Sunday, April 05, 2026

What Does Resurrection Mean? On What Christians Are Claiming When They Say, “He Is Risen”

Christians say each Easter, and many say each week, “He is risen.” Yet it is no longer clear that all who utter these words mean the same thing by them. Is this a cognitive claim? If so, what kind of claim is it, and what could make it true? Everything depends upon whether Easter names an objective act of God or merely the significance later attached to Jesus.

The Question We Must Ask

What does resurrection mean? Christians say each year, and many say each week, He is risen. Yet it is no longer clear that all who utter these words mean the same thing by them, or even that they take them to be the kind of claim the Church has historically taken them to be. For some, resurrection names a miracle in the strongest sense: God raised the crucified Jesus from the dead. For others, it is a symbol of hope, a poetic way of saying that love is stronger than hate, or that the memory of Jesus still animates the community of faith. For still others, it names the disciples’ transformed consciousness after the catastrophe of the cross, an existential recovery of courage after despair. These are not small differences. They concern what Christians are actually claiming when they say, He is risen.

The first task, then, is conceptual. What sort of assertion is He is risen? Is it a claim about reality, or a way of interpreting reality? Does it refer to something God has done, or to the significance believers have found in Jesus after his death? Does it name an event, however mysterious, or does it function as symbol, confession, or communal orientation? These questions arise because in modern theology and modern culture the meaning of resurrection has become unstable. The language remains; the content often shifts beneath it.

This instability matters because Christianity has always understood Easter as proclamation. The earliest Christians did not merely say that the cause of Jesus lived on, nor that his ideals remained inspiring, nor that his followers had recovered courage after his execution. They proclaimed that God had raised him. Whatever difficulties attend that proclamation, its grammar is plain enough. Something is being said to have happened, something that cannot be reduced to the inner life of the disciples or to the continuing vitality of Jesus’ teaching. Easter, in its classical Christian sense, is not first the announcement that the disciples came to see things differently. It is the announcement that God acted.

The Logical Type of the Easter Claim

Before asking whether He is risen is true, one must ask what kind of utterance it is. Is it cognitive or noncognitive? Does it purport to say what is the case, or does it instead express an attitude, commitment, hope, or stance?

This distinction is decisive. Expressivism is noncognitive. On such a view, He is risen does not fundamentally report a state of affairs. It expresses commitment, hope, endorsement, or ecclesial posture. The sentence retains declarative grammar, but its deepest function is not descriptive. One still says He is risen, but what is displayed is not what God has done to Jesus so much as the community’s orientation toward Jesus, death, and the future.

Subjectivism is different. It is cognitive. It does treat He is risen as truth-apt. But it locates the truthmaker within the sphere of consciousness: the experience of the disciples, the continuing consciousness of the Church, the transformation of existential self-understanding, or the occurrence of certain moral or religious states. Subjectivism does not say that the sentence merely expresses a stance. It says something. But what it says is made true by what obtains within human mindedness.

A further clarification is needed. The psychological states of others are objective for me. They may obtain apart from my awareness, perception, conception, and language, and they may therefore be investigated from a third-person standpoint. That is why psychology and historiography are possible. Yet epistemic objectivity is not the same thing as ontological realism. If the truth of He is risen were exhausted by the disciples’ psychological states, then the claim would still depend upon human awareness, conception, and experience as such, even if not upon mine.

That is why one must distinguish a weaker and a stronger sense of realism. If one says, x is real if and only if x obtains apart from my awareness, perception, conception, and language, then the psychological states of others may count as real. But if one says, x is real if and only if x obtains apart from human awareness, perception, conception, and language, then those same states no longer count as real in the stronger sense. They may be objective for inquiry without being mind-independent. The stronger sense is the one at issue in theological realism.

An objective cognitive reading of Easter in the strongest sense therefore requires more than the existence of Easter-faith, Easter-experience, or Easter-interpretation. It requires that something obtain apart from human mindedness as such. The decisive question then becomes: what must obtain if He is risen is to be true in that stronger realist sense?

What Could Make “He Is Risen” True?

Once the issue is framed in this way, the truthmaker question can no longer remain vague. It is not enough to say that resurrection is “real” or that “God acted.” One must ask more exactly: what in particular could make the sentence true?

The disciples’ renewed courage cannot be the truthmaker. Nor can the Church’s enduring hope, its liturgical confidence, or its Easter-shaped life. These may all be effects of resurrection-faith, or even effects of the risen Christ if Christ is risen, but they are not what makes the sentence true. They concern reception and appropriation, not the state of affairs to which the sentence answers.

Nor are the disciples’ experiences, taken simply as psychological events, sufficient truthmakers. One may say truly that certain disciples had visions, convictions, affective transformations, or powerful experiences of presence. Such claims may be psychologically and historically objective in the weaker sense just described. But if He is risen is made true only by such states, then its truth remains enclosed within human consciousness. The claim may still be about something more than my own mind, but it is not yet about something that obtains apart from human mindedness as such.

Neither are the empty tomb and the appearances, taken simply as evidential data, themselves the truthmakers. They are signs, testimonies, and evidentially relevant features within the Easter witness. But evidence for a claim is not identical with the state of affairs that makes the claim true.

The bare survival of Jesus’ soul is likewise insufficient. If that were all, then Easter would collapse into a doctrine of postmortem continuation. Yet the Church has always meant more than this. The scandal of Easter lies not in the persistence of consciousness after death, but in the victory of God over death itself.

Simple revivification is insufficient as well. If the truthmaker were merely that a corpse was biologically reanimated into ordinary mortal life, then Easter would amount to a remarkable reversal within the old order. But the Church has not meant Lazarus repeated. Resurrection, in the Christian sense, is not temporary return to perishability.

The strongest candidate truthmaker is therefore something like this: that the numerically same Jesus who was crucified, died, and was buried now lives by the act of God in a transformed, death-transcending mode of embodied existence. The truthmaker is thus neither bare psychology nor bare symbolism, neither sheer soul-survival nor mere biological reversal, but a divine act upon this Jesus yielding a transformed continuity between the crucified one and the risen one.

This is realism, but it is not crude resuscitationism. It does not say that a corpse simply resumed ordinary biological life. It says something far stranger and more difficult: that God acted objectively upon Jesus Christ so that the crucified one now lives beyond the ordinary conditions of mortality. Easter is therefore realist without being naively physicalist, and objective without being reducible to ordinary empirical occurrence.

The Post-Kantian Drift

Once these distinctions are in hand, much of modern theology becomes easier to read. The decisive question is always the same: what sort of claim is being made by the sentence, and what sort of thing could make it true? The theological tradition since the Enlightenment can often be read as a series of increasingly subtle relocations of the truthmaker for Christian discourse.

Kant is the great watershed. His critical philosophy does not simply reject religion; it restricts theoretical knowledge and presses religion toward practical reason. In that setting, claims such as He is risen become difficult to handle as straightforward judgments concerning divine action in reality. They are pressured toward moral significance, practical necessity, or regulative function.

Fichte radicalizes the movement. Religious language tends increasingly to function as language about vocation, ethical direction, or the self’s relation to the moral world-order. Easter is then no longer securely anchored in a singular divine act upon Jesus, but is tempted toward the sphere of moral or spiritual consciousness.

Schelling reopens the question of revelation and ontological depth, but the issue remains whether Easter is preserved as the singular act of God in history or absorbed into a larger speculative grammar of revelation.

Hegel transforms the matter still further. If spirit comes to actuality through the historical unfolding of consciousness and reconciliation, then resurrection is readily redescribed as a moment in the self-manifestation of spirit rather than as a singular divine act standing over against the Church’s appropriation of it.

Lotze then gives later theology one of its most important tools. Once one distinguishes sharply between the world of causal explanation and the world of worth and significance, resurrection can be preserved as a value-judgment even where confidence in its objective truthmaker has weakened. He is risen may then mean that Jesus is of abiding worth, that his significance was vindicated, or that the community stands under his incomparable value. The language remains cognitive, but its truthmaker has been relocated into the sphere of value rather than event.

Seen in this light, the post-Enlightenment trajectories become more intelligible. Some are frankly noncognitive and expressivist. Some are cognitive but subjectivist. Some are intersubjectively objective without being strongly realist. Some move from event-language to value-language. Once one asks of each trajectory, what kind of claim is this? and what could make it true?, a great deal of fog lifts.

Another Decisive Distinction: Does Soteriology Precede Christology?

A further distinction clarifies modern theology even more. One must ask whether, in the order of theological construction, soteriology precedes Christology or Christology precedes soteriology. Do we begin with the human need for salvation and then interpret Christ as the answer to that need? Or do we begin with the person and history of Jesus Christ and only then derive from that who he is for us and what he accomplishes?

The point here is methodological rather than ontological. No orthodox Christian theologian means to say that salvation exists prior to Christ in reality. The question is what has explanatory priority in the theologian’s account.

Tillich exemplifies one path. One begins with the human predicament and then presents the Christian message as the answer. Estrangement is first analyzed; Christ appears as the bearer of the New Being who overcomes estrangement. Christology is thus organized by the prior soteriological question. Jesus matters because he answers the problem already disclosed in the analysis of existence.

Pannenberg moves in the opposite direction. One asks first: Who is Jesus? What happened to him? What does the resurrection disclose about his identity? Only then does one ask what this means for us. Salvation follows from Christ’s identity and history; it is not the prior lens through which Christ is first construed.

This distinction matters deeply for the resurrection question. If soteriology precedes Christology, then Easter will be handled primarily as the answer to a human need already specified in advance. Resurrection then readily becomes a function of its salvific meaning. If, however, Christology precedes soteriology, then one asks first what God has done in Jesus, and only after that what this means for humanity, judgment, forgiveness, and hope.

That is why Pannenberg remains so important. He saw clearly that the resurrection of Jesus must be treated as an objective claim and not merely as existential transformation, ecclesial value, or post-Easter interpretation. He refused the easy modern bargain whereby one preserves Easter’s significance at the cost of surrendering its objectivity.

Some Major Ways “Resurrection” Has Been Understood

At this point, the conceptual field comes more fully into view. The word resurrection has not functioned univocally. It has carried several distinct possibilities, some ancient, some modern, some half-orthodox, some plainly reductive. To say merely that there are “different interpretations” is too weak. One must see the differing structures of thought at work.

1. Resurrection as Revivification

On the crudest construal, resurrection means that a dead organism once again became biologically alive. The corpse resumes ordinary bodily functioning and returns to the same order of mortal existence it inhabited before death. This is the easiest conception to imagine, because it requires the least conceptual revision. It treats resurrection as an extraordinary instance within an otherwise familiar biological frame.

Yet this is not the Christian meaning of Easter. It is closer to revivification than resurrection. It amounts to saying that Jesus came back, as one might come back from a coma or a near-fatal injury. But the risen Christ of the Church’s confession is not simply returned to ordinary life. If this were all Easter meant, then resurrection would be only a temporary reversal, not the decisive victory over death. Revivification leaves mortality structurally untouched.

2. Resurrection as Miraculous Resuscitation

A slightly more refined version speaks not of ordinary revivification, but of miraculous resuscitation. Here one does not imagine a natural process, but a supernatural interruption. God miraculously restores the dead Jesus to life. Still, the conceptual difficulty remains. For if the result is simply the restoration of ordinary mortal life, then the miracle changes only the cause of the return, not the kind of life returned to. The question is not merely how Jesus lives again, but what kind of life he now lives. A miraculous return to perishability is still not yet what the Church has meant by resurrection.

3. Resurrection as the Survival of the Soul

Another possibility is that resurrection language is really a way of speaking about postmortem spiritual continuation. On this account, what matters is that Jesus was not annihilated by death. His soul, spirit, or consciousness survived and continued in a mode no longer bound to the body. This view is often more intellectually refined than resuscitation language, and it can seem more plausible to those who find bodily resurrection difficult.

But it too falls short of the Christian claim. The Church has never proclaimed merely that Jesus’ spirit survived. If that were all, Easter would tell us little more than many religious and philosophical traditions have already maintained. The scandal of Easter lies not in disembodied persistence, but in God’s victory over death in relation to the crucified Jesus himself. A doctrine of soul-survival weakens the creaturely and bodily density of the Christian proclamation.

4. Resurrection as Symbolic Vindication

A modern symbolic construal takes resurrection as a way of saying that Jesus was, in the end, “right,” that his cause was vindicated, or that the meaning of his life survived the attempt to destroy him. Here resurrection names not a new state of affairs obtaining in relation to Jesus himself, but the enduring force of his significance. The world tried to silence him, yet his meaning lives on.

There is rhetorical power in such a construal. One can see why it appeals to modern hearers. It allows one to retain Easter language without bearing the full ontological weight of the classical claim. Yet the sentence He is risen is thereby transformed. It no longer says that God has acted upon Jesus; it says that Jesus continues to matter. It is not about a new state of affairs regarding Christ, but about the permanence of his significance.

5. Resurrection as Existential Awakening

A further construal, especially influential in modern theology, understands resurrection in terms of the disciples’ transformation. After the devastation of the cross, the disciples were reconstituted in courage, mission, and faith. Resurrection then names not primarily what happened to Jesus, but what happened in the disciples through their post-crucifixion encounter with his significance. The Easter proclamation becomes, in effect, a report on the emergence of a new existential possibility.

This is stronger than pure symbolism because it does describe a real occurrence. It is cognitive. It speaks of something that happened. But what happened is still located within human consciousness and communal life. The truthmaker lies in the disciples’ transformation. Resurrection has here become an account of Easter-faith rather than a proclamation of an objective divine act upon Jesus.

6. Resurrection as Value-Judgment

Lotze and much later theology make possible a different shift. Resurrection may be understood as a judgment of worth. To say He is risen is to say that Jesus possesses unsurpassable value, that his life has final significance, that the world cannot nullify the worth manifest in him, or that the community rightly stands under his claim. Here the statement remains cognitive, but its truthmaker lies not in event but in value. What is “risen” is not first a person in transformed life, but the incomparable worth of Jesus in relation to faith, history, and human self-understanding.

This construal is especially important because it preserves seriousness while quietly altering ontology. It is not noncognitive expressivism. It does assert something. But what it asserts is no longer a divine act in relation to Jesus so much as an evaluative truth about Jesus’ place in human and religious life.

7. Resurrection as the Self-Manifestation of Spirit

In more idealist construals, resurrection may function as a moment in the manifestation of spirit, reconciliation, or absolute life in history. The focus shifts from what happened to this Jesus to the larger movement in which death, negation, and estrangement are aufgehoben within the life of spirit. The language becomes grand, even majestic, but once again the center of gravity shifts. Easter becomes intelligible chiefly within a speculative account of totality rather than as the singular proclamation that God raised Jesus from the dead.

This construal can preserve theological richness, but it carries an obvious danger. The singularity of Jesus may become an exemplary moment within a larger metaphysical drama rather than the unique object of Easter proclamation.

8. Resurrection as Objective Divine Act

The classical Christian claim is different from all of these, though it may share elements with some of them. It is not mere revivification, not mere soul-survival, not symbolic endurance, not simply the transformation of the disciples, not a pure value-judgment, and not merely a speculative moment in the life of spirit. It is the claim that God acted upon Jesus Christ. The one crucified, dead, and buried now lives by the act of God in a transformed, death-transcending mode of embodied existence.

This is why the classical claim is so difficult. It will not allow itself to be reduced either to ordinary biological categories or to inward religious categories. It is realist, but not crudely physicalist. It is objective, but not reducible to simple empirical occurrence. It is bodily, but not merely biological. It is historical in reference, but not merely one item among others within the ordinary causal nexus. It is precisely the kind of claim modern thought has found hardest to sustain.

9. Why These Distinctions Matter

These are not idle conceptual possibilities. They govern preaching, apologetics, liturgy, and faith itself. If resurrection means revivification, then Easter is a miracle-story. If it means soul-survival, then Easter is a doctrine of personal continuity. If it means existential awakening, then Easter is a report on the disciples. If it means value-judgment, then Easter is a claim about significance. If it means objective divine act, then Easter is the proclamation that God has done something upon which all Christian hope rests.

The word resurrection thus conceals a great mass of philosophical and theological decisions. That is why the question cannot be left vague. To say He is risen is already to have decided, whether clearly or obscurely, what sort of claim Christian proclamation is.

Why the Modern Reductions Are Not Enough

The pressure of the modern world has made weaker accounts tempting. They allow one to retain Easter language while softening Easter’s metaphysical claims. One may still speak of resurrection while meaning by it memory, courage, value, or transformed self-understanding.

But this lowering of scandal also lowers the Gospel. If resurrection is reduced to symbol, then Christianity becomes a language for coping with death rather than the proclamation of God’s victory over it. If it is reduced to existential transformation, then the decisive Easter event is no longer what happened to Jesus, but what happened to the disciples. If it is reduced to spiritual survival, then the body becomes finally irrelevant and death remains substantially unconquered. If it is reduced to value-judgment, then Jesus’ significance is preserved at the cost of the objective divine act.

The problem is not that these weaker accounts contain no insight. Of course Easter does transform existence. Of course it does generate hope. Of course it does sustain a community and invest history with meaning. But none of these effects is the resurrection itself. They are, at best, consequences of it. When they are substituted for it, theology loses its object.

What the Church Has Traditionally Meant

What, then, has the Church meant when it says that Jesus Christ is risen from the dead? It has meant, first, that the crucified Jesus truly lives by the act of God. The subject of Easter is not a timeless ideal, nor the memory of a noble martyr, but this Jesus, the one who suffered, was crucified, died, and was buried.

It has meant, second, that resurrection is neither mere resuscitation nor mere spiritual continuation. The risen Christ is continuous with the crucified Jesus, yet he is not simply returned to the old order of perishability. His life is transformed and no longer subject to death. Easter is thus the beginning, in one man, of the new creation.

It has meant, third, that the resurrection is the Father’s vindication of the Son. The cross is not canceled by Easter, but confirmed in its deepest truth. The one rejected and condemned is the very one whom God vindicates.

It has meant, fourth, that resurrection concerns the creaturely life of the one raised. God does not redeem by abandoning creaturely reality, but by bringing His life to bear upon it.

A Theological Judgment

My own judgment is that He is risen must be taken as a cognitive and truth-apt claim about divine action and reality. It is not well understood as expressivist utterance, nor is it adequately grounded in the psychological states of the disciples or the Church. Its truthmaker cannot finally lie within human consciousness, however objectively such consciousness may be studied. Nor can it be reduced to the simple revivification of a corpse.

The claim is stronger and stranger than all of these. God raised Jesus from the dead. The crucified one now lives by the act of God in a transformed, death-transcending mode of embodied existence. That is not the resuscitation of ordinary mortal life. It is the Church’s proclamation that God has acted objectively upon Jesus Christ in such a way that death no longer has authority over him.

This means that Easter is not secured by liturgical repetition alone, communal intensity alone, or the persistence of Christian memory. The decisive matter is whether the words He is risen refer to what God has in fact done. If they do not, then Christian faith remains enclosed within the sphere of human projection and religious practice. If they do, then Easter names a reality that exceeds us, judges us, comforts us, and gives us hope.

Why This Matters Now

All of this matters because ours is an age tempted to make peace with death in subtle ways. Even where people deny transcendence, they continue to long for consolation. Hence the great temptation of modern theology: to preserve the consoling effects of Easter while relinquishing its claim about reality. One may still speak of hope, courage, renewal, and life emerging from darkness. But if God has not raised Jesus Christ from the dead, these become, at last, noble fictions.

The Christian proclamation is more difficult and more daring than that. It does not say merely that spring follows winter, that communities survive tragedy, or that ideals outlive their founders. It says that the God who gives life to the dead has acted in Jesus Christ, and that because of this act the deepest truth about the world is not death but life, not negation but promise, not despair but mercy.

That is why Easter matters. That is why Christians say, He is risen. And that is why the meaning of resurrection cannot finally be left vague. For if Christ is not raised, then the Church has mistaken its own need for God’s act. But if he is raised, then death is not sovereign, hope is not delusion, and the final truth of reality is disclosed not in the tomb, but in the God who raised Jesus from the dead.

Easter is therefore not the celebration of a religious symbol. It is the proclamation of an ontological victory. The Church dares to say that the crucified Jesus lives, that God has acted, and that because He has acted, death no longer has the authority to define what is finally real.

This essay arises from the work of the Department of Philosophical Theology at the Christ School of Theology of the Institute of Lutheran Theology.

Saturday, April 04, 2026

Disputationes: Essays in Philosophical Theology — On the Project

 A Project in Theological Realism, Semantic Theory, and Divine Causation

Disputationes is a sustained project in philosophical theology exploring theological realism, semantic reference, and divine causation within a model-theoretic framework. It is not a blog in the casual sense, nor a collection of occasional reflections, but a sustained and systematic project in philosophical theology. Its concern is the question of theological intelligibility: under what conditions theological language can bear truth, refer to reality, and sustain rational adjudication.

The essays gathered here proceed from the conviction that theology, if it is to speak meaningfully at all, must do so with ontological seriousness. Theological claims are not merely expressive, evocative, or regulative of practice. They purport to speak about what is the case: about God, causation, presence, and participation. If such claims are to be intelligible, they must be capable of truth and falsity, and thus must stand in a determinate relation to reality.

Disputationes therefore develops a framework in which theological discourse is treated as theory-like: possessing structure, deploying predicates, and requiring interpretation through models. Drawing upon the resources of analytic philosophy—especially model theory and the philosophy of language—while remaining deeply engaged with the classical Christian tradition, the project seeks to articulate the conditions under which theological language can genuinely refer.

Central themes include theological realism, semantic realism, and divine causation. The project argues that without a robust account of how God can be causally efficacious in the world, theological language collapses into either metaphor or projection. Conversely, where divine causation is affirmed in a disciplined and coherent manner, theological claims regain their capacity to describe, to explain, and to adjudicate.

The essays are written in the form of disputationes not as an antiquarian gesture, but as a methodological commitment to clarity, rigor, and argumentative accountability. Each piece aims to test theological claims under the pressure of contemporary philosophy while refusing the reduction of theology to that philosophy’s limits.

Disputationes thus functions as a public, ongoing corpus in philosophical theology: a place where the question of God is treated not as a matter of private meaning or cultural inheritance, but as a question concerning reality itself. For recent essays, readers are directed to the latest posts on Disputationes.

Wednesday, April 01, 2026

When Theology Cannot Mean: Realism, Irrealism, and the Crisis of Theological Language

This essay arises from the work of the Department of Philosophical Theology at ILT’s Christ School of Theology, where the central task is to clarify the conditions for the possibility of theological meaning, intelligibility, and truth in a post-Christendom context.

The question of theological meaning can no longer be approached as though its conditions were secure. The difficulty is not first that theological claims are disputed, nor that their truth is contested, but that what it would mean for such claims to mean at all has become unclear. The language of God, grace, redemption, and divine action continues to be employed, yet the relation between this language and any domain to which it might answer has been fundamentally destabilized.

This instability is not unique to theology. It arises wherever theoretical discourse is pressed to clarify the relation between its formal structure and the reality it purports to describe. A theory may be syntactically well-formed, inferentially rich, and pragmatically effective while remaining semantically indeterminate unless interpreted. Syntax alone does not yield reference. Nor does disciplined use by itself secure truth. The question is therefore unavoidable: what must be the case for a theory to be about anything at all?

Once this question is posed, the classical opposition between realism and its rivals must be reformulated with greater precision. The issue is not simply whether one affirms or denies the reality of a domain, but how the quantificational structure of a theory is to be understood with respect to that domain. Realism affirms that the entities over which a theory quantifies are real in the relevant sense. Irrealism denies that such commitment obtains universally. Antirealism replaces it with a universal denial. These positions do not merely differ in degree of confidence. They differ in the conditions they assign to meaning itself.

Theology cannot evade this problem. For theological discourse is theory-like: it quantifies, predicates, distinguishes, and orders claims concerning God and God’s relation to the world. If its syntax is to be meaningful, it must be interpreted. The decisive question is therefore not whether theology speaks, but what its speaking is taken to be about.

Realism, Irrealism, and Antirealism: A Logical Clarification

Let D be the domain over which a theory quantifies, and let R(x) signify that x is real in the sense required by the successful interpretation of the theory.

Realism affirms that for all x in D, R(x). If the entities quantified over are real, then the relations and functions defined over that domain are likewise taken to answer to reality. A realist construal of theory therefore holds that its models disclose, however fallibly, a genuinely mind-independent structure.

Irrealism is weaker. It denies that this universal claim obtains. It holds only that it is not the case that all members of the domain are real in the relevant sense. Some elements of the domain may be real, others not; some aspects of the theory may be referential, others merely heuristic, symbolic, or projected.

Antirealism is stronger. It claims that for all x in D, it is not the case that R(x). The discourse may remain coherent, useful, and even indispensable, but the entities over which it quantifies are not taken to belong to a mind-independent domain answering to the theory in the relevant way.

Schematically:

Realism: (x∈D)Rx
Irrealism: ~(x∈D)Rx
Antirealism: (x∈D)~Rx

The logical relation among these positions parallels the familiar distinction between reflexive, nonreflexive, and irreflexive relations. Realism affirms universal ontological commitment; irrealism denies that such universal commitment obtains; antirealism replaces it with a universal denial. The distinction is elementary, but its consequences are substantial.

The Semantic View of Theory

A theory is not best understood simply as a set of sentences or axioms, but as a structured family of models. Syntax alone does not yet yield meaning. A formal language may be internally coherent and inferentially rich while remaining semantically indeterminate unless interpreted.

Meaning arises from the relation between formal structure and interpreted structure. A model supplies a domain, assigns referents, and specifies relations and functions. The philosophical question is therefore not merely whether a theory is consistent or useful, but what kind of interpretation its models license.

This is where realism, irrealism, and antirealism emerge as competing construals of the relation between syntax, model, and world. A theory may function successfully while differing radically in what its success is taken to imply about the reality of the domain it describes.

From Scientific Theory to Theological Theory

Theological discourse belongs within this discussion more fully than is often recognized. It possesses theoretical form. It advances claims, deploys predicates, orders concepts, and licenses inferences. It speaks of God, creation, incarnation, grace, and redemption in ways that exhibit recognizable logical relations.

If this is so, then theological language too possesses a syntax in need of interpretation. The decisive question is therefore unavoidable: what sort of models render theological discourse meaningful?

A theological realist will answer that theological language is answerable to a reality independent of the discourse itself. A theological antirealist will preserve the discourse while redescribing its truth in terms of internal practice, communal rule, or warranted use. A theological irrealist will deny the universality of realist commitment, allowing a mixed or partial ontology.

Realism, Irrealism, and Antirealism in Theology

Theological realism affirms that the central terms of theological discourse answer to a reality independent of the discourse itself. God is not merely a name internal to a practice, nor a symbolic condensation of human aspiration. God is. Theological predicates therefore aim at truth in the strong sense.

Theological irrealism denies that such commitment holds across the entire domain. Some claims may be taken realistically, others symbolically or expressively. The result is a mixed and often unstable semantics.

Theological antirealism goes further. It denies that the entities over which theological discourse quantifies are real in the relevant sense at all. The discourse may remain meaningful within practice, but its function is no longer referential in the strong sense.

The Conditions of Theological Meaning

Theological meaning cannot be reduced either to formalism or to pragmatics. Syntax secures internal order but not reference. Practice secures use but not ontological answerability.

Theological meaning in its richest sense requires three moments:

  • a syntax capable of disciplined articulation
  • a semantic interpretation through models
  • a domain with respect to which such interpretations may be true

Remove the third, and theology may retain significance, but it loses the realist truth-conditions by which it could speak of God as independently real.

Realism therefore does not add an optional metaphysical surplus. It secures the condition under which theological discourse can be about God rather than merely about itself.

Conclusion

The question is not whether theology may continue to speak under antirealist or irrealist construals. It plainly may. The question is what such speech is taken to be.

If theology is not answerable to a reality that is not constituted by its own discourse, then its claims no longer bear truth in the sense theology has historically intended. Realism does not remove mystery, nor does it resolve the limits of creaturely speech before God. But without it, theology’s language no longer reaches beyond itself.

With it, theology may yet speak of God as God is, and not merely of the uses of God-language within human life.

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Why Congregations No Longer Make Sense: The Ontology of Christian Life after Christendom

This essay arises from the work of the Center for Congregational Revitalization (CCR) at ILT’s Christ School of Theology, which investigates the conditions under which congregations can hear, speak, and live the Christian faith intelligibly in a post-Christendom context.

The present inquiry concerns the conditions under which congregational life is intelligible at all in the early twenty-first century. What follows is not a programmatic proposal, nor a set of strategies for institutional renewal, but a more basic investigation. It asks what a congregation must be if it is to be recognized as a site of Christian life rather than as one more voluntary association among others.

The crisis now facing congregations is widely acknowledged, but it is rarely described with sufficient precision. It is said that attendance is down, that engagement is weak, that younger generations are absent, and that cultural conditions have shifted. All of this is true. Yet none of it reaches the heart of the matter. These phenomena are not the problem itself, but the surface manifestations of a deeper dislocation. The more fundamental issue is that congregational life increasingly takes place under conditions in which its central claims are no longer stably intelligible as referring to what is real.

To state the matter more directly: the difficulty is not simply that fewer people believe, but that what it would mean to believe is no longer clear. The language of God, grace, sin, redemption, and resurrection continues to be used, but its referential force has become unstable. It is heard, at times, as expressive, at times as symbolic, at times as ethically suggestive, but only intermittently as naming what is the case. Where this instability takes hold, congregational life becomes ontologically thin. It persists as form, but its substance is no longer secure.

It is at precisely this point that many contemporary responses go astray. Efforts at revitalization frequently assume that the underlying problem is one of execution: that congregations need better leadership, clearer vision, more compelling communication, or more effective programming. Such efforts are not without value, but they presuppose what is no longer given. They assume that the congregation already exists as a coherent site of meaning and that the task is to make that meaning more accessible or more attractive. But if the conditions under which that meaning is intelligible have themselves been eroded, then no amount of strategic refinement can restore what is absent. Strategy cannot generate ontology.

The question, therefore, must be pressed at a deeper level. What is a congregation? Not in sociological terms, nor in institutional terms, but in ontological and semantic terms. What must be the case for a gathering of persons to count as a congregation in the full theological sense?

A first approximation may be offered as follows. A congregation is a community constituted by practices in which the Word of God is not merely spoken, but is understood as referring to and effecting what is real. This definition is deliberately modest, yet it carries significant weight. It does not require uniformity of experience, nor does it deny the presence of doubt, struggle, or partial understanding. What it does require is that the practices of the community presuppose that the language they employ is truth-apt and world-disclosing. The Word is not merely meaningful; it is about something, and that something is the living God.

From this, several consequences follow. First, the reality of God cannot be treated as an optional background assumption. It must function as a constitutive presupposition of congregational life. Where God is tacitly bracketed, treated as a hypothesis, or reduced to a projection of communal meaning, the congregation ceases to be intelligible as a congregation in the theological sense. It becomes instead a community organized around shared values, narratives, or practices, but no longer a site of divine address and action.

Second, the language of the congregation must retain its referential integrity. The words of proclamation, prayer, and catechesis must be capable of referring beyond themselves. If they are heard only as expressions of human interiority or as symbolic gestures within a closed system of meaning, then their theological function collapses. Semantic realism is not an optional philosophical addendum to congregational life; it is one of its conditions of possibility.

Third, the practices of the congregation must be understood as participatory rather than merely expressive. In proclamation, something is said that is not reducible to the speaker’s intention. In the sacraments, something is given that is not exhausted by communal recognition. In catechesis, something is learned that is not constructed by the learner. These practices presuppose that reality exceeds the subject and that the congregation is addressed by, and drawn into, that excess.

It is here that a decisive distinction must be made between two kinds of congregational existence that are often outwardly indistinguishable. There are congregations that are formally Christian but ontologically thin. They retain the language, the structures, and even many of the practices of the tradition, yet these no longer function as disclosures of what is real. Alongside these are congregations that are ontologically thick, in which the same practices are inhabited as sites of divine presence and action. The difference between them is not primarily one of style, size, or even doctrinal precision. It is a difference in the mode of being.

If this is correct, then the task of revitalization must be reconceived. It is not first a matter of innovation, but of recovery. Not the recovery of past forms as such, but the recovery of the conditions under which those forms were intelligible as bearing truth. The question is not simply how to make congregations more effective, but how to restore them as places in which the Word of God can again be heard as referring to and effecting what is real.

This shifts the entire horizon of the discussion. Leadership, programming, and strategy remain important, but they must be subordinated to a more basic task: the cultivation of an ecclesial life in which the reality of God is presupposed, the language of faith is truth-apt, and the practices of the church are inhabited as participations in what exceeds them. Without this, revitalization will remain a matter of surface adjustment. With it, even small and fragile congregations may become again what they are called to be.

Subsequent reflections will seek to draw out the implications of this account for the concrete practices of congregational life, including proclamation, catechesis, and leadership. For the moment, it is enough to have clarified the point at which the problem must be engaged. The crisis of the congregation is, at its core, a crisis of intelligibility. And the renewal of congregational life will require nothing less than the recovery of its ontology.

Work of the Center for Congregational Revitalization (CCR), ILT’s Christ School of Theology.

Monday, March 23, 2026

Why the Emerging Church Cannot Restore Meaning: From Deconstruction to Intelligibility

This essay arises from the work of the Center for Congregational Revitalization (CCR) at ILT’s Christ School of Theology, which investigates the conditions under which congregations can hear, speak, and live the Christian faith intelligibly in a post-Christendom context.

I. The Misdiagnosis of Decline

Across the contemporary ecclesial landscape, a common narrative has taken hold. Congregations are declining. Participation is weakening. Institutional Christianity is losing its cultural and social centrality. In response, a wide range of proposals has emerged, many of which seek to reimagine the church in more flexible, adaptive, and contextually sensitive forms.

Among the most influential of these responses has been what is often called the “Emerging Church.” It presents itself not as a programmatic reform but as a reorientation of Christian existence. Its proponents speak of conversation rather than proclamation, community rather than institution, authenticity rather than authority. They seek to create spaces in which individuals may renegotiate inherited beliefs and practices in light of contemporary experience.

There is, at first glance, something compelling in this effort. It recognizes that the problem facing the church is not merely organizational. It acknowledges that the conditions under which Christian language is heard and understood have changed. It senses that what once could be assumed can no longer be presumed.

Yet for all this, the movement remains fundamentally misdirected, for it does not address the deepest level of the crisis.

The central issue is not that the church has failed to adapt its forms. It is that the conditions that once made theological language intelligible have been eroded. The problem is not first institutional. It is semantic and ontological.

Until this is seen, all attempts at revitalization—no matter how creative—remain superficial.

II. Deconstruction as Religious Orientation

The Emerging Church is best understood not as a coherent movement with defined doctrines, but as a shared orientation. Its unifying feature is not what it affirms, but what it resists. It resists institutional authority, doctrinal fixity, and the perceived rigidity of inherited forms of Christianity. In their place, it elevates openness, plurality, and ongoing reinterpretation.

At the heart of this orientation lies a continual practice of deconstruction. Beliefs are not received as given but treated as material for revision. Practices are not normative but experimental. Identity is not stable but negotiated. The church itself is not a fixed reality but an evolving network of relationships, conversations, and experiences.

This deconstructive posture is not accidental. It arises from a broader cultural situation in which claims to truth are met with suspicion, and where meaning is understood to be constructed rather than given. Within this horizon, the task of theology is no longer to articulate what is the case, but to facilitate processes by which individuals may find what is meaningful for them.

Thus faith becomes conversation. Doctrine becomes narrative. Proclamation becomes performance.

What is lost in this shift is not merely clarity, but reference.

III. The Loss of Theological Reference

The decisive weakness of the Emerging Church lies here: it cannot secure the referential status of its own language.

To speak theologically is to intend something. It is to say not merely what is meaningful, but what is the case. It is to speak of God, not as a projection of human discourse, but as that which stands over against and addresses the human subject. Without this referential orientation, theological language collapses into expressive activity.

The Emerging Church, however, systematically suspends this question.

It does not deny reference outright. Rather, it relocates it. Truth is no longer understood as correspondence to reality, but as the outcome of communal discourse. What is “true” is what can be sustained within the conversation. The criterion is no longer adequation to what is, but coherence within what is said.

This shift has profound consequences.

If theological claims do not refer beyond the practices that sustain them, then they cannot bind. If they cannot bind, they cannot command belief. If they cannot command belief, they cannot form a community ordered toward truth.

What remains is a space of negotiated meaning, in which individuals are affirmed but not adjudicated, included but not instructed, accompanied but not addressed.

Such a space may be psychologically appealing. It may even sustain a certain kind of communal life for a time. But it cannot sustain a congregation as congregation.

For a congregation is not merely a gathering of individuals in conversation. It is a community constituted by its relation to what is proclaimed as true.

IV. The Instability of Deconstructive Ecclesial Forms

The practical consequences of this failure are already visible.

Communities shaped by deconstructive orientations tend toward instability. Their structures remain informal, their commitments provisional, their practices continually subject to revision. Participation is often intense but transient. Leadership is diffuse. Institutional continuity is difficult to maintain.

This is not simply the result of poor organization. It is the natural outcome of the underlying orientation.

Where no claim is permitted to stand with normative authority, no structure can endure. Where all forms are subject to continual renegotiation, no form can stabilize. Where the individual is the final arbiter of meaning, communal coherence becomes fragile.

It is therefore not surprising that many such communities function as transitional spaces. They provide a context for those disillusioned with more traditional forms of Christianity, offering a place in which inherited beliefs may be questioned and reconfigured. But they rarely provide a durable framework for sustained ecclesial life.

They are, in this sense, parasitic upon the very traditions they critique. They draw their energy from the deconstruction of inherited forms, yet lack the resources to generate new forms capable of enduring beyond that deconstruction.

V. The Category Error: Adaptation Without Ground

The fundamental error of the Emerging Church lies in its attempt to solve a problem of intelligibility through adaptation of form.

It assumes that if the church becomes more conversational, more inclusive, more flexible, it will once again become meaningful. But meaning does not arise from form alone. It arises from the relation between language and reality.

One may alter the setting of proclamation, soften its tone, or multiply its modes of expression. But if what is said is no longer heard as referring to what is real, these changes do not restore intelligibility. They merely obscure its absence.

The result is a subtle but decisive displacement. The focus shifts from what is said to the conditions under which it is said. The success of theological language is measured not by its truth, but by its capacity to generate engagement.

This is not revitalization. It is accommodation to the loss of intelligibility.

VI. Toward a Different Diagnosis

If the analysis offered here is correct, then the path forward cannot consist in further experimentation with ecclesial forms. Nor can it rest content with the multiplication of conversational spaces.

What is required is a recovery of the conditions under which theological language can once again function as language that refers.

This requires, at minimum, the reassertion of three claims.

  • First, that God is not a function of discourse but the ground of it. Theological language does not create its object but responds to it.
  • Second, that theological statements are truth-apt. They are not merely expressive or performative, but capable of being true or false.
  • Third, that the congregation is constituted by its relation to this truth. It exists not simply as a community of shared experience, but as a community addressed by what it confesses.

These claims do not solve the problem. But without them, the problem cannot even be properly posed.

VII. Conclusion: Beyond Deconstruction

The Emerging Church has performed a valuable service. It has exposed the inadequacy of merely institutional solutions to the contemporary crisis of the church. It has shown that inherited forms can no longer be assumed to carry their own intelligibility. It has made visible the depth of dislocation experienced by many within contemporary Christianity.

But it has mistaken the nature of the problem. By treating the crisis as one of form rather than of intelligibility, it has directed its energies toward continual deconstruction and reconstruction of ecclesial practices. In doing so, it has produced spaces that are open but unstable, creative but indeterminate, hospitable but unable to bind.

What it cannot do is restore the conditions under which theological language is heard as referring to what is real.

Until that task is undertaken, the revitalization of the congregation will remain beyond reach.

Work of the Center for Congregational Revitalization (CCR), ILT’s Christ School of Theology.

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Catechesis after Christendom: Reclaiming the Intelligibility of the Faith

This essay arises from the work of the Center for Congregational Revitalization (CCR) at ILT’s Christ School of Theology, which investigates the conditions under which congregations can hear, speak, and live the Christian faith intelligibly in a post-Christendom context. under which the claims of the Christian faith may be received as referring to what is real.

I. The Catechetical Situation

Catechesis has always been a quiet but decisive work of the church. It does not carry the immediacy of preaching, nor the visibility of public worship, yet it is the means by which the language of the faith is actually learned, retained, and inhabited. In the Lutheran tradition, this task achieved a remarkable clarity in Luther's Small Catechism. Its structure is not merely pedagogical but theological. It orders the Christian life: existence under God’s command, trust in God’s promise, address to God in prayer, and reception of God’s gifts.

For a long time, catechesis could proceed with a certain confidence. The language it employed, though requiring explanation, was heard within a horizon that rendered it broadly intelligible. One might struggle with particular claims, but the claims themselves were not heard as unintelligible or referentially void. The catechetical task was thus largely one of instruction within an already functioning world of meaning.

That situation has changed.

II. The Loss of Intelligibility

The present difficulty is not first a matter of declining knowledge, though that is real enough. It is a matter of intelligibility. The language of the catechism is no longer reliably heard as referring to what is real. Its words remain, but their ontological weight has thinned.

This shift is often obscured because the vocabulary persists. One can still speak of “God,” “sin,” “grace,” and “forgiveness.” Yet these terms are now frequently received in ways that alter their function. They are heard as expressions of human experience, as symbolic articulations of value, or as markers of communal identity. What is no longer assumed is that they name realities that exist independently of such expression.

The result is a subtle but decisive transformation. Catechesis continues, but it increasingly operates within a framework in which its own claims are not taken to be straightforwardly about what is the case. It teaches a language whose referential status is uncertain.

III. From Instruction to Reestablishment

Under these conditions, catechesis cannot remain merely instructional. It must take on a more fundamental role: the reestablishment of intelligibility.

In an earlier setting, catechesis could presuppose that its claims were, in principle, understandable as true or false. Today, that presupposition must itself be addressed. The task is no longer only to teach what the catechism says, but to make possible an understanding of how what it says can be heard as referring to reality.

This does not entail a turn to abstraction for its own sake. It entails a renewed attentiveness to the conditions under which theological language functions as more than expression. Without such attentiveness, catechesis risks becoming either rote repetition or symbolic formation. In neither case does it form believers in the classical sense.

IV. The Catechism as Grammar of Reality

A helpful way to recover the depth of the catechetical task is to understand the catechism as a grammar rather than merely a summary.

  • The Commandments articulate the structure of creaturely life before the Creator.
  • The Creed names the reality of God’s action—past, present, and ongoing.
  • The Lord’s Prayer presupposes that God hears and responds.
  • The Sacraments enact the presence and promise of God in concrete form.

Each of these does more than convey information. Each presupposes a world in which God is an acting subject and in which human life is constituted in relation to that action. To teach the catechism is therefore to induct persons into a way of speaking that is ordered toward reality.

Yet such induction now requires more than repetition. The grammar must be shown to be responsive to what is. Without this, it may be learned formally while remaining uninhabited existentially.

V. The Question of Reference

At the center of the catechetical crisis lies the question of reference.

Traditional catechesis assumed that theological language refers. When one speaks of God, one speaks of God. When one speaks of forgiveness, one speaks of an act that occurs. This assumption did not require constant defense because it was supported by a broader cultural and conceptual framework.

That framework has weakened. Theological language is now often interpreted within models that do not support reference in this sense. It becomes expressive, performative, or communal, but not truth-apt in relation to an independent reality.

Catechesis must therefore proceed with an awareness of this shift. It must not only use theological language but help restore the conditions under which that language can be heard as referring. This is not an optional supplement. It is now intrinsic to the task.

If the difficulty lies not merely in usage but in the very possibility of reference itself, then the question of the ontological ground of intelligibility cannot be avoided. For a fuller account of the conditions under which theological language can be heard as referring to what is real, see my Nota Trinitaria on Teleo-Spaces: Intelligibility, Normativity, and the Limits of Subjectivity

VI. The Pastor as Interpreter of Intelligibility

This altered situation places a new weight upon the pastoral office.

The pastor remains a teacher, but not only a teacher of content. The pastor must also function as an interpreter of intelligibility. He or she must be able to discern how the language of the faith is being heard and where its referential force is being diminished or lost.

At times this will require explicit clarification. At other times it will require a more patient form of guidance, in which assumptions are brought into view and gently corrected. In either case, the aim is not to win arguments, but to make it possible for the language of the faith to be heard as meaningful in the fullest sense.

Without such work, catechesis risks speaking past its hearers. With it, catechesis can again form persons who understand what they confess.

VII. Practice and Understanding

Catechesis is not exhausted by explanation. It is sustained and deepened through practice.

Prayer, confession, and participation in the sacramental life are not adjuncts to catechesis but integral to it. They provide the lived context in which the language of the faith is enacted. In them, what is taught is also performed.

Yet practice alone cannot secure intelligibility. Where the conceptual conditions of understanding have eroded, practice can persist without clarity. It may be maintained as habit, even as its meaning becomes uncertain.

The task, therefore, is not to choose between practice and understanding, but to hold them together. Catechesis must teach and form, clarify and enact. Only in this integration can the language of the faith be both learned and inhabited.

VIII. Toward Catechetical Renewal

The renewal of catechesis will not be achieved through novelty alone. It will come through a reorientation of the task.

Catechesis must again proceed with patience, allowing its claims to unfold over time. It must be attentive to the conceptual situation of its hearers, neither assuming too much nor conceding too quickly. Above all, it must retain confidence in its own subject matter—that it speaks not merely of human possibility, but of divine reality.

Such catechesis may appear slower than what contemporary expectations demand. Yet it is precisely this slowness that allows depth to emerge. It forms not only familiarity with the language of the faith, but understanding of what that language intends.

IX. Conclusion

The catechetical challenge of the present moment is not merely pedagogical. It is ontological and semantic. It concerns the relation between language and reality, between what is said and what is.

If the church is to remain the church, it must form persons who can confess the faith with the understanding that such confession is about what is real. This cannot be assumed. It must be cultivated.

Catechesis is the place where this cultivation occurs.

In a time when the intelligibility of the faith is no longer given, catechesis becomes again what it has always, at its best, been: the patient formation of persons into a way of speaking and living in which God is not an idea, but the living One who addresses, judges, forgives, and gives life.

Congregational Life after Christendom: A Diagnostic Framework for Revitalization

This essay arises from the work of the Center for Congregational Revitalization (CCR) at ILT’s Christ School of Theology, which investigates the conditions under which congregations can hear, speak, and live the Christian faith intelligibly in a post-Christendom context.

The difficulty facing congregations today is not adequately described by decline.

Decline is real. Attendance has diminished, participation has weakened, and many congregations face uncertain futures. Yet these phenomena are better understood as symptoms than as causes. They are visible expressions of a deeper transformation, one that concerns the conditions under which congregational life can be understood at all.

The problem, more precisely, is one of intelligibility.

Congregations do not persist simply because they are well organized or effectively led. They persist when participation in their life can be recognized as fitting within the broader horizon in which individuals live. Where that horizon supports the claims of the congregation, participation appears natural, even necessary. Where it does not, participation becomes unstable, optional, and eventually difficult to sustain in any enduring way.

The present moment is marked by precisely this kind of shift. What has changed is not only how many people attend, but how congregational life is understood. The question is no longer simply whether individuals will participate. It is whether participation itself makes sense.

To address this, we must move from symptoms to structures, from observable decline to the underlying framework within which congregational life is interpreted. What follows is a brief account of five interrelated developments that, taken together, help to define that framework.

First, congregations have lost much of their social gravity. They no longer function as central gathering places within the lives of most people. Where congregational life once intersected naturally with patterns of work, family, and community, it now competes with a wide range of alternative structures. The result is not simply that people are less committed, but that fewer come into contact with congregational life in any sustained way.

Second, congregations have lost their normative status. Participation is no longer assumed as a basic feature of life. It has become one option among many and must now be justified. This shift is subtle but far reaching. Where participation was once taken for granted, it must now be explained, defended, and chosen. What is optional is always fragile.

Third, individuals increasingly inhabit what may be described as a condition of cross pressure. They live within multiple and often competing frameworks of meaning. They may affirm the language of the Christian tradition while simultaneously operating within accounts of reality that sit uneasily alongside it. The result is not straightforward unbelief, but fragmentation. The same individual may speak of God in one context and interpret the world in entirely different terms in another.

Fourth, a moral reversal has taken place in the way God is understood. In earlier contexts, the goodness of God was generally presupposed. Today, God is often evaluated according to moral intuitions formed independently of the tradition. Questions of suffering, justice, and fairness are no longer addressed within a framework that assumes divine goodness. They are brought to bear upon that assumption itself. The result is a growing instability in how central theological claims are received.

Fifth, a broadly naturalistic understanding of reality has become pervasive. The success of the natural sciences has contributed to a default framework in which events are explained in terms of natural causes and processes. This does not always take the form of an explicit denial of divine action. More often, it results in a situation in which such action no longer appears necessary for explaining what occurs. God is not so much rejected as displaced.

Each of these developments is significant in its own right. Their full force, however, lies in their convergence. Together, they alter the horizon within which congregational life is lived.

The most important consequence of this convergence is not simply decline, but the fragmentation of meaning within congregational life itself. The language of the church persists, but it no longer functions within a shared framework. Terms such as God, grace, and salvation are used, but they are heard in different and sometimes incompatible ways. The same practices are enacted, yet their significance is less stable. The same sermon is preached, yet it may be received as a claim about reality, as a symbolic narrative, or as a form of moral reflection, depending upon the framework within which it is heard.

This fragmentation is often not immediately visible. Congregations can continue to function with a considerable degree of outward continuity. Yet beneath this continuity lies a growing divergence in how what is said and done is understood.

It is at this point that the limitations of many contemporary approaches to congregational renewal become apparent. Much of the existing literature assumes that the basic intelligibility of congregational life remains intact and that the task is to increase participation through improved strategy. Better leadership, clearer communication, and more effective programming are all taken to be central.

Such efforts are not without value. But they presuppose precisely what is now in question.

If the framework within which congregational life once made sense has shifted, then strategy alone cannot resolve the problem. It can refine what is already understood. It cannot restore understanding where it has weakened. One cannot optimize what no longer makes sense.

If this diagnosis is correct, then the work before us must be reoriented. The task is not simply to improve congregational performance. It is to clarify and, where necessary, rearticulate the framework within which congregational life is understood.

This line of argument has been developed in greater detail across the essays mentioned above, all of which are available on Academia.edu. Readers may consult Congregations after Christendom, The Decline of the Church Is Not the Problem, Cross-Pressure and the Fragmentation of Belief, The Problem of God, and What Are We to Make of Science? for fuller treatments of each dimension. A more extended and integrated account is also available in the longer paper Congregational Life after Christendom: A Diagnostic Framework for Revitalization, which gathers these threads into a single argument.

What is now required is a second phase of work.

If the difficulty lies at the level of intelligibility, then the question of its ontological ground cannot be avoided. For a fuller account of the conditions under which intelligibility itself is possible, see my “Nota Trinitaria on Teleo-Spaces: Intelligibility, Normativity, and the Limits of Subjectivity.”

If the difficulty lies at the level of intelligibility, then the task is not only diagnostic but constructive. We must ask how proclamation, teaching, pastoral care, and congregational form can function under these altered conditions. This includes, in particular, a renewed attention to theological language, the reconstruction of plausibility, and the formation of persons capable of inhabiting the life of the church with understanding.

The next set of essays will take up these questions directly. The first of these, Proclamation under Conditions of Fragmented Meaning, examines the situation of preaching when the language of the church no longer carries a stable reference across hearers. Subsequent essays will address catechesis, pastoral care, and forms of congregational life in similar fashion.

The aim is not simply to reverse decline. It is to render congregational life intelligible again.

Where that occurs, renewal becomes possible. Where it does not, no strategy will suffice.

Readers who wish to explore the argument in greater detail may consult the individual essays available on Academia.edu: 

A more extended and integrated presentation of the full argument is given in Congregational Life after Christendom: A Diagnostic Framework for Revitalization, which gathers these analyses into a single framework and situates them within the work of the Center for Congregational Revitalization.