The Christ Centred Cosmic Civilisation
Someone bleeding and dying does not automatically communicate love. That single objection forces a deeper question many Christians assume is settled: how does the cross actually show the love of God, and what must be true for “Jesus died for us” to mean more than a disturbing image? We walk through Schleiermacher as one of the clearest modern voices for a human-facing atonement, where the cross primarily changes human attitudes rather than defeating cosmic enemies or satisfying divine justice. In his Enlightenment shaped theology, the universe is a closed chain of cause and effect, sin carries its own consequences, and there is no need for an external Judge issuing verdicts. That move reshapes everything: death becomes a natural feature of finite life, demons and the devil become poetic remnants of ancient culture, and God’s wrath is dismissed as non-literal language because God is treated as beyond emotion. From there we test a popular alternative: the cross as divine empathy, God climbing down into human suffering to sit with us in pain. We grant what is compelling in that vision, while asking why the Bible keeps reaching for sacrifice, covenant, cleansing, forgiveness and victory over sin and death. A death shows love when it is a rescue, when it achieves a real good for the beloved, like a rescuer entering danger so others can live. If you’ve ever wondered whether the cross is mainly inspiration, mainly comfort, or something far stronger, you’ll find plenty to wrestle with here. Subscribe for what comes next, share this with a friend who loves theology, and leave a review. What do you think “dying for” must mean for the cross to be convincing? The theme music is "Wager with Angels" by Nathan Moore
158 episodios
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