Monday, June 22, 2026

The Seminar Room at Marburg: Heidegger, Bultmann, and then Phenomenological Displacement of Divine Agency

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 essays have argued that the Kantian restriction theology inherited was never as philosophically secure as the theologians who built upon it assumed, that it was received rather than re-derived from Kant's own text, and that it was supplied by one of two neo-Kantian schools — Marburg — rather than by the critical philosophy as a whole. They have also shown what happened when a theologian of genuine seriousness, Rudolf Otto, tried to recover the objective otherness of the holy from within the Kantian inheritance: he succeeded in restoring the phenomenological priority of the object while leaving its ontological priority unsecured. The experience of the numinous pointed beyond consciousness, but Otto could not finally show how the reality of the object is to be distinguished from the distinctive structure of consciousness through which it is apprehended.

This essay is about what happened next. It is about a specific room, a specific winter, and the precise moment at which the phenomenological displacement of divine agency passed from philosophy into Protestant theology — not by argument, but by transmission. The room was at Marburg. The winter was 1923–24. The transmission happened across a seminar table.

The Room

Rudolf Bultmann held the New Testament chair at the University of Marburg from 1921. When Martin Heidegger arrived to take the philosophy chair in 1923, he entered an institution already shaped by fifty years of neo-Kantian philosophy of the kind the preceding essays have described. Paul Natorp — whose dissolution of the thing-in-itself into "the limit of the infinite process of objectification" had done more than any other single formulation to close the question of supersensible reality for a generation — was still alive, still at Marburg, three months from his death in August 1924. Wilhelm Herrmann, who had taught theology at Marburg since 1879 as Cohen's institutional neighbor and had built his entire account of theological certainty on the conviction that "no other kind of certainty about divine reality remains available after Kant," had retired only seven years earlier. Bultmann and Barth had both been Herrmann's students.

Into this building, in the winter semester of 1923–24, Heidegger stepped — not to lecture on ontology but to present in Bultmann's own New Testament seminar, on the ethics of Paul, reading Luther. The protokolle of that seminar, preserved by Bernd Jaspert, record two presentations: February 14 and February 21, 1924. What they record is not simply a philosopher helping a theologian read a Reformer. They record the moment at which a decisive philosophical move — the transformation of theological truth-conditions from metaphysical to phenomenological — was performed inside a New Testament seminar, in front of the man who would spend the next four decades making that move the methodological foundation of Protestant biblical interpretation.

What Heidegger Did to Luther

Heidegger came to the seminar having read Luther intensively and, by most accounts, penetratingly. Bultmann reportedly quipped that Heidegger was in fact the leading expert on Luther. The first session worked through Luther's 1516 Questio de viribus et voluntate hominis sine gratia disputata and the celebrated theses of the Heidelberg Disputation. The second explored Luther's later theology of sin, moving through the 1517 Disputation against Scholastic Theology and the 1544 Genesis lectures.

What Heidegger found in Luther — and found, by his own account, with approval — was a radicality of sin that the scholastics had missed. The scholastics understood sin as an impairment of human nature, a deficit that damaged but did not destroy the prelapsarian donum superadditum. Natural reason remained sufficiently intact to secure knowledge of God, to establish the authority of the Church as a divine institution, and to demonstrate the grounds of revelation. Luther, Heidegger argued, opposed this entire architecture not with a counter-argument but with experientia: the natura hominis is corrupt, the being of human being is itself sin, and accordingly sin is none other than an Existenzbegriff — an existential concept — not something tacked onto the moral constitution of the human being but constituting humanity's ownmost core.

Heidegger's reading of Luther here is not wrong. Luther does say this. The Heidelberg theses are genuinely about epistemology rather than ontology; Luther's quarrel with the theologian of glory is about inflated confidence in rational access to God, not about whether God has a determinate ontological character. The 1544 Genesis lectures do, as Heidegger quotes them, have Luther thundering against scholastic theory in favor of experientia: fugiamus deliria ista... et sequamur potius experientiam.

But something crucial happened in the move from Luther's experientia to Heidegger's phenomenological method. Luther's appeal to experience was an appeal against a particular theory of how much natural reason can achieve regarding a God who actually exists and acts. The experientia Luther commended was the experience of a God genuinely encountered, genuinely hidden, genuinely addressing the sinner through Word and cross. For Luther, what the theologian of glory misses is not that God is a limiting-concept or a phenomenological correlate of faithful self-understanding, but that the God who actually is, is known only under conditions of hiddenness — through suffering and cross, not through the via eminentiae of speculative ascent.

Heidegger's phenomenological appropriation of this reads the hiddenness but not the reality it hides. What concerns Heidegger is the phenomenological shape of Christian life — what it is to live in the world and before God, what it is to be positioned (gestellt) before God in such a way. He brackets, methodologically and permanently, the question of whether God exists apart from this positioning. When Heidegger has Luther saying that sin is an Existenzbegriff, he means something Luther did not mean: not that sin is a real disruption of the real relation between a real human being and a real God, but that sin names a self-understanding, a mode of Dasein's being-in-the-world, a way of finding oneself.

The truth-conditions of the two positions are not merely different in emphasis. They are logically independent. Luther's claim that sinners cannot do otherwise than accuse God and excuse themselves is true, on his interpretation, if and only if there is a domain of persons, a domain containing God, and sinners in fact stand in the relation of accusation toward God and reflexive excuse toward themselves. Heidegger's version of the same claim is true if and only if there is a self-understanding of accusation-and-excuse available within the phenomenological structure of Christian factical life. The first requires God to exist and to be the kind of being toward whom sinners can bear real relations. The second requires only that a particular structure of self-understanding be phenomenologically identifiable. The two interpretations can come apart entirely: one can be true while the other is false, because their domains of quantification have no overlap.

Heidegger was sufficiently honest to acknowledge what he was doing. Theological investigation, he held by 1927, is an ontic inquiry into Christian factical life — into what it is to live in a certain way. It is not an ontological inquiry in his sense, and it does not reach the level at which questions of being as such are addressed. Theology is a positive science of faith, not fundamental ontology. The existence of God, he held, cannot be investigated phenomenologically and is accordingly irrelevant to the truth-conditions of theological assertions properly understood.

What he did not say, and what was left for Bultmann to work out, is the theological consequence of this methodological decision.

What Bultmann Inherited

Bultmann was present for both February presentations. He had already, through his formation under Herrmann, absorbed the conviction that theological certainty must be grounded in something other than speculative metaphysics or historical proof. He had already accepted, in other words, the core prohibition the preceding essays have traced through Ritschl, Herrmann, and the Marburg inheritance. What Heidegger supplied was not the prohibition — that was already in place — but a precise philosophical apparatus for executing it at the level of New Testament interpretation.

Demythologizing, as Bultmann would later systematize it, is the methodological application of Heidegger's phenomenological displacement to the entire content of Christian proclamation. The mythological worldview of the New Testament — three-storey cosmology, divine intervention in the natural order, resurrection as bodily event, parousia as literal return — cannot, Bultmann holds, be believed by modern persons. This is the claim his opening pages of "New Testament and Mythology" assert without arguing. The claim is not primarily cosmological. It is epistemological in the Marburg sense: what "modern scientific consciousness" can and cannot constitute as an object determines in advance what theological claims are available for belief.

What demythologizing then proposes is that the kerygma — the core proclamation — be reinterpreted through the existential categories Heidegger had developed in Sein und Zeit. The resurrection does not refer to a bodily event in which God raised the crucified Jesus from the dead. It refers to the rise of faith in the disciples, to the eschatological self-understanding awakened in those who hear the proclamation of the cross. Original sin is not the real disruption of a real relation between real human beings and a real God. It is the condition of inauthentic existence, the fallenness of Dasein into the anonymous public world of das Man, from which the call of conscience — or the proclaimed Word — summons the hearer to authentic decision.

The parallel with what Heidegger did to Luther is exact. Heidegger had taken Luther's metaphysical truth-conditions — sin as real enmity between a real sinner and a real God — and replaced them with phenomenological truth-conditions: sin as a self-understanding, as a mode of Dasein's positioning before God. Bultmann applied the same operation to the New Testament as a whole. Theological assertions were reinterpreted as disclosures of existential possibility. Divine action became the event of self-understanding awakened in the hearer. Revelation became the occasion for authentic existence rather than the address of a God who exists and acts.

The result was a theology in which the sentence "God raised Jesus from the dead" no longer refers to what God did, but to what the proclamation of the cross does in the hearer. The agent disappears. The action is relocated into consciousness. The satisfaction-conditions of the original claim — the conditions under which it would be true that God raised Jesus — are replaced by conditions under which an existential self-understanding arises.

What the Model Makes Visible

The logical point is worth stating with the precision the underlying argument deserves. A theological sentence divides its possible interpretations into those that satisfy it and those that do not. "Sinners cannot do otherwise than accuse God and excuse themselves" is satisfied, on Luther's interpretation, by an interpretation that contains a real domain of persons, a real God, and a real relation of accusation between them. On Heidegger's interpretation, it is satisfied by the presence of a certain structure of self-understanding within the phenomenological field of Christian existence.

What demythologizing systematically achieves is the replacement of the first kind of satisfaction-condition by the second, across the entire range of Christian proclamation. And because the two kinds of interpretation are logically independent, this is not a translation that preserves content under a new vocabulary. It is a substitution. The sentences remain. The reality capable of satisfying them has been methodologically excluded before the interpretation begins.

This is the point at which Otto and Bultmann, who seem to be doing very different things, turn out to share a common structure. Otto restored the objectivity of the holy phenomenologically — the numinous is genuinely intended, genuinely other, genuinely prior to the subject's constituting activity. But he could not finally show how the reality of the object is distinguished from the distinctive structure of consciousness through which it is apprehended. Bultmann, a generation later, goes further: the object is no longer even phenomenologically prior. The kerygma creates what it proclaims. The proclamation of the crucified one awakens faith, and faith is the existential event within which the theological content becomes real. The direction of dependence has reversed entirely. The Word does not disclose a prior reality. The Word constitutes the self-understanding within which theological reality first obtains.

The Hidden God and the Absent God

There is one moment in the seminar protokolle that cuts against this trajectory with unexpected force, and Heidegger himself is the one who supplies it.

Near the end of his second presentation, Heidegger notes that even after the Fall, when Adam and Eve flee from God in guilt and accusation, their flight does not sever their relation to God. It is the highest grace, Heidegger says — summa gratia — that after the fall God does not fall silent but still speaks: loquitur. The being of God is always grasped as Verbum; the fundamental relation of human being to God is one of hearing, audire.

And in the concluding section of "A Tale of Two Martins," the essay in which these seminar protokolle are analyzed in detail, the observation stands that Heidegger's own reflection on truth as alethia may disclose more than he intended. A-lethia is derivative upon lethia: something must first be concealed in order to be unconcealed. Heidegger's a-theism, by the same logic, suggests that the absence of God is derivative upon a deeper divine presence. The phenomenological bracketing of divine agency may itself presuppose, without being able to acknowledge, precisely what it brackets.

But Christianity in general, and Luther in particular, never mistook seemings for the reality proclaimed by the Word and appropriated in faith. The theology of the cross is not committed only to the hiddenness of God in the world. It is committed to the reality of God perceived in Christ's suffering and proclaimed in his Word. The hidden God is hidden, not absent. The concealment is real, but so is what it conceals.

What Bultmann's demythologizing finally cannot accommodate is this distinction. A phenomenology of hiddenness is possible within its framework. A phenomenology of presence as the self-disclosure of a God who actually exists and acts is not. The summa gratia that God still speaks after the Fall is, for Luther, a fact about what God has done. For the program Bultmann inherited from the Marburg seminar room, it can only be a fact about the structure of Christian self-understanding.

The Word grounds the hearer. The hearer cannot ground the Word.

The next essay will consider what becomes of proclamation when the reality that grounds it has been methodologically suspended — and why the Lutheran tradition in particular has the resources to recover what Bultmann's inheritance displaced.

Sunday, June 21, 2026

The Supersensible Returns as Feeling: Rudolf Otto and the Ambiguous Reality of the Holy

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 described the theological synthesis that arose from the two principal schools of neo-Kantianism. From Marburg came the conviction that an object is never simply given apart from the conceptual activity through which it becomes an object of knowledge. From Baden came the distinction between existence and validity, together with an account of value and historical individuality that allowed religious judgments to retain objective significance even after speculative metaphysics had been placed under critical restriction. The resulting theology could continue to speak of God without saying clearly that God existed and acted independently of the moral, historical, or religious consciousness through which God became significant.

Rudolf Otto belongs immediately after this development because he recognized, perhaps more clearly than most theologians of his generation, what had been lost. A theology of value could explain why religious beliefs mattered. It could explain the moral seriousness of faith, the historical significance of Jesus, and the normative power of Christian judgment. What it could not adequately explain was the experienced otherness of the holy. It could not account for the sense that the religious subject had not merely conferred significance upon an object but had been grasped, overwhelmed, fascinated, and judged by a presence not reducible to the subject’s own activity.

Otto’s Das Heilige, published in 1917 and later translated as The Idea of the Holy, was an attempt to recover this dimension of religion without simply abandoning the critical philosophy. He did not return to pre-Kantian metaphysics, nor did he offer a traditional doctrine of divine attributes under another name. He sought instead to identify within religious consciousness a distinctive capacity for apprehending what ordinary theoretical and moral categories could not contain. The supersensible, excluded from theoretical knowledge, would return through a mode of awareness more primitive than conceptual determination and more fundamental than ethical valuation.

This return was one of the most important developments in twentieth-century theology and the study of religion. It was also deeply ambiguous. Otto restored the objectivity and otherness of the holy, but he restored them phenomenologically rather than ontologically. He showed that religious consciousness presents itself as responsive to an irreducible object. He did not finally show how the reality of that object is to be distinguished from the peculiar structure of consciousness through which it is apprehended.

The supersensible returned, but it returned as feeling.

Beyond the Reduction of Holiness to Moral Goodness

Otto begins The Idea of the Holy with a criticism of the way Christian theology had come to speak about God. The traditional rational predicates—spirit, reason, purpose, goodness, love, wisdom, and moral will—are not false. They are indispensable to any developed Christian doctrine of God. Yet when these predicates are treated as exhausting the divine, they produce what Otto regards as a rationalized and impoverished conception of religion. God becomes the supreme moral personality, the perfect embodiment of attributes whose meaning is already familiar from ordinary human experience.

What disappears from such theology is the element by which the holy is holy.

Otto’s complaint was directed especially against the tendency, characteristic of much post-Kantian Protestant theology, to identify religion with morality and holiness with ethical perfection. If God’s holiness means only that God is morally good without qualification, then religious awe becomes intensified moral respect and worship becomes reverence before the highest ethical ideal. Religion has not been abolished, but its distinctive object has been absorbed into categories already available to practical reason.

Otto believed that this could not account for the actual history or phenomenology of religion. The experience of the holy includes moral reverence, but it also includes dread, astonishment, fascination, abasement, attraction, silence, and the sense of standing before something wholly other than the ordinary world. These elements cannot be derived from the concept of goodness. They possess their own quality and must therefore be identified before their relation to rational and ethical religion can be understood.

To name this irreducible element, Otto coined the term numinous, drawing upon the Latin numen. The numinous is neither a metaphysical substance nor one divine property among others. It names both a distinctive category of value and the state of consciousness in which that category is apprehended. It is encountered as mysterium tremendum et fascinans: mystery, overwhelming majesty, daunting power, and fascination gathered into a single complex experience whose unity cannot be produced by adding ordinary emotions together.

The non-rational character of this experience does not mean that it is irrational, contradictory, or opposed to thought. Otto’s point is that the numinous cannot be exhaustively rendered into concepts. It lies outside the ordinary rational predicates by which objects are classified and judged, while nevertheless supplying the experiential depth from which distinctively religious language arises. The non-rational is not meaningless. It is that dimension of meaning which cannot be wholly translated into determinate concepts without remainder.

In this respect Otto’s achievement was substantial. He refused to allow religion to be reduced to an ethical appendix of the critical philosophy. He insisted that the religious object possesses a depth and otherness that moral consciousness alone cannot generate. Religion is not simply morality spoken in a more exalted vocabulary. The holy does not become holy because the subject recognizes in it the highest realization of values already known from elsewhere.

Something prior to moral interpretation is encountered.

Creature-Feeling and the Priority of the Object

Otto’s account of “creature-feeling” is particularly important because it distinguishes his position from a purely subjectivist theory of religion. The feeling of creatureliness is the sense of one’s own nothingness, dependence, and ontological insignificance before the overwhelming majesty of the numinous. It is not merely fear in the ordinary sense, nor is it simply the intellectual judgment that one is finite. It is the felt collapse of self-sufficiency in the presence of that which infinitely exceeds the creature.

At first glance, this appears close to Schleiermacher’s description of religion as the feeling of absolute dependence. Otto acknowledges the connection, but he alters its direction. For Schleiermacher, the feeling of dependence can appear to be the fundamental datum from which the consciousness of God is inferred or within which it is contained. Otto insists that creature-feeling is secondary. The subject does not first discover a feeling of dependence and then posit an object upon which it depends. The feeling arises as the subjective response to the apprehension of the numinous.

The object has priority.

This reversal matters greatly for the present argument. Otto understands that theology cannot secure the reality of God by beginning with a description of the subject and then treating “God” as the name for the ultimate depth of that subject’s experience. The subject feels creaturely because it apprehends something before which it is a creature. The religious response is elicited rather than spontaneously generated. Consciousness bears the mark of having been addressed or confronted.

Otto’s language is not always as careful as one might wish, and the term “feeling” has encouraged generations of readers to interpret him psychologically. Yet his intention is not to locate the holy inside the subject as a peculiar emotional state. The numinous is experienced as objective, as standing over against the self and imposing upon it a characteristic response. One does not simply feel religiously; one feels oneself to be in the presence of the holy.

Here Otto moves beyond the theological settlement described in the preceding essays. The holy cannot be understood merely as a value constituted within religious consciousness. The structure of the experience points toward a reality that gives rise to the consciousness and cannot be reduced to it. The subject does not create the numinous by assigning religious significance to an otherwise neutral object. Rather, the numinous awakens the subject to a dimension of reality that ordinary cognition and moral judgment cannot disclose by themselves.

Yet the gain is not complete. To say that an experience presents its object as objective is not yet to establish that the object exists independently of the experience. A hallucination may also present itself as caused by something external. A powerful state of consciousness may possess an intentional object without that object obtaining as the subject takes it to obtain. Otto is aware that the numinous cannot be reduced to an ordinary feeling, but he never fully explains how one moves from the sui generis character of the experience to the actuality of its object.

The priority of the object is phenomenologically affirmed. Its ontological status remains unsettled.

Kant, Fries, and the Religious A Priori

This ambiguity becomes clearer when Otto’s philosophical background is considered. Although he taught at Marburg and developed his mature work within the intellectual world shaped by neo-Kantianism, his most direct philosophical lineage ran through Kant and Jakob Friedrich Fries. His earlier Philosophy of Religion Based on Kant and Fries attempted to show how religion might possess a distinctive rational legitimacy even after the Kantian critique had denied theoretical knowledge of supersensible objects.

Fries offered Otto a way of expanding the critical philosophy without returning to speculative reason. Human cognition, on this account, is not exhausted by empirical knowledge and conceptual understanding. There is also Ahndung—usually rendered as presentiment, divination, or intuitive apprehension—through which finite consciousness becomes aware of the eternal within the temporal and of the supersensible through its appearance in the sensible world.

Otto’s mature language of the numinous retains this Friesian structure. The capacity to apprehend the holy is a priori in the sense that it cannot be derived from ordinary sensory experience or produced through conceptual inference. Religious experience presupposes an original disposition or capacity that can be awakened but not manufactured. One cannot teach the numinous by supplying a definition. One can only evoke it, direct attention toward it, and appeal to experiences in which the reader may recognize it.

This is why The Idea of the Holy often proceeds less by argument than by evocation. Otto calls upon the reader to remember solemn worship, the silence of sacred places, the dread awakened by ancient ritual, the sense of majesty in prophetic speech, the attraction of mystical beatitude, and the uncanny quality that remains present even in highly developed religion. The examples do not prove the existence of the numinous by deduction. They are meant to awaken recognition in those who possess the relevant capacity.

The strategy is recognizably transcendental. Otto does not derive the category of the numinous from empirical generalization. He identifies it as a condition under which specifically religious experience is possible. Just as ordinary cognition requires forms and categories that are not themselves extracted from experience, religious apprehension requires an a priori capacity by which certain experiences can be received as manifestations of the holy.

At this point Otto both continues and modifies the Kantian paradigm. He continues it because the possibility of the religious object is still approached through an examination of the subject’s capacity to apprehend it. The inquiry asks what must be present in consciousness for religion to occur. Yet he modifies Kant because the religious a priori does not merely regulate thought or answer to a demand of practical reason. It purports to disclose something objectively present. The capacity exists in order to receive a reality that exceeds it.

Otto therefore places himself at the unstable border between transcendental idealism and religious realism. The a priori is not simply constitutive of an object; it is receptive to an object. But because the object is available only through the a priori response, Otto never fully escapes the correlation between what appears and the structure through which it appears. The holy is not reduced to consciousness, yet neither is it described independently of the phenomenology of consciousness.

One can see why Otto was so attractive to theologians dissatisfied with liberal moralism. He reopened the door to transcendence without requiring them to abandon the critical philosophy. The supersensible no longer had to remain a bloodless postulate of reason. It could be encountered as mystery, majesty, dread, and fascination.

But what had returned was not yet the God of Christian predication. It was the objective correlate of the religious a priori.

Schematization and the Making of the Holy

The most philosophically significant feature of Otto’s account is his use of schematization to explain how the non-rational numinous becomes joined to the rational and ethical predicates of developed religion. Otto borrows the term from Kant, though he does not use it in precisely the same way. In Kant, schematism mediates between the pure concepts of the understanding and sensible intuition. In Otto, rational concepts provide schemas through which the otherwise non-conceptual numinous becomes articulated as the complex idea of the holy.

The numinous by itself is not yet the full Christian conception of holiness. It includes the moments of mystery, overwhelming majesty, energy, dread, and fascination, but it does not yet include the determinate ethical predicates by which Christians confess God as righteous, good, loving, faithful, and merciful. These rational predicates are not derived from the numinous as conclusions are derived from premises. Nor are they merely added to it from outside. They are associated with it through relations of analogy and affinity, so that the numinous becomes ethically and conceptually formed while the ethical concepts acquire a depth they could not possess on their own.

The tremendum, for example, may be schematized through the concept of divine wrath or moral severity. The fascinans may be schematized through love, grace, mercy, and goodness. The mysterious majesty of the numinous is thus united with moral perfection, yielding the developed religious category of holiness.

Otto’s purpose is to protect both sides of the relation. If the numinous is forgotten, religion becomes rationalistic and morally commonplace. God is reduced to the supreme instance of predicates already understood apart from God. If the rational and ethical elements are abandoned, religion remains primitive, demonic, or morally indeterminate. The holy requires both the irreducible non-rational depth of the numinous and the ethical articulation through which that depth becomes worthy of mature worship.

This is perhaps Otto’s most constructive theological achievement. He understands that Christian faith cannot simply celebrate overpowering otherness. A presence may terrify or fascinate without being good. Religious intensity does not establish holiness, and the experience of transcendence does not by itself distinguish God from a demon. The numinous must be joined to the ethical, just as the ethical must be deepened by the numinous.

Nevertheless, schematization introduces the central difficulty of Otto’s position. What precisely is the relation between the rational predicate and the divine reality to which it is applied? When Christians confess that God is good, does “good” refer analogically to an actual determination of God’s being, or is goodness the conceptual schema through which an otherwise ineffable experience is interpreted? When God is called just, loving, or merciful, do these predicates disclose what God truly is, or do they organize the numinous response into a form suitable for developed religion?

Otto wants to say more than that religious communities project moral concepts upon an indeterminate experience. Schematization is not supposed to be arbitrary. The rational and non-rational moments belong together through an internal affinity. Yet he does not explain this affinity ontologically. He describes how the elements of religious consciousness become associated, but he does not provide an account of why the predicates thereby formed are true of the object.

The relation between experience and language remains primarily evocative. Ordinary emotions and concepts can arouse analogous numinous responses, and religious language can call forth the awareness it seeks to express. Such language performs an indispensable function. It awakens, directs, deepens, and organizes religious consciousness.

But evocation is not satisfaction.

A sentence may awaken the experience of divine goodness without being true that God is good. A symbol may call forth awe without referring successfully to the reality it symbolizes. An analogy may disclose a dimension of experience without establishing that the object possesses the character attributed to it.

Otto gives a rich account of how religious language arises from and returns to numinous experience. He gives a much less developed account of how that language is made true by the reality to which it refers.

From Reference to Satisfaction

This limitation can be stated more precisely. Otto restores reference more successfully than he secures satisfaction.

The religious consciousness in The Idea of the Holy is intentional. It is directed toward something. The feeling of dread, fascination, dependence, and creatureliness is not presented as a self-enclosed psychological occurrence. It is the response to the numinous object. Otto therefore preserves the distinction between the subject and what the subject apprehends. The holy is not simply another name for a state of mind.

This distinguishes him from the most thoroughgoing constructivist versions of the Kantian inheritance. He does not say that God is constituted as an object through the lawful activity of religious consciousness in the Marburg sense. The numinous confronts the subject and evokes a response the subject could not produce from its ordinary conceptual resources.

Yet the intentional direction of consciousness does not answer the semantic question. To what exactly does the term “numinous” refer? Is it a feature of divine reality, the manner in which divine reality affects finite consciousness, the distinctive quality of the resulting experience, or the a priori category under which the experience is received? Otto’s exposition moves among these possibilities without always separating them.

The term sometimes appears to name the object: the numinous is the mysterious and overwhelming reality encountered by religion. At other times it names a category of value. At still other times it describes a state of mind or the characteristic quality of an experience. The mobility of the term gives Otto’s analysis its evocative power, but it also produces philosophical instability. Object, category, value, and response remain too closely intertwined.

This is exactly the ambiguity the present series has been tracing. The reality apprehended and the conditions of its apprehension are never entirely separated. Otto resists the reduction of the object to the subject, but he does not develop the semantic and ontological distinctions required to prevent the two from sliding back together.

A realist theological account must be able to say that the language of holiness is true because God is holy, not merely because the experience of God is received under the numinous category and then schematized through ethical predicates. It must distinguish the reality of God from the mode in which God is experienced, while also explaining how the mode of experience can genuinely disclose the reality.

This does not require univocal predication or exhaustive comprehension. It does not require that God become an empirical object or that divine holiness be analyzed as one property alongside others. It requires only that the theological predicate be answerable to God rather than to the structure of religious consciousness alone.

Otto approaches this position but does not reach it. He knows that the subject is responding to an object. He does not show with sufficient clarity how the object determines the truth of the response.

The Wholly Other and the Problem of Christian Determinacy

A further difficulty appears in Otto’s celebrated language of the “wholly other.” The numinous is experienced not merely as greater than ordinary things but as belonging to an entirely different order. It evokes astonishment because it breaks the categories by which familiar objects are understood. The mystery is not simply something temporarily unknown which might later be explained. It is other in principle, exceeding conceptual mastery.

This language powerfully restores divine transcendence after the moral domestication of God. God is not the highest instance of a genus whose other members are creatures. Divine holiness is not human goodness magnified without limit. The qualitative difference between Creator and creature must be preserved if worship is to remain worship.

Yet absolute otherness creates a problem for theological determinacy. If the object is wholly other than every concept available to finite reason, how can any predicate apply to it? Schematization permits rational concepts to be associated with the numinous, but association alone does not establish reference. The more radically Otto insists upon the wholly other character of the object, the more difficult it becomes to explain how the rational schemas genuinely disclose rather than merely domesticate it.

The Christian theologian cannot remain satisfied with the claim that an ineffable mystery has been encountered. Christian faith makes determinate assertions. It confesses that the God of Israel raised Jesus from the dead, that the Word became flesh, that the Father sent the Son, that Christ forgives sins, and that the Spirit creates faith through the proclaimed Word. These claims do not merely evoke the numinous. They identify agents, actions, relations, and events.

Otto’s account can illuminate the religious depth with which such claims are received. It can explain why the confession of divine judgment involves more than moral disapproval and why grace fascinates in a manner exceeding ordinary attraction. It can recover the awe, dread, and creatureliness too often absent from modern theology.

But the numinous cannot supply the determinate content of Christian proclamation. Nor can the intensity of numinous experience establish which theological claims are true. Many religious traditions evoke mystery, dread, and fascination. Even destructive powers may be experienced as overwhelming and wholly other. The category does not by itself distinguish revelation from idolatry or divine holiness from demonic power.

Otto knows this, which is why he insists upon rational and ethical schematization. Yet once more the question returns: by what reality are the schemas judged? If they are judged by their capacity to develop, purify, and deepen religious consciousness, then consciousness remains the final court. If they are judged by God’s actual being and action, then Otto requires an ontology and semantics that his phenomenology does not provide.

The wholly other must be capable of making itself specifically known. Otherwise transcendence is purchased at the cost of revelation.

What Otto Recovered

It would therefore be unjust to treat Otto simply as another example of the Kantian mischief under examination. His work is an internal protest against the very reduction this series criticizes. He saw that a theology confined to value, morality, and religious significance had lost the object capable of evoking worship. He understood that religion begins not with the autonomous subject legislating the conditions of experience but with a subject whose autonomy is shattered by encounter.

Otto also recognized that conceptual determination does not exhaust intelligibility. The holy may be genuinely apprehended even where it cannot be brought fully under a determinate concept. In this respect, his work anticipates the importance of reflecting judgment for the position developed in these essays. One may be oriented toward a reality, drawn by it, and rendered capable of recognizing it without possessing in advance the universal under which it must be subsumed.

There is also something profoundly right in Otto’s insistence that religious language is often evocative. Theological speech does not merely transfer information. A sermon, hymn, liturgy, or biblical narrative may awaken recognition and place the hearer within a reality that discursive exposition alone cannot communicate. The Word does not simply state propositions about God; it addresses, judges, absolves, and creates faith.

But none of this requires the conclusion that evocation replaces reference or that experience constitutes truth. The performative and affective power of theological speech presupposes rather than abolishes its semantic relation to reality. The absolution can do what it does only because Christ has authorized it and because God forgives. The proclamation of resurrection can create hope only because the one proclaimed has been raised. The hearer may experience dread and fascination before the holy because the holy one actually confronts the hearer.

Otto recovered the phenomenological priority of the object. What he lacked was a sufficiently robust account of the ontological priority of the referent.

The Supersensible under Another Description

The place of Otto within the Kantian story can now be stated. Kant had shown why the supersensible must be thought, while denying that theoretical reason could establish it as an object of knowledge. Marburg radicalized the constitutive activity of thought until the thing-in-itself became the limiting concept of an endless process of objectification. Baden preserved validity and value without restoring the independently existing referent required by theological realism.

Otto refused to accept the resulting absence. The supersensible returned in the experience of the numinous. It was not inferred as the remote cause of appearances or postulated as the condition of moral striving. It was encountered as mystery, majesty, dread, fascination, and the power before which the subject knew itself to be a creature.

This was a decisive advance. Yet Otto’s philosophical inheritance did not permit him simply to say that an actually existing supersensible reality had disclosed itself under determinate conditions. He approached that claim through the structure of religious consciousness. The holy was objectively intended, but its actuality remained bound to the a priori capacity through which it was apprehended.

The critical prohibition had been breached but not overcome.

The difference between Otto’s position and the theological realism toward which these essays move is therefore not that Otto takes experience seriously while realism does not. The difference concerns the direction of dependence. For Otto, the reality of the holy is established primarily through the distinctive quality of the numinous response. For theological realism, the numinous response is possible because the holy one actually exists, acts, and gives himself to be known.

The numinous does not ground God. God grounds the numinous.

Creature-feeling does not establish the Creator. The Creator evokes creature-feeling.

The experience of mystery does not constitute the supersensible. The supersensible confronts the subject as mystery because it exceeds the subject without being unreal.

Otto came nearer than much modern theology to restoring this order. His lasting importance lies precisely in the incompleteness of the restoration. He saw that theology could not live upon value alone and that the subject must be encountered by something it does not constitute. But because he returned to reality through feeling, he left theology uncertain whether it had encountered God or only the a priori form under which God must be experienced.

The supersensible had returned. It had not yet been permitted to speak its own name.

The next essay will examine what happened when the phenomenological recovery of otherness gave way to existential interpretation. In Bultmann, the object of proclamation would not simply disappear, but its theological meaning would be relocated into the event of self-understanding awakened in the hearer. The vocabulary changed from numinous feeling to existential decision. The unresolved question remained the same: whether the conditions under which revelation becomes meaningful are also the conditions by which its truth is constituted.

A Marburg God in a Baden World

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 distinguished the two principal schools of German neo-Kantianism. The Marburg school, represented most prominently by Hermann Cohen, Paul Natorp, and later Ernst Cassirer, understood philosophy chiefly as a transcendental reflection upon the procedures through which the sciences constitute their objects. The Southwest or Baden school, associated with Wilhelm Windelband and Heinrich Rickert, resisted the Marburg tendency to regard reality as wholly homogeneous with the logical activity through which it is known, turning instead toward value, validity, historical individuality, and the peculiar conditions under which cultural knowledge becomes possible. The contrast between the schools was genuine, particularly with respect to whether anything irreducible to conceptual constitution remains as a constraint upon thought.

It would nevertheless be misleading to conclude that modern Protestant theology simply chose one school and rejected the other. The history is both more complicated and more consequential than that. Theology did not receive Marburg and Baden as two completed systems, compare their respective merits, and then declare itself for Cohen against Rickert. It appropriated elements from both, sometimes directly and sometimes through broader currents of nineteenth-century thought, and fashioned from them a theological synthesis more durable than either philosophical school in isolation.

From Marburg theology received the conviction that no object is simply available apart from the forms and procedures through which it becomes an intelligible object. From Baden it received an account of value, historical individuality, and validity that allowed religious claims to retain seriousness even when they could no longer be defended as theoretical judgments concerning a supersensible reality. The result was a theology in which God could remain religiously and normatively decisive while becoming increasingly difficult to affirm as the independently existing referent of theological propositions.

Theology came, in effect, to inhabit a Baden world while speaking of a Marburg God.

By this I do not mean that the theologians involved read Cohen and Rickert with equal care, or that the history can be reconstructed as a straightforward line of influence from the two philosophical schools into a settled theological position. Albrecht Ritschl’s principal theological work, for example, was already substantially formed before either neo-Kantian school achieved its mature institutional identity. Ritschl cannot responsibly be described as having chosen between Marburg and Baden. His sources were more various, including Kant, Schleiermacher, Lotze, historical criticism, and a sustained opposition to speculative theology. Yet Ritschl established the theological problematic to which the two neo-Kantianisms would supply increasingly refined philosophical expression. His distinction between theoretical judgments and value-judgments made it possible for theology to withdraw from metaphysical speculation concerning the being of God while retaining strong judgments about God’s significance for reconciliation, moral freedom, and the coming kingdom.

Ritschl did not intend this as a surrender to private subjectivity. He believed that Christian value-judgments possessed objectivity within the historical and practical relations in which faith arose. Nevertheless, the movement of thought was decisive. God was no longer approached primarily through assertions concerning what God is independently of God’s significance for us. God was approached through the value God possesses within the nexus of Christian reconciliation and moral existence. The qualification “for us,” however necessary to Christian proclamation, began to carry a philosophical burden it had not borne in earlier theology. It no longer clarified the soteriological relation between God and the believer alone; it increasingly determined the conditions under which God could become a theological object at all.

Here the later synthesis of Marburg and Baden becomes intelligible. Marburg could explain why no object is available outside the conceptual and methodological procedures through which it is constituted for knowledge. Baden could explain why the objects of religion and history need not be constituted according to the law-seeking procedures of mathematical natural science. Together they allowed theology to claim that God is objectively significant without being theoretically knowable as a supersensible reality existing independently of the religious relation.

This was not a crude compromise. It was one of the most sophisticated intellectual achievements of modern theology, and its durability should not be underestimated. It preserved the dignity of theology in an academy increasingly governed by the natural sciences and historical criticism. It allowed theologians to acknowledge the critical restriction upon speculative metaphysics without reducing religion to arbitrary feeling. It granted religious judgments a kind of objectivity grounded in value, history, and communal significance rather than in the direct cognition of a metaphysical object. Theology could thus retain God-language while redefining what theological objectivity was understood to mean.

The difficulty is that objective significance and objective truth are not the same thing.

Constitution and the Marburg Object

The Marburg school began not with the isolated knowing subject but with what Cohen called the fact of science. The sciences had achieved genuine knowledge, and the philosophical question was therefore not whether knowledge was possible in the abstract, but what principles must be presupposed in the successful construction of scientific objectivity. Philosophy was not to speculate beyond the sciences about an independently existing world whose structure might or might not correspond to thought. Its task was to reconstruct the logical conditions through which the sciences constitute objects as objects of knowledge.

This position must not be confused with psychological idealism. Cohen and Natorp were not suggesting that individual minds invent worlds according to their private inclinations. The activity of constitution belonged to objective thought, expressed in the lawful and indefinitely progressive development of scientific cognition. The scientific object was not created by personal imagination. It emerged through the increasing determination of relations within a systematic order of knowledge.

Yet this very account altered the meaning of objectivity. The object was no longer first given as an independently structured reality to which thought must conform. It became the terminus, always provisional, of the process through which thought determined its object according to law. Natorp sharpened the point by denying that cognition begins with some conceptually unformed material standing over against thought as an external constraint. There is no fully determinate object in itself waiting behind the process of cognition to be discovered as it already is. The thing-in-itself functions instead as the limit of the endless process of determination, the never wholly completed task toward which knowledge advances.

The theological attraction of this position is not difficult to understand. If the object of knowledge is inseparable from the process of its constitution, then the object of theology need not be sought as a supersensible entity standing behind Christian faith and independently available for metaphysical inspection. God may be understood as the object constituted within the religious, moral, historical, or symbolic activity by which Christian faith becomes intelligible to itself.

This does not require theology to say that God is invented. No responsible theologian within this tradition would have accepted so simple a characterization. The religious object is constituted through structures larger than an individual believer: through moral consciousness, historical revelation, ecclesial tradition, communal language, or the symbolic forms of culture. God is not the product of an isolated imagination. Nevertheless, God becomes available as an object only within these structures, and the question of what God might be apart from them becomes correspondingly difficult to state.

The traditional realist question asks whether theological discourse refers to a reality that exists and acts independently of the discourse through which it is apprehended. Within the Marburg framework, however, this question appears to request an object outside the conditions under which anything can count as an object. It asks what God is apart from the theological, historical, and religious relations through which God becomes intelligible. The question is then judged not merely difficult but confused. There is no legitimate standpoint from which the object could be compared with its constitution, because the object is nothing other than what is progressively determined within the process of knowing.

Theology could therefore retain a robust language of objectivity while suspending the question of independent actuality. God remained the objective correlate of religious consciousness or Christian faith, but objectivity had come to mean validity within a lawful structure of constitution rather than correspondence to a reality that precedes and exceeds that structure.

The language remained realist in appearance, while the conditions of realism had quietly changed.

Value, Validity, and the Baden Alternative

The Baden school resisted Marburg’s attempt to understand all objectivity through the homogeneous activity of thought. Windelband and Rickert were particularly concerned with the status of history and culture, domains in which the individuality and significance of an object cannot be captured by subsuming it under universal natural laws. The difference between the natural sciences and the historical sciences was not simply a difference in subject matter. It concerned two distinct ways in which reality becomes intelligible.

Natural science seeks what is general and repeatable. Historical inquiry seeks what is individual and significant. A physicist may consider an event as an instance of a universal causal relation, while a historian considers that same event in the singular configuration of circumstances that makes it historically meaningful. Historical knowledge therefore requires selection. Not every occurrence becomes historically significant merely because it happened. The historian identifies and organizes events through their relation to values that render them worthy of attention.

The appeal to value did not mean that historical judgment was merely subjective. Rickert was determined to distinguish validity from the psychological occurrence of judgment. A proposition does not become valid because someone happens to believe it. Its claim upon thought exceeds the empirical act in which it is affirmed. The distinction between being and validity, inherited in significant measure from Lotze, allowed the Baden school to speak of a normative order irreducible both to physical existence and to psychological preference.

This provided theology with intellectual resources that Marburg alone could not supply. Christianity is irreducibly historical. Its central claims concern particular persons, events, texts, and communities. Jesus of Nazareth cannot be reduced to an instance of a general law. The exodus, the incarnation, the crucifixion, and the resurrection are not repeatable natural regularities. Their theological significance lies precisely in their particularity.

If the methods of the natural sciences supplied the only legitimate form of objectivity, Christian theology would be forced either to become an inadequate natural science or to retreat into private religious sentiment. Baden offered a third possibility. Historical and religious judgments could claim objective validity because they apprehended individual realities in relation to values whose normative significance was not reducible to empirical fact.

The gain was considerable. Theology could take history seriously without surrendering all claims to normativity. It could affirm that an event possesses unique religious significance even though that significance cannot be derived from natural law. It could speak of Jesus Christ as the bearer of unsurpassable value without pretending that historical criticism, operating by its own procedures, could establish a metaphysical doctrine of incarnation.

Yet the distinction between being and validity also created a profound ambiguity. A claim might be valid without the character of its validity being grounded in a corresponding state of affairs. Value could supply normative significance without deciding the ontological question. The theological judgment could be binding for faith while the question of whether its object exists independently of that judgment remained suspended.

Theology learned from Baden that the truth of religion need not be measured by the procedures of natural science. That lesson was necessary. It also learned, however, to speak as though validity could bear a theological weight that only reality could finally sustain.

The Construction of the Hybrid

The Marburg and Baden contributions could now be joined. From Marburg came the thesis that the object is inseparable from the process through which it is constituted for knowledge. From Baden came the thesis that the objects of religion, history, and culture are constituted through relations of value and significance rather than through the universal laws sought by natural science.

The theological object consequently became that which is constituted as religiously valid within a historical and cultural field of meaning.

This formulation permitted theology to avoid both metaphysical realism and private subjectivism. God was not treated as an entity available to speculative cognition, but neither was God reduced to a passing feeling within the individual believer. The objectivity of God was secured through structures that transcended the individual: the history of Israel, the person of Jesus, the moral community, the church’s proclamation, the religious consciousness, or the inherited symbolic world of Christian faith.

The synthesis was sufficiently flexible to assume many forms. In one theologian, the decisive structure might be moral experience; in another, historical revelation; in another, existential self-understanding; in another, ecclesial language or cultural symbol. What these forms shared was not a common doctrine of God but a common restriction upon how theological objectivity could be understood. God could be objectively significant insofar as God was constituted within a valid structure of religious meaning. Whether God also existed and acted independently of that structure was no longer the question theology was prepared to answer directly.

The resulting ambiguity can be seen in the questions the synthesis permitted theologians to postpone. Is God the independently existing source of the validity encountered in faith, or is “God” the name faith gives to the experience of ultimate validity? Does an event become revelation because God acts within it, or does it become revelation when it is apprehended as bearing unsurpassable religious significance? Is Jesus Christ of unique value because he is the incarnate Son of God, or is the confession that he is the incarnate Son of God the symbolic articulation of the unique value encountered in him?

These alternatives were seldom stated so sharply, because the purpose of the theological synthesis was precisely to prevent them from becoming unavoidable. Traditional language could be retained while its ontological force was transferred into another register. The confession remained, but its truth was interpreted through value, validity, historical significance, or the transformation it effected in the believer.

The theological sentences had not disappeared. Their satisfaction conditions had become elusive.

Herrmann and the Certainty of Faith

Wilhelm Herrmann is particularly important because his work stands near the institutional and intellectual intersection of these developments. Herrmann taught theology at Marburg while Cohen and Natorp were elaborating the philosophical program associated with the university. It would be too simple to treat him as the theological representative of the Marburg school, and the directions of influence were more complex than any such designation would suggest. Nevertheless, Herrmann participated in the same intellectual environment and shared its determination to secure objectivity without returning to speculative metaphysics.

Herrmann sought a certainty of faith that could not be destroyed by historical skepticism, yet he did not believe such certainty could be established through metaphysical demonstration or historical proof. Historical criticism might provide information concerning Jesus, but historical probability could never produce the unconditional certainty proper to faith. Faith arose when the believer encountered the inner life of Jesus as morally compelling and personally decisive.

Herrmann did not regard this encounter as arbitrary. The believer did not freely invent the religious object. Jesus confronted the believer through the historically mediated testimony of the Christian community, and the moral power of his life became inwardly present. Yet the object of faith was constituted as the object of faith only within this encounter. The theological identity of Jesus could not be detached from the act in which the believer apprehended his significance.

Here the Marburg–Baden synthesis appears with particular clarity. Jesus is historically individual and irreducible to general natural law, as the Baden emphasis upon historical singularity requires. His religious significance possesses a claim upon the believer that is not reducible to psychological preference. Yet the theological object emerges within the structure through which the believer encounters Jesus as the decisive revelation of God. Certainty is not grounded in the publicly demonstrable truth of a metaphysical proposition. It is grounded in the event through which Jesus becomes religiously certain for the subject.

The advantage of this position is considerable. Herrmann does not make faith dependent upon speculative proofs unavailable to most believers. He does not reduce Christianity to the acceptance of historical propositions whose probability could never produce religious certainty. He seeks to preserve the immediacy and seriousness of faith.

The difficulty is equally considerable. If theological certainty arises only within the constituting event of faith, it becomes uncertain how theology can distinguish between the truth of its object and the power of the believer’s relation to that object. The fact that Jesus becomes inwardly certain does not yet tell us whether the theological assertions made about Jesus are satisfied by what Jesus actually is. The transformation of the believer is not identical with the truth of the claims through which that transformation is interpreted.

Herrmann safeguards the certainty of faith by relocating it. What he cannot fully secure is the independent actuality of what faith confesses.

Troeltsch and the Historical World

Ernst Troeltsch developed the problem from another direction. He accepted the radical consequences of historical consciousness more fully than many of his contemporaries. Christianity belonged to history and could not exempt itself from historical comparison. Its doctrines, institutions, texts, and practices arose under contingent conditions, and the historian could not suspend ordinary historical methods when approaching Christian claims.

Yet historicism threatened to dissolve every normative judgment into the cultural conditions of its origin. If each religion expressed only its historical situation, Christianity could claim no more than local significance. The Baden philosophy of history supplied Troeltsch with a way to resist this conclusion. Historical knowledge was never a mere inventory of causally related facts. It depended upon selection according to value, and historical individuality became intelligible through relations of significance not reducible to natural explanation.

Troeltsch could therefore acknowledge the relativity of Christianity as a historical phenomenon while continuing to assess its comparative religious value. Christianity might be judged the most adequate or comprehensive realization of religious truth available within the history of religions, even though its emergence remained historically conditioned.

Once again the intellectual achievement should not be minimized. Troeltsch refused to protect Christian theology by isolating it from historical inquiry. He accepted the universality of historical method and nevertheless attempted to preserve theological normativity. His project represented a form of intellectual honesty often absent from more defensive theologies.

But the same ambiguity persisted. The truth of Christianity was increasingly expressed through its comparative adequacy as a realization of religious value. The question of whether its central propositions referred to acts of God that occurred independently of their historical and cultural reception receded from view. Christianity could be regarded as the highest synthesis of religious value without the theologian having to establish that God had acted as Christian proclamation said God had acted.

History became the arena in which religious meaning appeared, but divine agency became increasingly difficult to distinguish from the significance history acquired under religious interpretation.

The Survival of the Neo-Kantian Structure

Neo-Kantianism ceased to dominate German academic philosophy after the First World War. Phenomenology, existential philosophy, logical empiricism, and renewed ontological inquiry displaced the schools that had governed philosophy during the preceding decades. Crowell’s observation that neo-Kantianism entered the lore of Continental philosophy as the father who had to be slain captures the retrospective narrative well. Phenomenology and existential ontology were presented as liberations from a sterile philosophy of consciousness, method, and epistemological mediation.

Yet the theological structure fashioned from Marburg and Baden survived the apparent death of its philosophical parents.

It survived because the structure could migrate into conceptual vocabularies that seemed to reject neo-Kantianism. Phenomenology could replace the language of constitution with the language of intentionality, manifestation, or disclosure. Existential theology could replace value-consciousness with authentic self-understanding and decision. Hermeneutics could replace the transcendental subject with historically effected consciousness. Symbolic theology could replace categories with symbols. Postliberal theology could replace individual consciousness with the grammar and practices of the ecclesial community.

These changes were real. One should not collapse Heidegger, Bultmann, Tillich, Gadamer, and Lindbeck into a single undifferentiated neo-Kantian position. Each rejected important elements of the earlier settlement, and each opened questions the neo-Kantians had not adequately considered.

Nevertheless, a deeper continuity remained. Theological reality was still approached through the conditions under which it became intelligible to consciousness, history, language, or community. The site of constitution changed, but the correlation between the object and the conditions of its disclosure endured. What Marburg had treated as constitution and Baden as validity reappeared as event, symbol, horizon, grammar, or form of life.

Neo-Kantianism could therefore disappear as an acknowledged philosophical allegiance while continuing to govern the range of questions theology considered legitimate. The theologian might repudiate the philosophy of consciousness and still assume that there is no theological object apart from the event of disclosure. The theologian might reject liberal individualism and still assume that truth is inseparable from the grammar of the believing community. The old subject could be displaced without restoring a reality capable of determining the conditions of its own appearance.

The father had been slain, but the structure of his household remained.

Significance and Satisfaction

The deepest problem in the neo-Kantian theological synthesis is not its attention to consciousness, history, value, or culture. Theology must attend to all of them. Christian claims are made by finite subjects, within historical communities, through inherited languages, under conditions that shape both their formulation and reception. No adequate theology can simply step outside mediation.

The problem arises when the conditions under which a claim becomes meaningful are treated as sufficient conditions for its truth.

A theological utterance may possess profound significance without being true. It may transform the believer, orient a community, disclose a moral possibility, or organize a culture without being satisfied by the reality it asserts. The power of a sentence does not establish its reference. The validity of a practice does not donate the object toward which the practice is directed. The historical importance of a confession does not make the confession true.

The sentence “God raised Jesus from the dead” does more than express the hope of the Christian community. It identifies an agent and attributes an action. Its meaning is not exhausted by the existential possibilities it opens, the liturgical practices it authorizes, or the communal identity it sustains. It is true only if God raised Jesus from the dead.

Similarly, the confession that Jesus Christ is the Son of God is not true because it expresses the unsurpassable value encountered in Jesus. It is true if Jesus Christ is the Son of God. The value encountered may be evidence, consequence, or mode of apprehension, but it cannot substitute for the reality that satisfies the confession.

The neo-Kantian synthesis could explain with great subtlety how theological language acquires meaning and validity. What it could not explain from within its own resources was how theological language is made true by a reality not constituted through the language, consciousness, or history in which it appears.

This is the distinction theology must recover: the distinction between the conditions under which a claim becomes intelligible and the reality by virtue of which it is true.

Beyond Marburg and Baden

The path beyond this synthesis does not require theology to discard everything it learned from either school. Marburg was right to reject the notion that knowledge is merely the passive copying of an already articulated world. Concepts, judgments, theories, and models actively organize what becomes intelligible to us. Theological knowledge is mediated, and theology must examine the forms of that mediation.

Baden was right to insist that historical and cultural realities cannot be reduced to instances of universal natural law. Historical individuality, value, and significance are irreducible features of human understanding. Theology cannot speak responsibly of Jesus Christ, Israel, the church, or revelation without attending to singularity and history.

But neither insight warrants the conclusion that the conditions of intelligibility constitute the being that becomes intelligible. Mediation does not create its referent. Value does not generate existence. Validity does not replace truth.

A realist theology can acknowledge that God is known only under conditions without claiming that those conditions constitute God. It can acknowledge that revelation is historically mediated without reducing divine action to historical meaning. It can acknowledge that doctrine possesses a grammar without treating grammatical coherence as sufficient for truth. It can acknowledge that faith receives its object without claiming that faith produces the object it receives.

The direction of dependence must therefore be reversed. God is not real because God is religiously valid. God is religiously valid because God is real. Jesus Christ is not the Son of God because the church’s language constitutes him as its unsurpassable religious object. The church confesses him because he is the Son of God. The resurrection is not true because it generates Christian hope and authentic existence. Christian hope is possible because God raised Jesus from the dead.

This reversal does not return theology to an uncritical metaphysics. It does not deny the finitude of human knowledge or the historical conditions of theological language. It refuses only to allow those conditions to legislate what may exist and act. It affirms that reality may precede its apprehension, determine the conditions of its disclosure, and satisfy claims that no human subject or community could make true by its own constituting activity.

The next essay will consider how this neo-Kantian structure survived its supposed overthrow by migrating into existential theology. The conceptual vocabulary changed dramatically as value gave way to existence, consciousness to disclosure, and judgment to decision. The restriction upon theological reference, however, remained substantially intact.

The Father Who Had To Be Slain

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.

Two Neo-Kantianisms, and the One Theology Inherited

Steven Galt Crowell opens his account of neo-Kantianism with an observation about how the movement is remembered rather than what it actually held. Neo-Kantianism dominated German academic philosophy from roughly 1890 to 1920, and yet within a generation it had been reduced almost entirely to a foil — the orthodoxy that phenomenology and existential ontology had to overthrow in order to exist. As Crowell puts it, neo-Kantianism "enters the lore of Continental philosophy as the father who had to be slain in order that philosophy might live." Heidegger and Jaspers are the story. Neo-Kantianism is the thing they escaped.

The three essays preceding this one have already complicated a closely related story — the one theology tells about its own relationship to Kant. They showed that the construal of Kant theology received and still largely presupposes — totalizing antirealism about the supersensible, the prohibition on ontological assertion, the relocation of theological content into symbol, grammar, or existential possibility — was not re-derived from Kant's own text by the theologians who built on it. It was received, largely unargued, at the point each system needed it most. And they showed that this construal is not the one contemporary Kant scholarship defends.

This essay adds a complication of a different kind, and it matters because it cuts against the most natural way of misreading the first three essays. It would be easy to conclude from them that theology simply absorbed "neo-Kantianism," understood as a single settled position, and that the work of correction is therefore a matter of theology versus philosophy — theology catching up to what philosophy has since revised. That is not quite right, and the slippage is worth naming precisely. There was never one neo-Kantianism. From the 1870s onward there were two schools, both claiming Kant as their authority, both insisting they alone had grasped what the critical philosophy actually required — and they did not agree with each other about the question that matters most for theology: what, if anything, survives the critical restriction as a candidate for objective truth that is not simply the product of the mind's own constructive activity.

Theology did not choose between Kant and not-Kant. It chose — mostly without noticing it was choosing — between Marburg and Baden. And it overwhelmingly chose Marburg.

Marburg: Thought All the Way Down

The Marburg School took its name from the university where Hermann Cohen held the chair of philosophy from 1873, joined later by Paul Natorp and, through them, Ernst Cassirer. Cohen's founding move was to read Kant's first Critique not as an inquiry into the furniture of an independently existing world but as what Crowell calls a "theory of science." On this reading, philosophy cannot deduce truth speculatively from its own first principles, the way the precritical metaphysicians had tried to do. What it can do is reflect on the principles already governing the independent sciences — physics above all — and uncover, through transcendental logic, the categories by which those sciences construct their objects. Unity is not found in the world prior to inquiry. It is achieved, progressively, by the sciences' own constructive work, and philosophy's task is to make that achievement explicit.

Natorp pressed this further than Cohen had been willing to. Where Cohen left some ambiguity about how far the constructive activity of thought extended, Natorp closed it. Being, for Natorp, becomes a function of thinking — not metaphorically, but as a methodological thesis. Since the object of knowledge is constituted in and through the categories, one cannot meaningfully ask after the thing-in-itself apart from the process of knowing it; the question does not identify a real but inaccessible referent, it simply self-destructs, because "apart from the process of knowing" turns out to name nothing at all. The thing-in-itself, on Natorp's reading, is not a reality screened off from cognition by the limits of finite access. It is, in his own phrase, merely "the limit of the infinite process of objectification" — a placeholder for whatever the sciences have not yet finished constructing, not a name for something that already determinately is, waiting to be reached.

Natorp went further still, and the further step is the one that matters most for what theology eventually inherited. He denied that intuition supplies any raw material — any independent "stuff" — for the categories to form. There is, on his account, no dualism between the universality of form and the particularity of matter, no given content standing over against the constructing activity of thought and constraining it from outside. Some interpreters have suggested this makes Natorp's position less neo-Kantian than neo-Hegelian, since it dissolves precisely the dualism Kant's own architecture depended on. Whatever the right label, the effect is the same: there is no remainder. Whatever is real is real because thought has constructed it as an object according to law. What has not yet been constructed is not a hidden reality awaiting access from a being with better epistemic equipment. It is simply not yet known, and there is, on Marburg's own terms, no further fact about what it is "really like apart from the knowing of it" for any future inquiry to discover. The question is not difficult. It is malformed.

Cassirer would later extend this same constructive logic outward from mathematical physics to myth, language, and religion themselves — the symbolic construction of all cultural unities, as he put it, alongside the logical construction of the scientific object. The categories that build the physicist's object and the categories that build the believer's God are, on this extension, instances of the same fundamental activity, differing only in which symbolic form is doing the constructing. This is Marburg in its purest and most exportable form: a single constructive logic, applicable in principle to any domain, that leaves no conceptual room for asking whether the object so constructed also exists independently of the construction. To ask that question is to misunderstand what "exists" could possibly mean once thought is understood to be doing all the work.

Baden: The Remainder Marburg Refused

The second school formed in the southwest, around Wilhelm Windelband at Strasbourg and then Heidelberg, joined by Heinrich Rickert, Emil Lask, and Bruno Bauch. Where Marburg's interest ran toward the logic of the exact sciences, Baden's ran toward history, culture, and what its architects called the theory of transcendent value — Wert. The difference is not merely one of subject matter. It is a disagreement about whether Marburg's central move — being as a function of thinking, with no remainder — is actually defensible, and Baden's answer was no.

Windelband's founding claim was that logic itself is, at root, an "ethics of thought": a judgment is not merely a psychological event that happens to occur, correctly or incorrectly, in someone's head, but something normatively answerable to a standard that the psychological event itself does not contain. Behind this lies Hermann Lotze's earlier and more basic distinction between being and validity — the claim that Geltung is itself a kind of value, a category as fundamental as existence but not reducible to it. Rickert built the technical apparatus on this foundation. Cognitive judgment, on his account, has two distinct moments. There is the content of consciousness, immanent in the judging subject, alogical and irrational material that simply occurs. And there is something else: a subject-transcendent value of cognitive validity or truth that either affirms or denies what has been synthesized in that content — a verdict the content itself cannot supply, because the content is merely psychological and the verdict is not.

This is the move Marburg's logic has no room for. Validity, on Rickert's account, is not constructed by the categories the way the physical object is constructed; it is something a judgment either has or lacks, independently of whoever happens to be making it, and independently of whether anyone constructs anything at all. Baden therefore refused what Crowell identifies as Marburg's "homogeneous" picture of reality — the assumption that thought and its object are ultimately of one piece, related as construction to constructed. Rickert insisted instead on a genuine heterogeneity, an irrational remainder in reality that resists full absorption into the categories that know it. This is also why Baden's natural home was history rather than physics: a historical individual, a particular configuration of value realized once and not reducible to an instance of a general law, is exactly the kind of object Marburg's constructive logic struggles to accommodate and Baden's logic of validity was built to receive. And because validity, on this account, answers to something beyond the merely constructed, Baden remained open — in a way Marburg structurally could not be — to the primacy of the practical, to interest, position-taking, and decision as legitimate ingredients in how an object of knowledge comes to be known at all, rather than contaminants to be purged by transcendental logic.

Why the Difference Is Not Academic

It would be a mistake to overstate the contrast. The two schools agreed on more than their later partisans liked to admit, and Baden's Geltung is itself still a thoroughly idealist category, not a straightforward return to the kind of mind-independent realism the premodern tradition assumed without argument. Rickert is not a theological realist by other means, and nothing said here should be read as claiming he secretly was one. That caution will matter again before this short sequence is finished.

But the difference is real, and it is exactly the difference theology needed someone to notice. On Marburg's construal, the question "does God exist apart from the community's discourse about God" has the same shape as the question "does the thing-in-itself exist apart from the process of objectifying it" — and Marburg's own logic has already answered that question by dissolving it. There is no remainder for either question to be about. On Baden's construal, by contrast, there is a category — validity — that lets a claim be objectively binding, true independently of who currently holds it or how it came to be believed, without that bindingness being reducible to either a physical fact in the world or a psychological fact about the believer. A theological claim could, on Baden's terms, be asked to meet that standard. It is not obvious in advance that any particular theological claim would pass. But the question would at least be the right shape — answerable rather than already-decided by the framework in which it gets asked.

Theology did not receive Marburg and Baden as two neatly separated systems, weigh them, and choose one in its entirety. It did something more consequential. It joined Marburg’s account of object-constitution to Baden’s account of value, historical individuality, and validity. The result was a theological hybrid in which God could remain objectively significant without being straightforwardly affirmed as the independently existing referent of theological assertion. The next essay will examine that synthesis and show why it survived long after neo-Kantianism itself had ceased to dominate philosophy.