Andrew Meredith’s Reviews > Delivered from the Elements of the World: Atonement, Justification, Mission > Status Update
Andrew Meredith
is on page 164 of 368
The Davidic King was Yahweh's son (2 Sam 7:14), the representative of Israel, Yahweh's corporate son (Ex 4:23). Jesus was that King (Rom 1:3-4). This enabled Jesus to take the penalty that Israel deserved and so release Israel from the capital punishment for her blasphemy (among other transgressions). All who are joined to Christ (the head) by baptism are joined to Israel (His body), Abraham's seed (Gal 3:29).
— Feb 12, 2025 07:45AM
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Andrew Meredith
is on page 239 of 368
In Chapter 7, Leithart (1) enters the pistis Christou debate on the side of subjective genitive, (2) enters the penal substitutionary debate on the affirmative side, and then (3) skillfully and imo convincingly brings the two together.
Jesus, the faithful High King (David’s greater Son) is the penal substitution for Israel, taking the wrath she deserves as her one-flesh Husband. His faithfulness unto death saves us.
— Aug 24, 2025 07:50AM
Jesus, the faithful High King (David’s greater Son) is the penal substitution for Israel, taking the wrath she deserves as her one-flesh Husband. His faithfulness unto death saves us.
Andrew Meredith
is on page 150 of 368
Leithart provides in chapter 4 one of the most useful systematic treatments on the biblical understanding of "flesh" I have ever encountered.
Too briefly put, "flesh" is (now) godless mortality driven by the fear of death into protectiveness, segregation, violence, and virility to both guard and extend itself.
Thus illuminating circumcision: the removal of flesh by the deliberate cutting of its most potent symbol.
— Aug 22, 2025 05:55AM
Too briefly put, "flesh" is (now) godless mortality driven by the fear of death into protectiveness, segregation, violence, and virility to both guard and extend itself.
Thus illuminating circumcision: the removal of flesh by the deliberate cutting of its most potent symbol.
Andrew Meredith
is on page 85 of 368
A successful theory of the atonement:
1. Historically plausible: a meaningful interpretation of all events
2. Inevitable: end of an obvious trajectory with strong explanatory power for what came before
3. Levitical: fulfillment of ritual, especially sacrifice
4. Evangelical: arises from within Gospels
5. Epistolary: makes sense of words, sentences, arguments in Apostles' letters
6. Fruitful: leads to church history
— Aug 20, 2025 06:39AM
1. Historically plausible: a meaningful interpretation of all events
2. Inevitable: end of an obvious trajectory with strong explanatory power for what came before
3. Levitical: fulfillment of ritual, especially sacrifice
4. Evangelical: arises from within Gospels
5. Epistolary: makes sense of words, sentences, arguments in Apostles' letters
6. Fruitful: leads to church history
Andrew Meredith
is on page 70 of 368
"The common contemporary rhetoric of conflicts between religion and politics obscures the reality. Conflicts are never between politics and religion. Conflicts are always between rivals that are both religious and both political."
— Aug 19, 2025 03:03PM
Andrew Meredith
is on page 35 of 368
"Justification," being declared/proven right, must be placed within the ongoing war between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent, on which depends the destiny of the cosmos over which mankind has been placed.
Jesus and all who are "in Him" were justified by His resurrection, and with it, a cosmological regeneration began in which the curse of death and the power of Satan is being turned back day by day.
— Aug 19, 2025 05:59AM
Jesus and all who are "in Him" were justified by His resurrection, and with it, a cosmological regeneration began in which the curse of death and the power of Satan is being turned back day by day.
Andrew Meredith
is on page 257 of 368
Leithart spends the last few chapters providing a taxonomy of today's socio-religious landscape outside the Church. He has three designations:
1.) Those still living under the elements (e.g., tribal and more ancestral religions)
2.) Those "on the boundary" whose religion has been Christianized (e.g., Buddhism, Islam, etc.)
3.) Galatianists who were once Christian but have slid back into a world under the elements
— Feb 13, 2025 06:35AM
1.) Those still living under the elements (e.g., tribal and more ancestral religions)
2.) Those "on the boundary" whose religion has been Christianized (e.g., Buddhism, Islam, etc.)
3.) Galatianists who were once Christian but have slid back into a world under the elements

