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A Note on
"Ransom" A
wealth of Hebrew understanding pertaining to "redemption" lies behind lutron
("ransom"), a concept deployed by Jesus himself. Note
the three major Hebrew words for "redemption":
1] pdh (padah)
2] kpr (kippur)
3] g'l (goel) 1:
(pdh) Redemption is a mighty act of
God bringing deliverance from oppression, as in the deliverance of Israel out of
Egypt and the house of bondage, and also as in deliverance from the power of
death. It
stresses both a redemption out of the oppression of evil and out of the
judgement of God upon it, but with a special emphasis on (a)
the cost of redemption
through the substitutionary offering of life, (b)
the dramatic nature of the
redeeming act as a sheer intervention (a "rescue mission") on the part
of God in human affairs. It
is an act of redemption from unlawful
bondage, stripping the enthraller of usurped authority and vaunted right. (There
is no suggestion of a ransom being paid to
someone. This is a secular concept
of redemption not found in scripture.) 2:
(kpr) This term speaks of the
sacrificial aspect of redemption, the sacrifice by which propitiation is
effected and the barrier of sin and guilt between God and humankind done away
with (expiated.) God
is always the subject first and the object only secondarily (lest it appear that
something other than God can avert God's wrath.) The
emphasis here is atonement as judgement upon the wrong through the offering of
life, as well as restoration to favour and holiness before God. 3:
(g'l) This term speaks of redemption
out of destitution or forfeited rights or bondage, undertaken by an advocate who
is related to the person in need either through kinship or covenant love. Here
the focus is on the person of the
redeemer, the "goel." The
redeemer claims the cause of the person in need as his own cause. In
the older testament all three overlap. All three are used to speak of the
redemption of Israel out of Egypt. All
three are also used in Isaiah 40 (the promise of a new exodus when God will
redeem his people through his anointed servant, the servant mediating the
covenant, being afflicted with the judgements of God, and bearing the iniquities
of the people as he is made an offering for sin.)
The newer testament doesn't make systematic use of these three, but they
are all taken for granted and woven together in the apostles' understanding of
Jesus Christ.
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