Wednesday, June 24, 2026

When Revelation Becomes Being: Eberhard Jüngel and the Ontologization of the Linguistic Turn

This essay is part of an ongoing series in philosophical theology produced through the Department of Philosophical Theology at Christ School of Theology, Institute of Lutheran Theology. The series traces the conditions of intelligibility, theological language, and the philosophical grounds of Christian belief.

The preceding essays followed the event-character of revelation through several decisive transformations. Rudolf Bultmann relocated the meaning of divine action into the existential self-understanding awakened in the hearer. Ernst Fuchs and Gerhard Ebeling then moved the center of gravity from existence to language: proclamation became a Sprachereignis or Wortgeschehen, an event in which language opens a world and brings the hearer into a new relation to reality. Gerhard Forde received this concern for the happening of the Word but subjected it to the Lutheran distinction between Law and Gospel. The Word no longer disclosed merely an existential possibility. It accused, killed, forgave, and raised the sinner.

At each stage the theological gain was real. Christian speech was rescued from the notion that it merely conveys information about a religious past. Revelation addresses. The Gospel happens. Faith is not a human construction placed upon an inert object but the effect of a Word that comes from outside the hearer.

Yet the same question returned in increasingly refined form. What grounds the event? Does proclamation mediate an act of God that is true before and apart from its effect upon the hearer, or does divine action attain its theological actuality only in the occurrence of proclamation? Is language the creaturely medium through which God acts, or does "God" increasingly name what happens when language interrupts, transforms, and creates faith?

Eberhard Jüngel takes this question into the doctrine of God itself.

With Jüngel, the linguistic turn is no longer merely a theory of interpretation or preaching. It becomes ontology. God's being is not first conceived as a static substance that subsequently enters into relations, performs acts, and reveals itself. God's being is in becoming. More precisely in Jüngel's mature theology, God's being is in God's coming: the free movement in which God gives himself, differentiates himself, enters the history of Jesus Christ, and comes to language as the mystery of the world.

The move is audacious. Jüngel does not attempt to restore the God displaced by modern hermeneutics by placing an immobile metaphysical reality behind the event of revelation. He asks instead whether divine being itself must be understood as event. Perhaps the linguistic happening does not require an ontological ground located behind it, because the event of self-communication belongs to what God eternally is. Perhaps the opposition between being and event is itself the error. God does not merely have a history of revelation. God's being is the history of divine self-giving love.

This makes Jüngel the most formidable figure in the genealogy traced by these essays. The criticism directed against Bultmann, Fuchs, Ebeling, and even Forde cannot simply be repeated against him. He does not merely relocate God into the hearer, the language-event, or the effects of proclamation. He attempts to show that revelation corresponds to God because God is, in God's own triune life, the one who goes forth from himself, relates to another, and remains himself in this movement of self-giving. Jüngel therefore appears to restore precisely what the preceding essays have demanded: a divine reality capable of grounding the event.

But the apparent solution introduces a deeper question. If God's being is identified with God's coming, and if God's coming reaches its goal in coming to language, does the event now ground itself by being incorporated into the doctrine of God? Has Jüngel secured the ontological priority of the divine speaker, or has he made coming-to-language constitutive of what divine being means? The linguistic displacement has become an ontology of divine advent, and the question is whether the ontology overcomes the displacement or perfects it.

At the Intersection of Fuchs and Barth

Jüngel's intellectual formation placed him at the exact intersection required for such a project. Ernst Fuchs taught him to understand interpretation through the category of language-event. Gerhard Ebeling deepened the connection between hermeneutics, faith, and the happening of the Word. Karl Barth taught him that revelation must be understood as God's sovereign self-revelation rather than as an occurrence within human religious consciousness.

Fuchs and Barth might appear to pull in opposing directions. Fuchs began from the event in which language opens understanding. Barth began from the God who reveals himself and thereby creates the human capacity to receive revelation. The former threatened to make revelation dependent upon the occurrence of understanding; the latter insisted that divine objectivity precedes and grounds human subjectivity.

Jüngel's theology can be read as a sustained attempt to unite them.

His early study of Paul and Jesus already operated within the orbit of the New Hermeneutic. The relation between the proclamation of Jesus and the later apostolic kerygma could not be secured by identifying a timeless doctrinal content standing behind both. Continuity occurred as the word of Jesus became language again in the proclamation of the church. The history of Jesus was not preserved as a mute object. It was carried forward in speech.

But Jüngel did not remain satisfied with a merely hermeneutical account. The occurrence of language required a theological ground. If the kerygma is truly God's Word, then its eventfulness cannot be explained only by what language does to its hearers. The question must be asked from the side of God: what must divine being be if revelation is genuinely God's own act?

Jüngel found the resources for answering this question in Barth's doctrine of the Trinity. Barth's identification of God as revealer, revelation, and revealedness prevented revelation from becoming an external relation added to an otherwise hidden divine substance. God does not first exist in self-enclosed completeness and then decide to communicate information about himself. Revelation is divine self-revelation. The God who reveals, the content revealed, and the actuality of revelation belong together in the one triune act.

Jüngel interpreted this with the phrase that became the title of his early dogmatic work: Gottes Sein ist im Werden—God's being is in becoming.

The phrase was not intended to suggest that God develops from incompleteness toward fulfillment, as though God possessed unrealized possibilities that required history or the world for their actualization. Jüngel was not simply importing a Hegelian process into the doctrine of God. He intended to say that God's being is act rather than inertia, relation rather than isolation, self-giving rather than metaphysical immobility. God is not first a substance and only secondarily the one who reveals. God is the one whose being occurs as self-revelation.

This move gave the linguistic event an ontological depth it had lacked in Fuchs. Language does not become revelatory simply because it produces understanding. God comes to language because God is eternally the one who communicates himself.

Jüngel's synthesis can therefore be stated in a preliminary order:

  1. God's triune being is self-relation and self-communication.
  2. God gives himself historically in Jesus Christ.
  3. This history comes to language in proclamation.
  4. The language-event brings the hearer into correspondence with God's self-communication.

The sequence appears to preserve the direction of dependence demanded by theological realism. Divine being grounds revelation; revelation grounds proclamation; proclamation creates faith.

Yet Jüngel will also insist that divine being cannot be thought apart from this movement. God is not a being-in-itself located behind self-revelation. Revelation is not merely evidence from which an otherwise independent ontology may be inferred. God's being comes to speech in revelation, and that claim is both the strength and the danger of his theology.

The Death of the Necessary God

Jüngel's mature doctrine of God begins within the crisis of modern theism. The problem is not simply that modern persons have ceased to believe in God. The deeper problem is that the God whose existence modern theism attempted to establish had become unnecessary to the actual intelligibility of the world.

Classical and early modern theology often treated God as the necessary ground required to explain why anything exists, why causal series do not regress infinitely, why moral obligation possesses authority, or why the world exhibits order. God functioned as the highest explanatory term, the being whose necessity secured the contingency of everything else.

Modernity gradually learned to understand the world without this explanatory hypothesis. Nature could be interpreted through immanent causal relations. Political and moral life could be organized without appeal to divine command. Human consciousness could be explained historically, psychologically, and socially. The world no longer appeared to require God in order to function as a world.

The customary theological response was to defend God's necessity more vigorously. Arguments were refined. Gaps in natural explanation were identified. Moral and existential needs were invoked as signs that the secular world remained secretly dependent upon the God it denied.

Jüngel refused this strategy. A God who exists chiefly because the world requires an explanation is already the victim of the world's changing explanatory needs. Once the world discovers that it can explain itself without such a being, the necessary God becomes dispensable.

The triumph of atheism over this God may therefore be theologically salutary. What has died is not necessarily the God of the Gospel but the metaphysical construction that identified God with the world's highest explanatory necessity.

Jüngel does not respond by declaring God unnecessary in the sense of irrelevant. He speaks instead of God as more than necessary. God is not the final item required to complete a deficient account of the world. God comes freely. The world does not compel God's advent, and divine love does not arise from a lack within God that creation must fill.

The language is intended to protect both divine freedom and the gratuity of grace. God is not necessary in the manner of a logical premise without which a system collapses. God is more than necessary in the manner of love: not demanded, not derivable, not owed, and yet infinitely enriching the one to whom love comes.

This is one of Jüngel's most attractive insights. It prevents theology from turning God into a function of creaturely need. God does not exist because human beings require meaning, because morality needs a legislator, or because cosmology needs a first cause. God exists and comes freely. Revelation is gift rather than explanatory supplementation.

Yet the phrase "more than necessary" also alters the traditional question. Instead of asking whether God exists as the necessary ground of reality, Jüngel asks how God comes to the world as the mystery by which the world becomes newly intelligible.

The shift is not merely from one answer to another but a transformation of what it means to speak of God's reality. God is no longer principally the being whose necessary existence must be established; God is the event of advent in which reality is interrupted and reinterpreted by love. The question is whether the transformation preserves existence while correcting necessity—or whether existence itself is redescribed as event.

Mystery Rather Than Riddle

Jüngel's designation of God as the mystery of the world is central to this transformation. A mystery is not simply an unsolved riddle. A riddle disappears when the solution is found. Once the answer is known, the obscurity has been removed and the riddle ceases to exercise its power. Mystery behaves differently. Genuine disclosure does not eliminate mystery. It deepens it.

God is not mysterious because insufficient information has been supplied. Nor is divine mystery the residue left over after reason has exhausted itself. God becomes mysterious precisely in being revealed. The more fully God gives himself to be known, the more clearly the inexhaustibility of divine love becomes apparent.

This permits Jüngel to reject two inadequate alternatives. Against rationalistic theism, he denies that God becomes less mysterious as theological explanation becomes more complete, since revelation does not place the divine essence under conceptual mastery. Against an empty apophaticism, he denies that mystery means the absence of determinate knowledge. God's hiddenness is not a blank silence protected from every positive assertion. The mystery has a name and a history. God is revealed in Jesus Christ, and the cross is not an interchangeable symbol of generic transcendence.

The mystery is the crucified God.

This is why Jüngel can insist simultaneously upon divine hiddenness and divine self-disclosure. God is not hidden behind revelation, as though the revealed God were only a surface appearance concealing an inaccessible divine reality. God is hidden in revelation because the form of divine disclosure—the humanity, suffering, and death of Jesus—contradicts the ordinary expectations by which deity is recognized.

The cross reveals God under the appearance of God's opposite. Power appears as weakness, life as death, majesty as humiliation. The mystery is not an ontological reserve held back behind Christ. It is the inexhaustible depth of the God who gives himself in precisely this history.

Here Jüngel stands close to Luther's theology of the cross. God is not known by ascending from visible effects toward invisible power. God identifies himself in the crucified one. The scandal cannot be overcome by translating it into a more acceptable metaphysical principle.

But Jüngel adds a hermeneutical claim. Mystery requires language capable of preserving revelation without closing it. Literal and conceptual language tends to treat the object as already determined. Metaphor, parable, and narrative can disclose a reality while allowing it to remain inexhaustible. They do not merely ornament a prior conceptual content. They bring a new meaning into being.

The mystery comes to language in speech that makes old words new, and theology therefore requires not only correct propositions but a nova lingua capable of answering to the event in which God has come to the world.

God as a Word of Our Language

The phrase "God" belongs to human language. This fact creates a difficulty that Jüngel refuses to evade.

If God is truly transcendent, how can a creaturely word refer to God? If the word acquires its meaning through human use, history, and linguistic relations, does it not remain enclosed within the world? And if theology attempts to escape this difficulty by treating "God" as a wholly unique word without ordinary linguistic relations, has it not rendered the word meaningless?

Jüngel's answer begins from address. Human beings are linguistic creatures because they are capable of being addressed. Language is not merely an instrument through which an already complete subject expresses internal thoughts. The self comes to itself through the word of another. We become persons in relations of address and response.

Theological language intensifies this structure. Human beings can speak of God because God has first spoken to them. The word "God" is not projected from human consciousness toward an inaccessible transcendence. It enters human language through divine self-communication.

God is thinkable because God is speakable, and God is speakable because God has spoken.

This reverses the ordinary philosophical order. Theology does not first establish the concept of God and then inquire whether revelation supplies an instance corresponding to it. Revelation generates the possibility of the concept. God's coming to language determines what "God" may mean.

Anthropomorphic language is therefore not an unfortunate concession to human limitation that theology should eventually purify away. If God has become human, then human language is not extrinsic to divine self-disclosure. God has entered the relations, histories, sufferings, and speech through which human life becomes intelligible.

The humanity of theological language corresponds to the humanity of God.

Jüngel thus refuses both univocity and sheer equivocity. Human words do not apply to God in exactly the same manner in which they apply to creatures. But neither do they become empty when used theologically. Their meaning is transformed by the new context created in Jesus Christ.

"Love," "life," "death," "freedom," "fatherhood," and "sonship" acquire new meanings when they are drawn into the history of God with humanity. The words remain human words, but they are baptized into a new semantic field.

This resembles Luther's nova lingua. Old words are made new because they are placed in relations they could not have acquired through philosophical abstraction alone. Christ determines their theological meaning.

Yet Jüngel's account goes further. The new context does not merely permit human beings to speak differently about a reality that remains ontologically prior to language. The coming-to-language belongs to the event in which God comes to the world. God's advent and God's speakability are internally related, and the goal of God's coming is speech. At precisely this point, the semantic and ontological questions begin to converge.

From Becoming to Coming

The title God's Being Is in Becoming can easily mislead. "Becoming" ordinarily implies transition from one state to another. A being becomes what it was not previously. Potency is actualized; deficiency is overcome; development occurs.

Jüngel does not mean that God becomes divine by entering history. God does not depend upon the world for self-completion. Creation and incarnation do not repair a lack in God.

His mature language accordingly places increasing weight upon coming rather than becoming. God's being is in God's coming. Coming names the free advent of one who is already himself and who, without ceasing to be himself, gives himself to another.

This distinction protects Jüngel from a simplistic process theology. God does not become through the world in the sense that world history produces divine identity. God comes to the world out of divine freedom.

But coming is not external to God's being. God does not remain unchanged in a self-enclosed eternity while appearing under temporal forms that leave divine life untouched. The coming is God's own act. God is the one who goes forth from himself, enters relation, bears the history of the other, and remains himself in self-giving.

The doctrine of the Trinity supplies the ontological grammar of this movement. God is not solitary identity but differentiated unity. The Father gives himself to the Son; the Son receives and returns this life; the Spirit is the actuality of their communion. Divine being is relation without dissolution, self-differentiation without fragmentation, love without loss of identity.

Revelation corresponds to this being because God is eternally self-communicative. The movement toward the world is not an alien act contradicting an otherwise self-enclosed deity. The God who comes is the God whose being is self-giving love.

Jüngel therefore seeks to secure a strict correspondence between economic and immanent Trinity. God is not one thing eternally and another thing in revelation. The history of Jesus Christ discloses who God truly is.

This is an ontological advance over any account in which language-event is left to validate itself. The event is grounded in God's triune life.

But the correspondence raises a question of direction. Does God's eternal triune being ground the history in which it is revealed? Or is the divine being reconstructed from the history of revelation in such a way that the epistemic form of the revelation becomes constitutive of the ontology?

Jüngel intends both movements to coincide. God's being determines revelation, and revelation gives access to God's being. There is no God behind the revelation who differs from the God revealed.

The danger arises when epistemic and ontological priority are no longer distinguished.

The Cross and the History of Love

Jüngel's doctrine of God reaches its center in the cross. Christian theology cannot speak responsibly of divine being while leaving the death of Jesus external to what God is.

A traditional metaphysical account might say that the divine nature is impassible while the human nature of Christ suffers and dies. Jüngel fears that this formulation can protect an abstract divine being from the very history in which God identifies himself. The result would be a God who remains untouched while the man Jesus bears suffering alone.

Jüngel instead takes the language of the death of God with radical seriousness. God identifies himself with the crucified Jesus. The death of Jesus belongs to the history of God.

This does not mean that the divine being is annihilated. Nor does it mean that the Father is crucified in an undifferentiated manner. The death is trinitarian: the Son undergoes abandonment and death; the Father suffers the loss of the Son; the Spirit sustains and completes the unity of divine love through the differentiation.

God's relation to death reveals that divine life is not mere opposition to nonbeing. God is capable of entering the realm of death without being conquered by it. Love gives itself away, bears separation, and remains itself through this movement.

The cross therefore reveals the being of God as love. "God is love" is not one predicate among others applied to an already defined divine substance. Love identifies the manner in which God exists. Divine being is the event of self-giving, differentiation, and reunion.

This is why resurrection cannot be treated as the simple reversal of the cross. The risen one is the crucified one. God does not erase the history of death but takes it into the eternal identity of the Son. The history remains constitutive of the identity disclosed in resurrection.

Jüngel's account possesses immense theological power. It prevents the doctrine of God from becoming a metaphysical prolegomenon unaffected by Christ. It insists that Christian ontology must be cruciform. It also makes divine agency irreducibly personal: God acts as the history of self-giving love, not as an impersonal causal principle.

Yet the same strength creates a new form of the question pursued throughout this series. If God's being is identified through the narrative of cross and resurrection, what is the relation between that historical event and the divine being it reveals?

One answer is that the cross reveals what God eternally is. The history is epistemically decisive but ontologically grounded in the triune life.

Another answer is that God's eternal being includes this historical becoming in such a manner that the temporal event participates constitutively in divine identity.

Jüngel's formulations often press toward the second without abandoning the first. God is not merely represented by the history of Jesus. God's own being occurs there.

The distinction between manifestation and constitution becomes difficult to maintain.

Parable, Metaphor, and the New Context

Jüngel's treatment of metaphor and parable is essential to the connection between ontology and language.

A metaphor does not merely replace a literal term with a decorative image. It brings previously separate semantic fields into relation and thereby produces a meaning unavailable within either field alone. To say "God is my rock" does not classify God as a geological object. Nor does it merely state in figurative form a concept already fully available in literal language. The metaphor creates a new relation among stability, protection, faithfulness, creaturely vulnerability, and divine presence.

A parable works similarly on a larger scale. It draws the hearer into a narrative world in which familiar relations are reorganized. The hearer does not merely extract a proposition and leave the story behind. The story teaches the hearer how to see.

This is why Jesus is not only a speaker of parables. Jesus is himself the parable of God. His history brings God to language in a finite human life. The relation between God and Jesus is not arbitrary resemblance but a divinely instituted correspondence. The human history tells God truly because God identifies himself within it.

Jüngel's language theory therefore aims at realism of a particular kind. Metaphor is not fictional because it exceeds literal classification. It can disclose reality more adequately than concepts whose apparent precision conceals their inability to receive the new.

Theological truth requires semantic innovation because the event of Christ creates a context that did not previously exist. Words acquire new meanings in relation to this new content.

This claim bears directly upon the argument of this series. Theological language cannot be judged solely by meanings established independently of revelation. If "God," "love," "power," "death," and "life" must retain the meanings they possess in ordinary philosophical discourse, the cross will necessarily appear contradictory or meaningless.

Jüngel is therefore right that revelation determines its own semantic field. The model determines the theory; the object gives the grammar by which it is spoken.

But semantic novelty cannot by itself secure ontological truth.

A metaphor may create a new context without that context being satisfied by reality. A parable may reorganize the hearer's world while referring falsely to the world beyond the narrative. A story may disclose possibilities that never obtain.

The fact that the history of Jesus gives "God" a new meaning does not yet establish that God exists and identifies himself with Jesus. That requires more than semantic transformation. It requires the divine act that makes the new language true.

Jüngel does not deny this. He repeatedly insists that God is the agent of revelation. Yet his hermeneutical emphasis can make the coming-to-language appear to carry the ontological weight of the claim.

The new context tells us how "God" is to be understood. The satisfaction question remains: what makes the context true of God?

What Jüngel Genuinely Restores

Before pressing the criticism further, the magnitude of Jüngel's achievement must be acknowledged.

First, he restores ontology without returning to a pre-Christological metaphysics. God is not inferred as the highest member of a general order of being. The doctrine of God begins from the crucified and risen Christ.

Second, he restores divine agency without treating God as one cause among others. God's action is self-communication. Divine causality is personal, revelatory, and triune.

Third, he restores the objectivity of revelation without separating it from its eventful form. Revelation is not a timeless deposit placed behind proclamation. God acts in the address.

Fourth, he restores the unity of being and speech. The God who speaks is not ontologically distinct from the God who is. Speech is not an accidental instrument employed by a silent deity. The Logos belongs to divine life.

Fifth, he restores the cross to the doctrine of God. The suffering and death of Jesus are not merely events occurring on the creaturely side of the relation. God identifies himself with the crucified one.

These gains place Jüngel much closer to theological realism than Bultmann or a purely linguistic interpretation of the New Hermeneutic. His God is not the name for an existential possibility. Nor is God simply the depth-dimension of transformative language. God is the triune agent who comes, speaks, identifies himself, and raises the dead.

Indeed, Jüngel's phrase "revelation is God's self-interpretation" comes remarkably close to an agentive theological semantics. Interpretation is not first a human mapping of signs onto an antecedent divine object. God interprets himself. The divine act supplies both content and truth.

The difficulty is not that Jüngel lacks a divine agent but that the distinctions internal to the agent's act become obscured. Divine self-interpretation, the history of Jesus, the language-event of proclamation, and the faith of the hearer are so closely related that the explanatory order among them can become compressed. The problem is no longer displacement by subtraction; it is displacement by identification.

The Compression of Being, Revelation, and Language

Three distinctions must be preserved if Jüngel's achievement is to remain realist.

The first is the distinction between God's eternal being and God's free act toward the world. The act truly reveals God because it corresponds to God's being. Yet the world is not required for God to become who God is. God's self-giving to creatures is free because triune love is already fully actual in God.

Jüngel intends to maintain this. His description of God as more than necessary and his rejection of any divine need for the world protect divine freedom. Nevertheless, saying that God's being is in coming can blur the distinction if coming to the world is not clearly differentiated from the eternal self-relation of Father, Son, and Spirit.

The second is the distinction between the divine act in Christ and the linguistic mediation of that act. The incarnation, crucifixion, and resurrection are not generated by the proclamation that narrates them. Proclamation becomes God's Word because the risen Christ acts through it. The history does not first become divine history when it comes to language.

Again, Jüngel does not simply deny the historical priority of Jesus. But his claim that God's coming reaches its goal in speech risks making linguistic occurrence the completion of the ontological event.

The third is the distinction between the truth of proclamation and the faith it creates. The Word may be resisted. Its truth does not depend upon its successful transformation of this hearer. Faith is the effect of divine address, not the condition by which the address becomes divine.

Jüngel's theology ordinarily preserves the asymmetry between Word and faith. But once revelation is understood as an event that reaches actuality in address and response, the question arises whether an unheard or unbelieved Word has fully happened as revelation.

The distinctions may be represented in the threefold order articulated in the preceding essay:

  1. God acts in Christ.
  2. God acts through proclamation.
  3. God creates faith through hearing.

Jüngel's theology affirms all three. The question is whether his ontology of coming allows them to be distinguished as moments ordered by divine agency, or whether they become aspects of one event whose internal relations remain insufficiently differentiated. The risk is not that God disappears but that every distinction needed to identify what God does disappears into the unity of divine self-communication.

Epistemic Priority and Ontological Priority

The deepest issue can be stated as a distinction between epistemic and ontological priority.

The cross is epistemically prior for Christian theology. We do not first possess a general concept of deity and then apply it to Jesus. The crucified and risen Christ determines what Christians mean by God.

But it does not follow that the historical event is ontologically prior to God. The cross reveals who God eternally is because the God who eternally is acts in this history.

To put the matter differently: revelation determines our concept of God. It does not create its referent.

Jüngel's rejection of a God "behind" revelation is correct if "behind" means a deity differing from the Father revealed in the Son through the Spirit. There is no truer God concealed behind Jesus Christ.

But the rejection becomes problematic if it means that no distinction may be drawn between the divine being that grounds revelation and the creaturely history through which that being is revealed. Identity of agent does not abolish distinction of act, medium, and effect. The incarnate Son is God, but the humanity is not therefore the cause of the divine being; the proclamation is an act of God, but the human sentence is not therefore the ground of divine agency; faith is participation in God's truth, but the believer's response is not therefore constitutive of the truth received.

A realist account can affirm the strict correspondence Jüngel seeks without making correspondence into identity at every level. God truly gives himself in Christ. Christ truly gives himself in proclamation. The Spirit truly brings the hearer into this reality. But the order remains asymmetrical: God is not constituted by the history God freely assumes, Christ's act is not constituted by the proclamation that mediates it, and the promise is not constituted by the faith it creates. The God who comes is able to come because God is.

Divine Self-Interpretation and Constitutive Satisfaction

Jüngel brings theology closer than any preceding figure in this series to what may be called constitutive satisfaction.

Classical model theory presupposes a domain and asks whether sentences are satisfied within it. Hermeneutical theology asks whether language becomes an event of understanding. Jüngel moves behind both questions by interpreting revelation as God's own self-interpretation.

This is the right direction. The theological object is not passive. God interprets, signifies, and gives himself. Truth is grounded in personal agency.

But the agentive structure requires greater differentiation than Jüngel's language of coming-to-speech always provides.

The Logos does not first come into being when God comes to human language. The Logos is the eternal divine self-expression through whom the world and its languages become possible. Creation is already an act of divine signification before the proclamation of redemption occurs.

The incarnation is therefore not the origin of divine communicability but its climactic creaturely enactment. The eternal Word enters the world that exists through him and assumes a human nature capable of speaking, suffering, dying, and being raised.

Proclamation then participates in this act. The preacher does not reproduce the incarnation, cross, or resurrection. The Spirit authorizes finite language to refer truthfully to these acts and to deliver their promise to the hearer.

Faith is the creaturely reception of this participation. It is generated by the Spirit, but it does not complete an otherwise incomplete divine being.

Constitutive satisfaction would therefore articulate the order as follows:

  1. The triune God eternally interprets and expresses himself in the Logos.
  2. The Logos constitutes and sustains the created domain in which reference is possible.
  3. The Logos acts historically in Jesus Christ.
  4. The Spirit incorporates creaturely proclamation into this divine act.
  5. Faith receives the reality given through the authorized Word.

This account preserves everything Jüngel rightly seeks: divine being as act, revelation as self-interpretation, language as event, and faith as created correspondence.

But it refuses the compression of the levels. Divine self-interpretation grounds the history; the history grounds the proclamation; the Spirit joins proclamation to history; faith is created through the joined Word. The linguistic event is constitutive of faith—it is not constitutive of God.

The Spirit and the Difference within the Event

The Holy Spirit becomes decisive precisely where Jüngel's ontology risks compression. It is insufficient to say only that God comes to speech. One must ask how divine speech and human speech are united without confusion. The Spirit is not merely the subjective actuality of revelation or the effect by which divine address becomes human faith. The Spirit is the personal agent who authorizes creaturely language to participate in the speech of the Logos, and this pneumatological mediation permits theology to affirm identity of act without identity of level. The preached Word is genuinely God's Word, but the preacher does not become the Logos. The promise genuinely forgives, but its efficacy is not generated by linguistic form. Faith genuinely knows God, but the believer's understanding does not constitute divine being. Divine act and human word remain distinct, yet the finite utterance becomes a real instrument of the infinite speaker precisely because the Spirit joins them without collapsing them.

Jüngel's trinitarian ontology contains resources for this account. The Spirit belongs to the event of divine love and makes creaturely correspondence to God possible. But the Spirit's mediating role must be made explicit if coming-to-language is not to become a self-validating linguistic occurrence. The event requires not only a history and a hearer but an agent of inclusion—the Spirit who makes the Word happen as God's Word.

The God Who Comes Because God Is

Jüngel is right to reject the choice between static being and event. The living God is not an inert substance hidden behind revelation. God acts, comes, speaks, loves, suffers, and gives life. He is also right that Christian theology cannot define God independently of Jesus Christ. The crucified one is not an illustration of a concept of deity obtained elsewhere. God identifies himself in this history. He is right, finally, that theological language must be transformed by its object. The cross generates a new semantic context, and words acquire meanings reason could not have anticipated. But the order of dependence must remain clear. God's coming does not create the God who comes. The history of Jesus does not generate the divine agent whose history it is. The coming-to-language of revelation does not make revelation true. The faith awakened by the Word does not complete the act of God.

Jüngel's great achievement is to bring ontology inside the event. His danger is to bring it so completely inside that the event appears to possess no ground other than its own occurrence. The correction is not to place a silent divine substance behind the speaking God but to identify the speaker more fully. The God who comes is the triune God whose eternal life already possesses the plenitude from which free advent proceeds. The God who speaks is the Logos through whom the world exists. The God who makes proclamation effective is the Spirit who joins creaturely language to divine action. There is, in other words, no mute God behind the Word, and no divine being indifferent to revelation—but there is a God who speaks the Word, and there is a divine being whose free self-revelation is true because the one revealed is already the one who reveals. There is no Gospel apart from its happening, but the Gospel happens because God has acted and continues to act.

Jüngel comes nearer than the preceding theologians to restoring this order because he refuses to choose between reality and event. His theology should therefore not be dismissed as the final triumph of the linguistic turn. It is better understood as the place where that turn discovers its own ontological question: Can language be event without becoming self-grounding? Can revelation correspond perfectly to God without constituting the God to whom it corresponds? Can God's being be act without making historical or linguistic occurrence necessary to divine identity? The answer requires an agentive realism in which being and Word belong together without being collapsed. God's being is not an immobile possession standing behind divine coming; it is living, triune, self-communicative act. But the act remains God's. Revelation becomes being only because divine being gives itself in revelation. The event does not become God. God gives himself in the event.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

The Preached God and the God Who Acts: Iwand, Forde, and the Radicalization of Law and Gospel

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.

The preceding essay examined the New Hermeneutic of Ernst Fuchs and Gerhard Ebeling. Both sought to move beyond Rudolf Bultmann’s reduction of New Testament proclamation to existential self-understanding by attending more carefully to language itself. Theological interpretation, they argued, succeeds when the inherited text becomes address, when proclamation opens a world, and when the hearer is brought into a new relation to reality. The decisive theological occurrence was increasingly described as a Sprachereignis or Wortgeschehen: a language-event or happening of the Word.

The achievement was considerable. Theology recovered the living voice of proclamation and resisted the notion that Christian speech merely communicates information about a religious past. But the question of divine agency remained unresolved. Was proclamation effective because God acted through it, or did “God’s action” name what happened when language awakened faith, disclosed existence, and opened a new world for the hearer? The Word had acquired priority over the subject, but it remained uncertain whether the divine speaker possessed priority over the Word’s occurrence.

Gerhard Forde belongs immediately after this development, although he cannot be classified simply as an American representative of the New Hermeneutic. His theology is more explicitly Lutheran, more radically monergistic, more directly oriented toward preaching, and more suspicious of every attempt to convert the Gospel into a general theory of religious existence. Where Bultmann placed the hearer before the possibility of authentic decision, Forde placed the sinner under a Word that kills and makes alive. Where Fuchs and Ebeling emphasized the event-character of language, Forde asked what must be spoken so that the event is Gospel rather than merely interpretation.

His answer was the distinction between Law and Gospel.

Yet the shape this distinction assumed in Forde cannot be understood without Hans Joachim Iwand. Forde was not Iwand’s student in the ordinary institutional sense. His relation to Iwand was theological rather than biographical, mediated especially through his extended study of the modern German debate over Law and Gospel. But the appropriation was deep. Iwand supplied Forde with a way of reading Luther in which justification was not one doctrine among others but the critical center from which the whole of theology had to be judged. He also supplied the conviction that Gospel does not complete the possibilities opened by Law. It interrupts them. Christ does not assist the old human being toward fulfillment but brings the old order to its end.

Forde radicalized this insight. The Gospel became God’s final word, a word that breaks the continuity of the Law and creates a future unavailable within the moral, religious, or metaphysical possibilities of the old age. Justification became not merely a forensic judgment but death and resurrection. Theology became theology for proclamation because only proclamation could perform the distinction of Law and Gospel in the concrete situation of the hearer.

The result was one of the most powerful forms of Lutheran theology produced in North America. It was also one of the most disputed. Forde’s critics have accused him of antinomianism, of weakening the doctrine of sanctification, and of dissolving Christ’s atoning work into the present event of proclamation. His defenders have replied that such criticisms miss the entire point: Forde does not remove divine agency but restores it. God alone acts. The sinner is not improved, persuaded, or rendered capable of cooperation. The old Adam is killed, and a new creature is raised by the unconditional promise.

Both judgments contain an element of truth. Forde is not a subjectivist in any simple sense. He does not make the believer’s experience the ground of salvation. But his theology raises a more precise question. Does the preached Word mediate an act of God accomplished in Christ, or does the act of God reach its theological actuality only as the Word kills and raises the hearer? Has Forde preserved the priority of the God who acts, or has the event of proclamation become the final satisfaction-condition of divine agency?

To answer that question, one must begin with Iwand.

Iwand and the Center of Theology

Hans Joachim Iwand’s theology emerged from the German Luther Renaissance but also from a sustained criticism of some of its governing assumptions. Karl Holl had restored Luther to the center of Protestant intellectual life by presenting him as a theologian of conscience, religious personality, and the immediacy of the individual’s relation to God. The gain was undeniable. Luther could no longer be dismissed as a merely ecclesiastical reformer whose significance consisted chiefly in separating the Protestant churches from Rome.

Yet Iwand recognized that Luther’s doctrine of justification could not be secured by locating its truth within the religious consciousness. Justification was not the name for a subjective experience of acceptance, nor was faith the morally serious posture by which the religious personality became transparent to itself before God. The righteousness of faith was alien righteousness. It came from outside the sinner. Its ground was Jesus Christ, not the structure of believing consciousness.

This extra nos governed Iwand’s theology.

The distinction between Law and Gospel was therefore not merely a distinction between two religious attitudes or two stages in spiritual development. Law and Gospel named two fundamentally different relations in which the human being stands before God. The Law addresses the old human being under judgment. It exposes sin, removes every claim to self-righteousness, and destroys the illusion that the creature possesses within itself the possibility of reconciliation. The Gospel does not then provide assistance so that the condemned person may accomplish what the Law requires. It announces Christ.

The help comes from elsewhere.

For this reason, justification is inseparable from Christology. The righteousness of faith is not an inner quality produced by a transformed religious consciousness. It is the righteousness of Christ given to the ungodly. Faith does not create the object in which it trusts. It receives what is promised because Christ has done what the promise declares.

Iwand’s insistence upon this point distinguishes him both from liberal Protestantism and from every moralistic interpretation of Law and Gospel. The Gospel cannot be translated into the summons to a higher religious existence. It does not reveal the depth of moral personality or awaken a latent capacity for authentic life. It gives what the sinner lacks entirely.

The Law, correspondingly, is not a lower form of Gospel. It cannot be transformed into grace by placing it within a larger synthesis. It does not become saving when the hearer recognizes its educative function. The Law remains accusation and judgment. Its theological function is to close every path by which the sinner might return to God through the development of existing capacities.

This is why the distinction between Law and Gospel was for Iwand not simply one doctrine in a systematic arrangement. It was the condition under which Scripture could be read and Christ could be proclaimed. Without the distinction, theology would inevitably convert Gospel into Law. Grace would become a religious principle, faith a human possibility, and Christ the highest expression of what the old human being already sought.

The distinction is therefore radical, but it is not arbitrary. It is grounded in Christ. The Law is brought to its end because Christ has borne its judgment and because the righteousness promised in the Gospel is his righteousness. The discontinuity between Law and Gospel is not generated by the linguistic form of two different utterances. It is grounded in the difference between the sinner’s standing under judgment and the new relation established in Christ.

Iwand’s theology is proclamatory, but the proclamation is answerable to an antecedent reality. The promise gives Christ because Christ is there to be given. Faith lives from the promise because the promise is grounded in the person and work of the one whom it proclaims.

This point will become important when the same distinction is taken up by Forde.

Promise and the Hidden Reality of Faith

Iwand’s account of promise further clarifies the relation between proclamation and reality. The promise does not merely describe what the believer already possesses as an available object of experience. It addresses the believer under conditions in which the promised reality may remain hidden beneath its contrary.

The sinner is righteous by faith while continuing to see and experience sin. The believer lives while remaining under the visible conditions of death. The Gospel speaks peace where conscience, world, and Law appear to testify only to judgment. Faith therefore receives a reality not yet available under the ordinary conditions of sight.

This does not mean that the promise creates an unreal world in which the believer takes refuge. Nor does it mean that the promised reality exists only in the act of trusting. The hiddenness belongs to the mode of reception, not to the ontological status of what is received. Christ’s righteousness is real even when it remains hidden from experience. The promise does not become true because it succeeds in producing faith. Faith is possible because the promise is true.

Iwand thus holds together dimensions modern theology repeatedly separates. The Gospel is eventful: it addresses, judges, promises, and creates faith. Yet the event is not self-grounding. It carries an objective content given in Christ. The promise is performative because the one who authorizes it possesses the reality the promise delivers.

The relation might be stated in three moments. The schema is a reconstruction—Iwand nowhere sets it out in precisely this form—but it makes explicit an order his theology everywhere presupposes:

Christ has acted.

The promise announces and gives what Christ has accomplished.

Faith receives the promised reality under conditions in which it remains hidden from sight.

The order matters. Faith does not retroactively constitute the act of Christ. The proclamation does not make Christ’s work real by becoming effective in the hearer. The promise is effective because it participates in and delivers a reality grounded outside both preacher and believer.

At this point Iwand remains more ontologically explicit than many of the hermeneutical theologians who followed. He is not interested in constructing a metaphysical system behind the Gospel. But neither does he identify the reality of salvation with the event in which the Gospel becomes meaningful. The Word comes from outside because Christ comes from outside.

The extra nos is semantic and ontological before it is psychological.

Forde’s Appropriation of Iwand

Forde encountered Iwand as part of his investigation of the modern German debate over Law and Gospel. His early work traced the debate from the nineteenth-century theology of salvation history through Ritschl, Barth, Elert, Thielicke, Wingren, Iwand, and Ebeling. This was not merely an exercise in historical reconstruction. The history supplied the field within which Forde developed his own position.

It might seem that the most direct ancestor of Forde’s mature position lies elsewhere in this list. The understanding of Law and Gospel as two words rather than two doctrines, the contradiction between them, the lex semper accusat that refuses every domestication of the Law into a third use—these are Werner Elert’s themes before they are Forde’s. Why, then, should the thesis pass through Iwand rather than Elert?

The answer is that Elert cannot carry the weight this argument requires. His Law is rooted in a structure of being. It belongs to the orders of creation and retains an ontological standing antecedent to Christ and independent of him. The accusation of the Law expresses a creaturely and cosmic order that the Gospel interrupts but does not ground. Elert can therefore give Forde the two-word structure, but he cannot give him an alien righteousness whose otherness is Christological all the way down. His ontology is entangled precisely where Forde needs it to be clean.

Iwand supplies what Elert cannot. The discontinuity between Law and Gospel is not the interruption of one ontological order by another. It is grounded in Christ. The alien righteousness is alien because it is Christ’s, not because it descends from a higher order into a lower one. The choice of Iwand over Elert is therefore not an accident of Forde’s reading or of this essay’s emphasis. It is forced by the argument. Only a figure whose extra nos is intact—located in the person and work of Christ rather than in a structure of being—can serve as the ground to which Forde’s radicalization remains answerable.

Iwand was decisive, then, because he refused the dominant tendency to treat Gospel as the fulfillment of a process whose basic structure was already established by Law. In many modern accounts, Law and Gospel belonged to a single theological continuity. The Law disclosed the moral or historical order within which the Gospel supplied completion. Grace answered a need defined by the preceding structure. Christ fulfilled a teleology already latent within creation, history, conscience, or moral striving.

Iwand resisted this continuity. Forde made the resistance programmatic.

The Gospel, in Forde’s mature formulation, is God’s final word. It does not complete the Law’s unfinished project. It ends the Law’s accusation by ending the sinner whom the Law accuses. The old human being is not carried through a process of moral or spiritual development into a higher state. The old human being dies. The new creature arises from the promise.

This is Iwand’s distinction intensified eschatologically.

The decisive difference between Law and Gospel is therefore not merely a difference in content. The same biblical statement may function as Law or Gospel depending upon what it does in the concrete act of proclamation. Law and Gospel are modes of divine address. Law is the Word as it accuses, exposes, and kills. Gospel is the Word as it promises, forgives, and makes alive.

Forde’s later description of Law and Gospel as modes of speech and ways of preaching follows from this development. The distinction is not first a classificatory rule by which biblical passages are sorted into two doctrinal categories. It is an event occurring between speaker and hearer under the agency of God.

Here Forde receives the linguistic concerns of the New Hermeneutic while subjecting them to Lutheran dogmatic discipline. He does not ask only whether language opens a world. He asks what sort of word is spoken and what it does to the sinner. The event is not generically revelatory. It is the event of accusation and promise.

The parable, sermon, absolution, baptismal word, and sacramental declaration do not merely disclose a possibility of understanding. They put the old creature to death and give the new creature life. Theological language is performative because God acts through it.

Forde therefore represents neither a simple continuation of Iwand nor a simple continuation of Ebeling. He stands at their intersection. From Iwand he receives the radical distinction of Law and Gospel and the centrality of justification. From Ebeling and the hermeneutical tradition he receives an intensified account of language as event. His originality lies in making the event of proclamation the place where Iwand’s distinction reaches its concrete theological actuality.

The Gospel as the End of the Law

The phrase “the Gospel as the end of the Law” captures both Forde’s power and his danger.

For Forde, the Gospel is not a new law. It does not tell the sinner how to become righteous by believing correctly, receiving properly, or entering into a religious relation. Faith is not the one remaining work after every other work has been excluded. The promise is unconditional. It does not describe the conditions under which forgiveness might become available. It gives forgiveness.

This is why Forde relentlessly attacks every formulation that allows the old Adam to survive as a theological subject. The old Adam would rather become religious than die. He will use repentance, faith, sanctification, spirituality, theological knowledge, and even the doctrine of justification as projects by which to establish himself before God. The Law exposes this activity not in order to refine it but to bring it to an end.

The Gospel then speaks where nothing remains to be improved. It raises the dead.

Forde’s characteristic movement from forensic language to death-and-resurrection language should be understood in this context. He does not simply reject the declaration of righteousness. He fears that forensic language, when isolated, will be absorbed into a legal scheme within which the old subject remains intact and receives a favorable status. Death and resurrection disclose the more radical reality: justification is not merely a changed verdict about the same person but the ending of one existence and the beginning of another.

The claim is deeply Pauline and deeply Lutheran. It restores the apocalyptic force of justification. The Gospel is not the religious solution to a problem human beings can formulate in advance. It is the new creation of the one whose possibilities have been exhausted.

Here the debt to Iwand is unmistakable. The Gospel does not emerge from the Law’s possibilities. Christ is not the fulfillment of the old creature’s project. Righteousness comes from outside. Faith receives what it could neither anticipate nor produce.

But Forde shifts the center of emphasis. In Iwand, the discontinuity is grounded explicitly in Christ’s righteousness and in the promissory word that gives what Christ has accomplished. In Forde, the discontinuity appears increasingly as the event in which the preached Word terminates the old relation and creates the new.

The Gospel is not merely about the end. The Gospel is the end.

That formulation is homiletically electrifying. It is also ontologically ambiguous.

Theology Is for Proclamation

Forde’s claim that theology is for proclamation is not an anti-intellectual slogan. It is a judgment about the purpose and criterion of theological reflection. Theology exists to serve the speaking of Law and Gospel. A theological formulation that cannot be preached—or that, when preached, returns the hearer to the project of self-justification—has failed, however conceptually elegant it may be.

Dogmatics must therefore be tested in the pulpit, at the baptismal font, at the altar, and beside the dying. The question is not only whether a doctrine is internally coherent or historically defensible. The question is what it does when spoken.

Does the doctrine accuse the old Adam without secretly preserving his possibilities? Does it proclaim Christ as gift rather than as example? Does it release the hearer from the demand to become worthy of grace? Does it say, without qualification, “for you”?

This is one reason Forde continues to exercise such power in Lutheran theological education. He refuses to let doctrine become detached from pastoral address. He knows that a formally correct proposition may function as Law when it is preached as a condition the hearer must satisfy. He also knows that language that sounds unconditional may conceal another demand.

Theological truth therefore cannot be evaluated apart from use. The doctrine of justification is not properly understood when it is merely defined. It must be spoken so that it justifies.

Forde’s insight here is indispensable. Theological semantics cannot be reduced to the abstract relation between propositions and states of affairs. Christian language addresses persons. Some of its central utterances are performative. “I baptize you,” “This is my body,” and “Your sins are forgiven” do not merely report religious facts. They belong to the acts they name.

The question, however, is what makes these performatives successful.

A word does not become divine merely because it transforms its hearer. Its theological felicity depends upon authority. The absolution forgives because Christ authorizes the promise and the Spirit acts through the proclaimed Word. Baptism gives what it promises because God has joined the divine name and promise to the water. The sacramental declaration is not effective because linguistic eventfulness possesses its own power. It is effective because the divine speaker binds himself to the creaturely sign.

Theology is indeed for proclamation. But proclamation is for the delivery of something neither preacher nor hearer constitutes.

Forde Is Not Bultmann

At this point an important distinction must be made. Forde should not be assimilated too quickly to the genealogy running from Heidegger through Bultmann to the New Hermeneutic.

Bultmann translated the mythological assertions of the New Testament into existential possibilities. Resurrection became the eschatological self-understanding awakened by the proclamation of the cross. The theological content was relocated into the existence of the hearer.

Forde does not proceed in this way. His Gospel is not the disclosure of an available possibility of authenticity. It is an attack upon every human possibility. The sinner is not summoned to choose a new self-understanding. The sinner is put to death by a Word from outside.

Nor is the event grounded in the autonomous capacity of language. God is not simply the name for the world-opening power of speech. Forde intends to say that God speaks. His theology is uncompromisingly monergistic. The hearer does not cooperate in producing the event. The Word creates the faith by which it is received.

This is why criticism of Forde must be more exact than criticism of Bultmann. The difficulty is not that Forde substitutes human experience for divine agency. He insists upon divine agency precisely where many modern theologies have lost it.

The difficulty is that the divine act may become too closely identified with the present event of the Word.

The distinction can be put this way. Bultmann risks making the hearer’s transformed existence the theological meaning of divine action. Forde risks making the divine action fully actual as salvation only in the Word that transforms the hearer.

The former moves from God to self-understanding. The latter moves from proclamation to death and resurrection. Forde’s position is much stronger. But the semantic question remains: what act of God makes the proclaimed promise true before and apart from its effect upon this hearer?

The Cross and the Refusal of Explanation

The issue becomes especially clear in Forde’s treatment of the atonement.

Forde is right to resist every attempt to turn the cross into a mechanism hidden behind the event itself. Theories of atonement can become speculative constructions in which the theologian explains what transaction must have occurred between divine attributes, metaphysical powers, or legal claims in order for God to forgive. The cross is then treated as evidence for an invisible process whose logic the theologian claims to comprehend.

Such explanation can become a theology of glory. It looks behind the crucified Christ for a more intelligible divine arrangement. The scandal of the cross is subordinated to a theory capable of satisfying the antecedent demands of religious reason.

Forde’s protest is therefore necessary. God does not owe the theologian an account of the mechanism by which mercy becomes permissible. Christ crucified is not the visible surface beneath which the real saving event must be reconstructed. The cross is itself God’s act toward sinners and the world.

Forde also resists the picture of an otherwise unwilling God whose wrath must be redirected toward an innocent victim before forgiveness can occur. The Father and Son cannot be separated into opposing agents. The cross is the act of the Triune God, not a transaction by which Christ persuades God to become gracious.

These criticisms should be granted their full force.

It must further be granted that Forde’s reticence is principled rather than careless. He does not omit an account of what was accomplished in Christ because the question never occurred to him. He declines it. To specify the transaction lying behind the cross is, on his terms, already to look behind the cross—already to abandon the crucified God for a more intelligible arrangement of which the crucifixion would be merely the visible sign. The silence is a discipline, not an oversight. Any criticism that treats it as a gap Forde forgot to fill has not yet met him.

But the rejection of explanatory theories does not remove the need to say what God did in Christ. The cross is not saving merely because it exposes human violence, terminates the sinner’s theological projects, or becomes the content of a proclamation that raises faith. Christian confession identifies determinate acts and relations. Christ bears sin, undergoes judgment, defeats death, reconciles enemies, and is raised by the Father.

These are not optional theories surrounding an otherwise indeterminate event. They belong to the biblical and dogmatic identification of the event itself.

Here Forde will press, and rightly, with the sharpest form of his objection. To say that Christ “bore judgment” or “reconciled enemies” is already to deploy a juridical and relational vocabulary. Has the realist not smuggled back the very mechanism the cross was said to abolish? Is identification not simply explanation in a quieter voice?

The reply turns on a distinction that must be drawn with great care, because the whole argument rests upon it. There is a difference between explaining why the divine nature required a transaction and confessing that God did something determinate in Christ. The first is a necessitarian claim. It asks what conditions the divine being had to satisfy before forgiveness became permissible, and it answers with a theory of the metaphysical or legal necessity standing behind the cross. This is the theology of glory Forde rightly refuses. It looks behind the crucified Christ for an arrangement more intelligible than the crucifixion, and it makes that arrangement the real saving event of which the cross is only the report.

Dogmatic identification claims nothing of the kind. It does not say why God had to act in this way. It reconstructs no necessity antecedent to the divine freedom. It says only that God did act, and it names the act: Christ bore sin, underwent judgment, defeated death, reconciled enemies, was raised. The confession is committed to the that. It is not committed to the why-it-was-necessary. It identifies the event without explaining the mechanism, and it leaves the necessity in the freedom of God rather than in a structure God was obliged to honor.

Forde’s legitimate target is the necessitarian must. His overreach is the slide from refusing the must to refusing every determinate account of the what. One may decline to say why God had to reconcile the world in this way and still confess that this is what God did. To preserve the second is not to reimport the first. The cross does not become intelligible behind its own back. It remains the scandal it is. But it remains a determinate act of God toward sinners, and not merely the occasion on which the sinner’s hostility is overcome.

The question is therefore whether Forde’s polemic against explanation sometimes leaves too little distance between Christ’s historical act and the present effect of proclamation. If atonement is understood chiefly as what happens when the cross is preached and the hearer’s hostility is overcome, then the act that grounds proclamation risks being assimilated to the event proclamation produces.

Forde does not deny that Christ died and rose. Nor does he deny that God acts through the cross. The problem is more subtle. What exactly has been accomplished before the Word reaches the hearer? Is reconciliation a divine act delivered through proclamation, or does reconciliation name the event in which the proclaimed Christ terminates the sinner’s enmity and creates faith?

The two claims are related, but they are not identical.

Iwand’s Greater Ontological Reserve

Here the comparison with Iwand becomes illuminating.

Iwand’s theology is no less radical about the incapacity of the sinner. He does not preserve a moral continuity between Law and Gospel. He does not understand faith as a latent human possibility. The righteousness of faith comes entirely from outside.

The contrast with Forde must not be drawn, however, as a contrast between a static metaphysics and a theology of the event. Iwand is himself an actualist about the Word. Formed by the theology of revelation that ran through the Confessing Church, he no more conceives the righteousness of faith as a substance lying behind the proclamation than Forde does. Both men hold that the Word is act, that the Gospel happens, and that faith is created rather than elicited. The difference does not fall between event and being.

It falls within the event, and it concerns answerability. For Iwand the justifying Word is answerable to a reality it delivers but does not constitute. The promise gives a righteousness located in Christ; the reality may be hidden beneath its contrary, yet it is not produced by the event in which the believer comes to trust it. The Word creates faith because it announces and delivers what Christ is and has done. The event remains answerable to its content.

Forde receives this extra-nos structure but allows the delivering and the delivered to draw so close that the answerability becomes difficult to see. He shifts attention from the location of righteousness in Christ to the event of the justifying Word. This is not a rejection of Iwand. It is a radical appropriation. The alien righteousness becomes alien not only because it is Christ’s rather than ours, but because it comes as a Word that contradicts every available judgment concerning the sinner.

The shift is theologically fertile. It prevents alien righteousness from becoming a substance deposited in a heavenly account and subsequently transferred. Righteousness is given personally, promissorily, and eschatologically. It comes as God’s judgment against all other judgments.

But the shift can also produce a compression. Christ’s act, the promise concerning Christ, and the faith created by the promise are drawn so closely together that the distinctions among them become difficult to maintain.

Iwand’s order remains clearer:

Christ is our righteousness.

The promise gives Christ and his righteousness.

Faith receives the righteousness that remains alien even in being given.

Forde’s rhetoric sometimes produces another order:

The Gospel is spoken.

The old sinner dies and the new creature arises.

This happening is justification.

Nothing in the second order is necessarily false. The problem arises when it is treated as exhaustive. The proclaimed event must itself be grounded in the Christological reality identified in the first order.

The preached God must be the God who has acted.

Two Accounts of the Justifying Event

The distinction can be stated with greater precision.

Consider the proclamation:

“For Christ’s sake, your sins are forgiven.”

On a realist and Christologically grounded account, the utterance is felicitous because several conditions obtain. God exists and acts. Christ has entered the history of sinners, borne sin, died, and been raised. God has authorized the promise of forgiveness in Christ’s name. The Spirit employs the creaturely utterance to give the hearer what Christ has accomplished.

The proclamation is therefore genuinely performative. It does not merely inform the hearer that forgiveness exists. It delivers forgiveness personally. But its performative power depends upon an antecedent and continuing divine act. The utterance participates in a reality it does not create.

On a more purely event-centered account, the utterance is successful when it terminates the hearer’s relation of accusation and self-justification. The sinner is killed by the Law and raised by the promise. Forgiveness obtains as this new relation is brought about.

Again, the accounts may overlap. Divine forgiveness does transform the relation in which the sinner stands. The realist need not reduce absolution to information about a past event. The Word does what it says.

But the two sets of conditions are not equivalent. A hearer may experience release without the word being divinely authorized. A true absolution may be resisted and produce no discernible transformation. The reality of forgiveness cannot be identified simply with its phenomenological, existential, or linguistic effect.

The effect belongs to the event’s fulfillment in the hearer. It does not constitute the divine act that makes the event true.

This is where Forde’s theological achievement requires realist completion. He sees more clearly than most theologians that the Gospel must happen. What must be added is that its happening is grounded in what has happened and in the God who continues to act through what has happened.

Divine Agency and the Threefold Order

The relation among Christ, proclamation, and faith can therefore be articulated without surrendering Forde’s central insight.

First, God acts in Christ. The incarnation, ministry, crucifixion, resurrection, and exaltation are not merely the historical material upon which proclamation later reflects. They are divine acts establishing the reality the Gospel announces.

Second, God acts through proclamation. The Word is not an inert report of these acts. The Spirit joins the promise to Christ’s work so that what was accomplished there is delivered here and now. The preached Word is a genuine instrument of divine agency.

Third, God creates faith through hearing. Faith is neither the condition of the promise’s truth nor a human contribution to its efficacy. It is the creaturely reception generated by the same Spirit who authorizes the Word.

This threefold order preserves Forde’s monergism while refusing to compress divine agency into the event of proclamation alone.

The act of Christ grounds the promise.

The promise delivers the act.

The Spirit creates the faith that receives what the promise gives.

The order is not temporal in any simplistic sense. The risen Christ acts presently through the proclaimed Word. Nor is the work of Christ a completed object left behind in the past. The one who died and rose remains the living agent of proclamation.

Nevertheless, logical and ontological distinctions remain necessary. The proclamation is true because Christ is who the proclamation says he is and has done what it says he has done. Faith receives the promise because the promise is true. Neither the event of speaking nor the event of believing makes the crucified and risen Christ real.

The Word grounds the event because the Word was made flesh, acted in history, and continues to speak through the Spirit.

What Forde Gives to Theological Realism

A theological realist should therefore resist the temptation simply to reject Forde. His theology exposes weaknesses that realism itself can develop.

Realism may become preoccupied with propositions while neglecting address. It may defend the objective truth of the resurrection without asking how the risen Christ encounters sinners through preaching. It may insist that forgiveness is grounded in Christ while failing to forgive anyone. It may secure the reference of theological language while leaving its performative and sacramental character unexplained.

Forde does not allow such theology to remain comfortable.

He insists that the truth of the Gospel is not adequately served by stating it impersonally. “Christ died for sinners” must become “Christ died for you.” The universal statement does not disappear, but its evangelical purpose is fulfilled in direct address. The promise seeks a hearer.

He also insists that justification is not a static possession. It is the continuing death of the old Adam and the emergence of the new creature. The Christian lives from the Word because the old project of self-justification continually returns and must continually be ended.

Finally, Forde insists that theological language is inseparable from divine action. The Gospel is not merely true in the manner of an abstract proposition. It is God’s instrument for making alive.

All of this belongs within a robust theological realism. Indeed, realism becomes more adequate when it recognizes that divine agency can be mediated linguistically. The alternative to the New Hermeneutic is not a return to mute facts. It is an agentive semantics in which truth, reference, and performative efficacy are grounded together in the Logos.

Forde brings theology close to this position. His preached God is not merely an object of discourse but the speaking agent who kills and raises. What he does not always make sufficiently explicit is the ontological relation between this present speaking and the determinate acts of God in Christ that give the speaking its truth.

The Preached God

The phrase “the preached God” is characteristically Fordean because it refuses to separate God from the form in which God gives himself to sinners. The God of the Gospel is not available for speculative inspection behind the preached Word. God comes clothed in promise. To seek another God behind Christ and proclamation is to seek the hidden God apart from the place where God has chosen to be known.

This insight is profoundly Lutheran. Theology must not climb behind the Word to inspect the divine will. It receives God where God has promised to be found.

Yet “the preached God” can be understood in two ways.

It may mean that God is real as the event of preaching, so that divine actuality and the occurrence of proclamation become inseparable.

Or it may mean that the God who independently lives and acts gives himself truly through preaching, binding divine agency to the promise without being constituted by its reception.

The second formulation preserves what is strongest in Forde while avoiding the linguistic displacement traced throughout this series. God does not become gracious when grace is preached. The gracious God preaches himself into the sinner’s hearing. Christ does not become the end of the Law when the sermon succeeds in killing the old Adam. The sermon kills because Christ has brought the Law’s accusatory dominion to its end and acts through the promise.

The preached God is therefore neither a metaphysical object standing behind proclamation nor a linguistic event lacking ontological depth. He is the acting God present in the creaturely Word.

Proclamation is not less than event.

But event is not less than divine action.

Iwand, Forde, and What Must Be Preserved

Forde’s appropriation of Iwand can now be judged more exactly.

From Iwand he receives the centrality of justification, the radical distinction between Law and Gospel, the alien character of righteousness, and the refusal of every synthesis that makes Christ the completion of human religious possibility. These are not incidental influences. They provide the grammar of Forde’s entire theological project.

Forde then radicalizes Iwand by interpreting the distinction eschatologically and performatively. The Gospel is not only the announcement of the end of the Law. It is the final Word that ends the old sinner. Theology becomes proclamation because the distinction exists concretely only as God’s address does its work.

The gain is enormous. Law and Gospel cease to be doctrinal categories possessed by the theologian and become the living activity of God. Justification ceases to be an explanation and becomes death and resurrection. The extra nos arrives as a Word no sinner can generate from within.

But something in Iwand must be preserved against the possible consequences of Forde’s radicalization. The righteousness of faith is located in Christ. The promise is true before it is believed. The event of justification in the hearer is grounded in the divine act the promise mediates. The God who is preached is the God who has acted and continues to act.

Without this ontological priority, Forde’s theology risks giving the linguistic event more weight than it can bear. The event may become self-validating. Its power to kill and raise may function as the final evidence that God has spoken. The distinction between divine action and the experience of divine action may narrow until it disappears.

Iwand prevents that disappearance. His extra nos is not merely the phenomenological foreignness of a Word that interrupts the self. It is the ontological otherness of Christ’s righteousness given to the sinner.

Forde needs Iwand most precisely where he goes beyond him.

The Word That Has Something to Give

Gerhard Forde understood with uncommon clarity that the Gospel cannot remain a proposition placed at a safe distance from the hearer. It must be spoken. It must kill. It must forgive. It must make alive.

He also understood that the old Adam will turn every explanation of salvation into another strategy of self-preservation. The Gospel must therefore come as an unconditional and final Word, not as a theory awaiting assent or a program awaiting implementation.

For these reasons, Forde remains indispensable. He retrieves the evangelical nerve of Lutheran theology at precisely the point where academic theology is most tempted to lose it.

But the Gospel can be unconditional only because it has something to give.

The promise is not powerful because it creates an otherwise absent reality through linguistic force. It is powerful because the crucified and risen Christ gives himself through it. The Word kills and raises because the Spirit joins the hearer to the death and resurrection of Christ. Proclamation is an event because God acts in and through it.

Iwand’s contribution is therefore not a preliminary stage that Forde simply surpassed. It is the Christological ground Forde’s radical proclamation continues to require. The righteousness of faith is alien because it is Christ’s. The Gospel ends the Law because Christ has endured and overcome its judgment. The promise creates faith because the reality it promises is already held in the one who speaks.

The final relation is not between a word and a hearer alone.

It is between the acting God, the proclaimed Word, and the sinner whom the Spirit brings to faith.

Forde teaches theology that the Word must happen.

Iwand reminds theology that the Word has something real to say.

The preached God is the God who acts.

The next essay will turn to Eberhard Jüngel, where the event-character of revelation is drawn into the doctrine of God itself. The question will no longer be only whether God acts through proclamation, but whether God’s very being is rightly understood as the event in which God comes to language. Jüngel may appear to restore ontology after the linguistic turn. The question will be whether he restores a God whose being grounds revelation—or makes revelation-event constitutive of what divine being means.