Pictures of Atonement. Ben Pugh

Pictures of Atonement - Ben Pugh


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without having to engage with the kind of atomizing exegesis that empties the Word of all useful meaning, and leaves you wanting to slash your wrists.

      As I introduce this concept I want to first register two oddities about the TIS movement. The first is that, despite the fact that Fowl’s founding document was a reader and therefore entirely immersive, outlining only in the briefest of terms what the approach consists of, there has been a never-failing stream of prolegomena ever since. There seem to be at least as many books about TIS as there are books that seek to exemplify it as a practice. The other oddity that the newcomer will notice is that many publications that are coming out under the auspices of TIS are written by scholars who are not in any very obvious way practicing TIS and do not seem to have even fully understood it. The main reason many such publications are not really TIS gives me a reason now to introduce what, in my view, is the greatest strength and most distinguishing feature of the movement and the thing that marks it out as a clear development on the older discipline of biblical theology: it is theology done in and for the church. One avowedly TIS book I read mentioned the church right at the very end, as an after-thought, like most theology books do. By contrast, what you will find in Pictures of Atonement is academic research with some of the features of a devotional. It will have reflections at the end of each chapter borne out of my own daily meditations on these atonement themes.

      A second strength of TIS is that, unlike biblical theology, which was always at odds with systematic theology and wary of its confessional biases, TIS tries to be a genuine rapprochement between theology and biblical studies. Laudably, Brazos are in the middle of producing a series of commentaries that are written not by biblical scholars but by people who, in various ways, would normally be classed as theologians: Stanley Hauerwas and Robert Jenson, for instance. This is where TIS is truly ground-breaking. However, TIS is clearly not new. All of its leading proponents are unanimous on this point. The church has always instinctively read the Bible theologically, seeking to receive it as God’s Word spoken to faith for the formation of Christian character and action.

      The Role of Metaphor

      Metaphor is of interest to any biblical study of atonement since the way the earliest church understood the death and resurrection of Christ was expressed almost entirely in pictorial language. Indeed, one is hard pressed to find any New Testament interpretations of the work of Christ that are not in metaphorical language. Even the renderings of Christ dying or suffering “for us” and “for our sins”: ostensibly non-metaphorical language, almost certainly make some filtered reference to the Levitical sacrifices or qualify some commonly known trope from the Greek stage about heroic deaths for others.


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