Cross in Tensions. Philip Ruge-Jones
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Название: Cross in Tensions

Автор: Philip Ruge-Jones

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Религия: прочее

Серия: Princeton Theological Monograph Series

isbn: 9781630878108

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ of humility, but with a distinctive principle of theological knowledge. . . .”13 The theology of the cross “has its place not only in the doctrine of the vicarious atonement, but it constitutes an integrating element for all Christian knowledge.”14 “What is involved here is the question about knowledge of God.”15 “The theology of the cross rejects speculation as a way to knowledge. . . . If the cross becomes the foundation of Christian thought, a theology of the cross results. For the cross cannot be disposed of in an upper story of the structure of thought.”16 The theology of the cross “involved the question of theological method, not just a practical-ethical question.”17 He chastises one interpreter because he “does not speak of the significance of the cross for knowledge, criticism and theology.”18 And finally, when Loewenich had reached the end of his work, he summarized his project in this way: “The goal of my investigation was to show that the theology of the cross was a theological principle of knowledge for Luther.”19

      What then was the shape of this knowledge? Loewenich builds upon theses nineteen and twenty of the Heidelberg Disputation, which are decisive for Luther’s understanding. They read:

      Loewenich summarizes the aspects of Luther’s theology of the cross in five points. He states:

      1. The theology of the cross as a theology of revelation stands in sharp antithesis to speculation.

      2. God’s revelation is an indirect, concealed revelation.

      3. Hence God’s revelation is recognized not in works but in suffering, and the double meaning of these terms is to be noted.

      4. This knowledge of God who is hidden in his revelation is a matter of faith.

      Questions of epistemology run through all of these aspects. The last four aspects clarify the first claim about knowing through revelation rather than speculation. What does Loewenich mean by each of these points?

      Crucial to Luther’s understanding in this period is that:

      This equation of hiddenness and revelation is an explicit rejection of interpretations of Luther that see hiddenness as the antithesis of revelation in his thought. Within this schema, hiddenness had been equated with the terrifying powerfulness of God in and of Godself. There God is an all-consuming, threatening reality. Loewenich argues that Luther is explicitly rejecting this concept in favor of God made known in suffering and crosses.