an article of faith. It is not even a theological conclusion. But it voices the 11 On the uncertain teaching of gen, 1907, pp. 241 sqq. On the Scotus cfr. P. Minges, O. F. M., general subject of this thesis cfr. Compend. Theol. Dogmat. Specialis, also De Lugo, De Myst. Incarn., Vol. I, pp. 213 sqq., Monachii 1901; disp. 6, sect. 1; Scheeben, DogTheologische Quortalschrift, Tubin- matik, Vol. Ill, §251, Freiburg 1882. more general teaching of Catholic divines, especially of the Thomist school, and of Suarez, Tanner, Gregory of Valentia, Franzelin, and others. In a limited way we may also number among its defenders those Scotist theologians who, like Mastrius, admit that the atonement satisfied divine justice, though not to its full extent. a) It pertains to the dogmatic treatise De Deo Uno12 to show that the only kind of relation possible between God and His creatures is a free but real relation of rights and duties based upon the veracity and fidelity of the Creator. Christ’s vicarious atonement embodies all the conditions necessary and sufficient to establish a relation of strict and rigorous justice. These conditions are five in number, to wit : (

creditor must be separate and distinct persons. Satis-1 f actio debet esse ad alterutn No one can be his own debtor. How could Christ fulfil this condition? Since He is Himself God, is it not physically the same person that merits and rewards ? This difficulty cannot be solved by the retort that Christ renders satisfaction to God the Father. Humanity’s creditor was not the Father alone, but the whole Trinity.18 The right solution seems to be this: In atoning for our sins, Christ acts both as man and as God, and hence makes satisfaction virtually as a double person : ( 1 ) the man Jesus makes satisfaction to God for our sins in His human nature, as if He were a different person from the Logos ; (2) The Logos, as God, accepts this satisfaction. If Christ, as man, was able to practice the virtues of obedience and worship towards Himself as God, it can be no contradiction to say that, as man, He gave satisfaction to Himself, qua God, according to the strict measure of justice. We must, however, beware of misinterpreting the expression duplex persona moralis, as Berruyer (a pupil of Hardouin) did when he asserted that the humanity of our Lord was a quasisuppositum, to which, as to a distinct human person, must be ascribed certain actions of Christ which had no intrinsic hypostatic connexion with the Person of the Logos.14 y) The third of the conditions enumerated above is 18 “What does it mean to be the mediator between God and men?” asks St. Augustine, and answers the question as follows: “It means to be a mediator not between the Father and men, but between God and men. What is God? He is Father, Son, and Holy Ghost… . Christ was constituted mediator between this Trinity and the infirmity and iniquity of men.” Ennar. in Ps., 29, 2, x. 14 On this dangerous error see Legrand, De Incarn., diss, u, Paris i860; von Schazler, Das Dogma von der Menschwerdung Gottes, §24, Freiburg 1870; Scheeben, Dogmatik, Vol. Ill, pp. 29 sqq., Freiburg 1882; B. Dorholt, Die Lehre von der Genugtuung Chris ti, pp. 435 sqq., Paderborn 1891. that the debtor must pay his liability out of his own belongings. * Satisf actio debet fieri ex bonis propriis.* Did Christ fulfil this condition ? As He was a man, His power of giving satisfaction for our sins (vis merendi sive satisf aciendi) must have been a grace, i. e., a free gift of God, and consequently the atonement cannot have been a payment made by Him out of His own means. Even the supernatural merits of a justified man, being due to pure grace, cannot satisfy rigorous justice. Indeed we may broadly say that, as man possesses nothing of his own, but has received everything he has from God, whether by creation or by grace, so Christ’s human nature, which was the principium quo of His meritorious and expiatory action, was not His own but a gift of the debtor, i. e., God. This objection may be met as follows: It was not the man Jesus, but the Godman, whose meritorious actions made satisfaction for our sins. In other words, not the human nature of Christ as such made satisfaction, but the Divine Logos through the functions of His human nature, which, by virtue of the Hypostatic Union, is so intimately united to the Logos that He possesses and governs it with absolute sovereignty as its sole principium quod. To attribute such a sovereign control over the human nature of Christ to the Father and the Holy Ghost, i. e., to the Trinity qua Godhead, would be tantamount to asserting that it was not the Logos alone who was made flesh, but the whole Blessed Trinity.15, But this is manifestly repugnant. The human nature of Christ was the personal property of the Logos, and the satisfaction He made through that nature was made ex bonis propriis.1* 8) We come to the fourth condition: ” Satisf actio ‘leCfr. Pohlc-Prcuss, Christology, 16 Cfr. Ysambert, Dt Myst. Inpp. 132 sqq. earn., disp. 6, art. 2-3, Paris 1639.

debet esse ex alias indebitis” Satisfaction must be made by means of something which the debtor does not already owe to his creditor on some other” account. It may be argued that this condition, too, remained unfulfilled in the case of our Divine Saviour, because whatever He did and suffered, He was obliged to do and suffer for reasons other than that prompting the atonement, such as gratitude and obedience to God, a feeling of dependence, piety, etc. Can an action to which one is obliged by so many titles be in strict justice regarded as meritorious? Suarez offers two solutions of this difficulty. (1) The rigor iustitiae, he says, is to be measured purely and solely by the titulus iustitiae. Even if a debtor were obligated by gratitude towards his creditor, he would nevertheless satisfy rigorous justice as soon as he paid the last farthing of his indebtedness. Though other duties remained, justice as such would be satisfied. (2) The intrinsic merit of the satisfaction which Christ made for our sins is infinite, and as such capable of satisfying, not merely one single title of justice, but many, nay, an infinite number of such titles. Consequently justice can be rigorously satisfied even though there are other titles and duties. c) The last condition is that satisfaction must be made by the debtor for himself. * Satisf actio debet fieri pro se ipso, non pro alienis* Strictly speaking, Christ did not fulfil this condition, because He made atonement for others. It is to be noted, however, that the rigor iustitiae can be satisfied by proxy, provided the substitute is formally accepted by the creditor and the proportion between debt and reparation is strictly observed. Let it not be objected that where an offence has been committed the offended person waives his claim to strict justice by

surrendering his right to personal satisfaction. He does not remit the debt, nor any part thereof, but merely commutes it into something of equal value.17 Thesis III: The satisfaction which Christ made for our sins was more than adequate and rigorous ; it was superabundant. This thesis may be characterized as “communis/’ since it is held by practically all theological schools. Proof, a) A Scriptural argument may be drawn from St. Paul’s antithetical sentences in tracing the analogy between Adam and Christ. Cfr. Rom. V, 15: “But not as the offence, so also the gift. For if by the offence of one manydied ; much more 18 the grace of God, and the gift, by the grace of one man, Jesus Christ, hath abounded unto many/’ 19 And even more pointedly Rom. V, 20: “Where sin abounded,20 grace did more abound.” 21 The Apostle here distinctly asserts that Christ gave superabundant satisfaction for our sins. The sin was great, but the atonement and the graces flowing therefrom are still greater.22 17 Cfr. on the subject of these conditions and their fulfilment by Christ: Franzelin, De Verbo Incorn., thes. 47, Rome 1881 (new edition, 1910); B. Dorholt, Die Lehre von der Genugtuung Christi, pp. 424 sqq., Paderborn 1891; Tepe, Inst. TheoL, Vol. Ill, pp. 639 sqq., Paris 1896. 18 Multo magis, iroXXy fiaWop. 10 In plures abundavit, els robs woWoits ivcpiffffcvffcv. 20 Abundavit, iir\e6ya

THE ATONEMENT SUPERABUNDANT 71 b) The Fathers generally held that the adequacy of the atonement can be most effectively demonstrated from its superabundant meritoriousness. Thus St. Cyril of Jerusalem trenchantly argues: ” He who died for us was of no less value. He was not a visible lamb, no mere man, nor yet an angel, but the incarnate God. The wickedness of sinners was not as great as the righteousness of Him who died for us. Our sins were not equal to the justice of Him who died for us.” 23 St. Chrysostom exemplifies this truth as follows : ” Our experience has been like that of a man who was cast into prison with his wife and children and servants for a debt of ten oboli, and another man came and plumped down not only ten oboli, but ten thousand gold talents, and then led the prisoner into the royal chamber, placed him on an exalted throne, and allowed him to share in the highest honors… . For Christ paid far more than we owed, and in a larger measure, like as the infinite ocean exceeds in magnitude a tiny drop of water.” 24 c) If Christ’s vicarious atonement was superabundantly meritorious, that is to say, far in excess of the sins for which it was made, its intrinsic worth must have been actually infinite. This inference is demanded by all the rules of theological logic, and hence we need not wonder that Suarez lays it down as the common teaching of 23 Catech., 33, c. 13. Cfr. also B. Dorholt, Die Lehre von 24 Horn, in Ep. ad Rom., 10, 2. der Genugtuung Christi, pp. 376 Additional Patristic texts apud Pe- sqq., 419 sqq.; Muth, Die H exist at tav., XII, 9 and Thomassin, IX, 9. Christi, pp. 228 sqq.

Catholic divines that “the actions of Christ possessed a value which was absolutely and strictly infinite in making satisfaction and acquiring merits before God.” 25 a) St. Thomas demonstrates this proposition by a theological argument based on the infinite dignity of the Godman. ” The dignity of Christ’s flesh/’ he says, ” must not be estimated solely by the nature of the flesh, but by the assuming person ; it was the flesh of God, hence its dignity is infinite.” 26 As a matter of fact, the intrinsic moral value of an action varies in proportion to the dignity of him who performs it, and therefore the actions of a person of infinite dignity, when offered in satisfaction for an offence, must be infinitely meritorious. To demonstrate the infinite value of Christ’s vicarious atonement, it is not necessary to have recourse to its superabundant merit; the proposition follows as a corollary from the fact of its mere adequacy. If no one but a Godman was able to give adequate satisfaction for our sins, each and every one of Christ’s theandric actions, even the most insignificant, must have been sufficient, nay more than sufficient, for the purposes of the atonement, because each and every action performed by a Godman is by its very nature infinitely meritorious. As to the question, why the meritorious actions of our Lord had of necessity to culminate in His dolorous passion and death, St. Thomas says : ” If we regard the amount paid for the redemption of the human race, any suffering undergone by Christ, even without death, would 25 Opera Christi Domini habuisse valorem absolute et simpliciter infinitum ad satisfaciendum et merendum apud Deum, De Incarn,, disp. 4, sect. 4, n. 3. — On the untenableness of the Scotistic theory of extrinsic acceptation v. supra, pp. 63 sqq. 20 S. Theol., 3a, qu. 48, art. 2, ad 3. Cfr. Suarez, op. tit., n. 17 sqq. THE ATONEMENT SUPERABUNDANT 73 have sufficed for the redemption of the human race, on account of the infinite dignity of His person… . But if we regard the payment of the price, it must be observed that no other suffering less than Christ’s death was deemed sufficient by God the Father and by Christ Himself to redeem the human race.” 27 P) That the satisfaction which Christ made for our sins was infinite, may also be/ inferred from certain utterances (though they are not ex-cathedra decisions) of the Holy See. Among the propositions of Bajus condemned by Pope Pius V in the year 1567 is the following: “The works of justice and temperance performed by Christ derived no additional value from the dignity of His person.” 28 Hence it is Catholic teaching that the actions of Christ derived a higher value from the “dignity of His Person.” How high is this value to be rated? Evidently it must have corresponded to the infinite dignity of the Godman, — which is merely another way of saying that it was infinite. A far more important pronouncement for our present purpose is this from the Bull “Unigeni27 “Si ergo loquamur de redemp’ Hone humani generis quantum ad quantitatetn pretii, sic quaelibet passio Christi etiam sine morte suffecisset ad redemptionem humani generis propter infinitam dignitatem personae … 51 autem loquamur quantum ad deputationem pretii, sic dicendum est quod non sunt deputatae ad redemptionem humani generis a Deo Patre et Christo aliae passion es Christi absque morte/’ Quodlib. 2, art 2. — Cfr. Dorholt, op. cit., pp. 405 sqq. 28 Opera iustitiae et temperantiae, quas Christus fecit, ex dignitate personae operantis non traxerunt maiorem valorem. Prop. 19 (Denzinger-Bannwart, Enchiridion, n. 1019). 74 THE WORK OF REDEMPTION tus” of Pope Clement VI, A. D. 1343: “He is known to have shed, not a little drop of blood, — though this would have sufficed for the redemption of the entire human race, because of the [Hypostatic] Union with the Logos, — but streams of it, like unto a river… . That the mercy involved in such a large effusion [of blood] be not rendered vain, empty, and superfluous, He laid up for the Church militant a copious treasure, which the good Father desires to dispense to his children, in order that it may become an infinite store-house for men, and that those who make use of it may share in the friendship of God. 29 Pope Clement, in issuing his Bull, did not intend to define the dogmatic teaching of the Church with regard to this *infinite treasure.” Nor does the document contain any clear expression as to whether Christ’s merits are to be conceived as actually or potentially infinite. Hence the above-quoted words cannot be said to constitute a binding dogmatic definition. We may, however, safely assume that Clement VI intended to represent the treasure of Christ’s merits as actually infinite, for this is the obvious meaning of his words, considered both in 129 ” Non guttam sanguinis modi- tio redderetur, thesourum militanti cam, quae tamen propter unionem Ecclesiae acquisivit, volens suis ad Verbum pro redemptione totius thesaurizare filiis pius Pater, ut sic humani generis suffecisset, sed co- sit infinitus thesaurus hominibus, piose velut quoddam profluvium nos- quo qui usi sunt Dei amicitiae par~ citur effudisse … Quantum ergo ticipes sunt effecti.” Denzinger exinde, ut nec supervacua, inanis et Bannwart, Enchiridion, n. 550. superflua tantae effusionit miseraCHRIST DIED FOR ALL 75 themselves and in connection with the context. The doctrine of the superabundant merits of Jesus Christ and His Saints forms the groundwork of the Catholic teaching on indulgences, which we shall explain more fully in a later volume of this series.80

Article 2: Extrinsic Perfection or Universality of the Atonement

EXTRINSIC PERFECTION OR UNIVERSALITY OF THE ATONEMENT If, as we have shown in the preceding Article, the satisfaction made for our sins by Christ was intrinsically perfect, there is a priori ground for assuming that it must have embraced all men without exception. In matter of fact the universality of the atonement objectively coincides with the universality of God’s will to save the entire human race (voluntas salvifica), Here we shall merely touch upon a few important points bearing on the Redemption. Thesis I: Christ died for all the faithful, not only for the predestined. This proposition is strictly de fide. Proof. The predestined are those who actually attain to eternal salvation. Of the “faithful,” i. e.j those who have the true faith, many are unfortunately lost. a) Predestinarianism was taught by Calvin, and also by the younger Jansenius, who hereti30 In connection with the Sacrament of Penance. 6 cally asserted that ” It savours of Semi-Pelagianism to say that Christ died, or shed His blood, for all men without exception.” 1 This proposition was censured as “false, foolhardy, and scandalous” by Innocent X, who added that, understood in the sense that Christ died for the salvation of the predestined only, Jansenius’ thesis is furthermore “impious, blasphemous … and heretical.” Consequently it must be accepted as an article of faith that Christ died also for those who were not predestined. These are the “faithful,” i. e. (in the New Testament) all who have received the Sacrament of Baptism, be they infants or adults. For all baptized Christians are bound to accept the Creed, which says that Christ “descended from Heaven for us men and for our salvation.” 2 b) Sacred Scripture is so clear on this point that we may well marvel at the existence of Predestinarianism. St. Paul must have had the “faithful” in mind when he wrote to the Thessalonians: “For God hath not appointed us unto wrath, but unto the purchasing of salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ, who died for us.” 8 Again, Christ Himself, assuredly the most faithl “Semipelagianum est dicere, 2 ”… qui propter nos homines Christum pro omnibus omnino ho- et propter nostram salutem deminibus mortuum esse cut songuinem scendit de coelis.” fudisse.” Prop, Damn. Iansenii, 5 81 Thess. V, 9 sq. (Denzinger-Bannwart, Enchiridion, n. 1096). CHRIST DIED FOR ALL 77, ful exponent of the Divine Will, in the touching prayer which He pronounced as the High Priest of humanity, included all the faithful, — in fact, indirectly, the whole human race. Cfr. John XVII, 20 sq.: “Non pro eis [scil. Apostolis] autem rogo tantum, sed et pro eis qui credituri sunt4 per verbum eorum in me, … ut credat mundus,5 quia tu me misisti — And not for them [i. e., the Apostles] only do I pray, but for them also who through their word shall believe in me; … that the world may believe that thou hast sent me/’ c) The teaching of the Fathers on this point is copiously expounded by Petavius,6 and we need not expatiate on it here.7 Thesis II: Christ died for all men without exception. This thesis may be qualified as “saltern fidei proxima.” / Proof. The Provincial Council of Quiercy (A. D. 853) defined against Gottschalk: “As there never was, is or will be any man whose nature was not assumed by our Lord Jesus Christ, so there never was, is or will be any man for whom He has not suffered; though not all 4 Wepl T&V 1Tl(TT€v6vT(t)V’ 5 tva d icSafLos irurretan* De Incarn., XIII, 2 sq. Augustine’s teaching by the Jansenists consult Dechamps, De Haeresi Janseniana, 1. II, disp. 7. 7 On the misrepresentation of St. are redeemed by the mystery of His passion.” 8 Pope Alexander VIII, A. D. 1690, formally condemned the proposition that “Christ gave Himself for us as an oblation to God, not for the elect only, but for all the faithful, and for the faithful alone.” 9 The Tridentine Council defines the dogmatic teaching of the Church on this point as follows: “Him [Christ] God hath proposed as a propitiator, through faith in His blood, for our sins; and not for our sins only, but also for those of the whole world.” 10 a) This Tridentine teaching is thoroughly Scriptural, in fact it is couched in the very language of Holy Writ. Cfr. 1 John II, 2: “Et ipse est propitiatio 11 pro peccatis nostris, non pro nostris autem tantum, sed etiam pro totius mundi12 — He is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for those of the whole world. 1 Tim. II, 6 must be interpreted in consonance with the text just quoted. Qui 8 “Christus Iesus D. N., sicut nullus homo est, fuit vel erit, cuius natura in illo assumpta non fuerit, it a nullus est, fuit vel erit homo, pro quo passus non fuerit, licet non omnes passionis eius tnysterio redimantur” The controversies incident to the Council of Valence (A. D. 855) were due to a misunderstanding. Cfr. B. Dorholt, Die Lehre von der Genugtuung Christi, pp. 323 sqq. 9 . . dedit semetipsum pro nobis oblationem Deo, non pro solis electis, sed pro omnibus et solis fide’ libus.” (Denzinger-Bannwart, Enchiridion, n. 1294.) 10 “Hunc proposuit Deus propitiatorem per fidem in sanguine ip~ sius pro peccatis nostris, non solum autem pro nostris, sed etiam pro totius mundi” Cone. Trid., Sess. VI, cap. 2 (Denzinger-Bannwart, n. 794). 11 l\aofi6$. 12 dWd Kal vepl 6\ov rov k6gpot/* CHRIST DIED FOR ALU 79 dedit redemptionem semetipsum pro omnibus [scil. hominibus] — Who gave himself a redemption for all [i. e., for all men].” The context shows that St, Paul means to emphasize the universality of God’s will to save all men. We may also point in confirmation of our thesis to such passages as 2 Cor. V, 14, in which the Apostle numbers among the elect such as are still in the state of original sin as well as those who are justified. Si unus pro omnibus 13 mortuus est j ergo omnes 14 mortui sunt — If one died for all, then all are dead. 15 b) The Jansenists did not deny that the Fathers who wrote before Pelagius clearly taught the vicarious atonement to be as universal as God’s will to save mankind, i. e., that it embraces all human beings without exception. But they claimed that a change came with St. Augustine, who succumbed to the evil influence of Predestinarianism. It is to be noted that the famous African Doctor was warmly defended against this calumnious charge by one of his contemporaneous disciples, St. Prosper of Aquitaine.16 18 fakp TT&VTWV. ioZ irdvres, is For an explanation of this text see Al. Schafer, Erklarung der beiden Brief e an die Korinther, pp. 439 sqq., Munster 1903. 16 We cannot enter into the controversy here. The student will find it exhaustively treated by Dorholt, Lehre von der Genugtuung Christi, Paderborn 1896, pp. 317 sqq., by Tricassin, De Praedestinatione, p. I, sect. 7, punct. 4 sqq., and by Franzelin, De Deo Uno, thes. 32, Rome 1883. The fate of unbaptized infants will be discussed in Vol. VII of this series. Thesis III: The atonement did not benefit the fallen angels. This proposition is de fide. Proof. Origen taught that Christ also died for the demons, who were destined at some future time to be released from hell. This error (aTro/caraoracrt? iravrw} was closely related to another, harbored by the same learned but erratic divine, viz.\ that the Logos assumed the form of an angel to redeem the lost angels, just as He became man to redeem sinful humanity. These vagaries were condemned as heretical by a council held at Constantinople in 543, and again by the Fifth Ecumenical Council, A. D. 553.17 The dogma embodied in our present thesis is intimately bound up with that concerning the fall of the angels and their eternal banishment from Paradise.18 Being condemned to everlasting hell-fire, the evil spirits can have no share in the merits of the Redeemer. For although there is assigned to angels also perdition in the fire prepared for the Devil and his angels, says Tertullian, “yet a restoration was never promised 17 Cfr. Denzinger, Enchiridion, ed. 9, n. 193 and 198. Fr. Diekamp {Die origenistischen Streitigkeiten im 6. Jahrhundert und das V. allgemeine Konsil, Munster 1899) has put a quietus on an ancient controversy by showing that Origenism was condemned both by the Council of Constantinople in 543 and by the Fifth General Council in 553, though the acta of the latter do not mention the fact. Cfr. Chr. Pesch, S. J., Theologische Zeitfragen, Vol. II, Freiburg 1901. 18 Cfr. Pohle-Preuss, God the Author of Nature and the Supernatural, pp. 340 sqq. . WHY SOME ARE LOST 81 them. No charge about the salvation of angels did Christ ever receive from the Father; and that which the Father neither promised nor commanded, Christ could not have undertaken.” 19 Thesis IV: The doctrine of the universality of the atonement is not disproved by the fact that many human beings are eternally lost. This proposition may be qualified as theologically certain. Proof. The Council of Trent teaches : “But, though He died for all, yet not all receive the benefit of His death, but those only unto whom the merit of His Passion is communicated.” 20 According to Holy Scripture, the universality of Christ’s vicarious atonement is not absolute but conditional. Those only are saved who comply with the conditions necessary for participating in the fruits of the Redemption, viz.: baptism, faith, contrition, cooperation with grace, perseverance. Cfr. Mark XVI, 16: “Qui crediderit et baptizatus fuerit, salvus erit; qui vero non credideritj condemnabitur — He that believeth and is baptized, shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be condemned.” 19 De Came Christi, c. 14. — Cfr. Dorholt, Lehre von der Genugtuung Christi, pp. 353 sqq. — On the participation of the good angels in the merits of the Redeemer see PohlePreuss, Christology, pp. 243 sqq. i20 “Verum etsi ille pro omnibus tnortuus est, non omnes tamen eius beneficium recipiunt, sed ii dumtaxat, quibus meritum possionis communicatur.” Sess. VI, cap. 3. Denzinger-Bannwart, n. 795. 1 82 THE WORK OF REDEMPTION “The blood of thy Lord,” observes St. Augustine, “is given for thee, if thou wilt; if thou wilt not, it is not given for thee.” 21 Theologians distinguish between God’s antecedent and His consequent will to save men. Antecedently He willed to save all men without exception, even those who are lost ; voluntate consequenti, however, the damned are in fact, though not in principle, excluded from the fruits of the Redemption. It is correct to say, however, in spite of this limitation, that Christ also died for the damned, both past and future, because they are lost through their own fault. The atonement may be regarded as universal from still another point of view. Satisfaction is either merely sufficient or efficacious. It is sufficient if it provides adequate means of salvation. It is efficacious if these means are appropriated and utilized by those to whom they are offered. Catholic divines unanimously teach that Christ died for all men secundum sufficientiam, non tamen secundum efKcaciam. It is indeed quite obvious that if a man neglects to appropriate the fruits of the Redemption, he derives no more benefit therefrom than one who is dying of thirst receives from a spring within his reach but from which he refuses to drink. “Although [Christ] by His death made sufficient satisfaction for the sins of the human race/’ says St. Thomas, “yet each individual man must seek for the remedies whereby to work out his own salvation. The death of Christ may in a manner be called the universal cause of salvation, like as the sin of the first man was, after a fashion, the universal cause of damnation. But it is necessary that the ^versal cause be applied to each one 31 Serm., 344, n. 4.

WHY SOME ARE LOST 83 in particular, that each may participate in its effect. The effect of the sin of our first parents descends to each one of us by the propagation of the flesh, while the effect of our Saviour’s death comes to each by spiritual regeneration … and therefore it is necessary that each individual human being should seek to be regenerated through Christ and to employ all other means whereby the death of Christ becomes efficacious.” 22 In other words, the atonement is universal only with regard to its objective value or sufficiency, not in respect of its subjective application or efficaciousness. 23 22 ” Quamvis autem suMcienter pro peccatis humani generis sud morte satisfecerit, sunt tatnen unicuique remedia propriae salutis quaerenda. Mors enim Christi est quasi quae dam universalis causa salutis, sicut peccatum primi hominis fuit quasi universalis causa damnotionis. Oportet autem universalem causam applicari ad unumquodque specialiter, ut effectum universalis causae porticipet. Effectus igitur peccati primi parentis pervenit ad unumquemque per carriis originem, effectus autem mortis Christi pertingit ad unumquemque per spiritualem regenerationem . • . et ideo oportet quod unusquisque quaerat regenerari per Christum et alia suscipere, in quibus virtus mortis Christi operatur,” Contra Gent., IV, 55, sub. fin. 23 Cfr. Dorholt, op. cit., pp. 307 sqq.. 330 sqq.

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