The Atonement

Noel B. Reynolds

Noel B. Reynolds, "The Atonement," in New Testament History, Culture, and Society: A Background to the Texts of the New Testament, ed. Lincoln H. Blumell (Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2019), 341-357.

Noel B. Reynolds is a professor emeritus of political science at Brigham Young University.

Jesus Christ came into a world already well supplied with a rich variety of beliefs and practices related to atonement, redemption, and sacrifice. His exit three decades later established a dramatically new set of beliefs and practices that would inspire literally billions of followers over the next two millennia. While the cultural context of the ancient Mediterranean world provided New Testament and other early Christian writers with a variety of metaphors they could use to explain Christ鈥檚 atonement, the resulting texts do not give us a clear, unitary view. Almost six centuries earlier and a hemisphere away, the Nephite prophets recorded visions and revelations that foretold Christ鈥檚 coming and atonement in detail and that now provide us with an enlarged and more consistent understanding. Finally, the revelations given to Joseph Smith in the early nineteenth century add considerable detail about the afterlife made possible by the Atonement. Because the prophetic motivation has always been to promote the salvation of souls, the scriptural accounts of atonement tend to mix explanations of how the Atonement works with explanations of how men and women can pursue its blessings in their lives.

Biblical Accounts of the Atonement

New Testament writers consistently and vigorously testify that Jesus Christ atoned for the sins of all people and has provided for their resurrection from the dead. In so doing they point to historical facts, the things he did to accomplish this鈥攖o his sufferings during his crucifixion and his resurrection. Some of these writers also offer explanations or characterizations of that atonement intended to illuminate how it was possible or how it works. The various explanations offered are not identical or even always consistent with each other, but vary somewhat between writers, or sometimes even within the pages written by the same person. The overall impression we get from reading these testimonies of the Atonement is the deep conviction of the writers and their desires to help their readers understand and appreciate all dimensions of its contributions鈥攅ven though they themselves may not understand it fully or believe that their readers will be able to comprehend its full implications. Book of Mormon writers had the same motivation and faced the same challenges while contributing an even richer collection of testimonies and explanations than what we find in the Bible.

In comparison with the King James Version of the New Testament, which uses any form of the word atone/atonement only once (Romans 5:1), the Book of Mormon features thirty-nine instances of the word that accurately reflect its much more frequent direct discussion of the topic. These discussions are distributed throughout the book from the teachings of Lehi and Nephi in the beginning to the concluding comments of Mormon and Moroni at the end and include treatments of atonement-related concepts such as expiation, propitiation, and redemption that carry more of the load in the New Testament.

The long scholarly tradition of biblical interpretation has produced quite a number of competing explanations for the Atonement. For convenience, I will follow the helpful division of these into five categories that has been provided by the Anchor Bible Dictionary鈥攖hough in a changed order. In this dictionary article, C. M. Tuckett provides a balanced and critical overview of the enormous literature that explores and defends the numerous Christian efforts to understand the Atonement鈥攁n overview that will provide a reliable framework for comparisons with the atonement explanations we have received from the Nephite prophets.[1]

The most personal of these explanations for the individual Christian is the teaching that sinners can be reconciled eternally to Christ and the Father through Christ鈥檚 atonement. A second way of understanding the Atonement focuses on Christ鈥檚 mission to bring light and knowledge to men in their ignorance, revealing himself and the Father to them, and teaching them how they can receive eternal life. Other more general theories of atonement have received greater attention in the interpretive literature. The teaching of early Christian leaders that the Atonement was the result of Christ鈥檚 victory over Satan and the powers of evil was given new life and cut a very wide swath among twentieth-century interpreters. Because sacrificial language recurs in numerous references, equally prominent is the theory that the Atonement was a sacrifice of the sinless Son of God for the sins of the world. The fifth and possibly most prominent theory portrays the Atonement in terms of redemption understood as a ransom paid鈥攐r, more figuratively, of a rescue or deliverance from sin and the power of evil. There is scriptural language to support each of these interpretations, and most writers have tried to merge all of these together in theories dominated by one of these particular explanations. But over the last half century there has been a growing realization among Christian writers that all five explanations may have some basis in truth, even though they may not be reducible to one intellectually satisfying theory of atonement. The following discussion will emphasize the elements of these theories that have received the most reinforcement from Restoration scriptures and will identify corresponding teachings that are present in the Book of Mormon specifically.

1. Reconciliation

In Romans, Paul explains that reconciliation with God was made possible when 鈥淐hrist died for us,鈥 that we may be 鈥渏ustified by his blood鈥 and 鈥渟aved from wrath through him.鈥 We are in this way 鈥渟aved by his life.鈥 By his death, we 鈥渁re reconciled to God,鈥 which atonement (reconciliation) enables us to 鈥渏oy in God鈥 (Romans 5:8鈥11). The family of Greek terms translated as reconciliation and reconcile (katallass艒) indicates a complete or thorough change, reminding us of Christ鈥檚 teaching to Nicodemus that a man must 鈥渂e born again鈥 before he can 鈥渟ee the kingdom of God鈥 (John 3:3, 7). The letters of John extend the same theme by teaching that 鈥淓veryone who believes that Jesus is the Christ is born of God,鈥 鈥渙vercomes the world,鈥 and does 鈥渘ot continue to sin.鈥 Even though 鈥渢he whole world is under the control of the evil one,鈥 he 鈥渃annot harm him鈥 (1 John 5:1, 4, 18鈥19; 3:9 NIV). Peter expands this teaching when he says the saints 鈥渉ave purified [their] souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit . . . : being born again . . . by the word of God鈥 (1 Peter 1:22鈥23). Paul鈥檚 focus on reconciliation continues in his second letter to the Corinthians as he describes 鈥渢he ministry of reconciliation鈥 given to the Christians by Christ and 鈥渢he word of reconciliation鈥 committed to them (2 Corinthians 5:18鈥20). He emphasizes the universality of the Atonement of Christ to the Ephesians, explaining that unlike the law of Moses, the atonement reconciles both Jews and Gentiles unto God, so that 鈥渂oth have access by one Spirit unto the Father鈥 (Ephesians 2:15鈥18). By this act of reconciliation, God can bring former enemies into his fold.

The Nephite prophet Jacob ended his landmark sermon on the Atonement with a direct appeal to the language of reconciliation, calling upon his people to leave 鈥渢he way of everlasting death鈥 and to take up 鈥渢he way of eternal life鈥:

Therefore cheer up your hearts and remember that ye are free to act for yourselves, to choose the way of everlasting death or the way of eternal life. Wherefore, my beloved brethren, reconcile yourselves to the will of God and not to the will of the devil and the flesh. And remember that after ye are reconciled unto God that it is only in and through the grace of God that ye are saved. Wherefore may God raise you from death by the power of the resurrection, and also from everlasting death by the power of the atonement, that ye may be received into the eternal kingdom of God, that ye may praise him through grace divine. (2 Nephi 10:23鈥25)[2]

In this passage, Jacob powerfully links the ancient doctrine of the two ways[3] to the doctrine of the Atonement that underlies 鈥渢he way of eternal life.鈥 This understanding of the Atonement is presented even more clearly in King Benjamin鈥檚 explanation to the assembled Nephite people that 鈥渢he law of Moses availeth nothing except it were through the atonement of [Christ鈥檚] blood鈥 (Mosiah 3:15). Further, 鈥渢he blood of Christ atoneth for their sins,鈥 and 鈥渢here shall be no other name given nor no other way nor means whereby salvation can come unto the children of men鈥 (Mosiah 3:16). As he further explains:

The natural man is an enemy to God and has been from the fall of Adam and will be forever and ever but if he yieldeth to the enticings of the Holy Spirit and putteth off the natural man and becometh a saint through the atonement of Christ the Lord and becometh as a child, submissive, meek, humble, patient, full of love, willing to submit to all things which the Lord seeth fit to inflict upon him, even as a child doth submit to his father. (Mosiah 3:19)

Benjamin鈥檚 people responded unanimously that they did believe his words 鈥渂ecause of the Spirit of the Lord Omnipotent, which hath wrought a mighty change in us or in our hearts, that we have no more disposition to do evil but to do good continually鈥 and expressed their desire 鈥渢o enter into a covenant with our God to do his will and to be obedient to his commandments . . . all the remainder of our days鈥 (Mosiah 5:2, 5). The king went on to explain that because of this covenant they had made, 鈥測e shall be called the children of Christ, his sons and his daughters; for behold, this day he hath spiritually begotten you, for ye say that your hearts are changed through faith on his name; therefore ye are born of him and have become his sons and his daughters鈥 (Mosiah 5:7). Benjamin credits this 鈥渕ighty change鈥 in the hearts of the people to a transformation worked by 鈥渢he Spirit of the Lord鈥 and to their willingness to make a covenant to take his name upon them and to obey him to the end of their lives. No longer enemies but 鈥渟piritually begotten鈥 sons and daughters of Christ, his people are promised 鈥渆verlasting salvation and eternal life鈥 (Mosiah 5:15), conditional only upon their continued obedience to the Lord.

From this we learn that the 鈥渕ighty change鈥 described by Benjamin follows repentance that is grounded in a covenant of obedience, that it is a transformation effected by the Spirit, and that it is characterized as a new birth through which recipients become his sons and daughters. We further learn that it is a process made available to all men and women and that it is the only means by which sinners can be redeemed individually 鈥渇rom the gall of bitterness and bonds of iniquity鈥 and, so reconciled, become heirs of the kingdom of God (Mosiah 27:26, 29). In a subsequent and more detailed recounting of this same experience, Alma said that the experience came after he repented and called upon Jesus Christ, who would 鈥渁tone for the sins of the world,鈥 and that he had subsequently labored unceasingly to 鈥渂ring souls unto repentance, . . . that they might also be born of God and be filled with the Holy Ghost鈥 (Alma 36:17鈥18, 24). Alma made this personal experience the foundation of his signature sermon to the people of Zarahemla and tied it back to the experiences and teachings of his own father Alma and to Abinadi through whom Alma had been converted.

And now I ask of you: On what conditions are they saved? Yea, what grounds had they to hope for salvation? What is the cause of their being loosed from the bands of death, yea, and also the chains of hell? Behold, I can tell you: Did not my father Alma believe in the words which was delivered by the mouth of Abinadi? And was he not a holy prophet? Did he not speak the word of God and my father Alma believed them? And according to his faith there was a mighty change wrought in his heart. Behold, I say unto you that this is all true. And behold, he preached the word unto your fathers; and a mighty change was also wrought in their hearts, and they humbled themselves and put their trust in the true and living God. And behold, they were faithful until the end; therefore they were saved. And now behold, I ask of you, my brethren of the church: Have ye spiritually been born of God? Have ye received his image in your own countenances? Have ye experienced this mighty change in your hearts? Do ye exercise faith in the redemption of him who created you? Do you look forward with an eye of faith and view this mortal body raised in immortality and this corruption raised in incorruption, to stand before God to be judged according to the deeds which hath been done in the mortal body? (Alma 5:10鈥15)

These detailed accounts of the experience of the effects of the Atonement in the lives of repentant Nephites are consistent with the language of other prophets as reported throughout the Book of Mormon. The Atonement is consistently portrayed as the means by which this mighty change is made available to all who will repent鈥攖hat they might be spiritually reborn and filled with joy in this life and prepared to be found worthy of eternal life when they meet the Lord at the final judgment.

2. Revelation

Although not widely recognized as a theory of atonement, there are significant interpretations of the New Testament that see Christ鈥檚 accomplishments primarily focused on bringing mankind to a knowledge of God and of man鈥檚 relationship to him. Jesus is repeatedly characterized by John as the bearer of light and knowledge, the one who reveals God鈥檚 true nature and glory (John 1:14, 18). Through Jesus, light has come into the world, and by coming into that light, men can live by truth (John 3:16鈥21). Eternal life can be understood in terms of coming to know both Jesus and the Father, where knowing is understood in the more personal biblical sense of being acquainted with someone鈥攁nd not in the abstract sense of theological definitions.

It is striking that the same Book of Mormon passages cited above for their explanations of the process by which repentant men and women can be reconciled to God through a spiritual rebirth include the assurance that knowledge of God is gained through that same process. For Alma, that divine knowing is so intimate that the spiritually reborn sons and daughters of God will have 鈥渞eceived his image鈥 in their countenances (Alma 5:14). Alma was given a vision of God in his heaven as part of the experience, but the personal experience in which he received the blessings of the Atonement gave him his understanding of the Atonement. Because of the things which he had tasted and seen, he claimed to know of the Atonement and testified that 鈥渢he knowledge which I have is of God鈥 (Alma 36:26). In the same spirit, Benjamin foresaw a future day 鈥渨hen the knowledge of a Savior shall spread throughout every nation, kindred, tongue, and people,鈥 at which time 鈥渘one shall be found blameless before God, . . . only through repentance and faith on the name of the Lord God Omnipotent鈥 (Mosiah 3:20鈥21). Similarly, Benjamin鈥檚 people rejoiced because their king 鈥渉ath brought us to this great knowledge鈥 and because they knew of the 鈥渟urety and truth鈥 of his words 鈥渂ecause of the Spirit of the Lord Omnipotent, which hath wrought a mighty change in us鈥 (Mosiah 5:4, 2).

The Nephite prophets oriented much of their teaching and prophesying to the Abrahamic covenant, and especially to the promise that through Abraham鈥檚 seed all the nations of the earth would be blessed.[4] Setting out an explanation that would be repeated in many forms by his successors, Nephi taught his brothers that the knowledge of the gospel of their Redeemer would be the means by which the Lord would gather Abraham鈥檚 seed in the last days and bring them back into his fold:

And at that day shall the remnant of our seed know that they are of the house of Israel and that they are the covenant people of the Lord. And then shall they know and come to the knowledge of their forefathers and also to the knowledge of the gospel of their Redeemer, which was ministered unto their fathers by him. Wherefore they shall come to the knowledge of their Redeemer and the very points of his doctrine, that they may know how to come unto him and be saved. (1 Nephi 15:14)

It is even clearer in Book of Mormon teaching that the knowledge of the Redeemer and his gospel are essential in the actualization of the atonement of Jesus Christ in the lives of men and women on the earth.

3. Victory over Satan

A significant share of twentieth-century atonement studies emphasized the teachings of the early Christian fathers and scriptural passages that characterized mortal life in terms of a military struggle between the forces of good and evil.[5] Paul used this metaphor repeatedly and saw Christ鈥檚 victory over Satan鈥檚 armies in his death and resurrection, as illustrated in this key passage:

And when you were dead in trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, God made you alive together with him, when he forgave us all our trespasses, erasing the record that stood against us with its legal demands. He set this aside, nailing it to the cross. He disarmed the rulers and authorities and made a public example of them, triumphing over them in it. (Colossians 2:13鈥15 NRSV)

The author of Hebrews explicitly points to Christ鈥檚 death as the key to that victory: 鈥渢hrough death he might destroy the one who has the power of death, that is, the devil鈥 (Hebrews 2:14, NRSV). This corresponds closely to Jesus鈥檚 saying that 鈥渘ow is the judgment of this world; now the ruler of this world will be driven out鈥 (John 12:31, NRSV).

While this is not the most prominent Book of Mormon atonement theme, it is clearly stated by three Nephite prophets (Abinadi, Alma, and Mormon) and is often implicit in the teachings of others. From the time of Lehi, Nephites had understood the fallen and sinful state of mankind as the 鈥渃aptivity . . . of the devil鈥 and had understood the plan of salvation as the means by which men could be liberated from that captivity (2 Nephi 2:27). In the words of Abinadi:

He that persists in his own carnal nature and goes on in the ways of sin and rebellion against God, he remaineth in his fallen state, and the devil hath all power over him. Therefore he is as though there was no redemption made, being an enemy to God; and also is the devil an enemy to God. And now if Christ had not come into the world鈥攕peaking of things to come as though they had already come鈥攖here could have been no redemption. And if Christ had not risen from the dead or broken the bands of death鈥攖hat the grave should have no victory and that death should have no sting鈥攖here could have been no resurrection. But there is a resurrection. Therefore the grave hath no victory, and the sting of death[6] is swallowed up in Christ. (Mosiah 16:5鈥8)

Centuries later, Mormon reiterates this teaching鈥攅choing Abinadi鈥檚 own words and phrases:

Know ye that ye must come to the knowledge of your fathers and repent of all your sins and iniquities and believe in Jesus Christ, that he is the Son of God, . . . and by the power of the Father he hath risen again, whereby he hath gained the victory over the grave. And also in him is the sting of death swallowed up. And he bringeth to pass the resurrection of the dead, whereby man must be raised to stand before his judgment seat. And he hath brought to pass the redemption of the world. (Mormon 7:5鈥7)

Aaron may have been drawing on the same tradition when he taught the Lamanites that 鈥渢he grave shall have no victory鈥 inasmuch as 鈥渢he sufferings and death of Christ atoneth for their sins鈥 (Alma 22:14).

4. Sacrifice

Although the language of sacrifice permeates many of the New Testament passages and earliest Christian writings that relate to atonement, these do not present a unitary view of how Christ鈥檚 sacrifice would accomplish an atonement. Paul鈥檚 writings are the prime example. While he refers to the idea of sacrifice more than any other writer, he uses such a variety of different metaphors in the process that many scholars advise against looking for a unified theory in Paul鈥檚 teachings on the Atonement. References to the 鈥渂lood鈥 of Christ are too easily linked to the idea of sacrifice as scholars now recognize that blood was another term for death and need have no direct connection to sacrifice per se, thus reducing the number of New Testament writings that should be read as references to sacrifice.

Another major problem with interpreting the references to Christ鈥檚 sacrifice arises from the variety of understandings of sacrifice that Paul and his contemporaries inherited from their own Jewish traditions and from surrounding cultures. In Judaism and other ancient cultures, sacrifices were used in rituals establishing covenants between nations and between men and gods. Sacrifices could also be employed to express thanks to a deity for great blessings or as a means of commemorating great blessings of the past (i.e., Passover). Most attempts to understand the Atonement as a sacrifice invoke the Old Testament practice of sin offerings, but even this connection turns out to be problematic. Part of the problem is that Jewish scriptures and traditions include no rationale for sacrifice that would clarify what it means to say Christ sacrificed his life for the sins of others. Many ancient cultures understood sacrifices to be 鈥減ropitiation,鈥 designed to allay the anger of an offended deity. While linking the Atonement to that tradition has been foundational for many Christians, it has seemed too problematic for others. What sense, they ask, could it make to see Jesus sacrificing himself to allay his own or the Father鈥檚 anger for the sins of men?

A popular alternative has been to interpret the biblical terminology of sacrifice to mean that sacrifices can nullify or 鈥渆xpiate鈥 past sins, implying that Jesus鈥檚 life was sacrificed as a substitute for the lives of sinners. But this approach has its own problems. There appears to be no precedent in Jewish thought for the idea that one person鈥檚 life might be sacrificed to expiate the sins of another. Some have pointed to the scapegoat tradition by which the sins of the people were ritually conferred on the head of one goat that would be then driven into the wilderness, while a second goat would actually be sacrificed. But the analogy breaks down when we note the obvious fact that the goat bearing sins as a substitute is not the one sacrificed. Still, the idea that Christ鈥檚 sacrifice was expiation for sin seems to fit better with the scriptural language that consistently presents God as the actor and not the recipient of the sacrificial action.

The Epistle to the Hebrews presents the most developed and extensive explanation of Jesus as the sacrifice prefigured in the Jewish Day of Atonement. Here Jesus is portrayed as both the high priest and the sacrificial victim and the fulfillment of the prophetic dimension of the ancient ritual. But even here, our search for an explanation of Jesus鈥檚 atonement for our sins comes up empty-handed, for the arguments of the author of Hebrews are actually focused on a different objective. His arguments are designed primarily to prove to his Jewish Christian audience that the sacrifice of Jesus Christ brings the ancient tradition of sacrifices inaugurated through the law of Moses to a final conclusion (Hebrews 8:1鈥10:18). No more will God鈥檚 people be expected to make sacrifices of animal lives. Rather, they should understand the sacrifice of Christ in covenantal terms because it provides the sacrificial launch of the new covenant as the law of Moses with its blood sacrifices is officially terminated. The author of Hebrews assumes, as do other writers, that the shedding of blood is required to expiate sins, but he does not explain sacrifice or substitution.

In his linguistic analysis of biblical sacrifice for the Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, Johannes Behm found the basis for the spiritualized concepts of sacrifice in the New Testament in the presuppositions of Old Testament writers.[7]

The concept of sacrifice in the OT is rooted in the reality of the covenant order into which God鈥檚 historical revelation has integrated the people of Israel. . . . In the sacrificial order of the old covenant God wills to have personal and active dealings with his people. Sacrifice, whether it be the gift of man to God, the expression of spiritual fellowship between God and man, or a means of atonement, is always orientated to the presence of God in grace and judgment.[8]

The prophets proclaimed against the materialistic sacrificial practices of their day because they betrayed the original purpose, which was to produce a 鈥減ersonal, spiritual encounter with the God of salvation.鈥[9] As Paul and the author of Hebrews teach, the true meaning of sacrifice is displayed in the total self-giving of Christ that enables his people to give their own lives back to him. 鈥淭o bring oneself, one鈥檚 will, one鈥檚 action, wholly to God, is the new meaning which the concept of sacrifice acquires鈥 in the New Testament.[10]

The characterization of Christ鈥檚 atonement as a sacrifice is introduced in the Book of Mormon first in the teachings of Lehi to his family:

Wherefore redemption cometh in and through the Holy Messiah, for he is full of grace and truth. Behold, he offereth himself a sacrifice for sin, to answer the ends of the law unto all those which have a broken heart and a contrite spirit. And unto none else can the ends of the law be answered. (2 Nephi 2:6鈥7)

Amulek, who was taught by Alma, gives perhaps the clearest and most complete explanation:

Behold, I say unto you that I do know that Christ shall come among the children of men to take upon him the transgressions of his people and that he shall atone for the sins of the world, for the Lord God hath spoken it. For it is expedient that an atonement should be made, for according to the great plans of the Eternal God there must be an atonement made or else all mankind must unavoidably perish. Yea, all are hardened; yea, all are fallen and are lost and must perish except it be through the atonement, which it is expedient should be made.

For it is expedient that there should be a great and last sacrifice鈥攜ea, not a sacrifice of man, neither of beasts, neither of any manner of fowl鈥攆or it shall not be a human sacrifice, but it must be an infinite and an eternal sacrifice. . . .

And then shall there be鈥攐r it is expedient there should be鈥攁 stop to the shedding of blood; then shall the law of Moses be fulfilled. Yea, it shall all be fulfilled, every jot and tittle, and none shall have passed away. And behold, this is the whole meaning of the law, every whit a pointing to that great and last sacrifice; and that great and last sacrifice will be the Son of God, yea, infinite and eternal. And thus he shall bring salvation to all those who shall believe on his name, this being the intent of this last sacrifice, to bring about the bowels of mercy, which overpowereth justice and bringeth about means unto men that they may have faith unto repentance. (Alma 34:8鈥10, 13鈥15)

Like the author of Hebrews, both Lehi and Amulek see Christ鈥檚 atonement as 鈥渁 great and last sacrifice鈥 that was sufficient to fulfill the demands of justice inherent in the law of Moses. Going further, the Nephite prophets saw the Atonement making possible the forgiveness of sins through the mercy of Christ鈥檚 gospel, which required faith and repentance and not Mosaic sacrifices. Even when Jesus came to the Nephites after his resurrection, he did not refer to himself as the sacrifice, but instead instructed them that they were to replace the blood sacrifices they had been making under the law of Moses with sacrifices of their own broken hearts and contrite spirits:

And as many as have received me, to them have I given to become the sons of God. . . . For behold, by me redemption cometh, and in me is the law of Moses fulfilled. . . . And ye shall offer up unto me no more the shedding of blood. . . . And ye shall offer for a sacrifice unto me a broken heart and a contrite spirit. And whoso cometh unto me with a broken heart and a contrite spirit, him will I baptize with fire and with the Holy Ghost. (3 Nephi 9:17, 19鈥20)

The new gospel covenant instituted by Christ, through his atonement, would seem to focus on the same purpose as ancient sacrifice if we understand that being to recover an intimate relationship between God and his fallen children鈥攂ringing them back into his presence, or at least into a process that can lead to a full recovery of his presence.

5. Redemption

Less prominent in the New Testament than in either the Old Testament or the Book of Mormon is the notion that through his atonement Jesus redeemed all people from physical death and all those who would repent from their sins. One of the more common meanings for the New Testament language of redemption comes from the idea of ransoms paid to liberate enslaved peoples. This is reflected in English translations where Paul tells believers that they 鈥渨ere bought with a price鈥 or where Mark tells us that Jesus鈥檚 death was 鈥渁 ransom for many鈥 (1 Corinthians 6:20; 7:23; Mark 10:45, NRSV). While some interpreters believe strongly that Jesus鈥檚 suffering and death are to be understood literally as a price paid to redeem us from hell, there are linguistic reasons to doubt this, and it has not been easy to identify to whom this price was paid. Characterizing it as a payment to God or to Satan leads to other difficult theological questions that have not been answered persuasively. Others have argued that a more reasonable interpretation of the New Testament language of redemption would focus on its more universal meanings of rescue or liberation, as exemplified historically in God鈥檚 redemption of Israel from Egyptian slavery. This would seem to accord better with the larger range of statements in both the Old Testament and the Book of Mormon.[11]

The Hebrew Bible boasts as many as seventeen different terms that have been translated with some derivative of the English word redeem. While only a fraction of these have ransom or redeem as a principal meaning, almost all of them feature deliver or save as a principal meaning, including the name Joshua (测别蝉丑耻飞鈥檃丑), which was the name the angel prescribed to Joseph and Mary for their son Jesus: 鈥淪he will bear a son, and you are to name him Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins鈥 (Matthew 1:21, NRSV; compare Luke 1:31). Many of these terms can be used to mean rescue or free/liberate.

Scholars have recognized that one of the main Old Testament terms for redeem or ransom (驳腻鈥檃濒) carries a special meaning in the familial contexts that pervade the Bible. As Laird Harris has explained:

The primary meaning of this root is to do the part of a kinsman and thus to redeem his kin from difficulty or danger. It is used with its derivatives 118 times. One difference between this root and the very similar root 辫腻诲腻 鈥渞edeem鈥 is that there is usually an emphasis in 驳腻鈥檃濒 on the redemption being the privilege or duty of a near relative.[12]

The classic example would be the story of Naomi, Ruth, and Boaz, who steps up as kinsman of Naomi鈥檚 deceased husband to redeem the impoverished woman鈥檚 property and to marry her widowed daughter-in-law and raise up children for her posterity. The term 驳腻鈥檃濒 is used seven times in the negotiation between Naomi and Boaz as he accepts her request that he become the redeeming kinsman.

It may not be obvious to modern readers that ancient Israelites would also have seen themselves as God鈥檚 kin and the Lord as their divine kinsman. Frank Moore Cross has forcefully reminded Bible readers that ancient Israel was a typical West Semitic tribal group with its social organization 鈥済rounded in kinship.鈥[13] This kinship entailed a number of obligations, including protecting one鈥檚 kinfolk, looking out for their welfare, and playing the role of redeemer to those in needy circumstances鈥斺渢o love one鈥檚 kinsman as himself, as his own soul.鈥[14]

Like all such tribal societies, the Israelites saw their god Yahweh as their divine kinsman, who fulfills the mutual obligations and receives the privileges of kinship. 鈥淗e leads in battle, redeems from slavery, loves his family, shares the land of his heritage . . . , provides and protects. He blesses those who bless his kindred, curses those who curse his kindred. The family of the deity rallies to his call to holy war, 鈥榯he wars of Yahweh鈥, keeps his cultus, obeys his patriarchal commands, maintains familial loyalty (hesed), loves him with all their soul, calls on his name.鈥[15]

This kinship of Israelites with the Lord was further assured for all who would be part of Israel by the establishment of Yahweh鈥檚 covenant with them. Non-kin were incorporated into Israel as kin through the covenants and rites of marriage and adoption. Periodic covenant renewal ceremonies refreshed this relationship to Yahweh for all the tribes and their members. In this way, all were reconfirmed as 鈥渢he people of Yahweh.鈥

The God of Israel adopts Israel as a 鈥渟on鈥 and is called 鈥渇ather,鈥 enters a marriage contract with Israel and is designated 鈥渉usband,鈥 swears fealty oaths together with Israel, and enters into covenant, assuming the mutual obligations of kinship, taking vengeance on Israel鈥檚 enemies, and going to war at the head of Israel鈥檚 militia.

Marriage in ancient Israel may be described as entry into a mutual covenant of love, loyalty (hesed), and fidelity (鈥樐沵别迟). In Ezekiel 16 Jerusalem is addressed as a beautiful woman of mixed ancestry. Yahweh came upon her and said, 鈥淚 looked upon thee, and behold thy time was a time of love, and I spread my skirt over thee and covered thy nakedness, and I made oaths to thee and entered into a covenant with thee . . . and thou becamest mine.鈥[16]

The strong sense of Yahweh as the divine kinsman helps us understand the redemption talk in these passages as Yahweh doing his duty as a kinsman鈥攅mploying all his powers and resources to protect and bless鈥攁nd to redeem his people. The iconic story of his redemption of Israel in Egypt is paired with his redemption of all peoples from the powers of Satan and from death.

Isaiah stands out in the Old Testament for the numerous references to the Lord as the Redeemer of Israel. He repeatedly quotes the Lord calling himself 鈥渢he Redeemer of Israel,鈥 or otherwise refers to him in those terms. Every one of these twenty-three references uses 驳腻鈥檃濒, the Hebrew term for a kinsman redeemer.[17] Psalms follows the same pattern. This emphasis on various forms of redeem in the atonement language of the Old Testament is magnified even more in the Book of Mormon, which features 118 instances, some of which occur in quotations of Isaiah. We only have the English translation of the Book of Mormon, and we can only speculate what the underlying language might have been. But all of these occurrences could fit comfortably with the implication of a kinsman redeemer and the associated phraseology of Isaiah that comes from his exclusive use of 驳腻鈥檃濒. While, as is demonstrated above, the four other atonement concepts invoked in the New Testament also show up in some clear ways in the Book of Mormon, the language of redemption turns out to provide the most common atonement terminology. Of the thirty-one references to the plan of salvation, seventeen label it 鈥渢he plan of redemption,鈥 and no other label occurs more than three times.

The Book of Mormon makes clear in two different ways that mankind鈥檚 kinship relationship with the Lord is an essential dimension of his redeeming work and that we can understand that redemption as the Lord鈥檚 performance of his duties and privileges as a kinsman redeemer. Much of this language in the Old Testament refers to the corporate redemption of Israel from time to time historically and, even more importantly, to the eventual gathering and redemption of all of Israel in the last days鈥攁s promised in numerous prophetic interpretations of the covenant of Abraham.[18] But as the Nephite prophets explain from the beginning, God鈥檚 promises to Abraham serve as instructive surrogates of the promises of salvation that he offers universally鈥攖o all men and women whether they be Israelites or Gentiles. And all face the same requirements for redemption鈥攖hey must repent and covenant with the Lord to take his name upon them and to obey his commandments. As Nephi explained: 鈥淎s many of the Gentiles as will repent are the covenant people of the Lord; and as many of the Jews as will not repent shall be cast off. For the Lord covenanteth with none save it be with them that repent and believe in his Son, which is the Holy One of Israel鈥 (2 Nephi 30:2).

The second way the Lord emphasizes his kinship relationship with the redeemed arises from the covenant they make with him when they accept his gospel by repenting of their sins and being baptized as a witness of that covenant. Those who do so 鈥渨ith full purpose of heart鈥 receive a remission of sins when the Father baptizes them with 鈥渇ire and [with] the Holy Ghost,鈥 thereby redeeming them and making them his sons and daughters, as they are spiritually reborn (2 Nephi 31:13鈥14). In the words of Alma at the time he experienced this personally:

I have repented of my sins and have been redeemed of the Lord. Behold, I am born of the Spirit. And the Lord said unto me: Marvel not that all mankind, yea, men and women鈥攁ll nations, kindreds, tongues, and people鈥攎ust be born again, yea, born of God, changed from their carnal and fallen state to a state of righteousness, being redeemed of God, becoming his sons and daughters. (Mosiah 27:24鈥25)

The Nephite Synthesis

Whereas scholars tend to emphasize the differences between the various accounts of the Atonement in the New Testament, the Book of Mormon endorses them all as integral aspects of 鈥渢he great plan of redemption.鈥 Book of Mormon atonement explanations feature much of the same basic language seen in the New Testament. But rather than seeing these as competing explanations, the Nephite prophets seem to have understood each as one part of the larger story. This is most obvious in the lengthy atonement discourse of Jacob as preserved by Nephi in 2 Nephi 9鈥10, which may well have served as the model for all his successors.

Jacob begins with the plan of salvation, or 鈥渢he merciful plan of the great Creator.鈥 鈥淔or as death hath passed upon all men, . . . there must needs be a power of resurrection鈥 (2 Nephi 9:6). Because of the fall, 鈥渙ur flesh must waste away and die鈥 (9:4), which makes the Resurrection necessary. But there was also a fundamental spiritual consequence, for 鈥渢he fall came by reason of transgression鈥濃攚hich in turn cut men 鈥渙ff from the presence of the Lord鈥 (9:6). Because physical death would be of 鈥渆ndless duration,鈥 Jacob saw that 鈥渁n infinite atonement鈥 would be required (9:7).[19] Without this 鈥渙ur spirits must become subject to that angel which fell from before the presence of the Eternal God and became the devil, to rise no more鈥 (9:8).

Jacob here emphasizes the role of the devil whose domination over fallen men is undermined by the Resurrection:

For behold, if the flesh should rise no more, our spirits must become subject to that angel which fell from before the presence of the Eternal God and became the devil, to rise no more. And our spirits must have become like unto him, and we become devils, angels to a devil鈥攖o be shut out from the presence of our God and to remain with the father of lies, in misery, like unto himself. (2 Nephi 9:8鈥9)

But because the Messiah will come to 鈥渞edeem the children of men from the fall . . . they have become free forever, . . . and they are free to choose liberty and eternal life through the great Mediator of all men, or to choose captivity and death according to the captivity and power of the devil鈥 (2 Nephi 2:26鈥27).

Jacob characterizes this latter possibility as an 鈥渁wful monster,鈥 which is 鈥渄eath and hell . . . [or] the death of the body and . . . the death of the spirit.鈥 But God has prepared 鈥渢he way of deliverance,鈥 whereby 鈥渢he bodies and the spirits of men will be restored one to the other鈥 by 鈥渢he power of the resurrection of the Holy One of Israel.鈥 This 鈥減ower of the resurrection鈥 causes that 鈥渉ell must deliver up its captive spirits and the grave must deliver up its captive bodies.鈥 With 鈥渢he spirit and the body . . . restored to itself again, . . . all men become incorruptible and immortal; and . . . they must appear before the judgment seat of the Holy One of Israel鈥 to 鈥渂e judged according to the holy judgment of God鈥 (9:10鈥15).

Jacob鈥檚 explication of the atonement of Jesus Christ draws heavily on the broader context of the plan of salvation as it was understood by the first generation of Nephite prophets. As an essential step in their progress toward eternal life in the presence of the Father, his spirit children were given physical bodies in a physical world. The fall of Adam and Eve brought both physical and spiritual death into the world鈥攄eaths from which there was no escape. Their corrupted bodies would die and rot back into the dust, and they had no way to overcome the separation from the presence of the Father that resulted from the Fall. But God had foreseen all this, and his plan included a grand rescue or redemption by which those men and women who would choose to turn back from the way of the devil to follow the way of the Lord might be saved. The key was to overcome the finality of physical death. Jacob does not tell us how the sufferings and crucifixion of Jesus Christ could accomplish his resurrection. But when the Father raised him up from the grave, he instituted the resurrection by which the spirits and bodies of all men and women would be reunited incorruptibly and would be brought before the judgment bar of Christ鈥攁t which time they would be rewarded according to the way they had chosen, according to their works.

Both the language and the logic of Jacob鈥檚 explanations provide the model for all later Nephite prophets. Centuries later we find Abinadi adopting Jacob鈥檚 distinctive phrasing in his own detailed teaching of the Atonement to the wicked priests of King Noah (Mosiah 15鈥16). Alma taught the words of Abinadi to his first converts 鈥渃oncerning the resurrection of the dead, and the redemption of the people which was to be brought to pass through the power and sufferings and death of Christ and his resurrection and ascension into heaven鈥 (Mosiah 18:2). His son Alma continued with the same language, teaching the Nephites in Zarahemla of the great joy that comes 鈥渂ecause of the resurrection of the dead, according to the will and power and deliverance of Jesus Christ from the bands of death鈥 (Alma 4:14; compare 41:2). Later, his missionary companion Amulek presented one of the more complete discussions of the Atonement to the Zoramites, in which he also draws repeatedly on Jacob鈥檚 formulations (Alma 34). And another four centuries later in his final comments, Mormon explains that 鈥渁ll men are redeemed, because the death of Christ bringeth to pass the resurrection, which bringeth to pass a redemption from an endless sleep, from which sleep all men shall be awoke by the power of God鈥 (Mormon 9:13). So it is that the followers of Christ can 鈥渉ave hope through the atonement of Christ and the power of his resurrection, to be raised unto life eternal鈥 (Moroni 7:41).

Just as the resurrection of Christ breaks the bands of death and raises all men to judgment before him, so has he given them a law or a commandment or 鈥渉is words鈥 by which they shall be judged (2 Nephi 9:17). Throughout the Book of Mormon, this law is referred to as 鈥渢he way鈥 or as the doctrine or the gospel of Jesus Christ. Just as 鈥渢he plan of our God鈥 describes all that the Father and the Son have done and will do to make eternal life possible for the children of men, the gospel spells out what men and women must do individually to receive this great blessing (9:13). As Jacob explains:

He commandeth all men that they must repent and be baptized in his name, having perfect faith in the Holy One of Israel, or they cannot be saved in the kingdom of God. And if they will not repent and believe in his name and be baptized in his name and endure to the end, they must be damned, for the Lord God, the Holy One of Israel, hath spoken it. (2 Nephi 9:23鈥24)[20]

The recognition of Christ鈥檚 sufferings as an essential dimension of his Atonement is central to the teachings of all these Nephite prophets. Yet they offer a surprising variety of reasons why his suffering was necessary, reasons that can illuminate their understanding of the atonement itself. Jacob explains that he saw Christ鈥檚 suffering and death leading to his resurrection and his role as judge of all men (2 Nephi 9:22). Benjamin thought Christ鈥檚 suffering arose from 鈥渉is anguish for the wickedness and abominations of his people鈥 (Mosiah 3:7). Abinadi quoted Isaiah 53 to teach that Jesus bore our sorrows and was wounded and bruised for our iniquities. Abinadi saw God as the agent who used Christ鈥檚 death and resurrection to gain the victory over death. He then gave the Son 鈥減ower to make intercession for the children of men鈥 because his experience would enable his 鈥渂owels of mercy鈥 and fill him 鈥渨ith compassion toward the children of men.鈥 Abinadi explains that because Christ has broken the bands of death and taken men鈥檚 transgressions upon himself, he can stand between them and justice, satisfying the demands of justice and redeeming his people (Mosiah 15:8鈥9). Alma later invoked this same phrasing and added the insight that by taking upon himself the infirmities of his people, Christ is 鈥渇illed with mercy, according to the flesh, that he may know according to the flesh how to succor his people according to their infirmities鈥 (Alma 7:12).

Conclusions

Like the New Testament writers, the Nephite prophets affirm repeatedly the facts of Christ鈥檚 atonement and how through that atonement the Father and the Son have provided for the resurrection of all and the salvation and exaltation of all who will accept the invitation to repent and come unto Christ through obedience to his commandments鈥攂y enduring to the end. The Nephite sermons reference the power of the Father, the victory over death, the sufferings of Christ, and the notion of a divine kinsman redeeming his people from the captivity of the devil. Whereas these various features of the Atonement have been developed in Christian tradition as competing theories of atonement, the Nephite prophets understood them all as compatible pieces of one coherent explanation, which is fully elaborated by Jacob. Even so, many of the questions that can be asked about the inner workings of the Atonement remain unanswered. Nevertheless, as individuals who respond to the gospel invitation, we can each learn through our own experience that the Atonement described by those prophets does work with great power in our lives鈥攔efining our spirits and enabling us to bear the same testimony they have provided.

Further Reading

Beilby, James, and Paul R. Eddy, eds. The Nature of the Atonement: Four Views. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 2006.

Finlan, Stephen. Problems with Atonement: The Origins of and Controversy about the Atonement Doctrine. Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2005.

Lane, Jennifer Clark. "The Lord Will Redeem His People: Adoptive Covenant and Redemption in the Old Testament and Book of Mormon," Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 2, no. 2 (1993): 39-62.

Spackman, T. Benjamin. "the Israelite Roots of Atonement Terminology." BYU Studies Quarterly 55, no. 1 (2016): 39-64.

Tuckett, C. M. "Atonement in the New Testament." In Anchor Bible Dictionary, edited by David Noel Freedman, 1:518-22. New York: Doubleday, 1992.

Notes

[1] See C. M. Tuckett, 鈥淎tonement in the New Testament,鈥 Anchor Bible Dictionary, ed. David Noel Freedman (New York: Doubleday, 1992), 1:518鈥22.

[2] Jacob returns to this theme twice after the passing of Lehi and Nephi. Compare Jacob 4:11 and 6:9. All quotations from the Book of Mormon are taken from the Yale critical text. See Royal Skousen, ed., The Book of Mormon: The Earliest Text (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009). Italics have been added to emphasize key terminology.

[3] For a detailed treatment of the ancient doctrine of the two ways (the teaching contrasting the ways of God and Satan, life and death, light and darkness, etc.), see Noel B. Reynolds, 鈥淭he Ancient Doctrine of the Two Ways and the Book of Mormon,鈥 BYU Studies Quarterly 56, no. 3 (2017): 49鈥78.

[4] Noel B. Reynolds, 鈥淯nderstanding the Abrahamic Covenant through the Book of Mormon,鈥 BYU Studies Quarterly 57, no. 3 (2018): 39鈥79.

[5] This approach was launched by the 1931 publication of Swedish theologian Gustaf Aulen鈥檚 Christus Victor: An Historical Study of the Three Main Types of the Idea of the Atonement. The American edition was translated by A. G. Hebert and published by Macmillan.

[6] Abinadi鈥檚 phrase sting of death occurs in the same context as Paul鈥檚 discussion of the Atonement does in 1 Corinthians 15:55 but has its own twist. Paul equates the sting with sin, which loses its painful effects through Christ鈥檚 victory over death. Abinadi specifies the endless 鈥渃aptivity of the devil鈥 as the negative consequence of death that Christ鈥檚 victory eliminates for the redeemed.

[7] See Johannes Behm, 鈥溛赶呄佄迪屜傗 in Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, ed. Gerhard Kittel and Gerhard Friedrich, trans. Geoffrey W. Bromiley (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2000), 3:180鈥90.

[8] Behm, 鈥溛赶呄佄迪屜,鈥 183.

[9] Behm, 鈥溛赶呄佄迪屜,鈥 183.

[10] Behm, 鈥溛赶呄佄迪屜,鈥 185鈥86.

[11] See Jennifer Clark Lane, 鈥淭he Lord Will Redeem His People: Adoptive Covenant and Redemption in the Old Testament and Book of Mormon,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 2, no. 2 (1993), 39鈥62, for the earliest and most comprehensive application of this Old Testament concept of covenant and redemption in an interpretation of the teachings of the Book of Mormon prophets. While my analysis of atonement is largely independent of Lane鈥檚 paper, I see the two as being in full agreement in their interpretations of the Book of Mormon.

[12] See the full discussion in R. Laird Harris, Gleason L. Archer Jr., and Bruce K. Waltke, Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: Moody Press, 1980), 144鈥45.

[13] See Frank Moore Cross, 鈥淜inship and Covenant in Ancient Israel,鈥 first published as chapter 1 in his collected essays, From Epic to Canon (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998), 3鈥21, quotation on p. 3. T. Benjamin Spackman has provided a helpful discussion of Cross鈥檚 essay for Latter-day Saint readers in 鈥淭he Israelite Roots of Atonement Terminology,鈥 BYU Studies Quarterly 55, no. 1 (2016): 39鈥64.

[14] Cross, 鈥淜inship and Covenant in Ancient Israel,鈥 4.

[15] Cross, 鈥淜inship and Covenant in Ancient Israel,鈥 7.

[16] Cross, 鈥淜inship and Covenant in Ancient Israel,鈥 13, citing Ezekiel 16:8; compare Malachi 2:14 (鈥渨ife of my covenant鈥).

[17] See Isaiah 35:9; 41:14; 43:1, 14; 44:6, 22, 23, 24; 47:4; 48:17, 20; 49: 7, 26; 52:3, 9; 54:5, 8; 59:20; 60:16; 62:12; 63:4, 9, 16.

[18] Noel B. Reynolds, 鈥淯nderstanding the Abrahamic Covenant鈥 (forthcoming).

[19] Jacob鈥檚 language reminds us that in the linguistic context of the Book of Mormon we should not be thinking of modern mathematical notions of infinity, but rather the earlier English usage that suggests enormous size or being limitless, or as Jacob says, 鈥渆ndless duration.鈥 It also applies without limits to all the peoples of the earth across all time.

[20] For a brief discussion of the gospel of Jesus Christ and its relationship to the plan of salvation as these are taught in the Book of Mormon, see Noel B. Reynolds, 鈥淭his Is the Way,鈥 Religious Educator 14, no. 3 (2013): 79鈥91.