Difference between revisions of "Redemption"

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== Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_57136" /> ==
<p> Among the figures employed by the apostolical writers to set forth the nature of the transaction by which our Lord has saved His people, none is more illuminating than that which we are accustomed to speak of as ‘redemption.’ The terms ‘redeem,’ ‘redemption,’ ‘redeemer’ are a gift of the Latin Bible to our theological language. They fail in complete exactness as renderings of the terms which they are used to translate in the apostolical writings, in so far as there still clings to them the notion, intrinsic in their form, that the buying which they denote is distinctively a ‘buying back.’ The English word ‘ransom,’ etymologically a doublet of ‘redeem,’ has more completely lost its etymological implication of specifically ‘buying back,’ taking on in its stead rather that of ‘buying out.’ The series ‘ransom,’ ‘ransoming,’ ‘Ransomer’ might on this account serve better as equivalents of the Greek words currently employed by the apostolical writers to convey this idea. These are: [λύτρον, &nbsp;Matthew 20:28, &nbsp;Mark 10:45]; ἀντίλυτρον, &nbsp;1 Timothy 2:6; λυτροῦσθαι, &nbsp;Luke 24:21, &nbsp;Titus 2:14, &nbsp;1 Peter 1:18; λύτρωσις, &nbsp;Luke 1:68; &nbsp;Luke 2:38, &nbsp;Hebrews 9:12; ἀπολύτρωσις, &nbsp;Luke 21:28, &nbsp;Romans 3:24; &nbsp;Romans 8:23, &nbsp;1 Corinthians 1:30, &nbsp;Ephesians 1:7; &nbsp;Ephesians 1:14; &nbsp;Ephesians 4:30, &nbsp;Colossians 1:14, &nbsp;Hebrews 9:15; &nbsp;Hebrews 11:35; [λυτρωτής, &nbsp;Acts 7:35]. No words provided by the Greek language could convey more distinctly the idea which we commonly express by the term ‘ransoming.’ Their current employment by the writers of the NT to describe the action of our Lord in setting His people free is proof enough of itself that this action was thought of by them not broadly as ‘deliverance,’ but as a deliverance in the distinct mode of ‘ransoming.’ If ‘deliverance’ alone, without implication of the mode of accomplishing it, had been what was intended to be expressed, the simple forms λύειν, λύσις, λυτήρ or some of their strengthened prepositional compounds lay at hand. These were in common use in the sense of ‘delivering,’ and indeed some of them (like λύεσθαι and ἀπολύεσθαι) had even acquired the special sense of ‘ransoming.’ Instead of them, however, the NT writers elected to employ forms which embody in their very structure an open assertion that the mode of deliverance spoken of is by ‘ransom.’ To say λύτρον is to say ‘ransom’; and to say λυτροῦσθαι, λύτρωσις, is to say λύτρον; while ἀπολύτρωσις is but a stronger way of saying λύτρωσις. </p> <p> Of course, even words like these, in the very form of which the modal implication is entrenched, and which owe, in fact, their existence to the need of words emphasizing the mode unambiguously, may come to be used so loosely that this implication retires into the background or even entirely out of sight. In our common English usage the words ‘redeem,’ ‘redemption,’ ‘redeemer’ retain no sure intimation of their etymological denotation of ‘buying back,’ but suggest ordinarily only a ‘buying out.’ They are sometimes used so loosely as to convey no implication even of purchase. That λυτροῦσθαι, λύτρωσις, ἀπολύτρωσις have suffered in their NT usage such a decay of their essential significance cannot be assumed, however, without clear proof. In point of fact, the actual accompaniments of their usage forbid such an assumption. In a number of instances of their occurrence the intimation of a price paid is prominent in the context; in other words, the deliverance spoken of is definitely intimated as a ransoming. In the remaining instances this intimation becomes no doubt rather an assumption, grounded in their form and their usage elsewhere; but that is no reason for neglecting it. The apparently varying usage of the terms depends merely on an oscillation of emphasis between the two elements of thought combined in them. Sometimes the emphasis is thrown on the mode in which the deliverance asserted is wrought-namely, by ransoming. Sometimes, on the other hand, it is shifted to the issue of the ransoming which is affirmed-namely, in deliverance. In the former case the stress falls so strongly on the idea of ransoming that the mind tends to rest exclusively on the act of purchasing or the price paid. In the latter it rests so strongly on the idea of deliverance that we are tempted to forget that an act of ransoming is assumed as its procuring cause. In neither case, however, is either element of thought really suppressed entirely. Christ’s ransoming of His people is of course always thought of as issuing in their deliverance. His deliverance of His people is equally thought of always as accomplished by a ransoming. </p> <p> We may be surprised to observe that the epithet ‘Redeemer’ (‘Ransomer,’ λυτρωτής) is never applied to our Lord in the NT. Even the broader designation, ‘Deliverer,’ is applied to Him only once, and that in a quotation from the OT (ὁ ῥυόμενος &nbsp;Romans 11:26, from &nbsp;Isaiah 59:20; cf. &nbsp;1 Thessalonians 1:10). In fact, we do not meet with ‘Redeemer’ (λυτρωτής) as a designation of our Lord in extant [[Christian]] literature, until the middle of the 2nd cent. (Justin, Dial. xxx. 3; cf. lxxxiii. 3), and it does not seem to become common until three centuries later. Nevertheless, Justin himself tells us that it was in ordinary use in the Christian community when he wrote. ‘For we call Him [[Helper]] and Redeemer,’ he says, with an allusion to &nbsp;Psalms 19:14. And it seems that in the only instance of the appearance of the term in the NT-&nbsp;Acts 7:35, where it is used of Moses-its employment as a designation of our Lord is already pre-supposed. For it is applied to Moses here only as the type of Christ, and with a very distinct reference to the antitype in the choice of the word. The [[Israelites]] had demanded of Moses, ‘Who made thee a ruler and a judge?’ Stephen, driving home his lesson, declares that him who was thus rejected as ‘ruler and judge’ God has sent ‘both as ruler and as redeemer.’ The both … and’ is to be noted as well as the change of term. ‘Redeemer’ is introduced with great emphasis; attention is called markedly to it as a significant point in the argument. ‘Observe,’ says H. A. W. Meyer, ‘the climax introduced by λυτρωτήν in relation to the preceding δικαστήν. It is introduced because the obstinacy of the people against Moses is type of the antagonism to Christ and His work (v. 51); consequently, Moses in his work of deliverance is a type of Christ, who has effected the λύτρωσις of the people in the highest sense (&nbsp;Luke 1:68; &nbsp;Luke 2:38, &nbsp;Hebrews 9:12, &nbsp;Titus 2:14)’ (Commentary on the NT; ‘Acts,’ vol. i. [1877] p. 204 f.). We must look upon the absence of instances of the application of the epithet ‘Redeemer’ to Christ in early Christian writers, therefore, as merely a literary phenomenon. [[Christians]] were from the first accustomed to speak of their Lord as ‘Redeemer.’ The usage undoubtedly was not so rich and full in the earlier ages of the Church as it has since become. The intense concreteness of the term probably accounts in part for this. But it was already in use to express the apostolic conception of the function of our Lord as Saviour. </p> <p> The basis of this apostolic conception is laid in our Lord’s own declaration, ‘For verily the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many’ (&nbsp;Mark 10:45, &nbsp;Matthew 20:28), a declaration elucidated and enforced in those others, preserved by John, in which He speaks of laying down His life for the sheep (&nbsp;John 10:11), or His friends (&nbsp;John 15:13), or of giving His flesh for the life of the world (&nbsp;John 6:51). In this great declaration our Lord is commending a life of service to His disciples by His own signal example. He adduces His example after a fashion which runs on precisely the lines repeated by Paul in &nbsp;Philippians 2:5 ff. He calls Himself by the lofty name of the Son of Man, and, by thus throwing the exaltation of His Person into contrast with the lowliness of the work He was performing, He enhances the value of His example to a life of service. He describes His whole mission in the world as service, and He adverts to His ransoming death as the culminating act of the service which He came into the world to render. He, the heavenly man of Daniel’s vision (&nbsp;Daniel 7:13), came into the world for no other purpose than to perform a service for men which involved the giving of His life as a ransom for them. Thus He makes His ransoming death the final cause of His whole manifestation in the world. The terms He employs to describe His death as a ransom are as simple and precise as possible. He speaks of ‘giving his life,’ emphasizing the voluntariness of the act. He speaks of giving His life as a ‘ransom,’ using the most exact word the Greek language affords (λύτρον) to express the price paid to secure the release of prisoners, the manumission of slaves (see A. Deissmann, Light from the [[Ancient]] East, p. 322 ff., with some of the necessary correctives in T. Zahn, Der Brief an die Römer, 1910, p. 180, note 51 from the middle), or the purchase of immunity for faults committed against [[Deity]] (see F. Steinleitner, Die Beicht im Zusammenhange mit der sakralen Rechtspflege in der Antike, p. 37 f.). He speaks of giving His life as a ransom ‘for,’ or rather ‘in the place of,’ ‘instead of,’ ‘many,’ the preposition (ἀντί) employed emphasizing the idea of exchange, or, we may say shortly, of substitution. In this declaration, then, our Lord Himself sets forth in language as precise as possible His work of service for man as culminating in the vicarious payment by His voluntary death of a ransom price for them. This is what He came to do; and in this, therefore, is summed up briefly the nature of His work for men. </p> <p> It would be strange if so remarkable a declaration had produced no echoes in the teaching of our Lord’s followers. A very distinct echo of it sounds in &nbsp;1 Timothy 2:6, where it is declared of the man Christ Jesus, the only [[Mediator]] between God and men, that ‘he gave himself a ransom for all.’ The term employed for ‘ransom’ here is a strengthened form (ἀντίλυτρον), in which the idea of exchange, already intrinsic to the simple form (λύτρον), is made still more explicit. This idea having thus been thrown into prominence in the term itself, the way was opened to add an intimation of those with whom the exchange is made by means of a preposition which indicates them as beneficiaries of it (ὑπέρ). The voluntariness of the ransoming transaction on our Lord’s part is intimated when it is said that He ‘gave himself’ a ransom for all, a phrase the full reference of which on Paul’s lips may be gathered from &nbsp;Galatians 1:4 : ‘who gave himself for our sins’ (cf. &nbsp;Galatians 2:20, &nbsp;Ephesians 5:2; &nbsp;Ephesians 5:25). Every element of thought contained in &nbsp;Mark 10:45, &nbsp;Matthew 20:28, in a word, is repeated here; and what is there represented by our Lord as the substance of His mission, is here declared by Paul to be the sum of the gospel committed to him to preach. It is the ‘testimony in its own times, whereunto I was appointed a preacher and an apostle’ (&nbsp;1 Timothy 2:7). </p> <p> It is only an elaboration of the central idea of this declaration when Paul (&nbsp;Titus 2:14), stirred to the depths of his being by the remembrance of all that he owes to ‘our great God and Saviour, Jesus Christ,’ for ‘the epiphany of whose glory’ he is looking forward as his most ‘blessed hope,’ celebrates in burning words the great transaction to which he attributes it all: ‘who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a people for his own possession, zealous of good works.’ The fundamental fact thrown up to observation here too is that Jesus Christ ‘gave himself for us.’ The assertion is the same as that of &nbsp;1 Timothy 2:6, and the meaning is the same: our Lord voluntarily gave Himself as a ransom for our benefit. This statement dominates the whole passage, and doubtless has determined the choice of the verb ‘ransom’ in the first clause of the telic sentence which follows. But it is the effects of this ransoming which are particularly developed. Paul’s mind is intent in this context on conduct. He would have his converts live worthily of the grace of God which has come to them, their eyes set upon the recompense of the reward. If Christ gave Himself for our sins, it was that we might sin no more. That is expressed in &nbsp;Galatians 1:4 thus: ‘That he might deliver us out of this present evil world.’ It is expressed here thus: ‘That he might ransom us from all iniquity and purify for himself a people for his own possession, zealous of good works.’ The two statements have fundamentally the same content, expressed, however, in the one case negatively, and in the other positively. Christ ransomed us by the gift of Himself, that we might no longer belong to the world but to Him. To belong to Christ is to be holy; and therefore those who are His, while still in the world must live soberly, righteously, and godly, expecting His coming, that their deliverance out of this evil world may be completed. The verbs used in the two statements are, however, different. In the one case, the verb employed (ἐξαιρεῖσθαι, &nbsp;Galatians 1:4) declares the effect wrought exclusively, with no intimation of the mode of action by which it is attained: the purpose of Christ’s giving Himself for our sins is our rescue, deliverance, out of the present evil world. In the other case, the verb employed (λυτροῦσθαι, &nbsp;Titus 2:14) has a distinct modal connotation: Christ’s purpose in giving Himself for us is to ransom us from every iniquity, and thus to purify for Himself a people of His own, zealous of good works. The concept of ransom intrinsic in Christ’s giving Himself for us is here expressly carried over to the ultimate effects, our deliverance from all iniquity, and our purification for Christ, ‘so that,’ as B. Weiss puts it, ‘His giving Himself up for our liberation from guilt is conceived as the ransom-price, apart from which these things could not result’ (Die Briefe Pauli an [[Timotheus]] und Titus5, 1885, p. 384 n.[Note: . note.]). This is only to say, in our current modes of speech, that the ransom paid by Christ, when He gave Himself for us, purchases for us not only relief from the guilt but also release from the power of sin. </p> <p> How little such a reference to the revolution wrought in the life of Christians empties the term ‘to ransom’ of its implication of purchase may be learned from &nbsp;1 Peter 1:8 f. Peter is here as completely engrossed with conduct as Paul is in &nbsp;Titus 2:14. He too is exhorting his readers to a life, during their sojourn here expecting the revelation of the Lord, consonant with their high dignity as a people of God’s own possession. And he too seeks to gain force for his exhortation by reminding them of what they owe to Christ their Ransomer. The thing asserted to be secured by this ransoming is, with Peter as with Paul, an ethical deliverance. ‘Knowing,’ says he, ‘that ye were redeemed … from your vain manner of life handed down from your fathers’ (&nbsp;1 Peter 1:18). The thought is closely similar to that of &nbsp;Galatians 1:4 : ‘That he might deliver us out of this present evil world.’ If we should be tempted to suppose that, therefore, the term ‘ransomed,’ as here used, has lost its implication of purchase, and become the exact equivalent of the ‘deliver’ of &nbsp;Galatians 1:4, Peter at once undeceives us by emphasizing precisely the idea of purchasing. The peculiarity of the passage consists just in the fullness with which it dwells on the price paid for our deliverance. Paul contented himself in &nbsp;Titus 2:14 with saying merely that Christ ‘gave himself for us.’ Peter tells us that this means that He poured out His blood for us. ‘Ransomed’ here, although used exactly as in &nbsp;Titus 2:14, cannot possibly mean simply ‘delivered.’ It means distinctively, ‘delivered by means of the payment of a price.’ </p> <p> What the price was which Christ paid to ransom us ‘from our vain manner of life, handed down from our fathers,’ Peter develops with great fullness, both negatively and positively. Negatively, he tells us, it was no corruptible thing, no silver or gold. His mind is running on the usual commodities employed in the ordinary ransomings familiar to everyday life; and we perceive that he intends to represent the ransoming of which Christians are the object as similar in kind to them. It differed from them only in the incomparable greatness of the price paid; and this carries with it the greatness of the evil from which it delivers us and the greatness of the good which it secures for us. The price paid, Peter tells us positively, is the blood of Christ. This blood he characterizes in a two-fold manner. On the one hand, he speaks of it, enhancing its value, as precious. It is at great cost that we have been ransomed. On the other hand, intimating the source of its efficacy, he compares it with the blood ‘of a lamb without blemish and without spot’ (&nbsp;1 Peter 1:19). The sacrificial allusion here is manifest, whether we think (with Hermann Gunkel), through the medium of Is 53, of the ordinary offerings (cf. &nbsp;Leviticus 23:12), or (with F. J. A. Hort) particularly of the [[Paschal]] lamb (cf. &nbsp;Exodus 12:5). The main point to observe is that Peter feels no incongruity in blending the ideas of ransom and sacrifice. The blood which Christ shed as a sacrifice is the blood by which we are ransomed. The two modes of representation express a single fact. </p> <p> Peter does not inform his readers of these things as something new to them. He presents them as matters which are of common knowledge: ‘knowing, as you do, that,’ etc. ‘It is an appeal to an elementary Christian belief’ (F. J. A. Hort, The First [[Epistle]] of St. Peter I. 1-II. 17, p. 75). Of course, then, there are other allusions to them, more or less full, scattered through the NT. There is, for instance, a similar conjunction of the notions of sacrifice and ransom in &nbsp;Hebrews 9:12. There we are told that Christ, in contrast with the priests of the old dispensation, ‘a high priest of the good things to come, … not by means of the blood of goats and calves, but by means of his own blood, entered in once for all into the holy place having obtained eternal ransoming.’ There are not two acts intimated here: by the one shedding of His blood, Christ both entered once for all into the holy place and obtained an eternal ransoming. The correspondence of the ‘once for all’ in the one clause and the ‘eternal’ in the other should not be overlooked; it is a binding link assimilating the two assertions to one another. Christ, unlike the [[Levitical]] priests with their repeated entrances, entered the holy place ‘once for all,’ because the ransoming He was obtaining through His blood was not like theirs, temporary in its effect, but ‘eternal,’ that is to say, of never-failing absoluteness (cf. ‘eternal Spirit,’ &nbsp;Hebrews 9:14, ‘eternal inheritance,’ &nbsp;Hebrews 9:15). The effect of the sacrificial shedding of Christ’s blood is here expressed in terms of ransoming. </p> <p> Precisely how this author conceived this ransoming is made plain by a phrase which he employs three verses further on: ‘a death having taken place for the ransoming of the transgressions.’ He is still contrasting the effective work of Christ with the merely representative work of the Old Covenant. A promise had been given of an eternal inheritance. But men had not received the heritage which had thus been promised. Their sins stood in the way, and there was no sacrifice which took away sin. Christ had now brought such a sacrifice. In His case a death had taken place ‘for the ransoming of the transgressions’ which they had committed. ‘Ransoming’ here conveys a meaning which might have been conveyed by ‘expiation.’ The term used is not the simple form λύτρωσις, but the strengthened form ἀπολύτρωσις; and the construction is inexact-it is not the transgressions but the transgressors that are ransomed. But the meaning is plain. ‘The genitive expresses in a wide sense the object on which the redemption is exercised (“redemption in the matter of the transgressions,” “transgression-redemption”)’ (B. F. Westcott, Hebrews, p. 264). It was because men had sinned that they required to be ransomed; sin had brought them into a condition from which they could be delivered only by a ransom. And the ransom required was a death. The matter is put quite generally ‘a death having taken place for ransoming the transgressions.’ This death was, in point of fact, Christ’s death; and it was because it was Christ’s death that it was adequate to its end (&nbsp;Hebrews 9:14). But the fundamental point in our present passage is that Christ could ransom men from their sins, that is to say, from the consequences of their sins, including, of course, that consciousness of sin which bites into the conscience (&nbsp;Hebrews 9:14), only by dying. By sacrificing Himself He put away sin (&nbsp;Hebrews 9:26); He was offered to bear the sins of many (&nbsp;Hebrews 9:28). The images of sacrifice and of ransoming are inextricably interwoven, but it easily emerges that Christ is thought of, in giving Himself to death, as giving Himself as a ransom-price to deliver men from the guilt and penalties of sin. </p> <p> This representation meets us again, very tersely put, in &nbsp;Ephesians 1:7, of which &nbsp;Colossians 1:14 is a slightly less completely expressed repetition. The ransoming (ἀπολύτρωσις) which is in Christ, described with more particularity in Ephesians again as having been procured ‘through his blood,’ is in both passages alike identified immediately with ‘the remission of our trespasses’ (Eph.), or ‘of our sins’ (Col.). ‘The studied precision,’ as J. B. Lightfoot phrases it in his note on &nbsp;Colossians 1:14, with which the ransoming is thus defined to be just ‘remission of sins,’ is the more noteworthy because it is apparently directly contrasted as such with the wider ‘deliverance’ (ἐρύσατο) from the power of darkness and removal into the [[Kingdom]] of the Son of God’s love, for which it supplies the ground. It is because Christ has at the cost of His blood, that is, by dying for us, purchased for us remission of sins (which is our ransoming), that we have deliverance from the tyranny of darkness and are transferred under His own rule. We thus reach a very close determination of the exact point at which the ransoming act of Christ operates, and of the exact evil from which it immediately relieves us. It relieves us of the guilt and the penal consequences of our sins; and only through that relief does it secure to ns other blessings. It is, at its very centre, just ‘the remission of our sins’ that we have in Christ when we have in Him our ransoming. </p> <p> The great passage in which the nature of our ransoming is unfolded for us, however, is &nbsp;Romans 3:24. There, nearly all the scattered intimations of its essential nature found here and there in other passages are gathered together in one comprehensive statement. The fundamental declarations of this very pregnant passage are, that men, being sinners, can be justified only gratuitously, by an act of pure grace on God’s part; that God, however, can so act towards them in His grace, only because there is a ransoming (ἀπολύτρωσις) available for them in Christ Jesus; and that this ransoming was procured by the death of Christ as an expiatory sacrifice, enabling God righteously to forgive sins. The ransoming found-perhaps we may even say stored-in Christ Jesus is here represented as the result of His sacrificial death; this sacrificial death is made the ground of God’s forgiveness of sins; and this forgiveness of sins is identified with the justification which God gratuitously grants believing sinners. The blending of the ideas of ransoming and expiation is complete; the ‘blood of Christ,’ in working the one, works also the other. The ascription to God of the whole process of justification, including apparently the ransoming act itself, which is usually (but not always) ascribed to Christ, but which is thus traced back through Christ to God, whose will in this too Christ does, is apparently due to the emphasis with which, throughout the passage, the entirety of salvation, in all its elements, is attributed to God’s free grace. This emphasis on the gratuitousness of the whole saving process is the most noticeable feature of the passage. It has been strangely contended (e.g. by T. Zahn) that it is inconsistent with the conception of a ransom, strictly taken. There is, however, not even an antinomy here: the gratuitousness of justification quoad homines cannot possibly exclude the grounding of that act in the blood of Christ, as a ransom paid for men from without. What the passage teaches is, that all men have sinned and have failed to attain the glory God has in mind for them; all are in this matter in like case; those whom God justifies-namely, all believers-are, then, justified freely, by God’s grace alone. But it does not teach that God acts thus, in His free grace, justifying sinners gratuitously so far as they are concerned, arbitrarily and with no adequate ground for His action. On the contrary, it asserts a ground for His justifying act; and the ground which it asserts is the ransoming that is in Christ Jesus. It says, indeed, ‘not on the ground of the ransoming that is in Christ Jesus’ (διὰ τὴν ἀπολύτρωσιν), but ‘through the instrumentality of the ransoming that is in Christ Jesus’ (διὰ τῆς ἀπολυτρώσεως). But this is only a formal difference. What Paul says is, that the ransoming that is in Christ Jesus is the means by which men, being sinners, are brought by God into a justification which they cannot secure for themselves. If the ransoming that is in Christ Jesus is the means by which alone they can be justified, that is only another way of saying that God, who gratuitously justifies them in His grace, proceeds in this act in view of nothing in them, but solely in view of the ransoming that is in Christ Jesus. How this ransoming comes to be in Christ Jesus is, then, immediately explained: God has set Him forth as an expiatory sacrifice through faith in His blood, for the manifestation of His righteousness in the forgiveness of sins. Christ, then, has been offered as an expiatory sacrifice; this enables God to forgive sins righteously; those thus forgiven are justified gratuitously; and this justification has taken place in view of, and that is as much as to say by means of, the ransoming which has resulted from the shedding of the blood of Christ. The ransoming provided by Christ is, in a word, the means by which God is rendered gracious; and in this His grace, thus secured for us, He gratuitously justifies us, although we, as sinners, have no claim upon this justification. </p> <p> The fundamental idea underlying the representation of salvation as a ransoming is its costliness. In some of the passages which have been adduced this idea is thrown very prominently forward. This is the case with &nbsp;Romans 3:24, and, indeed, with all the passages in which Christ is said to have given ‘Himself,’ or ‘His blood,’ as a ransom for His people; and it is elaborated in much detail in such passages as &nbsp;Hebrews 9:12 and &nbsp;1 Peter 1:18 f. But the emphasis often falls no less on the value of the acquisition obtained, and that both on its negative and on its positive sides. [[Naturally]] it is the eschatological aspects of this acquisition on which ordinarily most stress is laid. These eschatological aspects of our ransoming are brought very decidedly into the foreground, for example, in &nbsp;Titus 2:14, &nbsp;1 Peter 1:18, and not less so in &nbsp;Hebrews 9:12, &nbsp;Ephesians 1:7, &nbsp;Colossians 1:14. When the mind is thus occupied with the eschatological results of the ransoming, it is apt to be relatively less engaged with the nature of the ransoming act itself, and we may be tempted to read the term ‘ransoming’ as if its whole implication were absorbed in the simple idea of ‘deliverance.’ This is, of course, not really the case. The term ‘ransoming’ is employed instead of one by which nothing more than ‘deliverance’ would be expressed, precisely because the writer is conscious that the deliverance of which he is speaking has been secured only at a cost, and instinctively employs a term which intimates this fact. It was thus a true feeling which led James Morison (A Critical [[Exposition]] of the Third [[Chapter]] of Paul’s Epistle to the Romans, 1866, p. 254) to insist that by the terms in question is expressed not mere deliverance, but ‘deliverance which is effected in a legitimate way, and in consistency with the rights and claims of all parties concerned.’ We must, however, go a step further and recognize that the deliverance intimated by these terms is thought of distinctively as resting on a purchase, as, in a word, the issue of a ransoming. This is, at all events, the state of the case with the NT instances. </p> <p> When we read, for example, in &nbsp;Romans 8:23, that we, in this life, are groaning within ourselves, waiting for our adoption, and then this adoption is defined as ‘the ransoming (ἀπολύτρωσις) of our body,’ the word ‘ransoming’ cannot be taken out of hand as merely ‘deliverance,’ and much less can it be supposed to intimate that a special ransom shall be paid at the last day for the deliverance of the body. What is meant is that the deliverance of our bodies-by which is intended just our resurrection, connected in this context with the repristination of the physical universe, an object as yet of hope only-shall be experienced in due season, not as something with the salvation we are enjoying here and now in its first-fruits, but as its consummation; that is to say, as one of the results of the ransom paid by Christ in His blood on the Cross, from which flow all the blessings which, as believers, we receive. It is because Paul’s mind is fixed upon this fundamental ransom-paying that he uses here a term which imports a ransoming and not one of mere deliverance. </p> <p> Similarly, when we read in the closing words (&nbsp;Ephesians 1:14) of that splendid hymn of praise which opens the Epistle to the Ephesians, that believers, having received the promised Spirit, defined specifically as ‘the earnest of the inheritance,’ have been ‘sealed unto the ransoming of the acquired possession, to the praise of God’s glory,’ every element in the wording of the statement itself, and of the context as well, cries out against seeing in the term ‘ransoming’ anything else but a reminder that this deliverance is an issue of the ransom-paying of Christ in His blood. This ransom-paying had just (&nbsp;Ephesians 1:7) been defined as made by Christ in His blood, and as consisting in the remission of our trespasses. As it is impossible to suppose that the term is used in two radically different senses in the same sentence, so it is impossible to imagine that those who are delivered are described expressly as God’s ‘acquired possession,’ and their deliverance is made dependent upon their reception of the Spirit, described specifically as ‘the earnest of their inheritance,’ without a very precise intention of connecting this deliverance with the ransom-paying out of which it flows as its consummation. And, this being true, it is quite clear that ‘the day of ransoming’ of &nbsp;Ephesians 4:30 does not mean the day on which the ransom shall be paid, nor merely the day of a deliverance wrought somehow or other not intimated, but distinctly the day on which there shall be actually experienced the ultimate results of the ransom-paying which Christ has made ‘through his blood’ (&nbsp;Ephesians 1:7), that is, at His death on the Cross, assured to believers, because they are sealed thereto by the [[Holy]] Spirit of God, received now as the earnest of their inheritance. </p> <p> There seems no reason to doubt that the same conception underlies the language of our Lord (&nbsp;Luke 21:28) when He encourages His followers to see in the signs of the coming of the Son of Man, fearful to others, the indications of their approaching ‘ransoming’ (ἀπολύτρωσις): ‘But when these things begin to come to pass, look up, and lift up your heads; because your ransoming draweth nigh.’ He does not point them to the time when the ransom which He came into the world to pay (&nbsp;Mark 10:45, &nbsp;Matthew 20:28) is at length to be paid for them; neither does He promise them some other deliverance, different from that and disconnected with it, which they might expect some time in the undefined but distant future. He says ‘your ransoming,’ intimating that it was already theirs in sure expectation; He speaks of it as ‘drawing nigh,’ recognizing that it was eagerly looked for. He is, of course, pointing to the complete realization of the ransoming of which He speaks in the actual deliverance which shall be experienced. But when He speaks of this deliverance as a ‘ransoming’ He is equally, of course, referring it as its result to a ransom-paying which secures it; and can we doubt that what was in His mind was His own promise that He would give His life a ransom in the place of many? </p> <p> This declaration of our Lord’s (&nbsp;Luke 21:28) may lead us to the two or three passages (all, like it, occurring in Luke’s Gospel, &nbsp;Luke 1:68, &nbsp;Luke 2:38, &nbsp;Luke 24:21) which differ from the other instances in which the terms denoting ‘ransoming’ are employed in the NT, in that they do not have the great basal assertion of our Lord (&nbsp;Mark 10:45, &nbsp;Matthew 20:28) behind them, but give expression to hopes nourished on the promises of the Old Covenant. We read of Zacharias, on the birth of his prophetic son, praising the God of Israel, because ‘he hath visited and wrought ransoming (λύτρωσις) for his people’ (&nbsp;Luke 1:68); and of Anna, the prophetess, on seeing the infant Jesus in the Temple, giving ‘thanks unto God, and speaking of him to all them that were looking for the ransoming (λύτρωσις) of Jerusalem’ (&nbsp;Luke 2:38); and of the two disciples, sorrowing over Jesus’ death, sadly telling their unknown Companion, as they journeyed together to Emmaus: ‘We hoped that it was he that should ransom (λυτροῦσθαι) Israel’ (&nbsp;Luke 24:21). Obviously these passages stand somewhat apart from those which embody the apostolic conception of the nature of the saving work of Christ. They represent rather the anticipations of the faithful in [[Israel]] with respect to the salvation promised to God’s people. Their interest to us is due to the use in them of the same terminology to express Israel’s hope which afterwards was employed by the apostles when they described Christ’s work as at its root a ransom-paying. As we can hardly ascribe to these aspirations of saints taught by the OT revelation so clearly cut and definitely conceived a conviction that the [[Divine]] deliverance for which they were waiting was to be specifically a ransoming, as we have ascribed to the apostolic writers with respect to the deliverance wrought by Christ, the question easily arises whether we have not overpressed the apostles’ language, and whether it would not be better to interpret their declarations from the vaguer, if we should not rather say the looser or at least the broader, use of the same terms in these earlier passages which represent a usage going back into the OT. </p> <p> Such has been the method of many expositors (the typical instance is commonly taken from H. Oltramare on &nbsp;Romans 3:24; cf. the corrective in Sanday-Headlam on the same passage). Following it, they have felt entitled or bound to empty the language of the apostles, which literally expresses the idea of ransoming, when speaking of the work of Christ, more or less completely of all such implication, and to read it as conveying merely the broad idea of delivering. This method of dealing with the apostolic usage is, however, quite misleading. The language of the apostles is altogether too definite to permit such a process of evacuation to be carried successfully through with respect to it. Their teaching as to the nature of our Lord’s work as an act of ransoming is not conveyed exclusively by the implication of the ransoming terms which they prevailingly employ in speaking of it; they use other terms also, of similar meaning, side by side with them (cf. &nbsp;Acts 20:28, &nbsp;1 Corinthians 6:20; &nbsp;1 Corinthians 7:23, &nbsp;Galatians 3:13, &nbsp;2 Peter 2:1, &nbsp;Revelation 5:9; &nbsp;Revelation 14:3-4); and they often expound their meaning in the sense of ransoming in great detail. It must not be permitted to drop out of sight that something happened between the prophetic promises of the Old [[Covenant]] reflected in the anticipations of the early days of the gospel, and the dogmatic expositions of the nature of the work of Christ by the apostles, which was revolutionary precisely with respect to the conceptions held by God’s people of the nature of His great intervention for their deliverance. We cannot interpret the apostles’ exposition of the meaning of the death of Christ and the manner in which it produces its effect-which was to them the most tremendous of experienced facts-wholly within the limits of the anticipations of even the most devout of Israelites who, at the best, only dimly perceived the necessity of a suffering [[Messiah]] (&nbsp;Luke 20:25 f.). We must expect a precision in defining the mode of God’s deliverance of His people to enter in after the experience of it as a fact, which could not exist before; and that the more, because a model which necessarily dominated all their teaching had been given His followers by our Lord Himself (&nbsp;Mark 10:45, &nbsp;Matthew 20:28) for interpreting the nature of His work and the meaning of His death. F. J. A. Hort is certainly right in saying, when speaking of &nbsp;1 Peter 1:19 : ‘The starting point of this and all similar language in the [[Epistles]] is our Lord’s saying in &nbsp;Matthew 20:28 || &nbsp;Mark 10:45’ (cf. also B. F. Westcott, Ephesians, 1906, p. 140, and even, though more cautiously, A. Deissmann, Light from the Ancient East, p. 331). Moreover, the primary assumption of this method of determining the apostolic usage of these terms is not unquestionable-to wit, that, in their earlier use, running back into the OT, the implication of purchase has dropped wholly out of sight, and only the broad sense of delivering has been retained. It is at least noticeable that the OT persistently employs terms with the implication of purchase, when speaking whether of the great typical deliverances from Egypt and the [[Captivity]] or of the greater deliverance typified by them which [[Jahweh]] was yet to bring to His people. This is no more a phenomenon of the Septuagintthan of the underlying Hebrew; and it does not appear that it is due to a complete decay of feeling for the implication of purchase intrinsic in these terms. No doubt they are sometimes used when we see nothing further necessary for the sense than simple deliverance, and sometimes in parallelisms together with terms of simple deliverance. They are also used, however, when the implication of purchase is express. And we are not encouraged to think that they had ceased to bear their intrinsic meaning to the writers of the OT, even when applied to the greater matters of destiny, whether of the individual or of the nation, by such a passage, say, as &nbsp;Psalms 49:7-8 : ‘None of them can by any means redeem (פרה, λυτροῦσθαι) his brother, nor give to God a ransom (בֹּפָר, ἐξίλασμα) for him: (for the redemption [פִּרְיוֹן, τὴν τιμὴν τῆς λυτρώσεως] of their life is costly …)’; or by such a passage as, say, &nbsp;Isaiah 43:1 ff. ‘Fear not, for I have redeemed thee (נְּאַלְתִּיךָ, ἐλυτρωσάμην); … I have given Egypt as thy ransom (כָּפְרְךָ, ἄλλαγμα), [[Ethiopia]] and Sea for thee.… I have loved thee; therefore will I give men for thee, and peoples for thy life.’ The truth seems to be that the language of ransoming and redemption is employed in the OT to describe the deliverances which Israel had experienced or was yet to experience at the Divine hands, not because this language had lost to the writers of the OT its precise import, but in order to intimate that these deliverances were not, and were not to be, without cost. Even the later [[Jews]] were not without some sense of this, and looked about for the purchase-price. ‘With two bloods,’ says the [[Midrash]] on &nbsp;Exodus 12:22, ‘were the Israelites delivered from Egypt, with the blood of the paschal lamb and with the blood of circumcision’ (A. Wünsche, Bibliotheca Rabbinica, ii. [1890] 135, as cited by F. J. A. Hort on &nbsp;1 Peter 1:19, p. 79b). There is no compelling reason, then, why we should not recognize an implication of purchase, however undefined, even in &nbsp;Luke 1:68; &nbsp;Luke 2:38; &nbsp;Luke 24:2 f. </p> <p> If there be any instance in the NT of the use of a derivative of λύτρον, from which this implication is wholly absent, it will most probably be found in &nbsp;Hebrews 11:35, where, in the bead-roll of the heroes of faith, we are told of some who were beaten to death, ‘not accepting the ransoming (ἀπολύτρωσις), that they might obtain a better resurrection.’ There is nothing in the context to intimate that the deliverance from their martyrdom which they refused was to be purchased by a ransom. But is anything further needed to carry this intimation than the employment of this particular word, in which the idea of a ransom is included? Is it not possible that the writer has selected this particular word (it is not employed in the account from which he is drawing) precisely in order to intimate that [[Eleazar]] and ‘the seven brethren with their mother’-if he is really alluding to their cases (2 [[Maccabees]] 6, 7)-felt apostasy too great a price to pay for their deliverance? They did not refuse a bare deliverance; they refused a deliverance on a condition, a deliverance which had to be paid for at a price which they rated as too high. The term employed is, at all events, perfectly adapted to express this fact; and the words of this stem, when used elsewhere in this Epistle, retain the implication of purchase (&nbsp;2 Maccabees 9:11; &nbsp;2 Maccabees 9:15). </p> <p> There is another passage in which we are practically dependent on the implications of the form itself, without the aid of contextual indications, to determine its meaning. This is &nbsp;1 Corinthians 1:30, where the Apostle, in enumerating the contents of that wisdom which Christ has brought to His followers, orders the several elements, which he mentions, thus: ‘that is to say, righteousness and sanctification, and also ransoming.’ It is a little surprising to find the ‘ransoming’ (ἀπολύτρωσις) placed after the righteousness and sanctification, of which it is the condition. We may, therefore, be tempted to give it some looser sense in which it may appear to be conceived as following upon them, if not chronologically, at least logically. There seems to be no justification, however, for departing from the proper meaning of a word which is not only clear in its natural meaning, but is closely defined in other passages in Paul’s writings in accordance with this natural meaning. We may think, with Lightfoot and T. C. Edwards, of the eschatological usage of the word, and understand it ‘of redemption consummated in our deliverance from all sin and misery’; and suppose it to be mentioned last because referring to the final deliverance, and, therefore, ‘almost equivalent to ζωὴ αἰώνιος’ (Lightfoot, ad loc.; cf. also Edwards, ad loc.). Or we may think with H. A. W. Meyer and C. F. G. Heinrici of its ordinary use as the proper term to designate the act by which Christ purchased His people to Himself by the outpouring of His blood, and suppose it to be mentioned last in the enumeration of the blessings received from Christ, with the emphasis of climax, because it supplies the basis of those further acts of salvation (justification and the gift of the Spirit), by means of which righteousness and holiness are conveyed to believers. The one thing which we cannot easily suppose is that Paul has departed in this one instance from his uniform usage of a word which holds the rank of a technical term in his writings. A. Deissmann cries out: ‘This rare word occurs seven times in St. Paul!’ (op. cit. p. 331, n.[Note: . note.]2). The reason obviously is that Paul had something to say which he needed this word to say. Are we to suppose that he might just as well have used the common words, current in everyday speech, for what he had to say? </p> <p> How little strange the idea of salvation as a thing purchased is to this particular Epistle may be observed from the declaration twice repeated: ‘Ye were bought with a price’ (&nbsp;1 Corinthians 6:20, &nbsp;1 Corinthians 7:23), which Paul uses as an incitement to Christian effort. The addition to the assertion of the verb that we have been ‘bought,’ of the words, ‘with a price,’ serves to give great emphasis to the exclusion of all notion that salvation was acquired for us without the payment of an equivalent, and thus to make very prominent the essential idea of exchange which underlies the conception of ransoming. What the price was which was paid for our purchasing is not mentioned in these passages: it was too well understood to require explicit statement. It is similarly taken for granted in the like allusion in &nbsp;2 Peter 2:1, where the false teachers who were vexing the Church are condemned as even ‘denying the [[Master]] (δεσπότης) that bought them.’ There is no question that they were bought: this pungent fact is rather treated as the fundamental thing in the consciousness of all Christians, and is therefore employed as a whip to their consciences to scourge them to right conduct towards their Master. In all these instances the stress falls on the ownership over us acquired by Christ by His purchase of us. They therefore naturally suggest the remarkable words of Paul, when, in bidding farewell to the [[Ephesian]] elders, he exhorts them ‘to feed the church of God, which he acquired by means of his own blood’ (&nbsp;Acts 20:28). Although, however, not the specific ‘purchased’ but the broader ‘acquired’ is employed here, the emphasis is shifted from the mere fact of acquisition and consequent ownership to the costliness of the acquisition, and therefore the price paid for it is not only explicitly mentioned but strongly stressed. God has acquired His Church by means of His own blood, a paradoxical statement which presented no difficulties to Paul and his readers, but rather was freighted with the liveliest gratitude. [[Whence]] ‘the church of God’ was thus acquired ‘by means of his own blood,’ we learn from the new songs of the Apocalypse. It was ‘purchased out of the earth,’ ‘from among men’ (&nbsp;Acts 14:3-4), or, more explicitly, ‘of every tribe, and tongue, and people, and nation’ (&nbsp;Acts 5:9). And here we are reminded again of the great price which was paid for it, and of the great deliverance which was obtained for it at this great cost. The purchase-price was nothing less than ‘the blood of the Lamb,’ and they that are purchased are ‘loosed (λύειν, the primitive of λυτροῦσθαι) from their sins in his blood’ (&nbsp;Acts 1:5), and made unto God ‘a kingdom and priests’ (&nbsp;Acts 1:5, &nbsp;Acts 5:10) who shall ‘reign upon the earth’ (&nbsp;Acts 5:10). All the virtues gather to them-‘they are without blemish’ (&nbsp;Acts 14:5). That nothing should be lacking to the presentation of the whole idea of ransoming outside the term itself, we find Paul employing the exact synonym, ‘to buy out’ (ἐξαγοράζειν), to express the common idea. ‘God sent forth his Son,’ he tells us, ‘born of a woman, born under the law, that he might buy out them under law, that we might receive the adoption of sons’ (&nbsp;Galatians 4:4 f.); </p>
       
== Bridgeway Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_18995" /> ==
<p> In Bible days a slave could be set free from bondage by the payment of a price, often called the ransom. The whole affair was known as the redemption of the slave (&nbsp;Leviticus 25:47-48). (The words ‘redeem’ and ‘ransom’ are related to the same root in the original languages.) The Bible speaks of redemption both literally (concerning everyday affairs) and pictorially (concerning what God has done for his people) (&nbsp;Psalms 77:15; &nbsp;Titus 2:14). </p> <p> '''In the Old Testament''' </p> <p> Under [[Israelite]] law, both people and things could be redeemed. In family matters, all Israelites had to redeem their firstborn. Since God had preserved Israel’s firstborn during the [[Passover]] judgment, they rightly belonged to him. Therefore, the parents had to redeem their firstborn by a payment of money to the sanctuary (&nbsp;Exodus 13:2; &nbsp;Exodus 13:13; &nbsp;Numbers 18:15-16; see [[Firstborn]] ). In matters of property, if people became poor and sold land they had inherited from ancestors, either they or close relatives had to buy the land back (redeem it) as soon as possible (&nbsp;Leviticus 25:25; &nbsp;Ruth 4:3-6; see [[Sabbatical Year]] ). </p> <p> If Israelites vowed to give God their children, animals, houses or land, they could redeem those things, again by a payment of money to the sanctuary (&nbsp;Leviticus 27:1-25; see [[Vows]] ). If a farmer was under the death sentence because his ox had killed someone, his relatives could redeem him (since the death was accidental) by a payment of money to the dead person’s relatives (&nbsp;Exodus 21:28-30). In all these cases there was the idea of release by the payment of a price. </p> <p> Often God is said to have redeemed Israel; that is, to have delivered Israel from the power of its enemies (&nbsp;Jeremiah 31:11; &nbsp;Micah 4:10). The greatest of these acts of redemption was at the time of the exodus, when God delivered Israel from captivity in Egypt (&nbsp;Exodus 6:6; &nbsp;Exodus 15:13; &nbsp;Psalms 106:9-10; see [[Exodus]] ). Centuries later, after Israel (Judah) had been taken captive to Babylon, there was a ‘second exodus’, when God again redeemed his people from bondage (&nbsp;Isaiah 44:22-23; &nbsp;Isaiah 48:20). </p> <p> In these acts of redemption of Israel there is no suggestion that God paid anything to the enemy nations, as if he was under some obligation to them. Nevertheless, there is the suggestion that redemption cost God something; for he had to use his mighty power in acts of judgment to save his people (&nbsp;Exodus 32:11; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 4:37-38; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 9:26; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 9:29; &nbsp;Isaiah 45:13; &nbsp;Isaiah 52:3; &nbsp;Isaiah 63:9). </p> <p> '''In the New Testament''' </p> <p> Besides being an everyday practice, redemption was a fitting picture of God’s activity in saving sinners. Those who sin are slaves of sin and under the sentence of death, and have no way of releasing themselves from bondage (&nbsp;John 8:34; &nbsp;Romans 6:17; &nbsp;Romans 6:23; &nbsp;1 John 5:19; cf. &nbsp;Psalms 130:8). Jesus Christ came to give his life as a ransom for those under this sentence of death. His death brought forgiveness of sins and so released them from sin’s bondage (&nbsp;Matthew 20:28; &nbsp;Romans 3:24-25; &nbsp;Galatians 3:13; &nbsp;Ephesians 1:7; &nbsp;Colossians 1:14; &nbsp;1 Timothy 2:6; &nbsp;Revelation 1:5). </p> <p> [[Sinners]] are therefore redeemed by the blood of Christ. The ransom price he paid for them was his life laid down in sacrifice (&nbsp;Hebrews 9:12; &nbsp;1 Peter 1:18-19; &nbsp;Revelation 5:9). They are freed from the power of sin in their lives now (&nbsp;Hebrews 2:14-15), and will experience the fulness of their redemption when their bodies also are freed from the power of sin at Christ’s return. That event will bring about not only the final redemption for humankind but also the release of the world of nature from sin’s corrupting power (&nbsp;Luke 21:28; &nbsp;Romans 8:21-23; &nbsp;Ephesians 4:30). </p> <p> Paul at times makes a slightly different use of the illustration of slavery and redemption to remind Christians of their present responsibilities. When people are redeemed from the bondage of sin and the curse of the law, they come into a new life of liberty as the sons of God. [[Sin]] no longer has power over them, and they must show this to be true by the way they live (&nbsp;Romans 8:2; &nbsp;Galatians 3:13-14; &nbsp;Galatians 4:4-7; cf. &nbsp;Titus 2:14). </p> <p> Yet, though free from sin, Christians are not free to do as they like. Because they have been bought with a price, they are now, in a sense, slaves of God. They must therefore be obedient to him, their new master (&nbsp;Romans 6:16-18; &nbsp;1 Corinthians 6:19-20; &nbsp;1 Corinthians 7:22-23; see [[Servant]] ; [[Slave]] ). </p>
       
== Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_81357" /> ==
<p> denotes our recovery from sin and death by the obedience and sacrifice of Christ, who, on this account, is called the Redeemer. "Being justified freely by his grace, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus," &nbsp;Romans 3:24 . "Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us," &nbsp;Galatians 3:13 . "In whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of his grace," &nbsp;Ephesians 1:7 . "Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition from your fathers; but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish, and without spot," </p> <p> &nbsp;1 Peter 1:18-19 . "And ye are not your own, for ye are bought with a price, &nbsp;1 Corinthians 6:19-20 . </p> <p> By redemption, those who deny the atonement made by Christ wish to understand <em> deliverance </em> merely, regarding only the effect, and studiously putting out of sight the cause from which it flows. But the very terms used in the above cited passages, "to redeem," and "to be bought with a price," will each be found to refute this notion of a gratuitous deliverance, whether from sin or punishment, or both. Our English word, <em> to redeem, </em> literally means "to buy back;" and λυτροω , <em> to redeem, </em> and απολυτρωσις , <em> redemption, </em> are, both in Greek writers and in the New Testament, used for the act of setting free a captive, by paying λυτρον , <em> a ransom </em> or <em> redemption price. </em> But, as [[Grotius]] has fully shown, by reference to the use of the words both in sacred and profane writers, redemption signifies not merely "the liberation of captives," but deliverance from exile, death, and every other evil from which we may be freed; and λυτρον signifies every thing which satisfies another, so as to effect this deliverance. The nature of this redemption or purchased deliverance, (for it is not gratuitous liberation, as will presently appear,) is, therefore, to be ascertained by the circumstances of those who are the subjects of it. The subjects in the case before us are sinful men. They are under guilt, under "the curse of the law," the servants of sin, under the power and dominion of the devil, and "taken captive by him at his will," liable to the death of the body and to eternal punishment. To the whole of this case, the redemption, the purchased deliverance of man, as proclaimed in the Gospel, applies itself. Hence, in the above cited and other passages, it is said, "We have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins," in opposition to guilt; redemption from "the curse of the law;" deliverance from sin, that "we should be set free from sin;" deliverance from the power of Satan; from death, by a resurrection; and from future "wrath," by the gift of eternal life. Throughout the whole of this glorious doctrine of our redemption from these tremendous evils there is, however, in the New Testament, a constant reference to the λυτρον , <em> the redemption price, </em> which λυτρον is as constantly declared to be the death of Christ, which he endured in our stead, "The Son of man came to give his life a <em> ransom </em> for many," &nbsp; Matthew 20:28 . "Who gave himself a <em> ransom </em> for all," &nbsp; 1 Timothy 2:6 . "In whom we have <em> redemption </em> through his blood," </p> <p> &nbsp;Ephesians 1:7 . "Ye were not <em> redeemed </em> with corruptible things, as silver and gold, but with the precious blood of Christ," &nbsp; 1 Peter 1:18-19 . That deliverance of man from sin, misery, and all other penal evils of his transgression, which constitutes our redemption by Christ, is not, therefore, a gratuitous deliverance, granted without a consideration, as an act of mere prerogative; the ransom, the redemption price, was exacted and paid; one thing was given for another, the precious blood of Christ for captive and condemned men. Of the same import are those passages which represent us as having been "bought," or "purchased" by Christ. St. Peter speaks of those "who denied the Lord τον αγορασαντα αυτους , that bought them;" and St. Paul, in the passage above cited, says, "Ye are bought with a price, ηγορασθητε ;" which price is expressly said by St. </p> <p> John to be the blood of Christ: "Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God (ηγορασας , hast purchased us) by thy blood," &nbsp;Revelation 5:9 . </p>
       
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_68415" /> ==
<p> This term signifies 'being set free, brought back.' God having smitten the firstborn of the Egyptians, claimed all the firstborn of Israel, and received the [[Levites]] instead of them; but there not being an equivalent number of the Levites, the residue of the firstborn were redeemed by money: they were thus set free. &nbsp;Numbers 3:44-51 . So the land, or one who sold himself, could be redeemed. &nbsp;Leviticus 25:23,24,47,54 . The Israeliteswere redeemed out of Egypt by the mighty power of God. &nbsp;Exodus 15:13 . From thence the subject rises to the redemption of the soul or life, forfeited because of sin. Man cannot give to God a ransom for his brother: for the redemption of the soul is precious, or costly, and it (that is, redemption) ceaseth, or must be given up, for ever: that is, all thought of attempting to give a ransom must be relinquished — it is too costly. &nbsp;Psalm 49:7,8 . </p> <p> In the N.T. there are two words translated 'redemption,' embracing different thoughts. The one is λυτρόω, λύτρωσις, 'to loose, a loosing, a loosing away,' hence deliverance by a ransom paid, redeemed. </p> <p> The other word is ἐξαγοράζω, 'to buy as from the market.' Christ has redeemed believers from the curse of the law. &nbsp;Galatians 3:13; &nbsp;Galatians 4:5 . Christians are exhorted to be "redeeming the time," that is, buying or securing the opportunity. &nbsp;Ephesians 5:16; &nbsp;Colossians 4:5 . A kindred word, ἀγοράζω, is translated in the A.V. 'to buy,' except in &nbsp;Revelation 5:9; &nbsp;Revelation 14:3,4 , where it is rendered 'redeem,' but would be better 'buy.' The difference is important in such a passage as &nbsp;2 Peter 2:1 , where it could not be said 'redeemed,' for those spoken of are such as deny Christ's rights of purchase, and bring on themselves swift destruction though they had been 'bought.' Christ 'bought' all, but only believers are 'redeemed.' Christians sometimes speak of 'universal redemption' without really meaning it, because they do not observe the difference between 'buying' and 'redeeming.' &nbsp;Ephesians 1:14 embraces both thoughts: "the redemption of the purchased possession." </p> <p> [[Redemption]] is sometimes used in the sense of the right or title to redeem (&nbsp;Psalm 130:7; &nbsp;Romans 3:24 ); and this right God has righteously secured to Himself in Christ, and in virtue of it He presents Himself to man as a Justifier. Hence redemption was secured for God before man entered into the virtue of it. But believers have it now by faith, in the sense of forgiveness of sins, in Christ, where it is placed for God. &nbsp;Ephesians 1:7 . And in result redemption will extend to the body. &nbsp;Romans 8:23; &nbsp;Ephesians 4:30 . In application, the term redemption covers the power in which it is made effectual, as well as the ground or condition on which it is founded; this was set forth in type in the case of Israel. </p>
       
== Charles Buck Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_20416" /> ==
<p> In theology, denotes our recovery from sin and death by the obedience and sacrifice of Christ, who, on this account, is called The Redeemer, &nbsp;Isaiah 59:20 . &nbsp;Job 19:25 . Our English word redemption says Dr. Gill, is from the Latin tongue, and signifies buying again; and several words in the Greek language of the New Testament, are used in the affair of our redemption, which signify the obtaining of something by paying a proper price for it: sometimes the simple verb, to buy, is used: so the redeemed are said to be bought unto God by the blood of Christ, and to be bought from the earth, and to be bought from among men, and to be bought with a price; that is, with the price of Christ's blood. &nbsp;1 Corinthians 6:20 . Hence the church of God is said to be purchased with it, &nbsp;Acts 20:28 . Sometimes the compound word is used; which signifies to buy again, or out of the hands of another, as the redeemed are bought out of the hands of justice, as in &nbsp;Galatians 3:13 . and &nbsp;Galatians 4:5 . In other places, another word is used or others derived from it, which signifies the deliverance of a slave or captive from thraldom, by paying a ransom price for him: so the saints are said to be redeemed not with silver or gold, the usual price paid for a ransom, but with a far greater one, the blood and life of Christ, which he came into this world to give as a ransom price for many, and even himself, which is an answerable, adequate, and full price for them, &nbsp;1 Peter 1:18 . The evils from which we are redeemed or delivered are the curse of the law, sin, Satan, the world, death, and hell. The moving cause of redemption is the love of God, &nbsp;John 3:16 . The procuring cause, Jesus Christ, &nbsp;1 Peter 1:18-19 . The ends of redemption are, that the justice of God might be satisfied; his people reconciled, adopted, sanctified, and brought to glory. The properties of it are these: </p> <p> 1. It is agreeable to all the perfections of God. </p> <p> 2. What a creature never could obtain, and therefore entirely of free grace. </p> <p> 3. It is special and particular. </p> <p> 4. Full and complete. </p> <p> And, </p> <p> 5, lastly, It is eternal as to its blessings. </p> <p> See articles PROPITIATION, RECONCILIATION, SATISFACTION; and Edwards's History of Redemption; Cole on the [[Sovereignty]] of God; [[Lime]] Street Lect. lect. 5; Watts's [[Ruin]] and Recovery; Dr. Owen on the Death and [[Satisfaction]] of Christ; Gill's Body of Divinity. </p>
       
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_33292" /> ==
<i> Apolutrosis </i> &nbsp; Matthew 20:28&nbsp;Mark 10:45 <i> Lutron </i> &nbsp; Leviticus 19:20&nbsp;25:51&nbsp;Exodus 21:30&nbsp;Numbers 35:31,32&nbsp;Isaiah 45:13&nbsp;Proverbs 6:35&nbsp;Numbers 3:49&nbsp;18:15 <p> There are many passages in the New [[Testament]] which represent Christ's sufferings under the idea of a ransom or price, and the result thereby secured is a purchase or redemption (Compare &nbsp;Acts 20:28; &nbsp;1 Corinthians 6:19,20; &nbsp;Galatians 3:13; &nbsp;4:4,5; &nbsp;Ephesians 1:7; &nbsp;Colossians 1:14; &nbsp;1 Timothy 2:5,6; &nbsp;Titus 2:14; &nbsp;Hebrews 9:12; &nbsp;1 Peter 1:18,19; &nbsp;Revelation 5:9 ). The idea running through all these texts, however various their reference, is that of payment made for our redemption. The debt against us is not viewed as simply cancelled, but is fully paid. Christ's blood or life, which he surrendered for them, is the "ransom" by which the deliverance of his people from the servitude of sin and from its penal consequences is secured. It is the plain doctrine of [[Scripture]] that "Christ saves us neither by the mere exercise of power, nor by his doctrine, nor by his example, nor by the moral influence which he exerted, nor by any subjective influence on his people, whether natural or mystical, but as a satisfaction to divine justice, as an expiation for sin, and as a ransom from the curse and authority of the law, thus reconciling us to God by making it consistent with his perfection to exercise mercy toward sinners" (Hodge's Systematic Theology). </p>
       
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_62520" /> ==
<p> REDEMP'TION, n. L. redemptio. See Redeem. </p> 1. Repurchase of captured goods or prisoners the act of procuring the deliverance of persons or things from the possession and power of captors by the payment of an equivalent ransom release as the redemption of prisoners taken in war the redemption of a ship and cargo. 2. [[Deliverance]] from bondage, distress, or from liability to any evil or forfeiture, either by money, labor or other means. 3. Repurchase, as of lands alienated. &nbsp;Leviticus 25 . &nbsp;Jeremiah 32 . 4. The liberation of an estate from a mortgage or the purchase of the right to re-enter upon it by paying the principal sum for which it was mortgaged with interest and cost also, the right of redeeming and re-entering. 5. Repurchase of notes, bills or other evidence of debt by paying their value in specie to their holders. 6. In theology, the purchase of God's favor by the death and sufferings of Christ the ransom or deliverance of sinners from the bondage of sin and the penalties of God's violated law by the atonement of Christ. <p> In whom we have redemption through his blood. &nbsp;Ephesians 1 . </p> <p> &nbsp;Colossians 1 . </p>
       
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_57721" /> ==
<p> in theology, denotes our recovery from sin and death by the obedience and sacrifice of Christ, who on this account is called the "Redeemer" (&nbsp;Isaiah 59:20; &nbsp;Job 19:25). "Being justified freely by his grace, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus" (&nbsp;Romans 3:24). "‘ Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us" (&nbsp;Galatians 3:13). "In whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of his grace" (&nbsp;Ephesians 1:7). "Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition from your fathers; but with.the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot" (&nbsp;1 Peter 1:18-19). "And ye are not your own, for ye are bought with a price" (&nbsp;1 Corinthians 6:19-20). </p> <p> By redemption those who deny the atonement made by Christ wish to understand deliverance merely, regarding only the effect, and studiously putting out of sight the cause from which it flows. But the very terms used in the above-cited passages, "to redeem" and "to be bought with a price," will each be found to refute this notion of a gratuitous deliverance, whether from sin or punishment, or both. "Our English word redemption," says Dr. Gill, "is from the Latin, and signifies buying again; and several words in the Greek language of the New Test. are used in the affair of our redemption which signify the obtaining of something by paying a proper price for it; sometimes the simple verb ἀγοράζω '', To Buy,'' is used; so the redeemed are said to be bought unto God by the blood of Christ, and to be bought from the earth, and to be bought from among men, and to be bought with a price — that is, with the price of Christ's blood (&nbsp;1 Corinthians 6:20); hence the Church of God is said to be purchased with it (&nbsp;Acts 20:28). Sometimes the compound word ἐξαγοράζω is used, which signifies to ''Buy Again,'' or out of the hands of another, as the redeemed are bought out of the hands of justice, as in &nbsp;Galatians 3:13; &nbsp;Galatians 4:5. To redeem literally means ‘ to buy back;' and λυτρόω, to redeem, and ἀπολύτρωσις '', Redemption,'' are, both in Greek writers and in the New Test., used for the act of setting free a captive by paying λύτρον, a ransom) or ''Redemtion Price.'' " Yet, as Grotius has fully shown by reference to the use of the words both in sacred and profane writers, redempn tion signifies not merely "the liberation of captives," but deliverance from exile, death, and every other evil fromi which we may be freed; and λύτρον ''Signifies'' everything which satisfies another so as to effect this deliverance. The nature of this redemption or purchased deliverance (for it is not gratuitous liberation, as will presently appear) is therefore to be ascertained by the circumstances of those who are the subjects of it. The subjects in the case before us are sinful men; they are under guilt, under "the curse of the law," the servants of sin, under the power and dominion of the devil, and "taken captive by him at his will," liable to the death of the body and to eternal punishment. To the whole of this case the redemption-the purchased deliverance of man as proclaimed in the [[Gospel]] — applies itself. Hence in the above-cited and other passages it is said, "We have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins," in opposition to guilt; redemption from "the curse of the law;" deliverance from sin, that "we should be set free from sin;" deliverance from the power of Satan; from death, by a resurrection; and from future "wrath" bv the gift of eternal life. Throughout the whole of this glorious doctrine of our redemption from these tremendous evils there is, however, in the New Test., a constant reference to the λύτρον, the redemption price, which λύτρον is as constantly declared to be the death of Christ, which he endured in our stead. "The Son of man came to give his life a [[Ransom]] for many" (&nbsp;Matthew 20:28). "Who gave himself a [[Ransom]] for all" (&nbsp;1 Timothy 2:6). "In whom we have redemption through his blood" (&nbsp;Ephesians 1:7). "Ye were not [[Redeemed]] with corruptible things, as silver and gold, but with the precious blood of Christ" (&nbsp;1 Peter 1:18-19). That deliverance of man from sin, misery, and all other penal evils of his transgression, which constitutes our redemption by Christ, is not, therefore, a gratuitous deliverance, granted without a consideration, as an act of mere prerogative; the ransom — the redemption price — was exacted and paid; one thing was given for another — the precious blood of Christ for captive and condemned men. Of the same import are those passages which represent us as having been "bought" or "purchased" by Christ. Peter speaks of those "who denied the Lord τὸν ἀγοράσαντα αὐτούς, that bought them;" and Paul, in the passage above cited, says, "Ye are bought with a price" (ἠγοράσθητε )'','' which price is expressly said by John to be the blood of Christ: "Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God (ἡγόρασας, hast purchased us) by thy blood' (&nbsp;Revelation 5:9). The ends of redemption are, that the justice of God might be satisfied; his people reconciled, adopted, sanctified, and brought to glory. The properties of it are these: </p> <p> '''(1)''' it is agreeable to all the perfections of God; </p> <p> '''(2)''' what a creature never could merit, and therefore entirely of free grace; </p> <p> '''(3)''' it is special and particular; </p> <p> '''(4)''' full and complete; </p> <p> '''(5)''' it is eternal as to its blessings. See Edwards, Hist. of Redemption; Cole, On the Sovereignty of God; Lime-street Lect. lect. 5; Watts, Ruin and Recovery; Owen, On the Death and Satisfaction of Christ; Gill, Body of Divinity; Pressensd, Religion; Goodwin, Works; Knapp, Theology, p. 331; Bullet. Theol. Avril, 1868; Calvin, Institutes; Evangel. Quar. Rev. April, 1870, p. 290; Presbyt. Confess.; Werner, Gesch. der deutschen Theol.; Meth. Quar. Rev. Oct. 1868; July, 1874, p. 500; Jan. 1876, art. ii; Presbyt. Quar. Rev. July, 1875, art. ii; Fletcher, Works; New-Englander, July, 1870, p. 531; Barnes [Albert], The [[Atonement]] in its Relations to Law and [[Moral]] [[Government]] (Phila. 1858, 12mo); [[Princeton]] Rev. July, 1859; Oct. 1859; Bibl. Sacra, Jan. 1858; Delitzsch, Bibl. Psychol. p. 482; Muller, On Sin; Pearson, On the Creed; Liddon, [[Divinity]] of Christ; Pin, Jesus-Christ dans le [[Plan]] Divin lde la Redemtption (1873). (See [[Propitiation]]); (See [[Reconciliation]]); (See Satisfaction) </p> <p> . </p>
       
==References ==
<references>


Redemption <ref name="term_57137" />
<ref name="term_57136"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-new-testament/redemption Redemption from Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament]</ref>
<p> <b> [[Redemption.]] </b> —An [[Apostle]] writes of Christ—‘in whom we have our redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses’ (&nbsp;Ephesians 1:7). It is proposed in this article to inquire what redemption in Christ means, how Christ’s redemption is effected, and what blessings are included in it. </p> <p> i. The Biblical doctrine </p> <p> <b> 1. The vocabulary. </b> —In the [[Ot]] the idea of redemption is distinctively expressed by the two verbs נָּאֵל and פָּדָה, with their derivatives. The former term is used technically, in the [[Mosaic]] law, of the redemption by price of an inheritance (by a kinsman or the man himself, &nbsp;Leviticus 25:25 ff., &nbsp;Ruth 4:4-7, &nbsp;Jeremiah 32:7-8), or of things vowed (&nbsp;Leviticus 27:14 ff.), or of tithes (&nbsp;Leviticus 27:31 ff.): the latter of redeeming the firstborn of animals or of children (&nbsp;Exodus 13:13; &nbsp;Exodus 13:15; &nbsp;Exodus 34:20, &nbsp;Numbers 18:15 ff.). Outside the Law, and in relation to Jehovah, both terms are used of simple salvation or deliverance, especially when attended by impressive displays of power, or the assertion or vindication of righteousness, or vengeance upon enemies. נָּאֵל appears in this sense in &nbsp;Genesis 48:16, &nbsp;Exodus 6:6; &nbsp;Exodus 15:13; repeatedly in the Psalms (&nbsp;Psalms 69:18; &nbsp;Psalms 72:14; &nbsp;Psalms 74:2; &nbsp;Psalms 103:4; &nbsp;Psalms 106:10; &nbsp;Psalms 107:2) and in Deutero-Isaiah (&nbsp;Isaiah 43:1; &nbsp;Isaiah 44:22-23; &nbsp;Isaiah 48:20 etc.), and occasionally in other prophets. פָּדה, on the other hand, is the favourite term in Deut. (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 7:8; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 9:26 etc.), is frequent in the <i> earlier </i> Psalms (&nbsp;Psalms 25:22; &nbsp;Psalms 31:5 etc.), but occurs only rarely in Isaiah (&nbsp;Isaiah 1:27; &nbsp;Isaiah 29:22; &nbsp;Isaiah 51:11). The person who has the right to redeem, or who undertakes the duty, is a נֹּאֵל, or ‘redeemer’ (&nbsp;Numbers 5:8, &nbsp;Ruth 2:20 etc. Authorized and Revised [[Versions]] ‘kinsman’); the term is used also to denote the ‘avenger of blood’ (&nbsp;Numbers 35:12, &nbsp;Deuteronomy 19:6 etc.); and elsewhere, as in the famous passage &nbsp;Job 19:25, in &nbsp;Psalms 19:14; &nbsp;Psalms 78:35, and &nbsp;Proverbs 23:11, but specially in Deutero-Isaiah (&nbsp;Isaiah 41:14; &nbsp;Isaiah 43:14 etc.), is applied to [[Jehovah]] as the all-powerful, holy, and merciful vindicator, deliverer, and avenger of His people. [[A]] term related in idea to ‘redemption’ is כֹּפֶר ‘ransom.’ (See Ransom). </p> <p> In the [[Nt]] the terms by which the idea is directly expressed are ἀγοραξω, ‘to buy’ or ‘purchase’ (&nbsp;1 Corinthians 6:20; &nbsp;1 Corinthians 7:23, &nbsp;2 Peter 2:1, &nbsp;Revelation 5:9; &nbsp;Revelation 14:3-4—the last translation in Authorized Version, ‘redeem’), and its compound ἐξαγοράζω, used by St. Paul in &nbsp;Galatians 3:13; &nbsp;Galatians 4:5; but specially λυτροῦμαι (from λὐτρον, ‘a ransom’), and its derivatives (&nbsp;Luke 24:21, &nbsp;Titus 2:14, &nbsp;1 Peter 1:18). The special [[Pauline]] word for ‘redemption’ is ἀτολύτρωσις (&nbsp;Romans 3:24; &nbsp;Romans 8:23, &nbsp;1 Corinthians 1:30, &nbsp;Ephesians 1:7 etc.,—found also in &nbsp;Luke 21:28, &nbsp;Hebrews 9:15). The simple form λύτρωσις occurs in &nbsp;Luke 2:38, &nbsp;Hebrews 9:12. The meaning of these expressions is more precisely considered below. </p> <p> <b> 2. The [[Ot]] preparation. </b> —The foundations of the [[Nt]] doctrine of redemption are laid in the [[Ot]] conceptions of the holiness, righteousness, and grace of Jehovah, and of sin as something abhorrent to Jehovah’s holiness, which He must needs condemn and punish, but from which He desires to save. He is the [[Holy]] One, who abhors iniquity. [[Sinners]] shall not stand in His sight. He visits with severest penalties those who disregard His counsels and persist in their wickedness. Yet He is the Lord God, merciful and gracious, full of compassion and ready to forgive (&nbsp;Exodus 34:6-7, &nbsp;Psalms 103:8 ff.); He desires not the death of any sinner, but that he should turn from his wickedness and live (&nbsp;Ezekiel 18:32; &nbsp;Ezekiel 33:12). More specially, He is the covenant-keeping God, who does not allow His promises to fail, but, even when the nation in the mass is rejected, fulfils His word in due season to the faithful remnant, or to the whole people when brought to repentance (&nbsp;Psalms 103:8-9, &nbsp;Isaiah 8:16-17, &nbsp;Jeremiah 32:37 ff., &nbsp;Hosea 1:10-11; &nbsp;Hosea 2:14 ff. etc.). In this it is already implied that Jehovah will manifest His power, righteousness, and love in helping and saving His people, in vindicating their cause when oppressed, in visiting their adversaries with judgments, and in working out great and astonishing deliverances for them when the hour comes for the fulfilment of His promises. It follows that His relation to them, and His concern for their good, will be seen in the course of their history in a succession of acts of <i> redemption </i> . </p> <p> It has been seen, accordingly, that while, in their legal usage, the [[Ot]] terms for ‘redeem’ and ‘redemption’ imply payment of a price, or, in the case of the firstborn, substitution of a life, or a monetary ransom, these terms are often used in the more general sense of simple deliverance or salvation. The great historic instance of Jehovah’s redemption of His people was their deliverance from the bondage of Egypt (&nbsp;Exodus 6:6; &nbsp;Exodus 15:13, &nbsp;Deuteronomy 7:8 etc.). That held in it already the pledge of every other deliverance which the nation or godly individuals in it might need. Prayers, therefore, are frequent that Jehovah would redeem from oppression, from violence, from sickness, from death, from captivity, etc. ( <i> e.g. </i> &nbsp;Psalms 25:22; &nbsp;Psalms 49:15; &nbsp;Psalms 72:14; &nbsp;Psalms 103:4), and thanksgivings for deliverance refer usually to the same things ( <i> e.g. </i> Psalms 116, 124, 126, &nbsp;Zechariah 10:8 ff.). [[Redemption]] in such passages is commonly from temporal calamities or ills, endured or feared. Only in one place is direct mention made of redemption from iniquities (&nbsp;Psalms 130:8). This last fact, however, must not mislead us. As, in the [[Ot,]] outward calamities are usually connected with Jehovah’s anger, or with the hiding of His face, so, it is everywhere implied, the first condition of the removal of these evils is return to God and the forsaking of iniquity; if the individual is righteous, this is the ground on which he looks to God for vindication against the ungodly oppressor (Psalms 3, 4, 5 etc.). We must beware here, and throughout this whole discussion, of building too much on the mere occurrence of a term. The <i> fact </i> of redemption is often present, where the <i> word </i> is not directly used. [[Behind]] all interpositions for deliverance and help, whatever the words employed, stand Jehovah’s unchanging character, His pledged word, His inflexible will to uphold the right, His compassion for the afflicted and oppressed. Righteousness, in His deliverances, always counts for more than the deliverance itself, which is conditioned by His unerring knowledge of the moral state. Where sin has been the cause of judgments on the individual or nation, redemption includes, in the removal of these evils, forgiveness and restoration to the [[Divine]] favour and to righteousness (cf. Psalms 85, &nbsp;Isaiah 1:16 ff., Hosea 14, etc.). </p> <p> The [[Deliverer]] of His people in the [[Ot]] is Jehovah Himself. Hence the affection with which Deutero-Isaiah dwells on the idea of Jehovah as the נֹּאֶל, or ‘Redeemer’ of Israel. It is noteworthy, however, that in two passages redemption is attributed to the ‘angel’ of Jehovah—that mysterious personality, one with Jehovah, yet again distinct from Him, who figures so prominently, particularly in the earlier stages of revelation. ‘The angel which hath redeemed me from all evil,’ says Jacob, in the earliest instance of the use of the word נָּאֵל, in &nbsp;Genesis 48:16; and again in &nbsp;Isaiah 63:9 we have, with the use of the same word, the like idea: ‘In all their affliction he was afflicted, and the angel of his presence saved them; in his love and in his pity he redeemed them,’ etc. That is, Jehovah’s interposition in redemption is by means of His angel (cf. &nbsp;Psalms 34:7). There is a fore-gleam here of what comes more clearly to light in the [[Nt.]] </p> <p> It may appear a point of contrast between the [[Ot]] and the [[Nt]] conceptions of redemption, that in the [[Ot]] the word is never brought directly into association with sacrifice, or the ritual of atonement. The use of ‘redeem’ in connexion with the firstborn (the substitution, <i> e.g. </i> , of a lamb for the firstling of an ass) does not affect this statement, for these substitutions have not the character of atonement for sin. Here again, however, it is important to keep in memory the distinction between words and things. Apart from the use of terms, it is the case that the sacrificial ritual—so far as expiatory—was, in its own way, a means of deliverance from guilt, and, in that sense, of redemption. [[A]] direct connexion between the sacrifices of the Law and the forgiveness of sin is expressly affirmed ( <i> e.g. </i> &nbsp;Leviticus 4:20; &nbsp;Leviticus 4:26; &nbsp;Leviticus 4:35; cf. &nbsp;Isaiah 6:7); a fact irrespective of any theory of efficacy. Even in regard to words, there is the important point of connexion in the word כֹּפֶר ‘ransom.’ (See Ransom). </p> <p> But there is a yet closer link. There can be no question that a peculiar line of preparation for the [[Nt]] doctrine lay in the development by Psalmists and [[Prophets]] of the idea of the Righteous Sufferer. The culmination of that development is reached in the matchless representation of Isaiah 53, where the [[Servant]] of Jehovah is pictured as making expiation by His sufferings and death for the sins of the people. Here at length Prophetic and sacrificial teaching touch, for the language and whole idea of the sacrificial ritual are taken over upon the [[Suffering]] Servant. The iniquity of His fellows is laid upon One who is without sin; His soul is made a guilt-offering; He bears the iniquities of the people; He pours out His soul unto death; He bears the sin of many, and makes intercession for the transgressors (&nbsp;Isaiah 53:6; &nbsp;Isaiah 53:10-12). The later Prophetic teaching is not without refrains of the same ideas (Zechariah 13, &nbsp;Daniel 9:24 ff.). Malachi brings to a close the long preparation of the [[Ot]] with his prediction of the Angel of the [[Covenant]] soon to come to His temple, whose work would be at once judging and saving (&nbsp;Malachi 3:4). </p> <p> <b> 3. Redemption in the Gospels. </b> —With respect to the sources, it is acknowledged that a distinction is to be made between the Synoptics and the Fourth Gospel. The last, however, is accepted in the present article as a genuine work of the Apostle John, embodying, if with a certain colouring from his own personality and interpretative comment, that Apostle’s reminiscences of the sayings and doings of Jesus, especially those of the Judaean ministry. [[Comparison]] will show that, fundamentally, the teachings of the four [[Gospels]] on our immediate subject coincide. </p> <p> St. Luke’s [[Gospel]] begins by introducing us to the circle of those who ‘were looking for the redemption (λύτρωσις) of Jerusalem’ (&nbsp;Luke 2:38), or, as an earlier verse has it, were ‘looking for the consolation of Israel’ (&nbsp;Luke 2:25). Of these there were not a few. [[Zacharias]] and Elisabeth, [[Simeon]] and the prophetess Anna, were among the number. From the hymn of Zacharias in &nbsp;Luke 1:68 ff. we see how far the idea of ‘redemption’ was from being confined to temporal deliverance from enemies. Such deliverance was only a means towards serving the God who had redeemed His people in holiness and righteousness (&nbsp;Luke 1:75). Redemption included the knowledge of (spiritual) salvation by the remission of sins (&nbsp;Luke 1:77). This salvation was to be brought in by one from the house of David, in fulfilment of the promises made to the fathers (&nbsp;Luke 1:69-73). John the [[Baptist]] was to prepare the way for the Redeemer’s coming (&nbsp;Luke 1:76, cf. &nbsp;Luke 3:3 ff.). We are here, in short, on the threshold of the introduction of the Messianic salvation. In three of the Gospels, accordingly, we have preparatory notes struck, which show in what sense we are to understand this wonderful redemption of the Christ. The shepherds in Lk. are apprised of the birth in the city of David of ‘a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord’ (&nbsp;Luke 2:11). In Mt. the child is called Jesus, ‘for it is he that shall save his people from their sins’ (&nbsp;Luke 1:21). In St. John’s Gospel the Baptist points out Jesus to his disciples as ‘the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world’ (&nbsp;Luke 1:29; Luk_1:36). All the Gospels give prominence to the [[Baptism]] of Jesus, with its consecration of Himself ‘to fulfil all righteousness’ (in Mt.), its acknowledgment of Him as ‘the Son of God,’ and the descent upon Him of the Holy Spirit (&nbsp;Matthew 3:13-17, &nbsp;Mark 1:9-11, &nbsp;Luke 3:21-22, &nbsp;John 1:31-34); and the Synoptics relate His Temptation, in which false ideals of Messiahship were rejected, and His true vocation was definitely grasped and chosen (&nbsp;Matthew 4:1-11 ||). </p> <p> The important question now arises, How did Jesus Himself conceive of the work of redemption which belonged to Him as Messiah? The word itself is only once attributed to Him, and that in an eschatological connexion (&nbsp;Luke 21:28); it affords us, therefore, little help. His conception must be sought in a less direct way, by consideration of the aspects in which His saving activity is presented in the Gospels, and of the sayings and doings in which He connects the salvation of men with Himself. An error to be sedulously guarded against here is that of fastening on one or two isolated sayings of Jesus, for instance, on the passages about His death, and giving these an interpretation as if they were without any context in Jesus’ own thought, or in His general Messianic claim, or in earlier Prophetic revelation, or in the events which succeeded them, and threw light on them. [[A]] broader method must be followed if Christ’s idea of redemption is to be satisfactorily grasped. </p> <p> It must impress us, then, that, in the idea of redemption, or what corresponds to it, in the Gospels, the spiritual elements are prominent as they were not in the [[Ot.]] This was to be expected from the spiritual nature of the teaching of Jesus, and from the larger place given to the hope of the future life. The political aspect of redemption disappears altogether. The [[Kingdom]] Jesus came to found was not of this world (cf. &nbsp;Matthew 18:1-5; &nbsp;Matthew 19:27-30; &nbsp;Matthew 20:25-28; &nbsp;Matthew 26:51-53, &nbsp;Luke 17:21, &nbsp;John 6:15; &nbsp;John 18:36 etc.). [[Salvation]] from bodily ills, indeed, appears as an important part of Christ’s ministry, as in the healing of disease, the casting out of demons, the raising of the dead, the feeding of the multitudes (&nbsp;Matthew 4:23-24; &nbsp;Matthew 11:4-5 etc.). In these works of mercy Jesus revealed Himself as the [[Saviour]] of the body as well as of the soul. But the physical benefit was never an end in itself; it pointed up to, and prepared the way for the reception of, the spiritual blessing (&nbsp;Matthew 9:2-8, &nbsp;John 6:26 ff.). It was conditioned by faith (&nbsp;Matthew 8:10; &nbsp;Matthew 9:2; &nbsp;Matthew 9:22; &nbsp;Matthew 9:28 etc.). The real evils from which Jesus came to redeem were spiritual evils; the priceless good He came to bestow was a spiritual good. [[Spiritual]] evil had its root and origin in sin; salvation takes its spring in the grace and mercy of God, and begins with forgiveness. </p> <p> (1) We have first, then, to look at <i> sin and its consequences </i> as the evil to be redeemed from. The teaching of Jesus on the love and mercy of the Father should not blind us to the depth of His realization of the awful evil of sin, of the wrath of God against it, and of the peril of eternal death which overhung the sinner. Rather, in His view, is the Father’s mercy to be measured by the depth of the sinner’s lostness, the heinousness of his state in the light of the Divine holiness, and his inability to deliver himself from that state or its consequences. The sternness of Christ’s teaching in this relation is sometimes very terrible. As the Baptist warned his hearers to flee from ‘the wrath to come,’ so Jesus has ever in the background of His most gracious teaching the thought of an awful Divine judgment, which surely one day will descend on the impenitent. He does not hesitate to speak of the fire of [[Gehenna]] (&nbsp;Matthew 5:22; &nbsp;Matthew 5:29-30, and of God, who is able to destroy both soul and body in Gehenna (&nbsp;Matthew 10:28); of the worm that dieth not, and the fire that is not quenched (&nbsp;Mark 9:44; &nbsp;Mark 9:46; &nbsp;Mark 9:48); of the judgment, less tolerable than that upon [[Tyre]] and Sidon, or even Sodom, which awaits cities like [[Capernaum]] (&nbsp;Matthew 11:20-24); of a blasphemy against the Holy Spirit which shall not be forgiven, either in this world, or in that to come (&nbsp;Matthew 12:31-32 ||). His denunciations of the [[Pharisees]] are merciless in their severity (&nbsp;Matthew 23:14-15; &nbsp;Matthew 23:32-33); the language of judgment in many of the parables is hardly less strong (&nbsp;Matthew 13:42; &nbsp;Matthew 13:50, &nbsp;Matthew 18:34, &nbsp;Matthew 21:44, &nbsp;Matthew 22:7; &nbsp;Matthew 22:13 etc.). Those who speak of supposed judgments on others are warned: ‘Nay but, except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish’ (&nbsp;Luke 13:3; &nbsp;Luke 13:5); of a [[Judas]] it is declared, ‘Good were it for that man if he had not been born’ (&nbsp;Matthew 26:24, &nbsp;Mark 14:21); the parable of the Final [[Judgment]] has such a sentence as, ‘Depart from me, ye cursed,’ etc. (&nbsp;Matthew 25:41; &nbsp;Matthew 25:46). The Synoptic teaching on this point is identical with that of St. John, who declares that the wrath of God ‘abideth’ on him who believes (or obeys) not the Son of God (&nbsp;John 3:36), and habitually speaks of the world as perishing in its sin (&nbsp;John 3:16-17, &nbsp;John 5:29, &nbsp;John 6:53, &nbsp;John 8:24 etc.). </p> <p> Exposure to the wrath of God, therefore, is one result of sin, from which, undeniably, redemption is needed; but this, in Christ’s view, is not the worst evil, but rather flows from the infinitely heinous and hateful nature of sin itself. Sin, considered in itself, is the real evil from which men need to be delivered. It is a fountain of pollution in the heart, defiling the whole nature (&nbsp;Matthew 15:18-20 ||; cf. &nbsp;Matthew 23:27); evolves itself in corrupt words and deeds (&nbsp;Matthew 7:16-20, &nbsp;Matthew 12:33-37); brings under subjection to Satan (&nbsp;Matthew 6:13, &nbsp;Matthew 12:29; &nbsp;Matthew 12:43-45); is the loss of the soul’s true life (&nbsp;Matthew 16:24-26); entails misery and ruin (&nbsp;Luke 15:11-16, &nbsp;Matthew 23:37-38); ripens into hateful vices (impurity, covetousness, pride, hypocrisy, mercilessness, etc.), and culminates in blasphemy against the Holy Spirit (&nbsp;Matthew 12:31-32 etc.). Souls in this condition are ‘lost’; need to be, in their helplessness and misery, sought after and saved (&nbsp;Luke 15:3 ff; &nbsp;Luke 19:10). The teaching of Jesus in Jn. is here again in accord with that in the Synoptics; only that in some respects St. John’s Gospel goes deeper, in explicitly affirming the need of regeneration (&nbsp;Luke 3:3; &nbsp;Luke 3:5), in laying more stress on the element of bondage in sin (&nbsp;Luke 8:33-34), and in giving greater prominence to the idea of Satan as ‘the prince of this world,’ whose power over men has to be broken (&nbsp;Luke 8:44, &nbsp;Luke 12:31, &nbsp;Luke 14:30, &nbsp;Luke 16:11; cf. &nbsp;Luke 10:17-18). </p> <p> One thing still requires to be said to exhibit in its full extent man’s need of redemption. The deepest and most condemnable aspect of sin is that it is alienation from God Himself. The first requirement of the Law is love to God (&nbsp;Matthew 22:37-38); the proper attitude of the soul to God is that of humble dependence and trust (&nbsp;Matthew 4:4; &nbsp;Matthew 4:7; &nbsp;Matthew 4:10, &nbsp;Matthew 7:25 ff., &nbsp;Mark 11:22; &nbsp;Mark 11:24-25 etc.). But sin is the negation of this right religious relation. [[‘I]] know you,’ said Jesus to the Jews, ‘that ye have not the love of God in you’ (&nbsp;John 5:42). Other and contrary principles—pride, self-sufficiency, self-will, the love of the honour that conies from men (&nbsp;John 5:44; cf. &nbsp;Matthew 6:2 ff.)—had taken the place of love to God; hence estrangement from God, antagonism to His will and spirit, enmity to Him and to His messengers (&nbsp;Matthew 23:29 ff.). Redemption means here the effecting of a change of disposition towards God, and the restoration of a spirit of love and trust—of the filial spirit ( <i> e.g. </i> &nbsp;Luke 15:17 ff.). It is synonymous with <i> reconciliation </i> (see Reconciliation). </p> <p> (2) This description of the evil to be redeemed from already determines <i> the positive character of the redemption </i> . The preaching of Jesus is described as the preaching of a ‘gospel’ (&nbsp;Luke 4:18-19)—. ‘the gospel of God’ (&nbsp;Mark 1:14)—and the ‘salvation’ (&nbsp;Luke 19:9-10) proclaimed in this gospel included deliverance from the whole range of evil covered by the word ‘sin,’ with introduction into the whole sphere of privilege and blessedness embraced in the term ‘Kingdom of God.’ Jesus in His teaching has much to say on the condition of mind necessary for the reception of this blessing. There is naturally the initial demand for repentance (&nbsp;Matthew 9:13; &nbsp;Matthew 11:20-21, &nbsp;Mark 1:15; &nbsp;Mark 6:12, &nbsp;Luke 13:3; &nbsp;Luke 13:5 etc.), which has the full weight of meaning involved in the etymology of the word μετάνοια, ‘change of mind.’ There is implied in this change of disposition a parting with all pride, sufficiency, and sense of merit (&nbsp;Luke 17:10); a coming to be humble, simple, trustful as a little child (&nbsp;Matthew 18:1-4); in a pregnant phrase, becoming ‘poor in spirit’ (&nbsp;Matthew 5:3, &nbsp;Luke 4:18). To those in this humble, trustful, self-renouncing state of mind every satisfaction and spiritual blessing are promised ( <i> e.g. </i> &nbsp;Matthew 5:3 ff.; see Iverach, <i> The Other Side of [[Greatness]] </i> , p. 1 ff.). This blessing is always represented as mediated through Jesus Himself. It is only through the Son that men can receive the knowledge of the Father (&nbsp;Matthew 11:27); it is through coming to Him, learning of Him, taking His yoke upon them, that they obtain rest to their souls (&nbsp;Matthew 11:28-30); men are called to follow Him, to become His disciples, to acknowledge Him as their Lord and [[Master]] (&nbsp;Matthew 7:21-23, &nbsp;Matthew 8:19-22, &nbsp;Matthew 23:8 etc.). He requires from His disciples the most absolute surrender to Himself (&nbsp;Matthew 10:37-39, &nbsp;Matthew 16:24-25); it is by relation to Him that men are judged at last (&nbsp;Matthew 25:40; &nbsp;Matthew 25:45). As King, He dispenses the awards of service (&nbsp;Matthew 16:27, &nbsp;Matthew 19:28, &nbsp;Matthew 25:34 ff.)—Of the dependence of salvation on His sufferings and death, more is said below. Those who stand in the above relation to Christ are ‘the children of the kingdom’ (&nbsp;Matthew 13:38), sons of God, and heirs of eternal life. [[Received]] into the Kingdom, they have the blessedness of knowing that their sins are forgiven them (&nbsp;Matthew 6:12, &nbsp;Matthew 9:2 etc.), though, reciprocally, there is laid on those who are thus forgiven the duty of forgiving others (&nbsp;Matthew 6:14-15, &nbsp;Matthew 18:35, &nbsp;Mark 11:25 etc.). They have the privilege of calling God their Father, of trusting Him for all their need (&nbsp;Matthew 6:25 ff.), of free access to Him in prayer (&nbsp;Matthew 7:7-11 etc.). They are acknowledged by Christ as His brethren (&nbsp;Matthew 12:49-50, &nbsp;Matthew 25:40). From the Father they receive mercy, and the satisfaction of their hunger and thirst for righteousness (&nbsp;Matthew 5:6-7); they are sustained in persecution and sacrifice by the promise of a thousandfold reward (&nbsp;Matthew 5:12, &nbsp;Matthew 19:29, &nbsp;Mark 10:29-30); it is theirs to share in the resurrection of the just (&nbsp;Luke 14:14); and as sons and heirs of God, they have the sure hope of ‘eternal life,’ in which is included blessedness and glory (&nbsp;Matthew 13:43) and the perfect vision of God (&nbsp;Matthew 5:8). These unspeakably lofty privileges and hopes imply corresponding responsibilities. It is constantly assumed that there cannot be true repentance, or genuine membership in the Kingdom, which does not manifest itself in ‘good works’ (&nbsp;Matthew 5:16), or in the doing of the will of the Father (&nbsp;Matthew 6:10). Only the doers of the Father’s will can be received into the Kingdom of heaven (&nbsp;Matthew 7:21, &nbsp;Matthew 18:4, &nbsp;Matthew 25:34 ff.). The disciple is to have for his aim to be perfect as his Father in heaven is perfect (&nbsp;Matthew 5:48). </p> <p> Not a great deal, comparatively, is said in the Synoptic Gospels of the work of the Spirit in imparting these spiritual blessings. But the Spirit’s presence and agency are nevertheless constantly assumed. Jesus was ‘full of the Holy Spirit’ after His baptism (&nbsp;Luke 4:1), and it was the Spirit of the Lord upon Him who fitted Him for His saving work (&nbsp;Luke 4:18). ‘The spirit of the Father’ speaks in the disciples (&nbsp;Matthew 10:20). He is, in Lk., the supreme gift of the Father (&nbsp;Matthew 11:13). [[Blasphemy]] against the Holy Spirit is the last and highest crime (&nbsp;Matthew 12:32 ||). The Baptist announced Jesus as the One who should baptize with the Spirit (&nbsp;Matthew 3:11 ||), and the promise of the Spirit is Christ’s final word to His disciples (&nbsp;Luke 24:49). In the Synoptics, as in Jn., it is assumed that the Spirit was not yet given in His fulness, because Jesus was not yet glorified (&nbsp;John 7:39). </p> <p> The Johannine teaching on salvation is once more, in all essential features, identical with that of the Synoptics. The change of mind insisted on by the latter is, in St. John’s Gospel, directly traced to a regenerating work of the Spirit (&nbsp;John 3:3; &nbsp;John 3:5), and the doctrine of the Spirit altogether is more developed (&nbsp;John 14:26, &nbsp;John 15:26, &nbsp;John 16:7 ff.); the condition of salvation is expressed generally by the term ‘believing’ (which includes in it the idea of ‘obeying,’ cf. &nbsp;John 3:18; &nbsp;John 3:36); sonship, as the fruit of regeneration, is viewed as a special supernatural gift, the prerogative of believers (&nbsp;John 1:12); salvation is connected with Christ’s being lifted up (&nbsp;John 3:14-17, &nbsp;John 12:32-33); ‘eternal life’ is regarded as already begun in the experience of the believer (&nbsp;John 3:36, &nbsp;John 4:14, &nbsp;John 6:47, &nbsp;John 17:3 etc.). But the necessity of union with Christ (cf. &nbsp;John 15:1-8), the salvation from wrath through Him (&nbsp;John 3:16-18; &nbsp;John 3:36, &nbsp;John 5:24), the dispositions to be laid aside in entering the Kingdom of heaven (&nbsp;John 5:44), and the essentials of character to be acquired by its members (humility, love, self-sacrifice, etc., &nbsp;John 13:4-17, &nbsp;John 15:12, &nbsp;John 12:25 etc.), the hope of the resurrection (&nbsp;John 5:28-29, &nbsp;John 6:40, &nbsp;John 11:24-26), and the prospect of ultimately sharing Christ’s glory in the Father’s house (&nbsp;John 14:2-3, &nbsp;John 17:24), are outstanding features in St. John’s teaching as they are in that of the earlier Gospels. </p> <p> (3) The question now recurs as to <i> the connexion of Christ’s own Person, and especially His sufferings and death, with this redemption </i> , the message of which constitutes His gospel. [[Certain]] obvious aspects of that connexion have already been indicated. Christ’s ministry of teaching and healing was itself a means of redemption—of bringing men to the knowledge of it, of awakening in them the desire for it, of drawing them to the acceptance of it, of putting them in possession of part of its blessing. But in its substance also, as we have seen, Christ and His gospel could not be separated. He alone could reveal the Father, and give the world assurance of His grace; He already, as the Son of Man, exhibited in its perfect form what Divine sonship in the Kingdom of God meant; it was by coming to Him, and learning of Him, that men were initiated into His mind and spirit, which itself was salvation. His purity, conjoined with His sympathy and grace, acted as mighty moral motives in breaking down the enmity of the heart to God and in winning sinners to repentance. These also are the aspects of Christ’s connexion with redemption,—these, and not declarations about atonement,—which meet us on the surface of the Gospels. Christ is the Good Shepherd, seeking and finding the lost sheep (&nbsp;Matthew 10:6; &nbsp;Matthew 15:24; &nbsp;Matthew 18:12-14, &nbsp;Luke 15:3-7). All-compassionating, forgiving love is the power He relies on to draw out love (&nbsp;Luke 8:47-50). The very majesty of His claims and the manifest authority with which He spoke gave an added power to His gentleness and grace (&nbsp;Matthew 11:27-30). </p> <p> We have still to ask, however, Is this the whole? Is this the only way in which redemption depends on Christ? If it is, what remains as the foundation of the [[Apostolic]] gospel, which undeniably connects redemption in a peculiar way, not with Christ’s life and teaching, but with His sacrificial sufferings and death? The question is further pressed upon us by particular utterances of Jesus, which likewise appear to point to such connexion. Is this aspect of redemption, as some think; to be excluded from Christ’s gospel? To find an answer we are driven back upon the wider question of how Jesus Himself viewed His sufferings and death. On this topic, it was remarked above that it is a very misleading method to confine ourselves to the exposition of isolated texts, without taking into account the whole context of Christ’s thought, and the ideas of [[Ot]] revelation in which His thought was grounded. It will be necessary to begin at this point in order to reach a satisfactory conclusion. </p> <p> [[A]] sure <i> datum </i> to start with here is the indubitable consciousness of Jesus—attested by the two names ‘Son of God’ and ‘Son of Man’—of His Messianic vocation, and consequently of the connexion of the Messianic salvation with His Person. It was He, as the whole [[Jewish]] hope implied, who was to bring in that ‘redemption’ for which [[Israel]] waited (&nbsp;Luke 2:38). That Jesus knew Himself to be the Christ, at least from the time of the Baptism, is implied in all the Gospels, though it was only to favoured individuals that the disclosure was directly made (in Jn. to Nathanael, &nbsp;Luke 1:47-51; to Nicodemus, &nbsp;Luke 3:13 ff.; to the [[Samaritan]] woman, &nbsp;Luke 4:26 etc.). </p> <p> It is to misinterpret Peter’s great confession in &nbsp;Matthew 16:16 to take it to mean that up to that time the disciples had no knowledge that Jesus was the Christ. Apart from what is narrated by St. John (&nbsp;John 1:41 ff.), the whole ministry of Jesus, as recorded by the Synoptics—the claims He made, the authority He exercised—was by implication an assertion of that dignity; while to the direct testimony borne by the forerunner (&nbsp;Matthew 3:11-12 ||) was added afterwards the answer given to the Baptist’s doubts (&nbsp;Matthew 11:2 ff.). What was new in Peter’s confession was the inburst of new illumination, and unshakable strength of conviction, with which the confession was made (&nbsp;Matthew 16:17-18). </p> <p> On the other hand, if Jesus knew Himself to be the [[Messiah]] of [[Ot]] prophecy and hope, it is not less certain that He apprehended this great vocation, and the salvation with which it was connected, in a quite different way from most of His contemporaries. Messiahship for Him, as the account of the [[Temptation]] shows, meant the definite renunciation of all self-seeking motives, the rejection of all political and worldly ideals, the repudiation of all swerving from the sole end of seeking His Father’s glory. [[Holding]] such a conception of His mission, and rooted in His consciousness, as His habitual use of [[Scripture]] and manner of deducing deep principles from its simplest words show Him to be, in [[Ot]] and specially Prophetic teaching, it is impossible that, from the first, He should not have clearly perceived the collision that must ensue between Himself and the ruling classes, and the persecution, and ultimately death, which their enmity must bring upon Him. With so clear a vision of the persecutions, scornings, and death that awaited His disciples (&nbsp;Matthew 10:16 ff. ||), He could not be ignorant of His own future. If, however, He saw thus far, it must be that He saw further. The path of self-renunciation and suffering that lay before Him must have presented itself, as we know it did, as part of His Father’s ordainment in the accomplishment of His vocation; not as a fate merely, or even as a martyrdom, but as a necessary step to the founding of His Kingdom, and procurement of the great end of His Coming—the end of salvation. If this, in turn, presented itself as a problem to His thought,—we speak, perhaps, too humanly of the way in which Jesus arrived at His convictions,—the light was near at hand for its solution in the Prophetic Scriptures, especially in the picture of the Suffering Servant of Isaiah 53. His sufferings were <i> expiatory </i> . No one who reads the Gospels with care can doubt the familiarity of the mind of Jesus with this portion of Prophetic testimony. It is probably this prophecy that was in view in the Baptist’s announcement to his disciples (&nbsp;John 1:29; &nbsp;John 1:36); it is contained in the section of Isaiah on the Servant of Jehovah which Jesus cited in the opening of His public ministry as fulfilled in Himself (&nbsp;Luke 4:17 ff.); one interesting passage shows that it was directly before His mind in His last sufferings—‘For [[I]] say unto you, that this which is written must be fulfilled in me, And he was numbered with transgressors: for that which concerneth me hath fulfilment’ (&nbsp;Luke 22:37). It cannot have been absent from the numerous prophecies which Jesus declared were fulfilled in His death (&nbsp;Mark 9:12; &nbsp;Mark 14:21; &nbsp;Mark 14:27, &nbsp;Luke 18:31; &nbsp;Luke 24:26-27; &nbsp;Luke 24:46); But, indeed, the same strain of thought, sacrificial and Prophetic, which inspired the representation of Jehovah’s Servant as One who must and would take upon Himself the burden of the people’s sins, and, in substitutionary love, offer Himself in atonement for them, must have wrought as powerfully in the mind of Jesus, conscious as He was of His peculiar relation to both God and man, and fully aware of what sin was, and of what the forgiveness of sin meant to a holy God. If atonement for the world’s sin was possible, and Jesus in, His representative capacity, and Himself sinless, could offer such atonement, it cannot be doubted that He would desire to do so. </p> <p> This point of the connexion of the sufferings and death of Jesus with redemption will receive elucidation afterwards; but already, perhaps, it is possible to see how, during His ministry, a relation of His sufferings to His saving mission might be present to His own mind, though He said little of it publicly, and only toward the end of His life spoke freely to His disciples of His approaching death. His reticence on His death would then be paralleled by His reticence on His Messiahship, which yet was present to His consciousness throughout. On such a view it may be found that the phenomena of the Gospels, as we have them, fall naturally into place,—His general silence on His death in His public teaching, the occasional disclosures in Jn. and the Synoptics, the connexion of the later announcements of His death with His resurrection, and, after His resurrection, of both with the preaching of remission of sins, and the promise of the Spirit; the coherence of this teaching with the Apostolic gospel. </p> <p> For now it is to be observed that this silence of Jesus on the connexion of His sufferings and death with His saving work is far from absolute; on the contrary, the intimations of such connexion, when brought together, and read with the help of such a key as Isaiah 53 affords, are neither few nor ambiguous. It is not, indeed, till late in the ministry, after Peter’s confession, that Jesus begins to speak plainly of His approaching death, and then of that death as Divinely ordained and foretold, and to be followed by resurrection (&nbsp;Matthew 16:21; &nbsp;Matthew 17:9; &nbsp;Matthew 17:22-23; &nbsp;Matthew 20:18-19 ||, see above). [[Thenceforth]] His death had an absorbing place in His thoughts. It was a ‘cup’ He had to drink, a ‘baptism’ He had to be baptized with. He was ‘straitened’ till it was accomplished (&nbsp;Matthew 20:22, &nbsp;Mark 10:32; &nbsp;Mark 10:38, &nbsp;Luke 12:50; cf. &nbsp;Luke 9:51). At the [[Transfiguration]] it was, according to St. Luke, the ‘decease (ἔξοδος) which he was about to accomplish at Jerusalem’ which was the subject of His converse with Moses and [[Elijah]] (&nbsp;Luke 9:31). But the very decision and circumstantiality of these first announcements to His disciples imply that the subject had long been before His own thoughts; and that, in conformity with what has already been said, this was really the case, we gather from such a passage as &nbsp;Matthew 9:15 (‘When the bridegroom shall be taken away from them’), but much more clearly from the sayings preserved to us by St. John from the Judaean and Capernaum ministries. Here, in the line of the Baptist’s opening announcement (&nbsp;John 1:29), the connexion between Christ’s death and the salvation of the world is unmistakably declared. Thus, in the conversation with Nicodemus, ‘As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up,’ etc. (&nbsp;John 3:14-16; cf. on the lifting up, &nbsp;John 12:33), and in the remarkable discourse at Capernaum, in which Jesus dilates on His flesh as given for the life of the world, and on His blood as shed (we must presume) for the same end (&nbsp;John 6:51-56). In the light of these sayings we must, in consistency, interpret others more general in character ( <i> e.g. </i> &nbsp;John 10:11; &nbsp;John 10:15; &nbsp;John 10:17-18, &nbsp;John 12:24; &nbsp;John 12:23). </p> <p> When we return to the Synoptics, we have again, in the closing period, more than one significant utterance. There is first the well-known passage preserved in both Mt. and Mk.: ‘The Son of Man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom (λύτρον) for many (ἀντὶ πολλῶν)’ (&nbsp;Matthew 20:28, &nbsp;Mark 10:45). </p> <p> It does not rob this passage of its force that it occurs in impressing on the disciples the lesson that the true greatness lies in service. No one will suppose that Jesus could have used language such as He here employs about the disciples, or about any other than Himself. The incidental occurrence of the saying may rather suggest that there must have been other teaching on the subject, and that Jesus here assumes the saving purpose of His death as known to the disciples. </p> <p> The significance of the word λύτρον is investigated in art. Ransom; it is enough now to say that the word is most naturally taken as the equivalent of the [[Hebrew]] בֹּפֶר (allied to בִּפֶד ‘to atone’), used of that which is given in exchange for a life, whether money or another life. The thought in Jesus’ mind may well have been that of Isaiah 53. The meaning would then be that His death is the redemption-price by which the many are delivered from the ruin entailed by sin (including both the guilt and the power of sin). There is, again, the passage already cited, &nbsp;Luke 22:37, directly glancing at Isaiah 53, and declaring it to be fulfilled in Christ’s death. There are, finally, the words at the Supper, which, amidst the variations in the four accounts we have of them (&nbsp;Matthew 26:26-28, &nbsp;Mark 14:22-25, &nbsp;Luke 22:19-20, &nbsp;1 Corinthians 11:23-25), present certain very distinguishable ideas. The bread is Christ’s body, the cup is Christ’s blood. The body is given or broken and the blood is shed for the disciples (in Mt. and Mk. ‘for many’). The very variations support the general meaning put upon the act. If Mt. and Mk. have not the words ‘given’ or ‘broken’ spoken of the body (Luke, Paul?), both have ‘shed for many’ of the blood. Lk. has both ‘given for you’ and ‘poured out for you’; St. Paul, on the other hand, has ‘My body, which is [broken?] for you,’ but not the corresponding ‘shed for you.’ All agree in the leading feature, that Jesus said: ‘This is my blood of the covenant’ (Mt., Mk.), or ‘This cup is the new covenant in my blood’ (Luke, Paul). Mt. adds: ‘which is shed for many unto the remission of sins.’ Even if it were conceded, what there is no necessity for conceding, that this <i> logion </i> is less original than the others [there is probably a reminiscence of &nbsp;Jeremiah 31:34], it has at least the value that it shows the sense in which Christ’s words were understood in the Apostolic age. That Jesus, therefore, in the words at the Supper, represents His death as a sacrifice for the salvation of many, and definitely connects the shedding of His blood with the remission of sins and the making of a New Covenant, is nearly as certain as anything in exegesis can be. The question that remains is—With what special sacrifice does Jesus regard His death as connected (Passover, ratificatory sacrifices at Sinai)? Probably it is not necessary to decide between different views. Jesus may well have regarded His death as fulfilling the truth of all propitiatory sacrifice. </p> <p> There is yet one other fact to which attention needs to be directed in this connexion. The death of Jesus is evidently dwelt upon by the [[Evangelists]] with a special sense of solemnity and mystery, and there are features in the story of His [[Passion]] which deepen this feeling of mystery, and compel us to seek some special explanation. Such features are the mental perturbation which the thought of His death awoke in Jesus (‘Now is my soul troubled,’ etc., &nbsp;John 12:27); the sore amazement and sorrow even unto death in the [[Garden]] (&nbsp;Mark 14:33-34); the sweat as of drops of blood, and words about the [[Cup]] (&nbsp;Luke 22:42-44, &nbsp;Matthew 26:39); the awful words upon the Cross, speaking to a loss of the sense and comfort of God’s presence (&nbsp;Matthew 27:46, &nbsp;Mark 15:14). We recall M‘Leod Campbell’s words: ‘When [[I]] think of our Lord as tasting death, it seems to me as if He alone ever truly tasted death’ ( <i> [[Atonement]] </i> , ch. vii.). Is there nothing which connects itself with Christ’s position as sin-bearer here? It is not thus martyrs are wont to die; not thus did Stephen, or Paul, or [[Ignatius]] die. Why, then, so strange a contrast in the Lord and Master of them all? On any hypothesis, must we not say that we have here something which takes <i> this </i> death out of the rank of simple martyrdom? Let us now take with this Christ’s last cry upon the cross, ‘It is finished’ </p>
       
 
<ref name="term_18995"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/bridgeway-bible-dictionary/redemption Redemption from Bridgeway Bible Dictionary]</ref>
== References ==
       
<references>
<ref name="term_81357"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/watson-s-biblical-theological-dictionary/redemption Redemption from Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_57137"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-new-testament/redemption+(2) Redemption from Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_68415"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/morrish-bible-dictionary/redemption Redemption from Morrish Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_20416"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/charles-buck-theological-dictionary/redemption Redemption from Charles Buck Theological Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_33292"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/easton-s-bible-dictionary/redemption Redemption from Easton's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_62520"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/king-james-dictionary/redemption Redemption from King James Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_57721"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/redemption Redemption from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
       
</references>
</references>

Revision as of 10:08, 13 October 2021

Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament [1]

Among the figures employed by the apostolical writers to set forth the nature of the transaction by which our Lord has saved His people, none is more illuminating than that which we are accustomed to speak of as ‘redemption.’ The terms ‘redeem,’ ‘redemption,’ ‘redeemer’ are a gift of the Latin Bible to our theological language. They fail in complete exactness as renderings of the terms which they are used to translate in the apostolical writings, in so far as there still clings to them the notion, intrinsic in their form, that the buying which they denote is distinctively a ‘buying back.’ The English word ‘ransom,’ etymologically a doublet of ‘redeem,’ has more completely lost its etymological implication of specifically ‘buying back,’ taking on in its stead rather that of ‘buying out.’ The series ‘ransom,’ ‘ransoming,’ ‘Ransomer’ might on this account serve better as equivalents of the Greek words currently employed by the apostolical writers to convey this idea. These are: [λύτρον,  Matthew 20:28,  Mark 10:45]; ἀντίλυτρον,  1 Timothy 2:6; λυτροῦσθαι,  Luke 24:21,  Titus 2:14,  1 Peter 1:18; λύτρωσις,  Luke 1:68;  Luke 2:38,  Hebrews 9:12; ἀπολύτρωσις,  Luke 21:28,  Romans 3:24;  Romans 8:23,  1 Corinthians 1:30,  Ephesians 1:7;  Ephesians 1:14;  Ephesians 4:30,  Colossians 1:14,  Hebrews 9:15;  Hebrews 11:35; [λυτρωτής,  Acts 7:35]. No words provided by the Greek language could convey more distinctly the idea which we commonly express by the term ‘ransoming.’ Their current employment by the writers of the NT to describe the action of our Lord in setting His people free is proof enough of itself that this action was thought of by them not broadly as ‘deliverance,’ but as a deliverance in the distinct mode of ‘ransoming.’ If ‘deliverance’ alone, without implication of the mode of accomplishing it, had been what was intended to be expressed, the simple forms λύειν, λύσις, λυτήρ or some of their strengthened prepositional compounds lay at hand. These were in common use in the sense of ‘delivering,’ and indeed some of them (like λύεσθαι and ἀπολύεσθαι) had even acquired the special sense of ‘ransoming.’ Instead of them, however, the NT writers elected to employ forms which embody in their very structure an open assertion that the mode of deliverance spoken of is by ‘ransom.’ To say λύτρον is to say ‘ransom’; and to say λυτροῦσθαι, λύτρωσις, is to say λύτρον; while ἀπολύτρωσις is but a stronger way of saying λύτρωσις.

Of course, even words like these, in the very form of which the modal implication is entrenched, and which owe, in fact, their existence to the need of words emphasizing the mode unambiguously, may come to be used so loosely that this implication retires into the background or even entirely out of sight. In our common English usage the words ‘redeem,’ ‘redemption,’ ‘redeemer’ retain no sure intimation of their etymological denotation of ‘buying back,’ but suggest ordinarily only a ‘buying out.’ They are sometimes used so loosely as to convey no implication even of purchase. That λυτροῦσθαι, λύτρωσις, ἀπολύτρωσις have suffered in their NT usage such a decay of their essential significance cannot be assumed, however, without clear proof. In point of fact, the actual accompaniments of their usage forbid such an assumption. In a number of instances of their occurrence the intimation of a price paid is prominent in the context; in other words, the deliverance spoken of is definitely intimated as a ransoming. In the remaining instances this intimation becomes no doubt rather an assumption, grounded in their form and their usage elsewhere; but that is no reason for neglecting it. The apparently varying usage of the terms depends merely on an oscillation of emphasis between the two elements of thought combined in them. Sometimes the emphasis is thrown on the mode in which the deliverance asserted is wrought-namely, by ransoming. Sometimes, on the other hand, it is shifted to the issue of the ransoming which is affirmed-namely, in deliverance. In the former case the stress falls so strongly on the idea of ransoming that the mind tends to rest exclusively on the act of purchasing or the price paid. In the latter it rests so strongly on the idea of deliverance that we are tempted to forget that an act of ransoming is assumed as its procuring cause. In neither case, however, is either element of thought really suppressed entirely. Christ’s ransoming of His people is of course always thought of as issuing in their deliverance. His deliverance of His people is equally thought of always as accomplished by a ransoming.

We may be surprised to observe that the epithet ‘Redeemer’ (‘Ransomer,’ λυτρωτής) is never applied to our Lord in the NT. Even the broader designation, ‘Deliverer,’ is applied to Him only once, and that in a quotation from the OT (ὁ ῥυόμενος  Romans 11:26, from  Isaiah 59:20; cf.  1 Thessalonians 1:10). In fact, we do not meet with ‘Redeemer’ (λυτρωτής) as a designation of our Lord in extant Christian literature, until the middle of the 2nd cent. (Justin, Dial. xxx. 3; cf. lxxxiii. 3), and it does not seem to become common until three centuries later. Nevertheless, Justin himself tells us that it was in ordinary use in the Christian community when he wrote. ‘For we call Him Helper and Redeemer,’ he says, with an allusion to  Psalms 19:14. And it seems that in the only instance of the appearance of the term in the NT- Acts 7:35, where it is used of Moses-its employment as a designation of our Lord is already pre-supposed. For it is applied to Moses here only as the type of Christ, and with a very distinct reference to the antitype in the choice of the word. The Israelites had demanded of Moses, ‘Who made thee a ruler and a judge?’ Stephen, driving home his lesson, declares that him who was thus rejected as ‘ruler and judge’ God has sent ‘both as ruler and as redeemer.’ The both … and’ is to be noted as well as the change of term. ‘Redeemer’ is introduced with great emphasis; attention is called markedly to it as a significant point in the argument. ‘Observe,’ says H. A. W. Meyer, ‘the climax introduced by λυτρωτήν in relation to the preceding δικαστήν. It is introduced because the obstinacy of the people against Moses is type of the antagonism to Christ and His work (v. 51); consequently, Moses in his work of deliverance is a type of Christ, who has effected the λύτρωσις of the people in the highest sense ( Luke 1:68;  Luke 2:38,  Hebrews 9:12,  Titus 2:14)’ (Commentary on the NT; ‘Acts,’ vol. i. [1877] p. 204 f.). We must look upon the absence of instances of the application of the epithet ‘Redeemer’ to Christ in early Christian writers, therefore, as merely a literary phenomenon. Christians were from the first accustomed to speak of their Lord as ‘Redeemer.’ The usage undoubtedly was not so rich and full in the earlier ages of the Church as it has since become. The intense concreteness of the term probably accounts in part for this. But it was already in use to express the apostolic conception of the function of our Lord as Saviour.

The basis of this apostolic conception is laid in our Lord’s own declaration, ‘For verily the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many’ ( Mark 10:45,  Matthew 20:28), a declaration elucidated and enforced in those others, preserved by John, in which He speaks of laying down His life for the sheep ( John 10:11), or His friends ( John 15:13), or of giving His flesh for the life of the world ( John 6:51). In this great declaration our Lord is commending a life of service to His disciples by His own signal example. He adduces His example after a fashion which runs on precisely the lines repeated by Paul in  Philippians 2:5 ff. He calls Himself by the lofty name of the Son of Man, and, by thus throwing the exaltation of His Person into contrast with the lowliness of the work He was performing, He enhances the value of His example to a life of service. He describes His whole mission in the world as service, and He adverts to His ransoming death as the culminating act of the service which He came into the world to render. He, the heavenly man of Daniel’s vision ( Daniel 7:13), came into the world for no other purpose than to perform a service for men which involved the giving of His life as a ransom for them. Thus He makes His ransoming death the final cause of His whole manifestation in the world. The terms He employs to describe His death as a ransom are as simple and precise as possible. He speaks of ‘giving his life,’ emphasizing the voluntariness of the act. He speaks of giving His life as a ‘ransom,’ using the most exact word the Greek language affords (λύτρον) to express the price paid to secure the release of prisoners, the manumission of slaves (see A. Deissmann, Light from the Ancient East, p. 322 ff., with some of the necessary correctives in T. Zahn, Der Brief an die Römer, 1910, p. 180, note 51 from the middle), or the purchase of immunity for faults committed against Deity (see F. Steinleitner, Die Beicht im Zusammenhange mit der sakralen Rechtspflege in der Antike, p. 37 f.). He speaks of giving His life as a ransom ‘for,’ or rather ‘in the place of,’ ‘instead of,’ ‘many,’ the preposition (ἀντί) employed emphasizing the idea of exchange, or, we may say shortly, of substitution. In this declaration, then, our Lord Himself sets forth in language as precise as possible His work of service for man as culminating in the vicarious payment by His voluntary death of a ransom price for them. This is what He came to do; and in this, therefore, is summed up briefly the nature of His work for men.

It would be strange if so remarkable a declaration had produced no echoes in the teaching of our Lord’s followers. A very distinct echo of it sounds in  1 Timothy 2:6, where it is declared of the man Christ Jesus, the only Mediator between God and men, that ‘he gave himself a ransom for all.’ The term employed for ‘ransom’ here is a strengthened form (ἀντίλυτρον), in which the idea of exchange, already intrinsic to the simple form (λύτρον), is made still more explicit. This idea having thus been thrown into prominence in the term itself, the way was opened to add an intimation of those with whom the exchange is made by means of a preposition which indicates them as beneficiaries of it (ὑπέρ). The voluntariness of the ransoming transaction on our Lord’s part is intimated when it is said that He ‘gave himself’ a ransom for all, a phrase the full reference of which on Paul’s lips may be gathered from  Galatians 1:4 : ‘who gave himself for our sins’ (cf.  Galatians 2:20,  Ephesians 5:2;  Ephesians 5:25). Every element of thought contained in  Mark 10:45,  Matthew 20:28, in a word, is repeated here; and what is there represented by our Lord as the substance of His mission, is here declared by Paul to be the sum of the gospel committed to him to preach. It is the ‘testimony in its own times, whereunto I was appointed a preacher and an apostle’ ( 1 Timothy 2:7).

It is only an elaboration of the central idea of this declaration when Paul ( Titus 2:14), stirred to the depths of his being by the remembrance of all that he owes to ‘our great God and Saviour, Jesus Christ,’ for ‘the epiphany of whose glory’ he is looking forward as his most ‘blessed hope,’ celebrates in burning words the great transaction to which he attributes it all: ‘who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a people for his own possession, zealous of good works.’ The fundamental fact thrown up to observation here too is that Jesus Christ ‘gave himself for us.’ The assertion is the same as that of  1 Timothy 2:6, and the meaning is the same: our Lord voluntarily gave Himself as a ransom for our benefit. This statement dominates the whole passage, and doubtless has determined the choice of the verb ‘ransom’ in the first clause of the telic sentence which follows. But it is the effects of this ransoming which are particularly developed. Paul’s mind is intent in this context on conduct. He would have his converts live worthily of the grace of God which has come to them, their eyes set upon the recompense of the reward. If Christ gave Himself for our sins, it was that we might sin no more. That is expressed in  Galatians 1:4 thus: ‘That he might deliver us out of this present evil world.’ It is expressed here thus: ‘That he might ransom us from all iniquity and purify for himself a people for his own possession, zealous of good works.’ The two statements have fundamentally the same content, expressed, however, in the one case negatively, and in the other positively. Christ ransomed us by the gift of Himself, that we might no longer belong to the world but to Him. To belong to Christ is to be holy; and therefore those who are His, while still in the world must live soberly, righteously, and godly, expecting His coming, that their deliverance out of this evil world may be completed. The verbs used in the two statements are, however, different. In the one case, the verb employed (ἐξαιρεῖσθαι,  Galatians 1:4) declares the effect wrought exclusively, with no intimation of the mode of action by which it is attained: the purpose of Christ’s giving Himself for our sins is our rescue, deliverance, out of the present evil world. In the other case, the verb employed (λυτροῦσθαι,  Titus 2:14) has a distinct modal connotation: Christ’s purpose in giving Himself for us is to ransom us from every iniquity, and thus to purify for Himself a people of His own, zealous of good works. The concept of ransom intrinsic in Christ’s giving Himself for us is here expressly carried over to the ultimate effects, our deliverance from all iniquity, and our purification for Christ, ‘so that,’ as B. Weiss puts it, ‘His giving Himself up for our liberation from guilt is conceived as the ransom-price, apart from which these things could not result’ (Die Briefe Pauli an Timotheus und Titus5, 1885, p. 384 n.[Note: . note.]). This is only to say, in our current modes of speech, that the ransom paid by Christ, when He gave Himself for us, purchases for us not only relief from the guilt but also release from the power of sin.

How little such a reference to the revolution wrought in the life of Christians empties the term ‘to ransom’ of its implication of purchase may be learned from  1 Peter 1:8 f. Peter is here as completely engrossed with conduct as Paul is in  Titus 2:14. He too is exhorting his readers to a life, during their sojourn here expecting the revelation of the Lord, consonant with their high dignity as a people of God’s own possession. And he too seeks to gain force for his exhortation by reminding them of what they owe to Christ their Ransomer. The thing asserted to be secured by this ransoming is, with Peter as with Paul, an ethical deliverance. ‘Knowing,’ says he, ‘that ye were redeemed … from your vain manner of life handed down from your fathers’ ( 1 Peter 1:18). The thought is closely similar to that of  Galatians 1:4 : ‘That he might deliver us out of this present evil world.’ If we should be tempted to suppose that, therefore, the term ‘ransomed,’ as here used, has lost its implication of purchase, and become the exact equivalent of the ‘deliver’ of  Galatians 1:4, Peter at once undeceives us by emphasizing precisely the idea of purchasing. The peculiarity of the passage consists just in the fullness with which it dwells on the price paid for our deliverance. Paul contented himself in  Titus 2:14 with saying merely that Christ ‘gave himself for us.’ Peter tells us that this means that He poured out His blood for us. ‘Ransomed’ here, although used exactly as in  Titus 2:14, cannot possibly mean simply ‘delivered.’ It means distinctively, ‘delivered by means of the payment of a price.’

What the price was which Christ paid to ransom us ‘from our vain manner of life, handed down from our fathers,’ Peter develops with great fullness, both negatively and positively. Negatively, he tells us, it was no corruptible thing, no silver or gold. His mind is running on the usual commodities employed in the ordinary ransomings familiar to everyday life; and we perceive that he intends to represent the ransoming of which Christians are the object as similar in kind to them. It differed from them only in the incomparable greatness of the price paid; and this carries with it the greatness of the evil from which it delivers us and the greatness of the good which it secures for us. The price paid, Peter tells us positively, is the blood of Christ. This blood he characterizes in a two-fold manner. On the one hand, he speaks of it, enhancing its value, as precious. It is at great cost that we have been ransomed. On the other hand, intimating the source of its efficacy, he compares it with the blood ‘of a lamb without blemish and without spot’ ( 1 Peter 1:19). The sacrificial allusion here is manifest, whether we think (with Hermann Gunkel), through the medium of Is 53, of the ordinary offerings (cf.  Leviticus 23:12), or (with F. J. A. Hort) particularly of the Paschal lamb (cf.  Exodus 12:5). The main point to observe is that Peter feels no incongruity in blending the ideas of ransom and sacrifice. The blood which Christ shed as a sacrifice is the blood by which we are ransomed. The two modes of representation express a single fact.

Peter does not inform his readers of these things as something new to them. He presents them as matters which are of common knowledge: ‘knowing, as you do, that,’ etc. ‘It is an appeal to an elementary Christian belief’ (F. J. A. Hort, The First Epistle of St. Peter I. 1-II. 17, p. 75). Of course, then, there are other allusions to them, more or less full, scattered through the NT. There is, for instance, a similar conjunction of the notions of sacrifice and ransom in  Hebrews 9:12. There we are told that Christ, in contrast with the priests of the old dispensation, ‘a high priest of the good things to come, … not by means of the blood of goats and calves, but by means of his own blood, entered in once for all into the holy place having obtained eternal ransoming.’ There are not two acts intimated here: by the one shedding of His blood, Christ both entered once for all into the holy place and obtained an eternal ransoming. The correspondence of the ‘once for all’ in the one clause and the ‘eternal’ in the other should not be overlooked; it is a binding link assimilating the two assertions to one another. Christ, unlike the Levitical priests with their repeated entrances, entered the holy place ‘once for all,’ because the ransoming He was obtaining through His blood was not like theirs, temporary in its effect, but ‘eternal,’ that is to say, of never-failing absoluteness (cf. ‘eternal Spirit,’  Hebrews 9:14, ‘eternal inheritance,’  Hebrews 9:15). The effect of the sacrificial shedding of Christ’s blood is here expressed in terms of ransoming.

Precisely how this author conceived this ransoming is made plain by a phrase which he employs three verses further on: ‘a death having taken place for the ransoming of the transgressions.’ He is still contrasting the effective work of Christ with the merely representative work of the Old Covenant. A promise had been given of an eternal inheritance. But men had not received the heritage which had thus been promised. Their sins stood in the way, and there was no sacrifice which took away sin. Christ had now brought such a sacrifice. In His case a death had taken place ‘for the ransoming of the transgressions’ which they had committed. ‘Ransoming’ here conveys a meaning which might have been conveyed by ‘expiation.’ The term used is not the simple form λύτρωσις, but the strengthened form ἀπολύτρωσις; and the construction is inexact-it is not the transgressions but the transgressors that are ransomed. But the meaning is plain. ‘The genitive expresses in a wide sense the object on which the redemption is exercised (“redemption in the matter of the transgressions,” “transgression-redemption”)’ (B. F. Westcott, Hebrews, p. 264). It was because men had sinned that they required to be ransomed; sin had brought them into a condition from which they could be delivered only by a ransom. And the ransom required was a death. The matter is put quite generally ‘a death having taken place for ransoming the transgressions.’ This death was, in point of fact, Christ’s death; and it was because it was Christ’s death that it was adequate to its end ( Hebrews 9:14). But the fundamental point in our present passage is that Christ could ransom men from their sins, that is to say, from the consequences of their sins, including, of course, that consciousness of sin which bites into the conscience ( Hebrews 9:14), only by dying. By sacrificing Himself He put away sin ( Hebrews 9:26); He was offered to bear the sins of many ( Hebrews 9:28). The images of sacrifice and of ransoming are inextricably interwoven, but it easily emerges that Christ is thought of, in giving Himself to death, as giving Himself as a ransom-price to deliver men from the guilt and penalties of sin.

This representation meets us again, very tersely put, in  Ephesians 1:7, of which  Colossians 1:14 is a slightly less completely expressed repetition. The ransoming (ἀπολύτρωσις) which is in Christ, described with more particularity in Ephesians again as having been procured ‘through his blood,’ is in both passages alike identified immediately with ‘the remission of our trespasses’ (Eph.), or ‘of our sins’ (Col.). ‘The studied precision,’ as J. B. Lightfoot phrases it in his note on  Colossians 1:14, with which the ransoming is thus defined to be just ‘remission of sins,’ is the more noteworthy because it is apparently directly contrasted as such with the wider ‘deliverance’ (ἐρύσατο) from the power of darkness and removal into the Kingdom of the Son of God’s love, for which it supplies the ground. It is because Christ has at the cost of His blood, that is, by dying for us, purchased for us remission of sins (which is our ransoming), that we have deliverance from the tyranny of darkness and are transferred under His own rule. We thus reach a very close determination of the exact point at which the ransoming act of Christ operates, and of the exact evil from which it immediately relieves us. It relieves us of the guilt and the penal consequences of our sins; and only through that relief does it secure to ns other blessings. It is, at its very centre, just ‘the remission of our sins’ that we have in Christ when we have in Him our ransoming.

The great passage in which the nature of our ransoming is unfolded for us, however, is  Romans 3:24. There, nearly all the scattered intimations of its essential nature found here and there in other passages are gathered together in one comprehensive statement. The fundamental declarations of this very pregnant passage are, that men, being sinners, can be justified only gratuitously, by an act of pure grace on God’s part; that God, however, can so act towards them in His grace, only because there is a ransoming (ἀπολύτρωσις) available for them in Christ Jesus; and that this ransoming was procured by the death of Christ as an expiatory sacrifice, enabling God righteously to forgive sins. The ransoming found-perhaps we may even say stored-in Christ Jesus is here represented as the result of His sacrificial death; this sacrificial death is made the ground of God’s forgiveness of sins; and this forgiveness of sins is identified with the justification which God gratuitously grants believing sinners. The blending of the ideas of ransoming and expiation is complete; the ‘blood of Christ,’ in working the one, works also the other. The ascription to God of the whole process of justification, including apparently the ransoming act itself, which is usually (but not always) ascribed to Christ, but which is thus traced back through Christ to God, whose will in this too Christ does, is apparently due to the emphasis with which, throughout the passage, the entirety of salvation, in all its elements, is attributed to God’s free grace. This emphasis on the gratuitousness of the whole saving process is the most noticeable feature of the passage. It has been strangely contended (e.g. by T. Zahn) that it is inconsistent with the conception of a ransom, strictly taken. There is, however, not even an antinomy here: the gratuitousness of justification quoad homines cannot possibly exclude the grounding of that act in the blood of Christ, as a ransom paid for men from without. What the passage teaches is, that all men have sinned and have failed to attain the glory God has in mind for them; all are in this matter in like case; those whom God justifies-namely, all believers-are, then, justified freely, by God’s grace alone. But it does not teach that God acts thus, in His free grace, justifying sinners gratuitously so far as they are concerned, arbitrarily and with no adequate ground for His action. On the contrary, it asserts a ground for His justifying act; and the ground which it asserts is the ransoming that is in Christ Jesus. It says, indeed, ‘not on the ground of the ransoming that is in Christ Jesus’ (διὰ τὴν ἀπολύτρωσιν), but ‘through the instrumentality of the ransoming that is in Christ Jesus’ (διὰ τῆς ἀπολυτρώσεως). But this is only a formal difference. What Paul says is, that the ransoming that is in Christ Jesus is the means by which men, being sinners, are brought by God into a justification which they cannot secure for themselves. If the ransoming that is in Christ Jesus is the means by which alone they can be justified, that is only another way of saying that God, who gratuitously justifies them in His grace, proceeds in this act in view of nothing in them, but solely in view of the ransoming that is in Christ Jesus. How this ransoming comes to be in Christ Jesus is, then, immediately explained: God has set Him forth as an expiatory sacrifice through faith in His blood, for the manifestation of His righteousness in the forgiveness of sins. Christ, then, has been offered as an expiatory sacrifice; this enables God to forgive sins righteously; those thus forgiven are justified gratuitously; and this justification has taken place in view of, and that is as much as to say by means of, the ransoming which has resulted from the shedding of the blood of Christ. The ransoming provided by Christ is, in a word, the means by which God is rendered gracious; and in this His grace, thus secured for us, He gratuitously justifies us, although we, as sinners, have no claim upon this justification.

The fundamental idea underlying the representation of salvation as a ransoming is its costliness. In some of the passages which have been adduced this idea is thrown very prominently forward. This is the case with  Romans 3:24, and, indeed, with all the passages in which Christ is said to have given ‘Himself,’ or ‘His blood,’ as a ransom for His people; and it is elaborated in much detail in such passages as  Hebrews 9:12 and  1 Peter 1:18 f. But the emphasis often falls no less on the value of the acquisition obtained, and that both on its negative and on its positive sides. Naturally it is the eschatological aspects of this acquisition on which ordinarily most stress is laid. These eschatological aspects of our ransoming are brought very decidedly into the foreground, for example, in  Titus 2:14,  1 Peter 1:18, and not less so in  Hebrews 9:12,  Ephesians 1:7,  Colossians 1:14. When the mind is thus occupied with the eschatological results of the ransoming, it is apt to be relatively less engaged with the nature of the ransoming act itself, and we may be tempted to read the term ‘ransoming’ as if its whole implication were absorbed in the simple idea of ‘deliverance.’ This is, of course, not really the case. The term ‘ransoming’ is employed instead of one by which nothing more than ‘deliverance’ would be expressed, precisely because the writer is conscious that the deliverance of which he is speaking has been secured only at a cost, and instinctively employs a term which intimates this fact. It was thus a true feeling which led James Morison (A Critical Exposition of the Third Chapter of Paul’s Epistle to the Romans, 1866, p. 254) to insist that by the terms in question is expressed not mere deliverance, but ‘deliverance which is effected in a legitimate way, and in consistency with the rights and claims of all parties concerned.’ We must, however, go a step further and recognize that the deliverance intimated by these terms is thought of distinctively as resting on a purchase, as, in a word, the issue of a ransoming. This is, at all events, the state of the case with the NT instances.

When we read, for example, in  Romans 8:23, that we, in this life, are groaning within ourselves, waiting for our adoption, and then this adoption is defined as ‘the ransoming (ἀπολύτρωσις) of our body,’ the word ‘ransoming’ cannot be taken out of hand as merely ‘deliverance,’ and much less can it be supposed to intimate that a special ransom shall be paid at the last day for the deliverance of the body. What is meant is that the deliverance of our bodies-by which is intended just our resurrection, connected in this context with the repristination of the physical universe, an object as yet of hope only-shall be experienced in due season, not as something with the salvation we are enjoying here and now in its first-fruits, but as its consummation; that is to say, as one of the results of the ransom paid by Christ in His blood on the Cross, from which flow all the blessings which, as believers, we receive. It is because Paul’s mind is fixed upon this fundamental ransom-paying that he uses here a term which imports a ransoming and not one of mere deliverance.

Similarly, when we read in the closing words ( Ephesians 1:14) of that splendid hymn of praise which opens the Epistle to the Ephesians, that believers, having received the promised Spirit, defined specifically as ‘the earnest of the inheritance,’ have been ‘sealed unto the ransoming of the acquired possession, to the praise of God’s glory,’ every element in the wording of the statement itself, and of the context as well, cries out against seeing in the term ‘ransoming’ anything else but a reminder that this deliverance is an issue of the ransom-paying of Christ in His blood. This ransom-paying had just ( Ephesians 1:7) been defined as made by Christ in His blood, and as consisting in the remission of our trespasses. As it is impossible to suppose that the term is used in two radically different senses in the same sentence, so it is impossible to imagine that those who are delivered are described expressly as God’s ‘acquired possession,’ and their deliverance is made dependent upon their reception of the Spirit, described specifically as ‘the earnest of their inheritance,’ without a very precise intention of connecting this deliverance with the ransom-paying out of which it flows as its consummation. And, this being true, it is quite clear that ‘the day of ransoming’ of  Ephesians 4:30 does not mean the day on which the ransom shall be paid, nor merely the day of a deliverance wrought somehow or other not intimated, but distinctly the day on which there shall be actually experienced the ultimate results of the ransom-paying which Christ has made ‘through his blood’ ( Ephesians 1:7), that is, at His death on the Cross, assured to believers, because they are sealed thereto by the Holy Spirit of God, received now as the earnest of their inheritance.

There seems no reason to doubt that the same conception underlies the language of our Lord ( Luke 21:28) when He encourages His followers to see in the signs of the coming of the Son of Man, fearful to others, the indications of their approaching ‘ransoming’ (ἀπολύτρωσις): ‘But when these things begin to come to pass, look up, and lift up your heads; because your ransoming draweth nigh.’ He does not point them to the time when the ransom which He came into the world to pay ( Mark 10:45,  Matthew 20:28) is at length to be paid for them; neither does He promise them some other deliverance, different from that and disconnected with it, which they might expect some time in the undefined but distant future. He says ‘your ransoming,’ intimating that it was already theirs in sure expectation; He speaks of it as ‘drawing nigh,’ recognizing that it was eagerly looked for. He is, of course, pointing to the complete realization of the ransoming of which He speaks in the actual deliverance which shall be experienced. But when He speaks of this deliverance as a ‘ransoming’ He is equally, of course, referring it as its result to a ransom-paying which secures it; and can we doubt that what was in His mind was His own promise that He would give His life a ransom in the place of many?

This declaration of our Lord’s ( Luke 21:28) may lead us to the two or three passages (all, like it, occurring in Luke’s Gospel,  Luke 1:68,  Luke 2:38,  Luke 24:21) which differ from the other instances in which the terms denoting ‘ransoming’ are employed in the NT, in that they do not have the great basal assertion of our Lord ( Mark 10:45,  Matthew 20:28) behind them, but give expression to hopes nourished on the promises of the Old Covenant. We read of Zacharias, on the birth of his prophetic son, praising the God of Israel, because ‘he hath visited and wrought ransoming (λύτρωσις) for his people’ ( Luke 1:68); and of Anna, the prophetess, on seeing the infant Jesus in the Temple, giving ‘thanks unto God, and speaking of him to all them that were looking for the ransoming (λύτρωσις) of Jerusalem’ ( Luke 2:38); and of the two disciples, sorrowing over Jesus’ death, sadly telling their unknown Companion, as they journeyed together to Emmaus: ‘We hoped that it was he that should ransom (λυτροῦσθαι) Israel’ ( Luke 24:21). Obviously these passages stand somewhat apart from those which embody the apostolic conception of the nature of the saving work of Christ. They represent rather the anticipations of the faithful in Israel with respect to the salvation promised to God’s people. Their interest to us is due to the use in them of the same terminology to express Israel’s hope which afterwards was employed by the apostles when they described Christ’s work as at its root a ransom-paying. As we can hardly ascribe to these aspirations of saints taught by the OT revelation so clearly cut and definitely conceived a conviction that the Divine deliverance for which they were waiting was to be specifically a ransoming, as we have ascribed to the apostolic writers with respect to the deliverance wrought by Christ, the question easily arises whether we have not overpressed the apostles’ language, and whether it would not be better to interpret their declarations from the vaguer, if we should not rather say the looser or at least the broader, use of the same terms in these earlier passages which represent a usage going back into the OT.

Such has been the method of many expositors (the typical instance is commonly taken from H. Oltramare on  Romans 3:24; cf. the corrective in Sanday-Headlam on the same passage). Following it, they have felt entitled or bound to empty the language of the apostles, which literally expresses the idea of ransoming, when speaking of the work of Christ, more or less completely of all such implication, and to read it as conveying merely the broad idea of delivering. This method of dealing with the apostolic usage is, however, quite misleading. The language of the apostles is altogether too definite to permit such a process of evacuation to be carried successfully through with respect to it. Their teaching as to the nature of our Lord’s work as an act of ransoming is not conveyed exclusively by the implication of the ransoming terms which they prevailingly employ in speaking of it; they use other terms also, of similar meaning, side by side with them (cf.  Acts 20:28,  1 Corinthians 6:20;  1 Corinthians 7:23,  Galatians 3:13,  2 Peter 2:1,  Revelation 5:9;  Revelation 14:3-4); and they often expound their meaning in the sense of ransoming in great detail. It must not be permitted to drop out of sight that something happened between the prophetic promises of the Old Covenant reflected in the anticipations of the early days of the gospel, and the dogmatic expositions of the nature of the work of Christ by the apostles, which was revolutionary precisely with respect to the conceptions held by God’s people of the nature of His great intervention for their deliverance. We cannot interpret the apostles’ exposition of the meaning of the death of Christ and the manner in which it produces its effect-which was to them the most tremendous of experienced facts-wholly within the limits of the anticipations of even the most devout of Israelites who, at the best, only dimly perceived the necessity of a suffering Messiah ( Luke 20:25 f.). We must expect a precision in defining the mode of God’s deliverance of His people to enter in after the experience of it as a fact, which could not exist before; and that the more, because a model which necessarily dominated all their teaching had been given His followers by our Lord Himself ( Mark 10:45,  Matthew 20:28) for interpreting the nature of His work and the meaning of His death. F. J. A. Hort is certainly right in saying, when speaking of  1 Peter 1:19 : ‘The starting point of this and all similar language in the Epistles is our Lord’s saying in  Matthew 20:28 ||  Mark 10:45’ (cf. also B. F. Westcott, Ephesians, 1906, p. 140, and even, though more cautiously, A. Deissmann, Light from the Ancient East, p. 331). Moreover, the primary assumption of this method of determining the apostolic usage of these terms is not unquestionable-to wit, that, in their earlier use, running back into the OT, the implication of purchase has dropped wholly out of sight, and only the broad sense of delivering has been retained. It is at least noticeable that the OT persistently employs terms with the implication of purchase, when speaking whether of the great typical deliverances from Egypt and the Captivity or of the greater deliverance typified by them which Jahweh was yet to bring to His people. This is no more a phenomenon of the Septuagintthan of the underlying Hebrew; and it does not appear that it is due to a complete decay of feeling for the implication of purchase intrinsic in these terms. No doubt they are sometimes used when we see nothing further necessary for the sense than simple deliverance, and sometimes in parallelisms together with terms of simple deliverance. They are also used, however, when the implication of purchase is express. And we are not encouraged to think that they had ceased to bear their intrinsic meaning to the writers of the OT, even when applied to the greater matters of destiny, whether of the individual or of the nation, by such a passage, say, as  Psalms 49:7-8 : ‘None of them can by any means redeem (פרה, λυτροῦσθαι) his brother, nor give to God a ransom (בֹּפָר, ἐξίλασμα) for him: (for the redemption [פִּרְיוֹן, τὴν τιμὴν τῆς λυτρώσεως] of their life is costly …)’; or by such a passage as, say,  Isaiah 43:1 ff. ‘Fear not, for I have redeemed thee (נְּאַלְתִּיךָ, ἐλυτρωσάμην); … I have given Egypt as thy ransom (כָּפְרְךָ, ἄλλαγμα), Ethiopia and Sea for thee.… I have loved thee; therefore will I give men for thee, and peoples for thy life.’ The truth seems to be that the language of ransoming and redemption is employed in the OT to describe the deliverances which Israel had experienced or was yet to experience at the Divine hands, not because this language had lost to the writers of the OT its precise import, but in order to intimate that these deliverances were not, and were not to be, without cost. Even the later Jews were not without some sense of this, and looked about for the purchase-price. ‘With two bloods,’ says the Midrash on  Exodus 12:22, ‘were the Israelites delivered from Egypt, with the blood of the paschal lamb and with the blood of circumcision’ (A. Wünsche, Bibliotheca Rabbinica, ii. [1890] 135, as cited by F. J. A. Hort on  1 Peter 1:19, p. 79b). There is no compelling reason, then, why we should not recognize an implication of purchase, however undefined, even in  Luke 1:68;  Luke 2:38;  Luke 24:2 f.

If there be any instance in the NT of the use of a derivative of λύτρον, from which this implication is wholly absent, it will most probably be found in  Hebrews 11:35, where, in the bead-roll of the heroes of faith, we are told of some who were beaten to death, ‘not accepting the ransoming (ἀπολύτρωσις), that they might obtain a better resurrection.’ There is nothing in the context to intimate that the deliverance from their martyrdom which they refused was to be purchased by a ransom. But is anything further needed to carry this intimation than the employment of this particular word, in which the idea of a ransom is included? Is it not possible that the writer has selected this particular word (it is not employed in the account from which he is drawing) precisely in order to intimate that Eleazar and ‘the seven brethren with their mother’-if he is really alluding to their cases (2 Maccabees 6, 7)-felt apostasy too great a price to pay for their deliverance? They did not refuse a bare deliverance; they refused a deliverance on a condition, a deliverance which had to be paid for at a price which they rated as too high. The term employed is, at all events, perfectly adapted to express this fact; and the words of this stem, when used elsewhere in this Epistle, retain the implication of purchase ( 2 Maccabees 9:11;  2 Maccabees 9:15).

There is another passage in which we are practically dependent on the implications of the form itself, without the aid of contextual indications, to determine its meaning. This is  1 Corinthians 1:30, where the Apostle, in enumerating the contents of that wisdom which Christ has brought to His followers, orders the several elements, which he mentions, thus: ‘that is to say, righteousness and sanctification, and also ransoming.’ It is a little surprising to find the ‘ransoming’ (ἀπολύτρωσις) placed after the righteousness and sanctification, of which it is the condition. We may, therefore, be tempted to give it some looser sense in which it may appear to be conceived as following upon them, if not chronologically, at least logically. There seems to be no justification, however, for departing from the proper meaning of a word which is not only clear in its natural meaning, but is closely defined in other passages in Paul’s writings in accordance with this natural meaning. We may think, with Lightfoot and T. C. Edwards, of the eschatological usage of the word, and understand it ‘of redemption consummated in our deliverance from all sin and misery’; and suppose it to be mentioned last because referring to the final deliverance, and, therefore, ‘almost equivalent to ζωὴ αἰώνιος’ (Lightfoot, ad loc.; cf. also Edwards, ad loc.). Or we may think with H. A. W. Meyer and C. F. G. Heinrici of its ordinary use as the proper term to designate the act by which Christ purchased His people to Himself by the outpouring of His blood, and suppose it to be mentioned last in the enumeration of the blessings received from Christ, with the emphasis of climax, because it supplies the basis of those further acts of salvation (justification and the gift of the Spirit), by means of which righteousness and holiness are conveyed to believers. The one thing which we cannot easily suppose is that Paul has departed in this one instance from his uniform usage of a word which holds the rank of a technical term in his writings. A. Deissmann cries out: ‘This rare word occurs seven times in St. Paul!’ (op. cit. p. 331, n.[Note: . note.]2). The reason obviously is that Paul had something to say which he needed this word to say. Are we to suppose that he might just as well have used the common words, current in everyday speech, for what he had to say?

How little strange the idea of salvation as a thing purchased is to this particular Epistle may be observed from the declaration twice repeated: ‘Ye were bought with a price’ ( 1 Corinthians 6:20,  1 Corinthians 7:23), which Paul uses as an incitement to Christian effort. The addition to the assertion of the verb that we have been ‘bought,’ of the words, ‘with a price,’ serves to give great emphasis to the exclusion of all notion that salvation was acquired for us without the payment of an equivalent, and thus to make very prominent the essential idea of exchange which underlies the conception of ransoming. What the price was which was paid for our purchasing is not mentioned in these passages: it was too well understood to require explicit statement. It is similarly taken for granted in the like allusion in  2 Peter 2:1, where the false teachers who were vexing the Church are condemned as even ‘denying the Master (δεσπότης) that bought them.’ There is no question that they were bought: this pungent fact is rather treated as the fundamental thing in the consciousness of all Christians, and is therefore employed as a whip to their consciences to scourge them to right conduct towards their Master. In all these instances the stress falls on the ownership over us acquired by Christ by His purchase of us. They therefore naturally suggest the remarkable words of Paul, when, in bidding farewell to the Ephesian elders, he exhorts them ‘to feed the church of God, which he acquired by means of his own blood’ ( Acts 20:28). Although, however, not the specific ‘purchased’ but the broader ‘acquired’ is employed here, the emphasis is shifted from the mere fact of acquisition and consequent ownership to the costliness of the acquisition, and therefore the price paid for it is not only explicitly mentioned but strongly stressed. God has acquired His Church by means of His own blood, a paradoxical statement which presented no difficulties to Paul and his readers, but rather was freighted with the liveliest gratitude. Whence ‘the church of God’ was thus acquired ‘by means of his own blood,’ we learn from the new songs of the Apocalypse. It was ‘purchased out of the earth,’ ‘from among men’ ( Acts 14:3-4), or, more explicitly, ‘of every tribe, and tongue, and people, and nation’ ( Acts 5:9). And here we are reminded again of the great price which was paid for it, and of the great deliverance which was obtained for it at this great cost. The purchase-price was nothing less than ‘the blood of the Lamb,’ and they that are purchased are ‘loosed (λύειν, the primitive of λυτροῦσθαι) from their sins in his blood’ ( Acts 1:5), and made unto God ‘a kingdom and priests’ ( Acts 1:5,  Acts 5:10) who shall ‘reign upon the earth’ ( Acts 5:10). All the virtues gather to them-‘they are without blemish’ ( Acts 14:5). That nothing should be lacking to the presentation of the whole idea of ransoming outside the term itself, we find Paul employing the exact synonym, ‘to buy out’ (ἐξαγοράζειν), to express the common idea. ‘God sent forth his Son,’ he tells us, ‘born of a woman, born under the law, that he might buy out them under law, that we might receive the adoption of sons’ ( Galatians 4:4 f.);

Bridgeway Bible Dictionary [2]

In Bible days a slave could be set free from bondage by the payment of a price, often called the ransom. The whole affair was known as the redemption of the slave ( Leviticus 25:47-48). (The words ‘redeem’ and ‘ransom’ are related to the same root in the original languages.) The Bible speaks of redemption both literally (concerning everyday affairs) and pictorially (concerning what God has done for his people) ( Psalms 77:15;  Titus 2:14).

In the Old Testament

Under Israelite law, both people and things could be redeemed. In family matters, all Israelites had to redeem their firstborn. Since God had preserved Israel’s firstborn during the Passover judgment, they rightly belonged to him. Therefore, the parents had to redeem their firstborn by a payment of money to the sanctuary ( Exodus 13:2;  Exodus 13:13;  Numbers 18:15-16; see Firstborn ). In matters of property, if people became poor and sold land they had inherited from ancestors, either they or close relatives had to buy the land back (redeem it) as soon as possible ( Leviticus 25:25;  Ruth 4:3-6; see Sabbatical Year ).

If Israelites vowed to give God their children, animals, houses or land, they could redeem those things, again by a payment of money to the sanctuary ( Leviticus 27:1-25; see Vows ). If a farmer was under the death sentence because his ox had killed someone, his relatives could redeem him (since the death was accidental) by a payment of money to the dead person’s relatives ( Exodus 21:28-30). In all these cases there was the idea of release by the payment of a price.

Often God is said to have redeemed Israel; that is, to have delivered Israel from the power of its enemies ( Jeremiah 31:11;  Micah 4:10). The greatest of these acts of redemption was at the time of the exodus, when God delivered Israel from captivity in Egypt ( Exodus 6:6;  Exodus 15:13;  Psalms 106:9-10; see Exodus ). Centuries later, after Israel (Judah) had been taken captive to Babylon, there was a ‘second exodus’, when God again redeemed his people from bondage ( Isaiah 44:22-23;  Isaiah 48:20).

In these acts of redemption of Israel there is no suggestion that God paid anything to the enemy nations, as if he was under some obligation to them. Nevertheless, there is the suggestion that redemption cost God something; for he had to use his mighty power in acts of judgment to save his people ( Exodus 32:11;  Deuteronomy 4:37-38;  Deuteronomy 9:26;  Deuteronomy 9:29;  Isaiah 45:13;  Isaiah 52:3;  Isaiah 63:9).

In the New Testament

Besides being an everyday practice, redemption was a fitting picture of God’s activity in saving sinners. Those who sin are slaves of sin and under the sentence of death, and have no way of releasing themselves from bondage ( John 8:34;  Romans 6:17;  Romans 6:23;  1 John 5:19; cf.  Psalms 130:8). Jesus Christ came to give his life as a ransom for those under this sentence of death. His death brought forgiveness of sins and so released them from sin’s bondage ( Matthew 20:28;  Romans 3:24-25;  Galatians 3:13;  Ephesians 1:7;  Colossians 1:14;  1 Timothy 2:6;  Revelation 1:5).

Sinners are therefore redeemed by the blood of Christ. The ransom price he paid for them was his life laid down in sacrifice ( Hebrews 9:12;  1 Peter 1:18-19;  Revelation 5:9). They are freed from the power of sin in their lives now ( Hebrews 2:14-15), and will experience the fulness of their redemption when their bodies also are freed from the power of sin at Christ’s return. That event will bring about not only the final redemption for humankind but also the release of the world of nature from sin’s corrupting power ( Luke 21:28;  Romans 8:21-23;  Ephesians 4:30).

Paul at times makes a slightly different use of the illustration of slavery and redemption to remind Christians of their present responsibilities. When people are redeemed from the bondage of sin and the curse of the law, they come into a new life of liberty as the sons of God. Sin no longer has power over them, and they must show this to be true by the way they live ( Romans 8:2;  Galatians 3:13-14;  Galatians 4:4-7; cf.  Titus 2:14).

Yet, though free from sin, Christians are not free to do as they like. Because they have been bought with a price, they are now, in a sense, slaves of God. They must therefore be obedient to him, their new master ( Romans 6:16-18;  1 Corinthians 6:19-20;  1 Corinthians 7:22-23; see Servant ; Slave ).

Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary [3]

denotes our recovery from sin and death by the obedience and sacrifice of Christ, who, on this account, is called the Redeemer. "Being justified freely by his grace, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus,"  Romans 3:24 . "Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us,"  Galatians 3:13 . "In whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of his grace,"  Ephesians 1:7 . "Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition from your fathers; but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish, and without spot,"

 1 Peter 1:18-19 . "And ye are not your own, for ye are bought with a price,  1 Corinthians 6:19-20 .

By redemption, those who deny the atonement made by Christ wish to understand deliverance merely, regarding only the effect, and studiously putting out of sight the cause from which it flows. But the very terms used in the above cited passages, "to redeem," and "to be bought with a price," will each be found to refute this notion of a gratuitous deliverance, whether from sin or punishment, or both. Our English word, to redeem, literally means "to buy back;" and λυτροω , to redeem, and απολυτρωσις , redemption, are, both in Greek writers and in the New Testament, used for the act of setting free a captive, by paying λυτρον , a ransom or redemption price. But, as Grotius has fully shown, by reference to the use of the words both in sacred and profane writers, redemption signifies not merely "the liberation of captives," but deliverance from exile, death, and every other evil from which we may be freed; and λυτρον signifies every thing which satisfies another, so as to effect this deliverance. The nature of this redemption or purchased deliverance, (for it is not gratuitous liberation, as will presently appear,) is, therefore, to be ascertained by the circumstances of those who are the subjects of it. The subjects in the case before us are sinful men. They are under guilt, under "the curse of the law," the servants of sin, under the power and dominion of the devil, and "taken captive by him at his will," liable to the death of the body and to eternal punishment. To the whole of this case, the redemption, the purchased deliverance of man, as proclaimed in the Gospel, applies itself. Hence, in the above cited and other passages, it is said, "We have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins," in opposition to guilt; redemption from "the curse of the law;" deliverance from sin, that "we should be set free from sin;" deliverance from the power of Satan; from death, by a resurrection; and from future "wrath," by the gift of eternal life. Throughout the whole of this glorious doctrine of our redemption from these tremendous evils there is, however, in the New Testament, a constant reference to the λυτρον , the redemption price, which λυτρον is as constantly declared to be the death of Christ, which he endured in our stead, "The Son of man came to give his life a ransom for many,"   Matthew 20:28 . "Who gave himself a ransom for all,"   1 Timothy 2:6 . "In whom we have redemption through his blood,"

 Ephesians 1:7 . "Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, but with the precious blood of Christ,"   1 Peter 1:18-19 . That deliverance of man from sin, misery, and all other penal evils of his transgression, which constitutes our redemption by Christ, is not, therefore, a gratuitous deliverance, granted without a consideration, as an act of mere prerogative; the ransom, the redemption price, was exacted and paid; one thing was given for another, the precious blood of Christ for captive and condemned men. Of the same import are those passages which represent us as having been "bought," or "purchased" by Christ. St. Peter speaks of those "who denied the Lord τον αγορασαντα αυτους , that bought them;" and St. Paul, in the passage above cited, says, "Ye are bought with a price, ηγορασθητε ;" which price is expressly said by St.

John to be the blood of Christ: "Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God (ηγορασας , hast purchased us) by thy blood,"  Revelation 5:9 .

Morrish Bible Dictionary [4]

This term signifies 'being set free, brought back.' God having smitten the firstborn of the Egyptians, claimed all the firstborn of Israel, and received the Levites instead of them; but there not being an equivalent number of the Levites, the residue of the firstborn were redeemed by money: they were thus set free.  Numbers 3:44-51 . So the land, or one who sold himself, could be redeemed.  Leviticus 25:23,24,47,54 . The Israeliteswere redeemed out of Egypt by the mighty power of God.  Exodus 15:13 . From thence the subject rises to the redemption of the soul or life, forfeited because of sin. Man cannot give to God a ransom for his brother: for the redemption of the soul is precious, or costly, and it (that is, redemption) ceaseth, or must be given up, for ever: that is, all thought of attempting to give a ransom must be relinquished — it is too costly.  Psalm 49:7,8 .

In the N.T. there are two words translated 'redemption,' embracing different thoughts. The one is λυτρόω, λύτρωσις, 'to loose, a loosing, a loosing away,' hence deliverance by a ransom paid, redeemed.

The other word is ἐξαγοράζω, 'to buy as from the market.' Christ has redeemed believers from the curse of the law.  Galatians 3:13;  Galatians 4:5 . Christians are exhorted to be "redeeming the time," that is, buying or securing the opportunity.  Ephesians 5:16;  Colossians 4:5 . A kindred word, ἀγοράζω, is translated in the A.V. 'to buy,' except in  Revelation 5:9;  Revelation 14:3,4 , where it is rendered 'redeem,' but would be better 'buy.' The difference is important in such a passage as  2 Peter 2:1 , where it could not be said 'redeemed,' for those spoken of are such as deny Christ's rights of purchase, and bring on themselves swift destruction though they had been 'bought.' Christ 'bought' all, but only believers are 'redeemed.' Christians sometimes speak of 'universal redemption' without really meaning it, because they do not observe the difference between 'buying' and 'redeeming.'  Ephesians 1:14 embraces both thoughts: "the redemption of the purchased possession."

Redemption is sometimes used in the sense of the right or title to redeem ( Psalm 130:7;  Romans 3:24 ); and this right God has righteously secured to Himself in Christ, and in virtue of it He presents Himself to man as a Justifier. Hence redemption was secured for God before man entered into the virtue of it. But believers have it now by faith, in the sense of forgiveness of sins, in Christ, where it is placed for God.  Ephesians 1:7 . And in result redemption will extend to the body.  Romans 8:23;  Ephesians 4:30 . In application, the term redemption covers the power in which it is made effectual, as well as the ground or condition on which it is founded; this was set forth in type in the case of Israel.

Charles Buck Theological Dictionary [5]

In theology, denotes our recovery from sin and death by the obedience and sacrifice of Christ, who, on this account, is called The Redeemer,  Isaiah 59:20 .  Job 19:25 . Our English word redemption says Dr. Gill, is from the Latin tongue, and signifies buying again; and several words in the Greek language of the New Testament, are used in the affair of our redemption, which signify the obtaining of something by paying a proper price for it: sometimes the simple verb, to buy, is used: so the redeemed are said to be bought unto God by the blood of Christ, and to be bought from the earth, and to be bought from among men, and to be bought with a price; that is, with the price of Christ's blood.  1 Corinthians 6:20 . Hence the church of God is said to be purchased with it,  Acts 20:28 . Sometimes the compound word is used; which signifies to buy again, or out of the hands of another, as the redeemed are bought out of the hands of justice, as in  Galatians 3:13 . and  Galatians 4:5 . In other places, another word is used or others derived from it, which signifies the deliverance of a slave or captive from thraldom, by paying a ransom price for him: so the saints are said to be redeemed not with silver or gold, the usual price paid for a ransom, but with a far greater one, the blood and life of Christ, which he came into this world to give as a ransom price for many, and even himself, which is an answerable, adequate, and full price for them,  1 Peter 1:18 . The evils from which we are redeemed or delivered are the curse of the law, sin, Satan, the world, death, and hell. The moving cause of redemption is the love of God,  John 3:16 . The procuring cause, Jesus Christ,  1 Peter 1:18-19 . The ends of redemption are, that the justice of God might be satisfied; his people reconciled, adopted, sanctified, and brought to glory. The properties of it are these:

1. It is agreeable to all the perfections of God.

2. What a creature never could obtain, and therefore entirely of free grace.

3. It is special and particular.

4. Full and complete.

And,

5, lastly, It is eternal as to its blessings.

See articles PROPITIATION, RECONCILIATION, SATISFACTION; and Edwards's History of Redemption; Cole on the Sovereignty of God; Lime Street Lect. lect. 5; Watts's Ruin and Recovery; Dr. Owen on the Death and Satisfaction of Christ; Gill's Body of Divinity.

Easton's Bible Dictionary [6]

Apolutrosis   Matthew 20:28 Mark 10:45 Lutron   Leviticus 19:20 25:51 Exodus 21:30 Numbers 35:31,32 Isaiah 45:13 Proverbs 6:35 Numbers 3:49 18:15

There are many passages in the New Testament which represent Christ's sufferings under the idea of a ransom or price, and the result thereby secured is a purchase or redemption (Compare  Acts 20:28;  1 Corinthians 6:19,20;  Galatians 3:13;  4:4,5;  Ephesians 1:7;  Colossians 1:14;  1 Timothy 2:5,6;  Titus 2:14;  Hebrews 9:12;  1 Peter 1:18,19;  Revelation 5:9 ). The idea running through all these texts, however various their reference, is that of payment made for our redemption. The debt against us is not viewed as simply cancelled, but is fully paid. Christ's blood or life, which he surrendered for them, is the "ransom" by which the deliverance of his people from the servitude of sin and from its penal consequences is secured. It is the plain doctrine of Scripture that "Christ saves us neither by the mere exercise of power, nor by his doctrine, nor by his example, nor by the moral influence which he exerted, nor by any subjective influence on his people, whether natural or mystical, but as a satisfaction to divine justice, as an expiation for sin, and as a ransom from the curse and authority of the law, thus reconciling us to God by making it consistent with his perfection to exercise mercy toward sinners" (Hodge's Systematic Theology).

King James Dictionary [7]

REDEMP'TION, n. L. redemptio. See Redeem.

1. Repurchase of captured goods or prisoners the act of procuring the deliverance of persons or things from the possession and power of captors by the payment of an equivalent ransom release as the redemption of prisoners taken in war the redemption of a ship and cargo. 2. Deliverance from bondage, distress, or from liability to any evil or forfeiture, either by money, labor or other means. 3. Repurchase, as of lands alienated.  Leviticus 25 .  Jeremiah 32 . 4. The liberation of an estate from a mortgage or the purchase of the right to re-enter upon it by paying the principal sum for which it was mortgaged with interest and cost also, the right of redeeming and re-entering. 5. Repurchase of notes, bills or other evidence of debt by paying their value in specie to their holders. 6. In theology, the purchase of God's favor by the death and sufferings of Christ the ransom or deliverance of sinners from the bondage of sin and the penalties of God's violated law by the atonement of Christ.

In whom we have redemption through his blood.  Ephesians 1 .

 Colossians 1 .

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [8]

in theology, denotes our recovery from sin and death by the obedience and sacrifice of Christ, who on this account is called the "Redeemer" ( Isaiah 59:20;  Job 19:25). "Being justified freely by his grace, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus" ( Romans 3:24). "‘ Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us" ( Galatians 3:13). "In whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of his grace" ( Ephesians 1:7). "Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition from your fathers; but with.the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot" ( 1 Peter 1:18-19). "And ye are not your own, for ye are bought with a price" ( 1 Corinthians 6:19-20).

By redemption those who deny the atonement made by Christ wish to understand deliverance merely, regarding only the effect, and studiously putting out of sight the cause from which it flows. But the very terms used in the above-cited passages, "to redeem" and "to be bought with a price," will each be found to refute this notion of a gratuitous deliverance, whether from sin or punishment, or both. "Our English word redemption," says Dr. Gill, "is from the Latin, and signifies buying again; and several words in the Greek language of the New Test. are used in the affair of our redemption which signify the obtaining of something by paying a proper price for it; sometimes the simple verb ἀγοράζω , To Buy, is used; so the redeemed are said to be bought unto God by the blood of Christ, and to be bought from the earth, and to be bought from among men, and to be bought with a price — that is, with the price of Christ's blood ( 1 Corinthians 6:20); hence the Church of God is said to be purchased with it ( Acts 20:28). Sometimes the compound word ἐξαγοράζω is used, which signifies to Buy Again, or out of the hands of another, as the redeemed are bought out of the hands of justice, as in  Galatians 3:13;  Galatians 4:5. To redeem literally means ‘ to buy back;' and λυτρόω, to redeem, and ἀπολύτρωσις , Redemption, are, both in Greek writers and in the New Test., used for the act of setting free a captive by paying λύτρον, a ransom) or Redemtion Price. " Yet, as Grotius has fully shown by reference to the use of the words both in sacred and profane writers, redempn tion signifies not merely "the liberation of captives," but deliverance from exile, death, and every other evil fromi which we may be freed; and λύτρον Signifies everything which satisfies another so as to effect this deliverance. The nature of this redemption or purchased deliverance (for it is not gratuitous liberation, as will presently appear) is therefore to be ascertained by the circumstances of those who are the subjects of it. The subjects in the case before us are sinful men; they are under guilt, under "the curse of the law," the servants of sin, under the power and dominion of the devil, and "taken captive by him at his will," liable to the death of the body and to eternal punishment. To the whole of this case the redemption-the purchased deliverance of man as proclaimed in the Gospel — applies itself. Hence in the above-cited and other passages it is said, "We have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins," in opposition to guilt; redemption from "the curse of the law;" deliverance from sin, that "we should be set free from sin;" deliverance from the power of Satan; from death, by a resurrection; and from future "wrath" bv the gift of eternal life. Throughout the whole of this glorious doctrine of our redemption from these tremendous evils there is, however, in the New Test., a constant reference to the λύτρον, the redemption price, which λύτρον is as constantly declared to be the death of Christ, which he endured in our stead. "The Son of man came to give his life a Ransom for many" ( Matthew 20:28). "Who gave himself a Ransom for all" ( 1 Timothy 2:6). "In whom we have redemption through his blood" ( Ephesians 1:7). "Ye were not Redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, but with the precious blood of Christ" ( 1 Peter 1:18-19). That deliverance of man from sin, misery, and all other penal evils of his transgression, which constitutes our redemption by Christ, is not, therefore, a gratuitous deliverance, granted without a consideration, as an act of mere prerogative; the ransom — the redemption price — was exacted and paid; one thing was given for another — the precious blood of Christ for captive and condemned men. Of the same import are those passages which represent us as having been "bought" or "purchased" by Christ. Peter speaks of those "who denied the Lord τὸν ἀγοράσαντα αὐτούς, that bought them;" and Paul, in the passage above cited, says, "Ye are bought with a price" (ἠγοράσθητε ), which price is expressly said by John to be the blood of Christ: "Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God (ἡγόρασας, hast purchased us) by thy blood' ( Revelation 5:9). The ends of redemption are, that the justice of God might be satisfied; his people reconciled, adopted, sanctified, and brought to glory. The properties of it are these:

(1) it is agreeable to all the perfections of God;

(2) what a creature never could merit, and therefore entirely of free grace;

(3) it is special and particular;

(4) full and complete;

(5) it is eternal as to its blessings. See Edwards, Hist. of Redemption; Cole, On the Sovereignty of God; Lime-street Lect. lect. 5; Watts, Ruin and Recovery; Owen, On the Death and Satisfaction of Christ; Gill, Body of Divinity; Pressensd, Religion; Goodwin, Works; Knapp, Theology, p. 331; Bullet. Theol. Avril, 1868; Calvin, Institutes; Evangel. Quar. Rev. April, 1870, p. 290; Presbyt. Confess.; Werner, Gesch. der deutschen Theol.; Meth. Quar. Rev. Oct. 1868; July, 1874, p. 500; Jan. 1876, art. ii; Presbyt. Quar. Rev. July, 1875, art. ii; Fletcher, Works; New-Englander, July, 1870, p. 531; Barnes [Albert], The Atonement in its Relations to Law and Moral Government (Phila. 1858, 12mo); Princeton Rev. July, 1859; Oct. 1859; Bibl. Sacra, Jan. 1858; Delitzsch, Bibl. Psychol. p. 482; Muller, On Sin; Pearson, On the Creed; Liddon, Divinity of Christ; Pin, Jesus-Christ dans le Plan Divin lde la Redemtption (1873). (See Propitiation); (See Reconciliation); (See Satisfaction)

.

References