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The Actuality of Atonement: A Study of Metaphor, Rationality and the Christian Tradition

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In a reissue of a masterly examination of both the Christian doctrine of Atonement and the nature and working of theological language, Professor Gunton reassesses the doctrine and the language in which it is expressed in the light of modern scholarly developments. He explains how the traditional metaphors of Atonement, drawn from the battlefield, the altar and the law courts, all express something of the meaning of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus-and examines their bearing
on human life in today's world.

236 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 1989

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About the author

Colin E. Gunton

40 books17 followers
Colin Ewart Gunton (1941-2003) was a British systematic theologian. As a theologian he made contributions to the doctrine of Creation and the doctrine of the trinity. He was Professor of Christian Doctrine at King's College London from 1984 and co-founder with Christoph Schwoebel of the Research Institute for Systematic Theology in 1988. Gunton was actively involved in the United Reformed Church in the United Kingdom where he had been a minister since 1972. He was arguably the most important British theologian of his generation.

Gunton's most influential work was on the doctrines of Creation and the Trinity. One of his most important books is The One, the Three and the Many: God, Creation and the Culture of Modernity" (1993), and is "a profound analysis of the paradoxes and contradictions of Modernity." The One, the Three and the Many remains a "majestical survey of the western intellectual tradition and a penetrating analysis of the modern condition."

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Corey.
255 reviews8 followers
August 25, 2023
Really liked the approach of looking at the different metaphors for the atonement. There are times where this book is nearly doxological, but other times it was boring. Still felt worth the read.
Profile Image for Spencer.
161 reviews24 followers
October 29, 2018
Gunton notes that with more rationalistic approaches to faith, moral action got stripped down to raw principles and concepts. In doing so, the centre of biblical faith, the cross, was eclipsed.

Gunton argues that action must be understood through narrative, and narrative is understood through employments of metaphor. All meaningful action is metaphorical, and these metaphors give the cross' narrative its meaning. Thus, while in one literalistic way, Jesus was not "fighting" or "ruling" or doing anything priestly, these three domains of Old Testament language (war, law, and sacrifice) are applied to the actions on the cross to understand it. These metaphors, in turn, can and do get employed to understand the believers action as fighting evil, living justly, or living sacrificially.

Personally, I found Gunton hard to follow at times in this book. I like Gunton's thinking, but he can at times get a bit ivory tower.
Profile Image for Kenosi.
Author 1 book3 followers
December 1, 2020
One of top 5 books i have read on atonement. Collin Gunton work is different from other atonement books in a sense that he engages with the enlightment scholars such as Hagel, Emmanuel Kant and Frederick Schleiermacher.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Joseph Sverker.
Author 4 books63 followers
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August 28, 2015
I suppose it is no secret that I am interested in Gunton and to a large degree like his writing and thinking. It was some time ago now that I finished this book and my memory of it is very foggy. I remember thinking that there is kind of a difference in Gunton's books from the 80s and those that he wrote in the 90s. This somehow seems to be able to take his development in two separate directions. There is a possibility for him to go towards a fairly liberal stance and also, as what happen, for him to take a more, should one say, 'evangelical' route (evangelical is very, very loosely defined here, since Gunton never saw himself as evangelical and probably wasn't, most likely "traditional" might be a better word).

The two sections in the book the first about metaphors and the second about atonement (if I remember correctly) are quite interesting in themselves. However, I do recall that I didn't quite think that Gunton brought the two together quite successfully. One is able to see Gunton's emphasis on the personal and relational in the atonement section, yet I am not so sure in what way the metaphorical intersects with that.
Profile Image for G Walker.
240 reviews30 followers
December 18, 2012
I've had enough Gunton... he has some great things to say, but this book cements in my mind that he is interested, regardless of what he says, in the abstract at ethereal... the ivory tower... not where I eat, live and breath.
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