Saturday, July 04, 2026

Prolegomena to Disputationes Theologicae V Reason Under the Word

“Theology does not require philosophy because revelation is insufficient. It requires philosophy because human reasoning is.”

This essay is the fifth of six Prolegomena to Disputationes Theologicae, a series in philosophical theology produced through the Department of Philosophical Theology at Christ School of Theology. Together, these essays articulate the methodological foundations of the larger Disputationes Theologicae project by recovering the proper order of theological inquiry. They proceed from the conviction that theology exists because these questions exist and that theology’s first responsibility is to render Christian doctrine intelligible without diminishing, translating away, or replacing the reality to which it refers. Having argued that theological language must become intelligible, genuinely referential, and capable of truth before it can be properly appropriated, the present essay asks the next necessary question: What role does human reason properly play within theological inquiry?

The preceding essays have argued that theology proceeds according to an order. It begins because questions concerning God, reality, meaning, truth, reconciliation, and the destiny of creation cannot finally be evaded. Christian theology answers these questions by attending to God’s self-disclosure and by seeking to articulate that disclosure intelligibly, referentially, and truthfully.

Only then do proclamation, appropriation, worship, ethics, and ecclesial life assume their proper place. They are not secondary in importance, but they are dependent in order. One cannot responsibly proclaim what has not been rendered intelligible, appropriate what has not been shown capable of truth, or order Christian life around claims whose referent has quietly disappeared.

A decisive question now arises concerning the entire sequence. What role does human reason play in rendering theological language intelligible, preserving its reference, and judging its truth?

Few questions have generated greater confusion within Christian theology. Some have imagined that philosophy supplies a foundation upon which revelation must subsequently be constructed. Others have regarded philosophy as an alien intrusion whose influence must be excluded if theology is to remain faithful to the Word of God.

Both positions misunderstand the relation between reason and revelation. Christian theology neither begins with philosophy nor dispenses with it, because it begins with revelation and reasons about what revelation gives.

Revelation is prior. Reason follows, but it does not therefore become optional.

This order expresses a conviction characteristic of the strongest moments in the Christian and especially the Lutheran theological tradition. Revelation gives theology its subject matter, authority, and object. Philosophy gives it none of these and cannot discover the gospel, generate faith, identify the incarnate Word from first principles, or determine the truth of Christian doctrine independently of God’s self-disclosure.

Theology therefore does not require philosophy because revelation is deficient. It requires philosophy because human understanding is finite, historically situated, linguistically mediated, and continually vulnerable to confusion.

Scripture is sufficient for the purpose for which God gives it, but human reasoning about Scripture is not thereby rendered infallible. The sufficiency of the Word does not entail the adequacy of every interpretation of the Word.

This distinction must be maintained carefully. Philosophy is not called upon to complete what revelation lacks, nor does it contribute a second source of divine knowledge alongside Scripture. It disciplines the reasoning by which finite creatures seek to understand, distinguish, and judge what revelation gives.

The need for philosophy therefore arises not from an insufficiency in God’s speech but from the limitations of those who hear it. The Word is not obscure because human beings reason badly, but bad reasoning can obscure the Word.

This understanding differs from both rationalism and fideism. Rationalism asks philosophy to determine in advance what revelation may legitimately say, while fideism imagines that theology can avoid philosophical commitments by refusing to examine them.

Rationalism places revelation before a tribunal whose standards have been established independently of the reality revelation discloses. It decides beforehand what God may be like, what divine action must resemble, what incarnation can mean, what resurrection may involve, and what forms of presence or causation are metaphysically permissible.

Under such conditions, revelation is allowed to speak only after philosophy has determined the grammar of acceptable divine action. Theology then becomes an illustration of conclusions reached elsewhere.

Fideism moves in the opposite direction but arrives at a related failure. Distrusting reason, it treats conceptual clarification, logical analysis, and ontological inquiry as threats to faith rather than as unavoidable dimensions of responsible theological judgment.

Yet fideism does not eliminate philosophy. It merely conceals the philosophy it already employs.

Every theological judgment presupposes distinctions, concepts, inferential relations, and assumptions about reality. To say that God acts, that Christ is present, that sin binds the will, that grace creates faith, or that the dead will be raised is already to employ causal, personal, modal, temporal, and ontological categories.

The question is therefore never whether theology will reason philosophically. The question is whether it will reason carefully, explicitly, and responsibly or whether its philosophical commitments will remain unexamined.

Fideism cannot distinguish mystery from confusion merely by appealing to mystery. It cannot determine whether an apparent contradiction arises from the reality confessed, from the limitations of language, or from a failure to distinguish the predicates being employed.

Nor can fideism protect revelation from philosophy, because philosophy is already present wherever theology asks what its words mean, to what they refer, and under what conditions its judgments could be true. Refusing to examine these questions does not preserve purity; it merely makes theological confusion more difficult to detect.

Theology therefore requires disciplined reasoning precisely because revelation deserves responsible understanding. Conceptual confusion does not honor mystery, and invalid inference does not become faithful merely because it occurs in religious language.

Without careful distinctions, theology may attribute incompatible predicates to God, confuse metaphor with ontology, treat analogical language as univocal, substitute existential effect for truth, or mistake ecclesial repetition for referential continuity. Such errors do not arise because revelation has failed. They arise because human reason has failed to attend adequately to what revelation gives.

The proper vocation of philosophy within theology follows from this circumstance. Philosophy clarifies concepts, distinguishes categories, disciplines inference, exposes equivocation, identifies hidden assumptions, tests coherence, uncovers category mistakes, traces implications, and asks what must be the case if theological judgments are to be true.

It also examines the models through which theological claims are understood. When theology speaks of divine presence, action, identity, causation, judgment, or promise, philosophy asks what conceptual structures are being employed and whether those structures preserve or distort the reality intended.

This work is not extraneous to theology. It belongs to theology’s responsibility to say what it means and to mean what it says.

Philosophy remains, however, ministerial rather than magisterial. It serves theological judgment without determining the content of revelation from a standpoint external to revelation.

Its ministerial character does not mean that philosophy is weak, decorative, or intellectually subordinate in the sense of being careless. A good servant must be competent in the work entrusted to it. Philosophy serves theology best when it reasons with maximal precision while remaining within the limits of its office.

The distinction between ministerial and magisterial reason concerns not the rigor of philosophy but the source of its authority. Philosophy possesses genuine authority wherever conceptual, logical, semantic, or ontological judgments are required. It exceeds its authority when it decides in advance what the Word of God may or may not disclose.

Conversely, theology neglects its responsibility when it refuses philosophical clarification simply because the conclusions may prove uncomfortable. Revelation does not authorize incoherence, and the transcendence of God does not license contradiction.

The ministerial role of philosophy is especially important because theological language repeatedly crosses conceptual domains. It speaks of a God who is transcendent yet present, immutable yet acting, eternal yet involved in history, hidden yet revealed, one in essence yet triune in person, and incarnate without confusion of divine and human natures.

These claims cannot be dismissed as contradictions merely because they are difficult. Neither can they be protected from scrutiny by declaring them mysteries before their logical form has been examined.

Philosophical theology asks whether the predicates are being used in the same respect, whether the apparent contradiction is genuine, whether different levels of discourse have been confused, and whether the relevant distinctions are ontological, semantic, or merely verbal. This analysis does not solve the mystery by explaining it away. It protects the mystery from being mistaken for nonsense.

This ministerial account of philosophy is deeply Lutheran. Luther’s criticisms of philosophy have often been interpreted as expressions of hostility toward rational inquiry, metaphysics, or logic as such. Such readings mistake the target and underestimate Luther’s competence.

Luther could criticize Aristotle, scholasticism, and philosophical theology precisely because he understood their arguments, distinctions, and conceptual structures. His attacks upon philosophy were not the protests of someone incapable of philosophical reasoning. They were the judgments of a theologian who understood what reason could accomplish and where it exceeded its office.

Luther objected when philosophical categories were treated as normatively prior to revelation. He resisted the assumption that inherited accounts of substance, causation, merit, freedom, or justice could determine beforehand what the gospel must mean.

His concern was not that philosophy reasons. His concern was that philosophy often forgets what it is reasoning about and assumes that the object of theology must conform to conceptual structures formed elsewhere.

The theology of the cross provides the decisive discipline here. It does not abolish reason but places reason under judgment by refusing to allow human expectations of glory, power, wisdom, and divine action to govern the interpretation of God’s self-disclosure in the crucified Christ.

Reason naturally seeks God in what appears powerful, intelligible, morally ordered, and metaphysically fitting. Revelation identifies God under the contrary form of the cross.

Philosophy must therefore not determine beforehand what divine action ought to resemble, what divine majesty must exclude, what reconciliation should accomplish, or where God may properly be found. Those judgments belong to revelation.

Philosophy instead asks whether the theological claims made on the basis of revelation are conceptually intelligible, logically coherent, semantically determinate, and ontologically serious. It investigates whether their conclusions follow, whether their distinctions hold, and whether the reality confessed is preserved rather than translated into something more congenial to prior philosophical expectations.

Reason therefore stands under the Word. It neither precedes revelation as its judge nor disappears before revelation as though faith required intellectual passivity.

Reason serves the Word by receiving its subject matter from revelation and then laboring to understand that subject matter responsibly. Its task is not to invent the object of theology but to prevent theology from speaking carelessly about the object it has been given.

This relation also clarifies the proper place of philosophical theology within the wider theological enterprise. Philosophical theology does not replace biblical exegesis, historical theology, dogmatics, or proclamation. Neither does it merely stand beside them as one optional specialization among others.

It asks the conceptual, logical, semantic, and ontological questions that all theological disciplines inevitably presuppose. Exegesis makes judgments about meaning and reference. Dogmatics makes judgments about coherence, identity, implication, and truth. Proclamation makes judgments about divine agency, linguistic effect, and the relation between word and reality.

Philosophical theology brings these presuppositions to explicit examination. It asks whether the conceptual instruments employed by theology are adequate to the realities theology intends.

Its work is therefore both critical and constructive. Critically, it exposes confusion, invalid inference, conceptual substitution, and hidden metaphysical commitments. Constructively, it develops distinctions, models, and arguments capable of rendering Christian claims more intelligible without reducing the reality to which they refer.

This understanding also explains why philosophy remains necessary after revelation has been received and doctrine has been confessed. The Church continually encounters new vocabularies, scientific developments, metaphysical assumptions, political ideologies, cultural practices, and intellectual challenges.

Revelation does not change, but the conceptual worlds within which revelation is heard do. Theology must therefore distinguish what belongs to the enduring subject matter of Christian doctrine from what belongs to historically contingent models through which that subject matter has been expressed.

This task requires more than repetition. It requires judgment concerning continuity and change, identity and description, truth and reformulation.

A theological formulation may need revision because its conceptual model no longer communicates what it once communicated. Another may need preservation precisely because contemporary thought has lost the categories necessary to understand the reality it names.

Philosophy assists theology in making these judgments. It helps determine whether a conceptual change clarifies the same referent or replaces it, whether a translation preserves the same truth conditions or silently alters them, and whether an inherited distinction remains necessary for Christian confession.

Reason thus finds its proper freedom not in independence from revelation but in faithful service to it. Its liberation consists in being released from the impossible task of generating its own ultimate object.

Reason need not construct God from universal principles or secure the gospel through an autonomous foundation. It may instead attend to what has been given and devote its rigor to understanding, distinguishing, and judging that gift.

This is not the humiliation of reason but the fulfillment of its theological vocation. Reason is most itself when it serves truth rather than attempting to constitute it.

Theological inquiry therefore neither fears philosophy nor idolizes it. It orders philosophy beneath the Word and thereby gives it a genuine office.

Under the Word, philosophy may reason boldly because it no longer needs to pretend that its conceptual schemes are sovereign. It may criticize inherited theology, expose confusion, reformulate doctrine, and test arguments precisely because the subject matter of theology does not depend upon philosophy for its existence.

The order established in the preceding essays can now be stated more fully. Theology seeks intelligibility because truth cannot be responsibly judged where meaning remains obscure. It seeks reference because intelligible language that fails to identify its subject cannot become theological truth.

It seeks truth because doctrine is not justified by usefulness, ecclesial continuity, or existential power alone. It seeks appropriation because truth is given to be trusted, proclaimed, worshiped, and lived.

Throughout this order, reason performs a necessary ministry. It does not create revelation, establish its referent, or constitute its truth. It assists theology in understanding what revelation gives, distinguishing what revelation claims, and judging whether theological language remains faithful to its object.

Reason remains under the Word because the Word alone gives theology its subject matter, truth, and hope. Yet reason remains genuinely active under the Word, because faithful reception is not passive repetition but disciplined judgment.

The final methodological question therefore follows necessarily. If theology must reason rigorously while remaining answerable to revelation, what form should such reasoning take?

Why should theology proceed by disputation rather than by mere exposition?

That is the question of theology’s proper argumentative form.

Friday, July 03, 2026

Prolegomena to Disputationes Theologicae IV Truth Before Appropriation

“Christian doctrine cannot be appropriated until it is first capable of truth.”

This essay is the fourth of six Prolegomena to Disputationes Theologicae, a series in philosophical theology produced through the Department of Philosophical Theology at Christ School of Theology. Together, these essays articulate the methodological foundations of the larger Disputationes Theologicae project by recovering the proper order of theological inquiry. They proceed from the conviction that theology exists because these questions exist and that theology’s first responsibility is to render Christian doctrine intelligible without diminishing, translating away, or replacing the reality to which it refers. Having argued that theological language must first become intelligible and genuinely referential, the present essay asks the next necessary question: Under what conditions can theological judgments be true?

The preceding essays established that theology begins with the questions that make theology necessary, that Christian doctrine must be rendered intelligible, and that theological language must genuinely refer to the God whose self-disclosure gives theology its subject matter. Yet neither intelligibility nor reference completes theology’s task. A sentence may be perfectly intelligible, and its principal terms may successfully identify their referents, while the sentence itself remains false.

The decisive question therefore emerges: When is Christian doctrine true? This question is not one concern among others. It is the question upon which the theological importance of all the others finally depends.

Modern theology has frequently displaced this question. It has asked whether theological language is existentially meaningful, ecclesially authorized, morally fruitful, politically liberating, psychologically transformative, narratively coherent, or liturgically effective. Each of these questions may be legitimate, and some are indispensable to the life of the Church. Yet none of them can substitute for the prior question of whether the doctrine being interpreted, proclaimed, practiced, or appropriated is true.

Theology is not finally justified by its usefulness. A belief may console, motivate, unify, discipline, or transform while nevertheless being mistaken. Nor is theology finally justified by its capacity to sustain a community across time. Ecclesial continuity may preserve truth, but continuity itself cannot make a doctrine true.

The first responsibility of theology is therefore not to demonstrate what Christian doctrine accomplishes within human life. It is to ask whether what Christian doctrine says is the case. Theology is concerned with usefulness, proclamation, faith, worship, ethics, and ecclesial continuity because it is first concerned with truth.

This ordering is easily misunderstood. To insist upon truth is not to advocate an abstract rationalism that forgets faith, worship, proclamation, or discipleship. Nor is it to imagine that finite creatures occupy an unmediated standpoint from which divine reality may be inspected independently of revelation. Theology remains historically situated, linguistically mediated, conceptually finite, and wholly dependent upon God’s self-disclosure.

Mediation, however, does not abolish truth. On the contrary, revelation presupposes that something is the case before and apart from our acknowledgment of it. Revelation may transform our understanding of reality, but it does not create the reality disclosed merely by being received.

Theological realism therefore begins with a simple conviction: God is not constituted by theological language. Ecclesial confession, theological reflection, religious experience, and liturgical practice do not bring God into being. They neither create their referent nor determine the reality to which they answer.

Theology exists because God exists and has acted. Christian doctrine is therefore accountable to realities that do not depend upon theological discourse for their existence. God’s reality is not a consequence of the Church’s grammar, and God’s acts are not made actual by the community’s interpretation of them.

This is why truth must be distinguished from several neighboring concepts with which it is frequently confused. These distinctions are not philosophical refinements imposed upon theology from without. They arise from theology’s own claim to speak responsibly about God and God’s works.

Truth is not coherence. A doctrinal system may be internally consistent, elegantly ordered, and inferentially disciplined while nevertheless failing to describe reality. Coherence is a necessary virtue of theology, but a coherent fiction remains fiction.

Truth is not usefulness. A doctrine may sustain a community, shape character, provide consolation, and inspire sacrificial action while still being false. Practical fruit cannot by itself determine the reality of the seed from which it is said to grow.

Truth is not ecclesial authorization. Churches possess genuine authority to teach, confess, discipline, and proclaim. Yet ecclesial authority serves truth; it does not constitute truth merely by exercising itself.

Truth is not felicity. An utterance may achieve its intended performative effect without accurately predicating what is the case. A proclamation may move, accuse, console, or reconcile while remaining confused about the reality in whose name it speaks.

Truth is not warrant. One may possess strong reasons for believing a proposition and still be mistaken. Warrant concerns the responsibility of belief; truth concerns whether what is believed is actually the case.

Nor is truth identical with sincere faith. Faith trusts what is given as true; it does not make its object true by the intensity, authenticity, or existential seriousness of its trust. The sincerity of belief cannot transform falsehood into truth.

These distinctions reveal why theological truth cannot be reduced to the internal life of Christian discourse. Christian doctrine does not merely express religious attitudes, organize ecclesial practices, or articulate a communal form of life. It makes judgments about God, creation, sin, incarnation, reconciliation, resurrection, judgment, and the consummation of all things.

Such judgments are truth-apt because they predicate something of realities they intend. To say that God created the world, that the Word became flesh, or that Jesus Christ was raised from the dead is not merely to display a Christian attitude toward existence. It is to say that something happened and that reality is accordingly different from what it would have been had it not happened.

Truth-aptness must, however, be distinguished from truth itself. A sentence becomes capable of truth or falsity when it is sufficiently intelligible, when its terms successfully refer, and when it predicates something determinate of what it identifies. Only then can the further question arise whether the predicate truly belongs to the referent.

The order is therefore exact. Intelligibility makes judgment possible. Reference gives judgment a subject. Predication says something determinate of that subject. Truth concerns whether what is predicated is actually the case.

This also explains why the previous essay’s insistence upon reference was necessary but insufficient. Successful reference does not guarantee true predication. One may refer successfully to God while saying something false about God, just as one may identify a person correctly while misdescribing that person’s character or actions.

Theology must therefore remain answerable not only for whom it names but also for what it says of the one named. Referential continuity preserves the subject matter of theology; truth determines whether theological judgment is faithful to that subject matter.

The demand for truth also distinguishes theology from the mere demonstration of logical or metaphysical possibility. To show that a doctrine is internally coherent, noncontradictory, or metaphysically possible is an important achievement. It may remove confusions, answer objections, and establish that the doctrine is not irrational merely in virtue of its form.

Possibility, however, is not actuality. A doctrine may be coherent without being true, and a possible account of God may fail to describe the God who actually exists. Theology therefore seeks more than consistency and more than possibility. It seeks responsible judgment concerning who God is and what God has done.

This point is especially important for philosophical theology. Philosophy clarifies concepts, distinguishes categories, disciplines inference, examines presuppositions, and exposes confusion. It can show that an apparent contradiction is not genuine, that a distinction has been overlooked, or that an argument fails to establish its conclusion.

Philosophy cannot, however, supply the truth of Christian doctrine from its own resources. The truth of Christian doctrine remains grounded in the reality of God’s self-disclosure. Philosophy serves theology precisely by refusing both to replace revelation and to exempt theological claims from conceptual and logical scrutiny.

Theology therefore proceeds according to a definite architectonic order. It first asks whether its language is intelligible, because unintelligible language cannot yet express a responsible judgment. It then asks whether its language genuinely refers, because meaningful discourse that fails to identify its subject remains theologically empty.

Only after intelligibility and reference have been secured can theology ask whether what it predicates is true. Only after truth has become a genuine possibility do proclamation, appropriation, ethics, spirituality, ecclesial life, and cultural engagement assume their proper theological place.

This order does not diminish faith. It protects faith from being asked to trust what theology has never adequately clarified, from being directed toward a referent theology has failed to identify, or from being confused with the power to make doctrine true through believing it.

Nor does this order diminish proclamation. It protects proclamation from becoming eloquence detached from reality, religious performance sustained by effect, or ecclesial speech that substitutes authority for truth. Proclamation may become divine address only because it bears witness to what is independently true of God and God’s acts.

Neither does this order diminish the Church. It protects the Church from confusing fidelity to inherited formulations with fidelity to the reality toward which those formulations point. The Church preserves its doctrinal inheritance faithfully only when it remains answerable to the truth that inheritance intends.

Theology therefore seeks truth before appropriation. Appropriation concerns the reception of truth within the life of the believer and the community. It includes trust, obedience, worship, consolation, repentance, transformation, vocation, and hope.

These are not dispensable additions to an otherwise complete intellectual system. Christianity would be reduced to a dead letter without faith’s reception of the gospel. Yet appropriation presupposes that there is something real to appropriate and something true to believe.

Faith does not create its object. It receives what God gives.

Truth belongs to the relation between judgment and reality. Faith belongs to the creature’s reception of the reality truthfully judged. Theology stands between revelation and appropriation, seeking to articulate as responsibly as possible what God has disclosed and what Christian doctrine therefore claims to be true.

This does not mean that theology first achieves an exhaustive and indubitable body of truths and only afterward permits faith to begin. The order is methodological and theological rather than simply chronological. Faith, proclamation, inquiry, and judgment occur together within the actual life of the Church.

Nevertheless, their logical relations must not be confused. Appropriation cannot determine truth without becoming projection, just as proclamation cannot determine its own referent without becoming self-authorizing speech. Faith may deepen understanding, but it does not convert false predication into true predication.

Theology’s governing order may therefore be stated succinctly: intelligibility, reference, truth, appropriation. Each moment presupposes the preceding one, and none may simply replace another.

Without intelligibility, doctrine cannot be responsibly understood. Without reference, doctrine cannot be genuinely about God. Without truth, doctrine cannot rightly claim faith. Without appropriation, truth remains unreceived within creaturely life.

The third moment is architectonically decisive. Intelligibility and reference open theological discourse toward truth; appropriation, proclamation, and ecclesial life receive and enact what is true. Truth therefore stands neither at the beginning nor at the end of theology’s order, but at its pivotal center.

Only what is intelligible can become truth-apt. Only what refers can become true or false of its intended subject. Only what is true can finally become an object of faith rather than merely an instrument of religious formation.

The next question therefore follows necessarily. If theology is answerable to truth grounded in divine self-disclosure, how is human reason to serve that truth? How can philosophy render its indispensable ministry without becoming either revelation’s master or revelation’s enemy?

That is the question of reason under the Word.

Thursday, July 02, 2026

Prolegomena to Disputationes Theologicae III Reference Before Proclamation

“Theological language cannot proclaim what it has first failed to name.”

This essay forms part of Prolegomena to Disputationes Theologicae, a series in philosophical theology produced through the Department of Philosophical Theology at Christ School of Theology. Together these essays articulate the methodological foundations of the larger Disputationes Theologicae project by recovering the proper order of theological inquiry. The series proceeds from the conviction that theology exists because these questions exist and that theology's first responsibility is to render Christian doctrine intelligible without diminishing, translating away, or replacing the reality to which it refers. Having argued that theology must first render its judgments intelligible, the present essay asks the next necessary question: How does theological language genuinely refer to God? Only language that truly refers can be truthfully proclaimed.

This essay is the third of six Prolegomena to Disputationes Theologicae, a series in philosophical theology produced through the Department of Philosophical Theology at Christ School of Theology. Together, these essays articulate the methodological foundations of the larger Disputationes Theologicae project by recovering the proper order of theological inquiry. They proceed from the conviction that theology exists because these questions exist and that theology’s first responsibility is to render Christian doctrine intelligible without diminishing, translating away, or replacing the reality to which it refers.

The preceding essay argued that intelligibility is not the source of theological truth but a condition under which theological claims may be responsibly affirmed or denied. Theology therefore seeks conceptual clarity before it renders judgment. Yet intelligibility alone cannot complete theology’s task. One may understand perfectly well what a sentence means while remaining uncertain whether it is about anything at all.

The next question therefore arises necessarily:

How does theological language become genuinely about God?

This question is prior to proclamation. The priority at issue is not necessarily temporal. The preacher need not first complete a philosophical theory of reference before proclaiming the gospel. The priority is logical and theological. Proclamation cannot create its own referent. It cannot make itself speech about God merely through rhetorical power, ecclesial authorization, existential effect, or the sincerity of the one who speaks.

One cannot proclaim what one’s language has failed to identify.

A sermon may be rhetorically compelling, existentially arresting, ecclesially sanctioned, and even morally transformative while remaining uncertain in its reference. Before theology asks whether proclamation is faithful, effective, or life-giving, it must ask whether the language of proclamation continues to name the reality of which prophetic and apostolic testimony speaks.

Theological language therefore requires more than intelligibility.

It requires reference.

Reference is among the most neglected questions in modern theology. Enormous attention has been given to meaning, interpretation, narrative, language games, performative utterance, communal practice, existential appropriation, and rhetorical effect. These inquiries have often been illuminating. Language does form communities, shape perception, order practices, and open possibilities of existence. The question, however, is whether the reality about which theology speaks is constituted by these linguistic and communal activities or whether those activities remain answerable to a reality they did not create.

The decisive question is simple:

What makes theological discourse about God rather than merely about religion?

Theology does not merely analyze religious consciousness. It does not merely describe ecclesial practices, preserve inherited vocabularies, narrate communal identities, or interpret human experiences of ultimacy. It claims to speak about God: the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; the Father of Jesus Christ; the God who creates, judges, reconciles, raises the dead, and promises the consummation of creation.

Unless these claims genuinely refer beyond the linguistic practices in which they are expressed, theology has exchanged its subject matter for its own discourse. It may continue to use the word ‘God,’ but the word may now designate only a moral ideal, a communal self-understanding, an existential possibility, a cultural memory, or the symbolic horizon of human meaning. The vocabulary remains, while the subject has quietly changed.

Reference must therefore be distinguished from several closely related notions.

Reference is not meaning. A sentence may be intelligible even when its principal terms fail to identify anything real.

Reference is not truth. A statement may successfully identify its subject while predicating something false of it. Reference makes truth and falsity possible; it does not by itself determine which obtains.

Reference is not warrant. A person may possess reasons for believing a claim even though the terms employed in that claim do not refer as the speaker assumes.

Reference is not exhaustive understanding. Speakers frequently refer successfully while possessing incomplete, confused, or partially mistaken conceptions of that to which they refer. Referential success does not require conceptual mastery.

Nor is reference identical with existential appropriation, ecclesial participation, or performative effect. These may accompany successful reference, and proclamation may indeed become a means through which God addresses the hearer. Yet neither personal transformation nor communal use can by itself guarantee that the language employed remains about the God whom Christian witness claims to name.

Theology therefore requires a distinct account of reference.

The Christian answer does not begin with the human capacity to reach God through description, inference, religious experience, or conceptual construction. It begins with God’s capacity to identify himself. God does not first become the referent of theological discourse when human beings devise a sufficiently adequate name. God gives himself to be named.

Israel does not invent the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The Church does not construct the Father of Jesus Christ by adopting a distinctive religious vocabulary. God publicly identifies himself through acts and words: in the calling of Israel, the prophetic witness, the incarnation of the Word, the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the apostolic testimony, and the scriptural form in which this testimony is normatively received.

Human language refers because human beings have first been addressed.

Reference is therefore receptive before it is expressive.

This ordering distinguishes Christian theology from theories that construe theological language primarily as the projection of religious consciousness, the grammar of ecclesial life, or the symbolic articulation of human existence. Theology speaks because it has first been spoken to. It names because God has first made himself identifiable.

Yet revelation does not eliminate philosophical questions concerning reference. It creates them. Once God has acted and spoken, theology must ask how names, predicates, narratives, metaphors, and doctrines continue to refer to the God who has revealed himself. It must ask how reference remains stable through historical distance, linguistic change, doctrinal development, cultural translation, and the inevitable partiality of human understanding.

Divine self-disclosure is therefore the ground of theological reference, but it is not a substitute for theological discipline.

The problem is not merely whether the Church has retained the same words. The same expression may be preserved while its referent is altered. Nor does referential continuity require that every generation possess precisely the same descriptions or conceptual schemes. Different descriptions may identify the same reality, while identical descriptions may be employed within fundamentally different ontologies.

Theology must therefore distinguish continuity of vocabulary from continuity of reference.

This is also why theological interpretation cannot terminate in textual analysis alone. Texts possess linguistic forms, historical settings, and authorial intentions. These are indispensable to interpretation. Yet prophetic and apostolic authors do not finally intend only their own acts of writing. They intend realities. They bear witness to what God has done, whom God has identified himself to be, and what God has promised.

Theological interpretation consequently asks not only what a text meant within its first historical context, but what reality the text identifies and whether contemporary theological speech remains answerable to that same reality.

The order is therefore theological before it is hermeneutical:

God acts and speaks.

Prophetic and apostolic witnesses identify the one who has acted.

Scripture normatively bears this witness.

The Church receives, interprets, and confesses Scripture.

Doctrine tests whether the Church’s speech preserves the identity of the one witnessed to.

Proclamation addresses the hearer in the name of this same God.

The legitimacy of proclamation depends upon preserving rather than replacing this referential order. Proclamation does not establish the identity of God by its own occurrence. It becomes genuine proclamation when the God who has identified himself in Israel and in the crucified and risen Jesus Christ remains the one about whom—and through whose agency—the proclamation speaks.

The claim that reference precedes proclamation therefore does not deny that God acts through proclamation. It identifies the condition under which such a claim is intelligible. God may address the hearer through the proclaimed Word because the proclaimed Word does not invent the one who speaks through it. Its authority is derivative. Its referent is antecedent. Its efficacy, when granted, is divine.

This also explains why philosophical theology remains indispensable. Philosophy does not discover or manufacture the referent of Christian theology independently of revelation. Revelation has already identified the one about whom theology speaks. Philosophical theology clarifies the logical, semantic, and ontological conditions under which theological language may continue to refer faithfully to this God.

It distinguishes naming from description, reference from predication, identity from attributed properties, and continuity of terminology from continuity of subject matter. It asks how speakers may successfully refer under conditions of partial understanding, how descriptions may change without changing the referent, and how apparently identical theological expressions may conceal incompatible accounts of reality.

These distinctions are not external constraints imposed upon theology. They are instruments of theological accountability. Without them, theology may preserve traditional vocabulary while replacing its subject with something conceptually more manageable.

Reference is therefore neither a merely linguistic achievement nor a merely historical inheritance. It is the continuing discipline of remaining answerable to the God whose self-disclosure first made theological language possible. It is the refusal to allow the Church’s words, practices, experiences, or conceptual systems to become substitutes for the reality to which they are ordered.

Theology may revise its descriptions.

It may refine its concepts.

It may correct its inherited models.

It may discover that some of its predicates were confused, inadequate, or false.

What it may not do is quietly change the subject while continuing to speak as though nothing decisive has happened.

Reference precedes proclamation because proclamation can proclaim as gospel only what it has first received as God’s self-identification. Where reference fails, proclamation becomes religious speech about the community’s own meanings. Where reference is preserved, proclamation may remain answerable to the God who acts, speaks, judges, reconciles, and promises.

Only once the referent has been identified does the question of predication properly arise. We may then ask not merely whether theological language is about God, but whether what it says about God is true.

The next question therefore follows necessarily:

Under what conditions can theological judgments be true?

Wednesday, July 01, 2026

Prolegomena to Disputationes Theologicae I: Theology Exists Because These Questions Exist

This essay inaugurates Prolegomena to Disputationes Theologicae, a series that serves as the methodological introduction to my larger theological project. Although the essays and disputations that follow range across biblical interpretation, Luther studies, ontology, philosophical theology, and theological language, they are all governed by a single conviction: theology exists because the deepest questions of human existence exist. The purpose of these essays is to recover the proper order of theological inquiry so that Christian doctrine may once again be understood as making intelligible, truthful, and reality-directed claims about God and God's works.

Every generation inherits Christian doctrine. Far fewer inherit the question that made the doctrine necessary in the first place.

That loss has had profound consequences. Modern theology has often devoted enormous energy to defending traditions, revising doctrines, interpreting texts, or reconstructing communities while giving comparatively little attention to the questions that gave rise to theology itself. As a result, theology increasingly appears to many as the internal discourse of religious institutions rather than as an inquiry into realities that concern every human being.

The purpose of this series is to begin somewhere deeper.

Theology does not exist because churches exist. It does not exist because theological schools require curricula or because scholars require subjects for publication. Theology exists because finite human existence gives rise to questions that refuse to disappear. Human beings discover themselves to exist contingently rather than necessarily. They confront suffering, guilt, death, hope, justice, beauty, and the persistent question of whether reality possesses a meaning greater than the succession of finite events through which it passes.

These questions are not produced by Christianity. Christianity inherits them because they arise from the structure of finite existence itself.

The question of truth has always been central to my own theological work. Long before graduate school, before philosophy, before Luther studies, I found myself wondering whether the words heard in church actually referred to anything real. Those questions did not arise in a classroom. They arose in ordinary life, long before I possessed the vocabulary to formulate them clearly. They have remained the governing questions behind everything I have written.

Theological questioning therefore begins neither with doctrine nor with the Church. It begins with existence.

Yet Christian theology does not merely repeat the existential questions already present within human life. It proceeds because God has addressed those questions through revelation. Revelation does not simply answer questions already properly formulated. It judges false questions, redirects disordered expectations, and discloses realities that finite reason could never discover by itself.

Theology therefore arises from an existential occasion and lives from a revelatory source. It begins with the questions that arise from finite existence, but it proceeds under the authority of God’s self-disclosure. Both dimensions are essential. Without the existential questions, theology becomes an exercise in institutional repetition. Without revelation, it becomes speculative philosophy or religious anthropology.

This conviction determines the method of Disputationes Theologicae.

The first responsibility of theology is neither to defend inherited doctrines merely because they are inherited nor to revise them merely to accommodate contemporary sensibilities. Its first responsibility is to render Christian doctrine intelligible without diminishing, translating away, or replacing the reality to which it refers.

That sentence has gradually become the governing principle of this entire project.

From that principle follows a definite order of inquiry. Before theology asks what Christians ought to believe, it must ask how theological language can be meaningful, how it refers, under what conditions theological judgments may be true, and how those judgments concern realities that are not constituted merely by language, religious consciousness, ecclesial authority, or social practice. Only after these questions have been responsibly addressed can theology proceed to doctrine, proclamation, ethics, spirituality, and ecclesial life.

Much of modern theology, in my judgment, has reversed this order. It has concentrated upon appropriation before truth, proclamation before reference, ecclesial practice before intelligibility, or existential transformation before the reality of that which transforms. These concerns are genuine, but they cannot bear the weight placed upon them if the prior questions remain unanswered.

Theological realism therefore becomes the governing concern of the present work. Christian doctrine is not merely useful. It is not merely expressive. It is not merely constitutive of communal identity. It purports to speak about realities that exist independently of our linguistic practices, our ecclesial institutions, and our psychological states. If that claim cannot be sustained, theology has changed its subject.

For this reason, philosophy has an indispensable, though subordinate, place within theology. Theology does not require philosophy because revelation is insufficient. It requires philosophy because human reasoning is. Revelation supplies theology’s subject matter. Philosophy disciplines theology’s reasoning so that it neither says less than revelation gives, more than revelation warrants, nor something other than revelation gives and warrants.

This, I have increasingly come to believe, is Lutheran method at a deeper level than confessional citation. Scripture is sufficient. Human reasoning is not. Philosophy therefore serves theology not as its master but as its disciplined servant.

The essays that follow over the coming months will attempt to unfold this methodological vision patiently. They will explain why intelligibility precedes doctrine, why reference precedes proclamation, why truth precedes existential appropriation, and why theology must once again become answerable to reality if it is to remain theology at all.

The larger project now bears the title Disputationes Theologicae. It consists of sixty-six disputations developed over many years of work in philosophical theology. Although these essays address subjects as diverse as Luther, Kant, ontology, language, hermeneutics, metaphysics, bioethics, proclamation, and formal semantics, they are governed by a single question.

Can Christian theology once again become an intellectually responsible inquiry into realities that are genuinely there?

Everything that follows is an attempt to answer that question.

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Prolegomena to Disputationes Theologicae II Intelligibility Before Doctrine

This essay forms part of Prolegomena to Disputationes Theologicae, a series in philosophical theology produced through the Department of Philosophical Theology at Christ School of Theology. The essays together articulate the methodological foundations of the larger Disputationes Theologicae project by recovering the proper order of theological inquiry. They proceed from the conviction that theology exists because these questions exist, and that theology's first responsibility is to render Christian doctrine intelligible without diminishing, translating away, or replacing the reality to which it refers.

Christian theology begins with revelation, but theological inquiry begins with intelligibility. Revelation gives theology its subject matter; intelligibility makes responsible theological judgment possible. Theology therefore does not seek intelligibility because intelligibility creates truth. It seeks intelligibility because finite knowers cannot responsibly affirm what they do not understand.

Much of modern theology has quietly reversed this order. It has assumed that doctrine can be defended, proclaimed, appropriated, or revised before asking whether the doctrine itself has first been rendered intelligible. The result has been a theology that often knows what it wishes to affirm while remaining uncertain about what, precisely, it is affirming.

Christian theology has often assumed that its principal task is to state the doctrines of the Christian faith correctly. The assumption is understandable. Doctrine matters because truth matters, and the Church cannot confess faithfully if it no longer knows what it is confessing.

Yet a doctrine may be repeated correctly without being understood. It may retain its inherited vocabulary while the distinctions that once gave that vocabulary meaning have disappeared. It may be defended with great conviction even though no one can say clearly what would have to be true for the doctrine itself to be true.

The problem is therefore deeper than doctrinal disagreement. Before theology can ask whether a doctrine ought to be affirmed, rejected, defended, or revised, it must ask whether the doctrine has first become intelligible.

Intelligibility comes before doctrine.

This claim does not mean that theology exists before revelation, Scripture, or confession. Christian theology receives its subject from revelation and its language through the scriptural and ecclesial traditions that bear witness to it. Nor does it mean that the theologian must first construct a neutral philosophical foundation upon which Christian doctrine may later be placed.

It means something more modest and more demanding. Before a theological judgment can be responsibly affirmed, theology must understand what is being claimed, what distinctions the claim requires, what realities its terms identify, and what would follow if the claim were true.

This methodological ordering may be expressed in a single governing principle: intelligibility is not the source of theological truth; it is the condition under which theological truth can be responsibly affirmed or denied.

Theology therefore seeks intelligibility not because revelation requires philosophical completion, but because theological judgment requires conceptual clarity concerning what revelation gives. Its task is not to supplement revelation but to understand it responsibly.

A sentence can be grammatically familiar while remaining conceptually obscure. Christians may say that God is triune, that the Word became flesh, that Christ is present in the sacrament, that God acts providentially, or that the dead will be raised. Each sentence belongs recognizably to Christian confession. Yet familiarity does not by itself secure intelligibility.

What does it mean to say that God is one and three? In what respect is God one, and in what respect three? What is meant by person and nature? What must be true if the one who suffered under Pontius Pilate is the eternal Son? What kind of presence is claimed when the Church says that Christ gives his body and blood? What relation between divine and creaturely causality is implied by providence? What makes the person raised numerically identical with the person who died?

These are not questions imposed upon doctrine from outside. They arise from doctrine itself. They are required if doctrine is to become more than the repetition of inherited expressions.

The first discipline of intelligibility is conceptual distinction. Theology must distinguish what should not be confused.

Person is not nature. Cause is not ground. Reference is not meaning. Truth is not usefulness. Divine action is not one finite cause alongside another. Presence is not necessarily spatial location. Participation is not identity. Mystery is not contradiction. Incomprehensibility is not unintelligibility.

Much theological confusion arises because one term is asked to perform the work of several. The Holy Spirit is invoked to solve a problem of reference, warrant, sanctification, ecclesial authority, or personal experience without distinguishing those questions. Participation is used to explain likeness, causality, communion, transformation, and identity as though these were one relation. Divine mystery is appealed to when an argument has merely failed to specify what it means.

Philosophical theology begins by resisting such conflations. Its first service is not invention but distinction. Before proposing new constructions, it seeks to clarify inherited judgments by identifying the conceptual boundaries within which responsible theological reasoning becomes possible.

Yet conceptual intelligibility is only one part of the matter. There is also semantic intelligibility: the question of how theological language means anything at all.

Words acquire meaning through histories of use, patterns of inference, relations of contrast, practices of correction, and the realities to which they are directed. The word “resurrection,” for example, cannot mean whatever a speaker wishes it to mean. It belongs within scriptural narratives, Jewish expectations, apostolic testimony, creedal confession, liturgical practice, and disputes concerning bodily identity and death. To redefine resurrection as the survival of influence, the persistence of memory, or the continuing significance of Jesus may preserve a religious function while changing the subject.

The same is true of “God,” “creation,” “incarnation,” “sin,” “grace,” and “judgment.” Theological terms are neither empty containers nor private symbols. They possess histories, identities, inferential commitments, and conditions of responsible use.

Semantic intelligibility therefore requires more than clarity of style. A sentence may be written plainly and still change the meaning of its central terms. Conversely, a difficult doctrine may remain intelligible even when its subject exceeds complete comprehension.

This distinction is essential. To render a doctrine intelligible is not to make it simple, obvious, or exhaustively transparent. God is not made comprehensible by being described coherently. The incarnation does not cease to be mysterious when person and nature are distinguished. Resurrection does not become empirically predictable when its identity conditions are clarified.

Intelligibility is therefore not mastery. It is the disciplined determination of what is being claimed, how the claim holds together, what it excludes, and what reality would have to be like for it to be true. Theology does not remove mystery by rendering doctrine intelligible. It distinguishes genuine mystery from conceptual confusion and thereby allows mystery to remain genuinely theological.

There is, finally, an ontological dimension of intelligibility. Theological language can be meaningful only because reality itself is sufficiently determinate to be known, identified, and judged.

If things possessed no identities, properties, relations, histories, or powers, there would be nothing for language to describe correctly or incorrectly. If Jesus Christ were merely the product of ecclesial interpretation, the Church could not be corrected by the one it confesses. If God were only a function of religious language, theology could never discover that its language had falsified its subject.

The intelligibility of theological discourse therefore presupposes that reality is not created by discourse. Language mediates our access to reality, but it does not bring its referent into existence.

This is the fundamental realist commitment of Disputationes Theologicae. Theology speaks through finite concepts, historical languages, contested traditions, and fallible judgments. Yet it speaks about realities that are not constituted by those concepts, languages, traditions, or judgments.

Theology can therefore be wrong, and that possibility is not an embarrassment to theological reasoning but one of its necessary conditions. A discourse incapable of falsehood is equally incapable of truth.

If every doctrinal formulation becomes valid merely because it functions within a community, theology has ceased to make judgments about reality and has become the description of ecclesial practice.

The demand for intelligibility is therefore also a demand for corrigibility. A doctrine must be stated clearly enough that one can identify what would count against it, what would expose an equivocation, and what would show that the subject has been changed.

This is why inherited language, however venerable, cannot be protected from analysis. The purpose of analysis is not to dissolve the confession but to determine whether the language still performs the work for which it was formed.

The doctrine of the Trinity, for example, must preserve both divine unity and irreducible personal distinction. An account that secures unity by reducing Father, Son, and Spirit to modes of appearance has not clarified the doctrine. It has changed it. An account that secures distinction by positing three independent divine beings has done the same.

The doctrine of the incarnation must preserve the identity of the one Son and the integrity of both divine and human natures. An account that protects divinity by assigning suffering to an independent human subject has changed the subject. So has an account that makes the divine nature itself passible in precisely the same respect as the humanity.

Theological intelligibility therefore has boundaries. It does not mean that every formulation is equally acceptable so long as it can be explained. It means that the reality confessed imposes constraints upon the concepts by which it is articulated.

This is also why intelligibility must precede apologetics. Theology cannot responsibly defend a doctrine it has not first understood. Nor can it translate doctrine for contemporary hearers until it knows what must survive the translation.

Much modern theology has moved too quickly from inherited doctrine to contemporary appropriation. It asks what the Trinity, incarnation, resurrection, or justification might mean for us before asking what those doctrines claim to be true. The result is often a theology rich in significance but uncertain in reference.

A doctrine may matter profoundly and still be false. It may shape identity, generate hope, sustain community, and inspire ethical action while failing to refer to the reality it names. Usefulness therefore cannot substitute for truth, and existential significance cannot substitute for intelligibility.

Theology must therefore first ask what it is saying before it asks whether what it says is true, and only then may it ask how that truth is to be proclaimed, embodied, and lived. This ordering does not diminish doctrine. It protects doctrine from becoming a formula repeated after its subject has disappeared, proclamation from becoming eloquence without reference, ecclesial practice from becoming self-authorization, and faith from being asked to trust what theology has not yet made sufficiently clear to be judged.

The first discipline of theological reason is therefore intelligibility. Its task is neither to simplify Christian doctrine nor to dissolve mystery into conceptual transparency. It seeks to determine as carefully as possible what Christian doctrine actually claims, what distinctions its truth requires, and what realities its language intends.

Theology seeks intelligibility because truth deserves to be understood.

Truth belongs to reality itself. Intelligibility belongs to our responsible apprehension and judgment of that reality. Theology therefore seeks intelligibility not because it creates truth, but because finite knowers cannot responsibly affirm what they do not understand. Only a doctrine rendered intelligible can be responsibly judged, and only what can be responsibly judged can be responsibly affirmed or denied.

The next question therefore follows necessarily:

How does theological language become genuinely about God?

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Consent Is Not Enough: Autonomy, the Ontology of the Patient, and the Vocation of Medicine

This essay forms part of an ongoing series in philosophical theology produced through the Department of Philosophical Theology at Christ School of Theology. The series explores questions of intelligibility, reality, theological language, and the philosophical conditions for Christian belief.

Abstract

The doctrine of informed consent represents one of the great moral achievements of modern medicine, correcting paternalistic practices and recognizing the patient as a responsible moral agent rather than a passive object of clinical expertise. This essay argues, however, that contemporary bioethics has too often elevated consent from an indispensable procedural safeguard into the governing principle of a medical ethics that tacitly reduces the patient to a preference-bearing will. When autonomy becomes the primary category through which patients are understood, medicine risks losing sight of the deeper realities that constitute personal identity, vulnerability, embodiment, and vocation.

Drawing upon philosophical theology, contemporary metaphysics, and Lutheran anthropology, the essay contends that patients are not simply autonomous choosers but persons whose identities are irreducible to acts of consent. Clinical judgment therefore cannot be exhausted by procedural respect for autonomous preference. Medicine is fundamentally ordered toward the good of embodied persons whose dignity is grounded in realities that precede and exceed autonomous choice.

Rather than rejecting informed consent, the essay relocates it within a richer account of the human person and the vocation of medicine. Physicians are called not merely to secure the patient's consent but to serve the flourishing of persons created in the image of God, whose lives possess objective meaning and worth independent of their present capacities for autonomous decision. In this way, informed consent is preserved as an essential ethical practice while recovering the broader ontological and theological framework within which it has its proper place and force.

Key Words: informed consent; patient autonomy; principlist bioethics; Beauchamp and Childress; H. Tristram Engelhardt; Edmund Pellegrino; Alasdair MacIntyre; ontology of the patient; personal identity; extrinsic individuation; medical vocation; imago Dei; coram Deo; Lutheran anthropology; life ethics

I. Introduction: A Moral Achievement and Its Inflation

The modern doctrine of informed consent represents a genuine moral achievement. Its emergence in the mid-twentieth century marked a decisive break with a paternalism so habitual in clinical medicine that it had ceased to recognize itself as such. Patients had been subjected to experimental procedures without disclosure — at Tuskegee, at Willowbrook, and in the Nazi medical programs that prompted the Nuremberg Code — to surgical interventions decided by physicians who considered their own clinical judgment sufficient warrant for action, and to a systematic reduction of the embodied person to an object of professional expertise. The correction demanded by the consent doctrine was not a refinement of existing medical ethics; it was a moral challenge to its foundations. The physician's expertise, it declared, does not confer authority to determine the course of another person's life. The patient is an agent, not a substrate. Information must be disclosed, comprehension secured, and the patient's free authorization obtained before anything is done.

This correction was right, and nothing argued in what follows proposes to reverse it. The patient's voice must be heard; her preferences must be taken seriously; coercion and manipulation in the clinical setting are genuine wrongs. These are not abstract principles; they were purchased at the cost of real suffering, and the history of bioethics has given us abundant reasons to maintain vigilance on precisely these points.

What requires urgent criticism, however, is something different: the inflation of consent from a necessary condition of ethical medical practice into the governing principle of a medical ethics that tacitly reduces the patient to a preference-bearing will. This is not a small or merely technical dispute. It concerns what medicine is for, who the patient is, and what a physician owes to both. When autonomy is elevated from a necessary safeguard into the controlling principle of medical morality, the patient is tacitly reconceived as a preference-bearing will, medicine becomes a technical service industry, and the physician's vocation is reduced to competent compliance. Each of these consequences is a distortion — not merely of Christian medical ethics, but of medicine and of the human person as such.

This essay argues that the autonomy model in its dominant contemporary form presupposes an ontology of the patient that it cannot itself supply. The patient precedes the patient's choices and retains moral significance even when the capacities for deliberation, memory, communication, or consent are diminished or absent. To explain why this is so — and to do more than merely assert it — requires recovering a richer account both of the person and of medicine. In prior contributions to this journal, I have argued that all intrinsic accounts of personal identity ultimately fail, that what individuates persons is finally the intentional love of God, and that human life is constituted by divine address prior to and independent of any social mediation or functional capacity.¹ I have also argued that the concept of vocation names not primarily what one does but what one is: a creature called into being, relation, and responsibility.² These arguments bear directly on the crisis of bioethics, and the present essay draws out their implications for the clinical setting.

The argument proceeds in seven stages. It first reconstructs the principlist consensus and traces the philosophical pedigree of autonomy's rise to primacy. It then identifies three philosophical failures of the autonomy-as-master-principle model and examines what that model presupposes but cannot supply: an ontology of the patient adequate to the problem of personal identity. The essay next develops a Christian account of the patient as embodied creature, relationally constituted person, and divinely addressed self; retrieves the concept of medical vocation and its implications for the physician's moral agency; and concludes by offering a constructive account of a richer medical ethics that situates rather than supplants consent.

II. The Principlist Consensus and the Ascendancy of Autonomy

Any serious engagement with the autonomy model must begin by understanding its intellectual architecture. The regnant framework in anglophone bioethics did not emerge arbitrarily; it drew on deep resources in modern moral philosophy and was institutionalized through a rigorous and widely influential body of work. To criticize it responsibly requires first reconstructing it fairly.

Beauchamp and Childress and the Four Principles

The dominant framework in anglophone bioethics for the past half century is the principlist architecture associated with Tom Beauchamp and James Childress, most fully developed in their Principles of Biomedical Ethics, now in its eighth edition.³ On this account, medical ethics is organized around four prima facie principles: respect for autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and justice. These principles are presented as mid-level norms derived from the overlapping consensus of common moral experience and a range of ethical theories. They require specification and balancing in particular cases, and no single principle enjoys automatic priority over the others.

In formal terms, this is a balanced framework. In practice, however, autonomy has emerged as first among equals. Beauchamp and Childress themselves acknowledge the special weight the respect-for-autonomy principle carries in contemporary clinical ethics, particularly in contexts of patient refusal. When a competent patient refuses a recommended intervention — even one the physician judges urgently necessary — the refusal is generally understood to be binding. The language of "patient-centered care" and "shared decision-making" that now pervades clinical culture expresses this priority. So does the proliferation of advance directive legislation, surrogate decision-making frameworks, and the legal doctrine of informed consent itself, which in most jurisdictions permits liability not only for failures of disclosure but for interventions undertaken without adequate authorization, whatever their medical outcome.

The Philosophical Pedigree

This priority has a serious philosophical pedigree. The roots run to Kant's account of rational autonomy as the ground of moral worth, to Mill's harm principle as the limiting condition on legitimate interference with individual choice, and through both to a broadly liberal tradition that treats rational self-governance as definitive of what distinguishes persons from things. On the Kantian inheritance in particular, the capacity for autonomous rational agency is not merely one valuable property among others that persons happen to possess; it is constitutive of personhood itself. To override a competent agent's considered choice is therefore not merely to act against that person's interest — it is to treat her as less than a person, to substitute one's own will for hers and thereby deny the very capacity that makes her a moral subject rather than a mere object. This is why, on Kantian grounds, even a beneficent override of autonomous choice carries a moral cost that no good outcome can fully cancel: it is a wrong to the person as person, not merely a miscalculation about welfare.

Engelhardt and the Secular Bridge

H. Tristram Engelhardt Jr. drew the inference with unusual clarity and unflinching consistency. In a secular, pluralist society, he argued, there is no morally authoritative account of the good life available to all parties through reason alone. Moral strangers — persons who do not share a thick ethical framework — can nonetheless interact peacefully and cooperate in institutions like medicine, but only if they observe the procedural principle of mutual respect for autonomy. Beneficence has no agreed-upon content in a morally plural world; autonomy at least gives us a procedure.⁴ On this view, the physician's proper role is to provide accurate information, ensure comprehension, and then stand aside. The patient's authorization is what makes a medical intervention legitimate; without it, even a beneficial act is a trespass.

Autonomy as Master Principle in Practice

The result, as Leon Kass has noted, is a medicine increasingly understood as a service industry whose product is the satisfaction of patient preferences.⁵ The physician is the expert; the patient is the consumer. The encounter is transactional rather than relational, and its moral content is exhausted by the terms of the transaction. This picture has achieved sufficient cultural penetration that it is now largely invisible — experienced not as one possible account of medicine but as the natural and obvious one.

This is the adversary worth engaging. Its philosophical foundations are serious; its humanitarian motivations are genuine; and its critique of paternalism was historically warranted. But the account is nonetheless deeply mistaken, and the mistakes run all the way down to the question of who the patient is.

III. Three Philosophical Failures of the Autonomy-as-Master-Principle Model

The principlist consensus reconstructed in the preceding section is philosophically serious and historically understandable. What follows is not a dismissal of it but a diagnosis. The autonomy-as-master-principle model fails, and fails at the level of its foundations, on three distinct fronts: ontological, normative, and vocational. Each failure is independent; together they are decisive.

The Ontological Problem: The Patient Who Precedes Her Choices

The first and most fundamental failure of the autonomy model is ontological. Autonomy is a predicate that requires a subject, and the model has no adequate account of that subject. The preference-bearing will that appears at the clinical encounter — expressing values, issuing authorizations, declining interventions — is presupposed by the framework but never adequately analyzed within it. The patient is identified with her choices, but this identification is unstable.

The instability becomes visible at the margins of the framework: at the bedside of the patient in the terminal stages of dementia, who can no longer express coherent preferences; in the neonatal intensive care unit; in the care of the patient with acute psychotic crisis. The standard response is to invoke advance directives, surrogate decision-making, and best-interest standards — mechanisms that attempt to honor autonomy where its direct exercise is impossible. But this is a repair operation performed on a framework whose foundations have quietly shifted. The patient in these cases is acknowledged to have moral status that precedes and exceeds her current capacity for self-determination. The question the framework cannot answer from its own resources is the one that matters most: what grounds that status?

If personal moral status is grounded in the capacity for autonomous rational agency — as the Kantian inheritance suggests — then those who lack that capacity have diminished or no status. This conclusion is not merely monstrous; it is embraced with logical consistency by some bioethicists who follow the Kantian premises wherever they lead.⁶ The standard principlist response is to insist that the four principles must be balanced, and that the interests of those who cannot exercise autonomy fall under the beneficence and non-maleficence principles. But this response defers rather than resolves the problem. What is the ground of the beneficence owed to the demented patient? If it is not their capacity for autonomous choice, what is it?

The autonomy model has no satisfying answer, because the moral significance of the patient who cannot consent is not derivable from a framework whose master principle is consent.

The Normative Gap: Consent Authorizes but Does Not Justify

The second failure is normative. Consent authorizes; it does not justify. A patient's informed and voluntary agreement to a procedure establishes a necessary condition for the physician's performing it, but necessary conditions are not sufficient ones. There is a gap between what the patient wants and what is medically good for the patient, and the autonomy model systematically collapses this gap.

Consider the physician confronted with a patient who requests an intervention the physician judges to offer no medical benefit, or affirmative harm, or that belongs to a category of acts the physician regards as incompatible with medicine's internal goods. The autonomy model, taken to its logical conclusion, generates an obligation for the physician to comply or at minimum to facilitate access. The physician's clinical and moral judgment becomes, in this picture, an obstacle to be managed rather than a contribution to be integrated. The physician is re-described as someone who offers services; the patient is re-described as someone who orders them.

But this conception of medicine is not self-evidently correct; it is a substantive and contestable view that has achieved the status of common sense by winning an argument it was never required to make explicit. Edmund Pellegrino, perhaps the most philosophically rigorous defender of a different view, argued throughout his career that medicine possesses internal goods — truthful diagnosis, healing where possible, palliation where cure is impossible, relief of suffering, faithful accompaniment of the ill — that are not derived from patient preference but constitute the telos of the practice.⁷ The patient's authorization is morally necessary because the patient is a person whose body is at stake; but the authorization does not create the good toward which medicine is ordered. Consent is morally indispensable within medicine; it is not the foundation of medical morality.

The Vocational Problem: The Physician Reduced to Competent Compliance

The third failure concerns the physician. The reduction of medical ethics to the authorization of patient preferences has consequences for the physician's moral agency that are rarely discussed with the seriousness they deserve. On the autonomy-as-master-principle model, the physician's personal moral convictions are a liability to be disclosed and then set aside. The widespread use of the language of "conscientious objection" to describe physician reluctance to participate in certain procedures — abortion, assisted suicide, certain reproductive technologies — reveals the underlying assumption: the physician's conscience is an exception to a default of compliance, not the center of a vocation.

But this inverts the proper order. The physician is not someone who happens to possess technical skills and rents them to whichever preferences present themselves in the consultation room. The physician is someone who has entered a practice constituted by goods — health, healing, truthful accompaniment of the suffering — and whose integrity consists precisely in orienting her skills toward those goods. The "conscientious objector" framing presupposes that the physician's primary obligation is compliance, with conscience as a permitted deviation from that default. The vocational understanding inverts this: conscience is the center, and what requires justification is any demand that the physician act against it.

When we reduce the physician to competent compliance, we do not merely restrict her moral agency. We deprive her of the vocational structure within which medicine's own goods become intelligible.

IV. The Ontology the Autonomy Model Cannot Supply

The three failures just identified share a common root. The autonomy model does not merely make errors at the level of application; it operates with an impoverished account of the person that it never subjects to critical scrutiny. This section excavates that account, shows why it collapses under philosophical pressure, and identifies what a more adequate account of the patient must supply.

The Thin Self and Its Failures at the Margins

These problems converge on a single underlying difficulty: the autonomy model operates with a thin, functionally defined account of the self, and that account cannot bear the normative weight placed upon it. To see this clearly, it is worth attending carefully to what the model implicitly assumes.

The model assumes that patients have preferences — that is, that they have psychological states with intentional content, organized into something like a set of values or a life plan. It assumes that these preferences can be elicited and expressed under conditions of adequate information and freedom from coercion. And it assumes that respecting these preferences is the primary form that respect for the patient-as-person takes.

What the model does not do is provide any account of why the preference-bearing subject deserves moral respect in the first place, or of what makes that subject the particular individual she is. These are not idle metaphysical questions; they have direct clinical and ethical consequences. If what grounds moral status is the capacity for rational preference-formation, then the capacity matters more than the individual who possesses or lacks it. And if what identifies the patient as this particular patient is her psychological continuity — her memories, personality, beliefs, and values — then radical disruption of psychological continuity raises the question of whether the person who consented is the same person who is being treated.

The Personal Identity Problem and Its Bioethical Consequences

I have argued at length elsewhere in this journal that all intrinsic accounts of personal identity ultimately fail.⁸ Neither bodily continuity, nor psychological continuity, nor the appeal to an immaterial soul individuated by its own haecceity, can accomplish what personal identity requires — namely, the re-identification of this individual across possible situations, including the possible situation of radical psychological disruption or bodily transformation.

The case of the Alzheimer's patient makes this vivid. Consider a patient who has, over years of progressive dementia, lost her memories, her characteristic personality, her capacity for deliberation, and her ability to recognize her own family. A psychological criterion of personal identity — the view, associated with Locke and his successors, that personal identity consists in continuity of consciousness and memory — implies that the woman currently in the bed is not, or perhaps not entirely, the same person as the woman who signed an advance directive five years earlier.⁹ The bodily criterion fares no better in the long run: for if we cannot conceive that the same person might have a different body (as it seems we can), then bodily continuity does not suffice to identify the person. And the appeal to an immaterial soul runs into the problem of what individuates souls — a problem that dissolves into either the claim that all souls share the same properties (which leads to the conclusion that there is only one soul) or the postulation of a bare haecceity that explains individuality by positing what cannot be specified.¹⁰

The conclusion is not that persons do not exist — it is that their existence cannot be grounded in any intrinsic property or set of properties they happen to possess. There is nothing in Bob, on any account, that fully explains why Bob is Bob and not someone else, and why Bob remains Bob through radical psychological or physical change.

What Must Be True of the Patient

This conclusion has a direct implication for medical ethics. The autonomy model implicitly relies upon a psychological criterion of the patient's identity: it is the patient's values, preferences, and life-narrative that make her the particular individual whose consent is sought. But if psychological continuity cannot fully individuate the person, then the moment the patient's psychological continuity is disrupted — by dementia, coma, psychiatric crisis, or even the radical transformation that serious illness brings — the framework loses its footing.

At the same time, our moral intuitions — confirmed by clinical practice at its best — insist that the patient in the advanced stages of dementia remains a person who commands care, whose suffering must be relieved, whose dignity must be honored. These intuitions are right. But they cannot be derived from the framework that makes autonomous preference the ground of moral status. They require a different account of who the patient is.

What must be true of the patient if her moral significance is to survive the loss of those capacities the autonomy model relies upon? The patient must have significance prior to her preferences — significance that does not depend on her ability to form or express them. And this significance cannot rest on any property she intrinsically possesses, since all such accounts fail. It must be grounded in something extrinsic to the patient — in a relation in which the patient stands independently of her capacities, and which is not dissolved by the loss of those capacities.

 V. A Christian Account of the Patient

The preceding analysis established what the autonomy model cannot supply: an account of the patient whose moral significance survives the loss of the functional capacities on which the model relies. The present section offers that account. It is explicitly theological, and it makes no apology for being so. The argument is not that Christian theology provides one supplementary perspective among others, but that it articulates what the philosophical critique already requires — an ontology of the person that precedes and exceeds any capacity the person happens to possess at a given moment.

The Patient as Embodied Creature: Life Received, Not Self-Created

Christian theology identifies the patient, in the first instance, as an embodied creature. This is not a trivially pious claim; it has specific philosophical content. To be a creature is to exist as the recipient of a gift one did not produce and cannot fully secure. Life is not an achievement but a receiving; it precedes any activity of the self and cannot be fully grasped from within the framework of self-authorship.

Gilbert Meilaender has noted, in these pages, that a living human being is not just a thing, not an inanimate object: "We do not exist the way a rock does, 'simply and fixedly what it is, identical with itself over time, and with no need to maintain that identity by anything else it does.'"¹¹ We are organisms that must work to sustain our life through the metabolic processes of embodied creaturely existence. But we are also more than organisms: our being is, as Meilaender puts it, ecstatic — we have a kind of inner freedom from our own substance, a capacity to reach out toward something that transcends our present condition. The patient is neither pure will, as the autonomy model implies, nor pure biology, as reductive naturalism implies. She is an embodied creature whose very existence participates in a drama of creation, fall, and redemption that she did not author.

This creaturely character of human life is directly relevant to the medical encounter. The patient who arrives in the clinic is not a sovereign self who happens to need technical services. She arrives carrying a body she received, sustained by relations she did not choose, embedded in a history she did not write. The finitude, fragility, and dependence she presents at the clinical encounter are not aberrations from her normal condition; they are revelations of what she always was. Medicine's response to her condition is not simply the fulfillment of a contract; it is an act of attending to the creature in her creatureliness.

The Patient as Relationally Constituted: Extrinsic Individuation and Divine Love

Second, the patient is a relationally constituted self whose identity is sustained through relations that exceed subjective consciousness. I have argued in this journal that the problem of personal identity is genuinely intractable on any account that attempts to ground it in intrinsic properties of the person — whether bodily, psychological, or spiritual.¹² The argument, briefly reconstructed: neither bodily continuity, nor psychological continuity, nor an immaterial soul with a bare haecceity, can accomplish the individuation of persons across possible situations and times. All intrinsic accounts founder on the same problem: there is nothing in the person that uniquely identifies her, that necessarily distinguishes her from every other possible person, and that remains constant through radical physical or psychological change.

The only available solution is extrinsic individuation: the person is the particular individual she is not because of any property she intrinsically possesses, but because of the relation in which she stands to one who individuates her through his love. "Peter is Peter because God regards Peter so. God thus functions as a type of ideal agent that grants personhood — they are the person that they are because God has loved them into a self-same one."¹³ God's love for Peter in an appropriately Peter-directed way discriminates Peter from all others whom God loves in their own particular ways.

This is not a merely consoling thought; it is a metaphysical claim with direct ethical consequences. If what makes the patient this patient — what individuates her as the particular person she is — is divine love and intentionality rather than any capacity or property she intrinsically possesses, then her moral significance is not exhausted by, and does not depend upon, her present functional capacities. The patient with advanced Alzheimer's disease retains her personhood not because she retains a sufficient degree of psychological continuity, but because God has not ceased to love her into the particular self she is. Her identity is held in existence by a love that does not diminish when memory fades or preference becomes inexpressible.

This account also illuminates the imago Dei in a way that avoids the standard difficulty of identifying the image with some specific intrinsic property — reason, will, moral capacity — that is diminished or absent in conditions of cognitive impairment. The image of God is not a property the patient possesses; it is a relation in which she stands. She is made in the image of God not because she can do what God can do, in some analogous sense, but because God has addressed her and continues to address her as a particular, beloved creature. The image is not an achievement but a gift — and like all gifts from God, it cannot be revoked by the limitations of finite creaturely existence.¹⁴

The Patient as Divinely Addressed: Dignity Coram Deo

Third, and most fundamentally, the patient is a creature who stands before God — coram Deo — independently of any social recognition, clinical evaluation, or capacity for self-expression. I have argued, drawing on the Lutheran theological tradition, that human life is constituted by address: "life is given before it is chosen and answerable before it is fully understood."¹⁵ To be human is to stand coram Deo before one can stand within any social order — before one can exercise autonomy, form preferences, or participate in the procedures through which principlist bioethics adjudicates moral status.

The coram Deo dimension of human existence names the givenness of life. Prior to social mediation — prior to participation in the structures of medicine, law, family, or economy — life stands before God. Its worth is not conferred by system, negotiated through procedure, or bestowed by successful recognition. It is given. Address precedes action; grace precedes achievement. This is precisely the ontological claim that the autonomy model cannot supply. The dignity of the patient does not derive from her capacity to consent. It precedes her capacity to consent, and it remains even when that capacity is gone.

This coram Deo structure has a correlate in the coram hominibus dimension: life before God does not terminate in private religious consolation. It issues in answerability to the neighbor. The patient who stands before God as addressed and loved is also the neighbor who stands before the physician as one to whom something is owed — not merely technical competence, not merely respect for expressed preferences, but faithful attention to the whole person in her creaturely condition. The physician-patient relationship is structured by this dual relatedness, and neither the physician nor the patient can be adequately understood without it.

VI. Medicine as Vocation: The Goods Internal to Practice

The account of the patient developed above has direct implications for how medicine itself must be understood. If the patient is not a preference-bearing will but an embodied creature addressed by God and individuated by divine love, then the practice ordered toward her cannot be adequately conceived as a technical service industry. This section retrieves an understanding of medicine as a vocation constituted by internal goods — an understanding that the autonomy model systematically obscures.

Pellegrino and the Internal Goods of Medicine

The autonomy model's reduction of the physician to competent compliance requires, as its correlate, a conception of medicine as a service industry — a body of technical expertise rented to whatever preferences present themselves for fulfillment. This conception is not merely philosophically inadequate; it is unfaithful to the actual character of medicine as a practice with its own internal goods.

Edmund Pellegrino, in a body of work spanning more than four decades, argued persistently against this reduction. Medicine has an end (a telos), he maintained, that is internal to the practice itself and that cannot be reduced to the satisfaction of patient preferences: the right and good healing action in this particular patient at this particular time.¹⁶ This end encompasses truthful diagnosis, healing where possible, palliation where cure is impossible, the relief of suffering, the protection of bodily integrity, and faithful accompaniment in illness and dying. These are not externally imposed goals; they are what medicine is for. A physician who disregards them in the name of patient preference has not respected the patient's autonomy; she has abandoned her vocation.

Pellegrino's account draws on a broadly Aristotelian framework, retrieving the notion that practices are constituted by the goods they characteristically pursue and that the virtues are precisely those dispositions that enable practitioners to pursue those goods reliably and well.¹⁷ The good physician is not merely a skilled technician who happens to possess certain values; she is someone whose character has been formed by the goods of medicine in such a way that she can be trusted to pursue them even when doing so is inconvenient, unprofitable, or contrary to patient demand.

MacIntyre in the Background: Practices, Virtues, and the Telos of Healing

Alasdair MacIntyre's analysis of practices and their internal goods provides the broader philosophical framework within which Pellegrino's account of medicine operates.¹⁸ For MacIntyre, a practice is a coherent, complex form of socially established cooperative activity through which goods internal to that activity are realized in the course of trying to achieve those standards of excellence appropriate to it. The internal goods of a practice cannot be identified or pursued apart from participation in the practice itself; they are not reducible to external goods like income, prestige, or patient satisfaction.

Medicine, on this account, is a practice in the fullest sense: it has internal standards of excellence (diagnostic accuracy, therapeutic efficacy, appropriate palliation), internal goods (the patient's genuine health, the relief of genuine suffering), and a tradition of reflection on those goods that extends from Hippocrates through the long history of medical ethics. The autonomy model, by subordinating all of this to the patient's expressed preferences, effectively collapses the distinction between internal and external goods — treating the patient's satisfaction as the only relevant measure of medical success. This is not an enrichment of medical ethics but an impoverishment of it.

Vocation as Ontological Address: The Physician Before God

The Christian tradition adds a further dimension that the MacIntyrean framework does not supply. The physician's calling is not merely the result of having entered a practice with internal goods; it is a vocation in the theological sense — a calling that comes from outside the self and that is answerable to something more than the internal logic of medical practice.

I have argued, in dialogue with the Lutheran tradition, that vocation does not name first what one does but what one is: a creature called into being, relation, and responsibility.¹⁹ In its fundamental sense, vocation names the creaturely condition as such: life received from God and given for the neighbor within concrete forms of creaturely existence. The physician's vocation is a specification of this fundamental creaturely calling. She is summoned to care for the neighbor in the particular vulnerability of illness, to attend to the creature in her creatureliness, and to serve the goods of healing, truth, and compassionate accompaniment — not because she has contracted to do so, but because she stands coram Deo as one to whom this service has been given.

This vocational understanding of medicine has two important implications. First, it means that the physician's conscience is not an exception to her professional role but its center. She is not a technician with incidentally held values; she is a person whose integrity consists in the faithful ordering of her skills toward goods she has received and is accountable for. When demands are made of the physician that conflict with the internal goods of medicine or with her own moral convictions, the language of "conscientious objection" is precisely backwards: it is the demand for compliance, not the exercise of conscience, that requires justification.

Second, and equally importantly, the vocational understanding of medicine situates the physician coram Deo in her relation to the patient. The patient before the physician is not merely a preference-bearer with whom a transactional agreement is negotiated. She is a creature whom God has loved into existence, whom God continues to address and sustain, and who stands before both physician and God in the vulnerability of her creaturely condition. The physician who attends to her does so as one who is herself coram Deo — answerable for what she does and does not do with the gifts of knowledge and skill she has received. Medical care is not merely a technical transaction; it is an exercise of creaturely responsibility before God.

VII. Toward a Richer Doctrine of Informed Consent

The argument developed in the preceding sections is critical in its diagnosis but constructive in its intention. Having shown that the autonomy model presupposes an ontology of the patient it cannot supply, and having offered a Christian account of the patient and of medicine adequate to what the critique requires, it remains to show what a richer doctrine of informed consent looks like in practice — and what it is capable of protecting that the autonomy model is not.

Consent Situated Within, Not as the Governing Principle

Nothing argued in the preceding sections implies that consent is dispensable, that the patient's voice should be overridden, or that paternalism in its historical forms was anything other than a moral failure. The argument is not that autonomy does not matter but that autonomy cannot bear the full normative weight assigned to it.

A richer medical ethics situates consent within a broader framework constituted by medicine's internal goods, the physician's vocation, and an adequate account of the patient as a person whose dignity is not generated by her preferences. Within this framework, consent retains its indispensable function: it protects the patient from coercion, manipulation, and the reduction of her embodied person to an object of professional decision. It ensures that the physician's clinical judgment is not exercised unilaterally, but in partnership with the patient whose life and body are at stake. It honors the patient as an active participant in her own care rather than a passive recipient of expert decisions.

But consent now has a different status. It is not the ground of medical morality; it is a necessary expression of a medical morality already constituted by deeper goods. The physician seeks the patient's consent because the patient is a person whose creaturely dignity demands it — not because consent is what makes the intervention legitimate in the abstract, but because this particular creature has been addressed by God as the one whose participation in her own healing is owed to her as a matter of her God-given dignity.

What a Thicker Medical Ethics Protects

A medical ethics that situates consent within a richer framework is capable of protecting things the autonomy model cannot protect. It can account for the moral significance of the patient who cannot consent — the demented, the unconscious, the neonate — without the strained mechanisms of advance directives and best-interest standards that the autonomy model requires. The demented patient commands care not because her earlier expressed preferences survive or because her interests can be inferred from her former values, but because she stands before God as an addressed and loved creature whose significance is not a function of her current capacities.

It can also protect the physician's moral agency in ways the autonomy model suppresses. If the physician's conscience is the center rather than the margin of her professional identity, then demands for her participation in acts she regards as incompatible with medicine's internal goods cannot simply override that conscience in the name of patient preference. The physician is not a neutral tool; she is a person with a vocation, answerable for what she does and does not do.

And it can sustain the goods of truthfulness, faithful accompaniment, and compassionate presence that the service-industry model of medicine systematically erodes. Paul Ramsey observed long ago that the patient is not merely a biological problem to be solved but a person to be accompanied.²⁰ Accompanying a person through illness and dying is not reducible to respecting her preferences; it requires forms of presence, truthfulness, and care that go beyond the fulfillment of any contract. Medicine practiced as vocation is medicine oriented toward these forms of presence as constitutive of the practice itself.

The Distinction between Necessary and Sufficient

The fundamental distinction at stake can be stated simply: consent is necessary because the patient is a person; it is insufficient because the patient is more than a will.

The patient is a person: she possesses dignity that demands she be treated as an agent, not merely as a substrate for intervention. Her preferences must be taken seriously; her authorization must be sought; her right to refuse must be honored. The consent doctrine expresses something real about what she is.

But she is more than a will: she is an embodied creature whose life is received rather than self-created, a relationally constituted self whose identity is held in existence by divine love, and a creature who stands before God independently of her capacities for choice. These dimensions of her existence are morally relevant — indeed, they are morally primary — and they cannot be captured by a framework that treats autonomous preference as the master principle of medical morality. It is to the conclusion that these distinctions finally point.

VIII. Conclusion: The Vocation of Medicine and the Dignity of the Patient

Modern bioethics was built, in part, on a justified protest against the reduction of the patient to an object of professional expertise. The protest was right. The correction — the insistence that patients are persons whose voices must be heard and whose authorizations must be sought — was morally necessary and remains practically indispensable.

But the protest has generated a framework that cannot sustain its own deepest commitments. The dignity of the patient who cannot consent, the moral seriousness of the physician's vocation, the goods internal to the practice of medicine — none of these can be adequately grounded in a framework whose governing principle is the satisfaction of patient preferences. The autonomy model gives us an indispensable safeguard and mistakes it for a foundation.

The recovery of a richer medical ethics requires attending to what the autonomy model presupposes but cannot supply: an account of the patient as more than a preference-bearing will. That account is available, though not without theological commitment. The patient is an embodied creature whose life is received from God and whose significance does not depend on her present capacity for self-determination. She is a relationally constituted self whose identity is held in existence by divine love that does not diminish when memory fades or preference becomes inexpressible. And she is a creature who stands coram Deo — before the God who has addressed and loved her into the particular person she is — independently of any social recognition or functional capacity.

Medicine practiced as vocation — ordered toward the genuine goods of healing, truth, relief of suffering, and faithful accompaniment — is medicine adequate to this patient. Consent belongs within such a medicine, and it belongs there necessarily. But it cannot constitute such a medicine, because the patient who arrives in the clinic is not first and finally a will. She is a creature — addressed, loved, and called — whose dignity the physician is summoned to serve.

 Notes

1. Dennis Bielfeldt, "Personal Identity, Divine Love, and Extrinsic Individuation," Verba Vitae 1, nos. 3–4 (Autumn/Winter 2024): 21–44; Dennis Bielfeldt, "Gaining Clarity on the That and What of Life," Verba Vitae 1, nos. 1–2 (Spring/Summer 2024): 39–52.

2. Dennis Bielfeldt, "Alienation, Vocation, and the Ontology of Life," Verba Vitae 3, no. 1 (Spring 2026): 39–58.

3. Tom L. Beauchamp and James F. Childress, Principles of Biomedical Ethics, 8th ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2019). The first edition appeared in 1979; the work has shaped anglophone bioethics across eight editions.

4. H. Tristram Engelhardt Jr., The Foundations of Bioethics, 2nd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996), 67–114. Engelhardt's position grew more explicitly theological in his later work; see The Foundations of Christian Bioethics (Lisse: Swets and Zeitlinger, 2000), where he largely abandons the secular project.

5. Leon R. Kass, Life, Liberty, and the Defense of Dignity: The Challenge for Bioethics (San Francisco: Encounter Books, 2002), 1–40. Kass's critique of the service model of medicine runs throughout his bioethical writing.

6. The most consistent defenders of this view are Peter Singer and Michael Tooley. See Peter Singer, Practical Ethics, 3rd ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011), 73–105; Michael Tooley, "Abortion and Infanticide," Philosophy and Public Affairs 2, no. 1 (1972): 37–65. For a careful response, see Robert P. George and Christopher Tollefsen, Embryo: A Defense of Human Life (New York: Doubleday, 2008).

7. Edmund D. Pellegrino and David C. Thomasma, For the Patient's Good: The Restoration of Beneficence in Health Care (New York: Oxford University Press, 1988). See also Edmund D. Pellegrino, "Toward a Virtue-Based Normative Ethics for the Health Professions," Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 5, no. 3 (1995): 253–77; and Edmund D. Pellegrino, The Philosophy of Medicine Reborn: A Pellegrino Reader, ed. H. Tristram Engelhardt Jr. and Fabrice Jotterand (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2008).

8. Bielfeldt, "Personal Identity, Divine Love, and Extrinsic Individuation," 26–36.

9. The locus classicus for the psychological criterion is John Locke, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, ed. Peter H. Nidditch (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1975), bk. 2, chap. 27. Its most influential contemporary defender is Derek Parfit; see Reasons and Persons (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984), 199–347. For the bioethical application of Parfitian considerations, see Jeff McMahan, The Ethics of Killing: Problems at the Margins of Life (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002).

10. Bielfeldt, "Personal Identity, Divine Love, and Extrinsic Individuation," 28–32. The argument draws on the analysis developed there, which engages Jacob Berger's critique of soul theories of personal identity and Jaegwon Kim's "pairing problem" for dualist accounts.

11. Gilbert Meilaender, "Death in the History of Redemption," Verba Vitae 1, nos. 1–2 (Spring/Summer 2024): 19. The passage Meilaender quotes is from Hans Jonas, The Phenomenon of Life: Toward a Philosophical Biology (New York: Harper and Row, 1966), 80.

12. Bielfeldt, "Personal Identity, Divine Love, and Extrinsic Individuation," 26–36; Dennis Bielfeldt, "Gaining Clarity on the That and What of Life," Verba Vitae 1, nos. 1–2 (Spring/Summer 2024): 44–52. The latter article develops the metaphysical distinction between the that (existence) and the what (essence) of a thing, arguing that existence is irreducible to essence — an insight directly relevant to the recognition that the patient's moral significance cannot be read off from her present properties or capacities.

13. Bielfeldt, "Personal Identity, Divine Love, and Extrinsic Individuation," 33. The argument draws on Robert C. Koons, "Divine Persons as Relational Qua-objects," Religious Studies 35, no. 4 (1999): 383–401, extending Koons's account of intra-Trinitarian individuation through divine love to the individuation of created persons.

14. The argument is developed in relation to the imago Dei in Bielfeldt, "Personal Identity, Divine Love, and Extrinsic Individuation," 38–43. See also Dan Lioy, "The Imago Dei: Biblical Foundations, Theological Implications, and Enduring Significance," Verba Vitae 1, nos. 3–4 (Autumn/Winter 2024): 45–72, for a complementary biblical-theological account.

15. Bielfeldt, "Alienation, Vocation, and the Ontology of Life," 40. The formulation draws on Luther's account of the Christian's standing coram Deo as developed in The Freedom of a Christian (1520); see Martin Luther, "The Freedom of a Christian," in Luther's Works, American Edition, vol. 31, ed. Harold J. Grimm (Philadelphia: Muhlenberg Press, 1957), 327–77.

16. Pellegrino and Thomasma, For the Patient's Good, 147–70. See also Edmund D. Pellegrino and David C. Thomasma, A Philosophical Basis of Medical Practice: Toward a Philosophy and Ethic of the Healing Professions (New York: Oxford University Press, 1981), 192–220.

17. Pellegrino, "Toward a Virtue-Based Normative Ethics," 260–63. The connection between internal goods and the virtues required to pursue them is central to Pellegrino's appropriation of Aristotelian ethics for medicine.

18. Alasdair MacIntyre, After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory, 3rd ed. (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2007), 187–203. MacIntyre himself does not directly apply his framework to medicine in After Virtue, but the application has been developed extensively by others; see Warren Thomas Reich, ed., Encyclopedia of Bioethics, rev. ed. (New York: MacMillan, 1995), and the essays collected in Daniel Sulmasy, The Healer's Calling: A Spirituality for Physicians and Other Health Care Professionals (New York: Paulist Press, 1997).

19. Bielfeldt, "Alienation, Vocation, and the Ontology of Life," 45–47. The Lutheran theological background is Luther's own account in "The Freedom of a Christian" and in his treatment of the Three Estates; see also Robert Kolb, "Martin Luther's Definition of the Human Creature," Verba Vitae 2, no. 2 (Summer 2025): 41–62.

20. Paul Ramsey, The Patient as Person: Explorations in Medical Ethics (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1970), xi–xviii. Ramsey's insistence that the patient is a person — a fellow human being — rather than a case or a problem remains one of the most important formulations in twentieth-century medical ethics, and his work anticipates much of what both Pellegrino and the present essay argue.

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