At the foundation of every well-founded belief lies a belief that is not well-founded.— Ludwig Wittgenstein, On Certainty
To call a sermon “mere opinion” is not to avoid metaphysics. It is to conceal one’s own.
To say that a sermon is “just the pastor’s opinion” is already to have decided far more than one admits.
The slogan presents itself as modesty. In fact it functions as an ontological veto. It does not merely say that preaching has failed to persuade. It says, in advance, that preaching cannot bear truth about what is. The sermon may express aspiration, inwardness, communal memory, or moral seriousness. But it cannot, on this construal, disclose reality. It may register commitment; it may not name being.
That judgment is never neutral. It does not arise at the end of inquiry. It arises because a prior decision has already been made about what counts as fact, what qualifies as public rationality, and what kinds of speech may be allowed ontological force. Theology is then excluded, not because it has been refuted, but because a rival grammar of the real has already occupied the court.
The phrase “just the pastor’s opinion” is therefore not the suspension of metaphysics. It is metaphysics in concealment.
II. Against the Myth of Bare Fact
This dismissal depends upon one of modernity’s most persistent myths: the myth of bare fact.
According to this picture, reality first presents itself as a neutral inventory of brute data. Only afterward do human beings project value, meaning, and interpretation onto it. Facts simply are; values are what we add. Science concerns the former, religion the latter. Once this partition is installed, theology can be confined without argument to the precincts of inwardness.
But no such world of brute givenness has ever been encountered.
There is no datum available to thought apart from a prior horizon of intelligibility. Nothing appears simply as a fact in itself. It appears under description, within judgment, through discrimination, and against a background of what counts as relevant, coherent, and real. The “given” is never merely given. It is always given-as.
A simple medical example makes the point. When a physician says, “The MRI shows a tumor,” no one imagines that this is a bare fact in the naive sense. The image does not interpret itself. To identify a “tumor” already presupposes an entire grammar: imaging physics, clinical training, norms of healthy and unhealthy tissue, criteria of visual discrimination, and a conceptual distinction between anomaly and ordinary structure. The judgment is objective, but it is not uninterpreted. It is theory-laden, disciplined, and socially mediated.
The point is not that the diagnosis is “just opinion.” It is that objectivity does not mean the absence of interpretation. It means interpretation disciplined by a truthful relation to the real.
The same must be said, mutatis mutandis, of preaching. The sermon does not cease to be truth-claiming because it speaks within a grammar. It is no more disqualified by this than medicine, physics, or jurisprudence are disqualified by the conceptual and normative frameworks within which they operate. The question is not whether preaching interprets. The question is whether the grammar within which it interprets is true to reality.
This does not dissolve reality into subjectivity. It discloses something more serious: facts do not stand over against interpretation as though they were self-interpreting units of presence. A fact is available as fact only within an order in which disclosure has already become possible. The empirical is never raw. It is formally available only within a grammar.
III. Intelligibility and the Conditions of Inquiry
Once this is seen, the argument must move higher. The real question is not whether human beings interpret; that is obvious. The question is what must be true of reality for interpretation, inquiry, and truth-claiming to occur at all.
Knowledge presupposes that the world is not mere chaos, not pure dissemination without identity, not motion without form. It presupposes stable structures, inferential continuities, and a proportion between mind and world such that cognition is not sheer accident. It presupposes as well norms of adjudication: coherence, noncontradiction, explanatory adequacy, and the possibility that one judgment may genuinely be truer than another.
Yet none of these conditions can be generated by the empirical procedures they underwrite. No experiment can first prove that reality is intelligible and then begin to investigate it. No inductive practice can ground induction without circularity. No system of thought can fully certify the conditions of its own intelligibility from within itself.
Inquiry begins only because something has already been granted: that reality is not finally mute, that reason is not hallucination, and that the world bears an order proportioned to understanding.
This is why the old foundationalist dream fails. Thought does not begin from indubitable atoms and then construct intelligibility upward. It begins within a world already trusted as meaningful enough to pursue, stable enough to track, and ordered enough to judge. Beneath every explicit warrant lies an operative confidence not itself produced by explicit warrant. Wittgenstein’s point remains decisive: the well-founded rests upon what is not itself well-founded.
This is not irrationalism. It is the recognition that reason does not begin nowhere. It begins within a field of intelligibility already operative.
IV. Science and the Failure of Neutrality
Science does not escape this structure. It confirms it.
Its success has tempted many to redescribe it mythically, as though it were simply the passive registration of uninterpreted data. But scientific practice is never the reception of brute fact alone. It is disciplined participation in intelligibility. It proceeds through theory, judgment, paradigm, and criteria of adjudication that are not themselves empirical objects among others.
No theory is accepted merely because it “matches the facts” in some naive sense. It is judged according to explanatory power, coherence, scope, economy, fecundity, and elegance. These are not observational deliverances. They are judgments concerning what it means to have rendered something genuinely intelligible.
Science therefore does not inhabit a realm purified of all nonempirical commitments. It presupposes that nature is formally tractable, that its regularities are not arbitrary, that mathematization is apt to its disclosure, and that finite rational beings may participate in the intelligible structure of what is. None of this can be established by an experiment that already depends upon it.
To say this is not to diminish science. It is to distinguish science from scientism. Science is a disciplined inquiry into the structures of the natural order. Scientism is the illicit expansion of that inquiry into a total ontology. It moves from the claim that scientific method is powerful within its sphere to the claim that only what scientific method can capture is real. But this is not a scientific conclusion. It is rather a metaphysical decree.
V. Ontology and the Rule of Physicalism
The modern dismissal of theology is generally governed by just such a decree, most often under the sign of physicalism.
Physicalism is often presented as though it were simply the mature verdict of science: reality finally consists of matter and energy under law, and everything else—mind, meaning, normativity, intentionality, teleology—must be reduced to the physical or treated as derivative from it. But physicalism is not itself an empirical discovery. No one observes, measures, or isolates the thesis that being as such is exhausted by the physically measurable. It is not a scientific finding. It is an interpretation of the whole.
That is to say, it is ontology.
This is the asymmetry that modern discourse continually conceals. Theology is dismissed because it is said to be metaphysical, while physicalism is permitted to govern the conversation as though it were merely methodological sobriety. But physicalism is not less metaphysical because it is culturally ascendant. It is simply metaphysics rendered habitual.
And it is from within this habitual ontology that preaching is reduced to opinion. The sermon is not judged false by neutral inquiry. It is judged inadmissible by a prior settlement concerning what may count as real.
VI. Teleology, Normativity, and the Limits of Reduction
Yet this reigning ontology is least secure precisely where its claims are most sweeping, for intelligibility is not exhausted by recurrence. A world may display regularity without thereby becoming meaningful. To understand something is not merely to note that it happens, but to grasp its ratio, its formal relation to other things, and the norms by which a better account may be distinguished from a worse one. Explanation is always ordered toward adequation, not mere accumulation.
The same is true of normativity. If reality is finally indifferent, then truth, rational obligation, and explanatory preference become hard to secure except as useful fictions. One may describe the conditions under which organisms behave as though truth mattered, but that is not yet to account for why truth should bind, why contradiction should wound thought, or why reason should be answerable to anything beyond utility.
Intentionality presses the matter further. Thought is always thought-of. It is directed beyond itself toward an object, a meaning, a possible world, a judgment. Yet it remains unclear how purely physical process, construed in strictly nonintentional terms, yields genuine aboutness without remainder. One may redescribe neural events indefinitely and still not have arrived at truth-ordered cognition. While reductionism can correlate these realities with physical processes, it struggles to explain their authority.
VII. Theology as Ontological Speech
At this point theology must be understood with greater seriousness than modernity usually allows.
Theology is not the codification of religious sentiment. Nor is it an ornamental supplement appended to an otherwise self-explanatory world. It is ontological discourse under the condition of revelation. It concerns being, origin, intelligibility, estrangement, order, and end. It speaks not merely of how human beings feel before the world, but of what the world is in relation to its source.
On the Christian construal, the world is not self-grounding. Its being is received, not self-posited. Its intelligibility is not accidental, nor is human rationality a brute anomaly in an unintelligible cosmos. The finite is intelligible because it is grounded in a prior intelligibility. Creaturely order is not self-originating, but is derivative.
To say that the world is creaturely, then, is not merely to insert “God” as one more cause among others. It is to say that finite being exists by participation. It is real, but not self-subsisting. It is ordered, but not self-authorizing. It is intelligible, but not the source of its own intelligibility.
This is why theology does not compete with chemistry or physics as though it were a parallel empirical discipline. It addresses a different level of determination: how there can be a world at all, how finite forms may be intelligible, how normativity may bind, how teleology may be intrinsic rather than projected, and how thought may genuinely participate in truth.
VIII. Logos and Formal Intelligibility
All of this converges upon the doctrine of the Logos. The Christian claim is not merely that the world happens to be understandable. It is that the world is intelligible because it is from and through Logos. Intelligibility is therefore not adventitious to being. Reality is not first mute and only later interpreted. It is, from the first, ratio-bearing, form-bearing, communicable.
Logos names the ground of this formal intelligibility. It names that from which determinate beings possess determinacy, relations possess order, and thought may enter into adequation with what is. It means that being is not prior to meaning as chaos is prior to articulation. Being is always already articulate because it is always already from Logos.
Several consequences follow:
First, the fit between mind and world is not brute coincidence. Human rationality is not an inexplicable flare within darkness, but a finite participation in intelligibility itself.
Second, normativity is not accidental. Truth, order, and fittingness are not merely subjective overlays upon an indifferent substrate, but dimensions of the real grounded in its derivation from Logos.
Third, teleology is not a naive intrusion into mechanism. It is the intrinsic orientation of finite being according to the intelligible gratuity of its source. Formal order tends beyond mere repetition toward meaning, relation, and end.
IX. Christological Intensification
The doctrine of the Logos reaches its decisive Christian intensification in Christology.
If Logos were only a metaphysical principle, theology could too easily be reduced to a lofty philosophy of order. But the Christian claim is more exacting, for the Logos through whom all things were made is not an impersonal structure. He is the living self-expression of God, and in the incarnation this Logos enters creaturely history without ceasing to be the ground of creaturely intelligibility.
This matters for preaching because proclamation is not merely discourse about transcendence in general. It is witness to the concrete self-disclosure of the ground of being within history. Christ is not one symbolic figure among others for human possibility. He is, in Christian confession, the enactment within the finite of that very Logos by which the finite is.
Thus Christian preaching names sin, judgment, reconciliation, and redemption in more than expressive terms. Sin is not merely moral underperformance, but ontological derangement. Judgment is not divine mood, but truth against distortion. Grace is not affective uplift, but reparative participation. Reconciliation is not inner adjustment, but restored relation. Christ does not merely announce this order. He is its decisive manifestation.
X. The Freedom of Theological Language
At this point one may also speak in a more specifically Lutheran key.
The reduction of preaching to “mere opinion” is not only an epistemic slight. It is another attempt to force theological speech into an alien grammar. Recent work on Luther, including Vestrucci’s reading of De servo arbitrio, has argued that theology becomes free precisely when it is no longer compelled to speak under philosophical regimes foreign to its subject matter—whether modal, deontic, or typological. Revelation does not merely supply theology with additional content inside an antecedently neutral language. It frees theology for its own mode of speech.
That insight bears directly here. The sermon is judged deficient because it does not submit to a prior regime of admissibility determined by physicalism, autonomous reason, or the fact-value partition. But this is precisely the wrong tribunal. Theological speech is not irrational; it is simply not answerable in the first instance to an alien logical regime that has already stripped it of ontological force before hearing it.
In that sense, the dismissal of the sermon as “just opinion” repeats, in altered form, the captivity Luther sought to break. It reduces proclamation to a mode of discourse legible only within a grammar not proper to revelation, and then condemns it for failing to behave like secular description.
XI. What the Sermon Is
The sermon, then, is not the externalization of a pastor’s inward states. Nor is it merely a communal language-game whose significance is exhausted by intramural use. It is a truth-bearing act within a participatory ontology ordered by Logos and intensified Christologically.
Preaching names the world as creaturely, human beings as relationally constituted, sin as privative distortion, history as the theater of judgment and mercy, and Christ as the decisive advent of divine intelligibility into finite existence. Its scandal for modernity lies precisely here: it refuses to remain merely symbolic, therapeutic, or moral. The sermon does not simply recommend a sensibility. It risks ontology.
XII. Determinatio
The phrase “just the pastor’s opinion” performs a sleight of hand. It imagines that one party to the dispute has a worldview while the other has only facts. But there is no such asymmetry. There are only rival construals of the whole: rival accounts of intelligibility, rival ontologies, rival judgments concerning teleology, mind, truth, and the structure of reality.
Theology is indeed metaphysical. But so is every serious denial of theology. The only question is whether one’s metaphysics is explicit enough to be argued.
The sermon should not be exempted from rational scrutiny. It should be restored to the plane on which rational scrutiny actually occurs. If Christian proclamation is false, let it be shown false as a determination of being, intelligibility, creatureliness, estrangement, and reconciliation. Let rival ontologies show that they can account for truth, normativity, intentionality, and the participatory structure of knowledge without covertly borrowing what they cannot ground.
Until then, the reduction of preaching to opinion remains intellectually unserious. It is not criticism. It is metaphysical impatience protected by cultural habit.
The question is not whether the preacher speaks from within a vision of the whole, for he does. The question is whether modernity will admit that it does the same.
Once that admission is made, the false hierarchy collapses. Theology is no longer measured against a fictive neutrality. It stands where it has always stood: in dispute with rival accounts of being, intelligibility, and truth.
At that point the slogan perishes, and the real argument begins.