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The Vicarious Repentance of Christ in the Theology of John McLeod Campbell and R. C. Moberly
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 February 2009
Extract
The name of John McLeod Campbell (1800–1872) is well-known among historians of Scottish church history. A pastor who spent most of his life in Glasgow, Campbell is remembered best for his deposition from the Church of Scotland in 1831 because of the preaching of unlimited atonement and of assurance as belonging to the essence of faith. Among historians of doctrine, Campbell's notoriety stems from his later work, The Nature of the Atonement. The book aroused controversy from the moment of its publication. Among the highly original themes set forth by Campbell, one continues to stand out as the most perplexing and controversial: Campbell's teaching on Christ as providing a ‘perfect response’, a ‘perfect repentance’, a ‘perfect sorrow’ and a ‘perfect contrition’ before the judgment of the Father on the sins of humanity.
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References
page 529 note 1 The only full-length study of Campbell published is Bewkes, Eugene Garrett, Legacy of a Christian Mind (Philadelphia, 1937).Google Scholar
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page 530 note 8 ibid., p. 137. Jonathan Edwards, ‘satisfaction for Sin’ in The Works of President Edwards (New York, 1844), ii, 1–3.
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page 532 note 24 ibid., p. 135.
page 533 note 25 Bewkes, p. 295.
page 533 note 26 Moberly, p. 22.
page 533 note 27 ibid., p. 110.
page 533 note 28 ibid., p. 99.
page 533 note 29 ibid., p. 117.
page 533 note 30 ibid., p. 28.
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page 534 note 34 ibid., p. 43.
page 534 note 35 ibid., p. 117.
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page 534 note 37 ibid., p. 44.
page 534 note 38 ibid., p. 46.
page 534 note 39 ibid., p. 283.
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page 537 note 57 Paul also mentions Christ as our ‘redemption’. We have no salvific parallel to this, but this in no way invalidates the previous pictures of wisdom, righteousness, and sanctification.
page 537 note 58 J. B. Torrance, p. 306.
page 537 note 59 Moberly, pp. 136–53.
page 538 note 60 Cited by Campbell, p. 144.
page 538 note 61 Moberly, p. 42.
page 538 note 62 Lewis, p. 60.
page 538 note 63 ibid., p. 59.
page 538 note 64 ibid., p. 60.
page 538 note 65 Moberly, p. 90.
page 538 note 66 ibid., p. 66.
page 538 note 67 Campbell, p. 178.
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page 539 note 70 ibid., p. 127.
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page 539 note 77 ibid., p. 286.
page 540 note 78 ibid., p. 285.
page 540 note 79 Campbell, p. 249.
page 540 note 80 ibid., p. 345. cf. xxv.
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page 542 note 89 ibid., p. 409. It is also tempting to see the baptism of Jesus as recorded in Matthew as an indication of how vicarious repentance and the sonship of Jesus are intertwined. John's baptism is a baptism ‘for repentance’ () (3.11). He is genuinely surprised when Jesus comes to be baptized by him (v. 14) (a response similar to the modern opposition to ‘vicarious repentance‘?). Jesus states that its purpose is ‘to fulfill all righteousness’ (v. 15, only in Mt.) (). Is it coincidental that the baptism is crowned with the pronouncement by the Father, ‘This is my beloved son …’ (v. 17)?
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page 542 note 91 See the successive order of forgiveness before repentance in Calvin's theology (InstituteIII.3.1, 2). Cf. Torrance, p. 311.