« Back | Home | Next »

 

Righteous to forgive unrighteousness

[Bible - NT - John | Link | Print]

It's common among evangelicals to say that the gospel is about God solving the tension between His justice and His mercy. As a just God, He must punish sin; as a merciful God, He seeks to save. The cross combines the two.

At one level, I have no problem with this. But it is problematic both theologically and exegetically. Theologically because it reifies the attributes of God and implicitly denies the simplicity of God. Exegetically because, as John says, it is precisely the "righteous" God who "forgives us our sins and cleanses us from all unrighteousness." Forgiveness is not a contradiction of God's justice, but a manifestation of His justice.

posted by Peter J. Leithart on Saturday, July 29, 2006 at 08:43 AM

Go home!

RECENT ENTRIES
- Celebrity
- Obama's faith
- The Gaze
- Sacrifice and death
- Derrida the theologian
- Miriam's leprosy
- Prematurely white
- Gift of the Text
- Calvin, Milbank, and Gifts
- Derrida on Gifts
- Ontology of Personhood
- Knowing God Twice
- Unity or Revelation
- Engaging Barth
- Eucharistic exhortation
- Exhortation
- Unread books
- Vestiges of Perichoresis
- Hooray for Hollywood
- Augustine on the web
CATEGORY ARCHIVES
LINKS
- Biblical Horizons
- Covenant Worldview Institute
- Theologia
SYNDICATE

XML  |   RDF

CONTACT

Comments:
leithart@leithart.com

Problems:
webmaster@leithart.com