Showing posts with label Gospel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gospel. Show all posts

Friday, January 09, 2026

The Ontological Priority of Law and Gospel: Why Reality is Not about Being Human

Intelligibility and the Ontological Priority of Law and Gospel

Modern theology habitually begins with the self. Law and Gospel are therefore read first as modes of human experience, as the ways in which God confronts consciousness. The Law accuses, the Gospel consoles. Within this horizon they function as psychological or existential dispositions, structures of address within the drama of conscience. There is truth here, but it is only a derivative truth.

What if this familiar orientation were reversed? What if Law and Gospel were not first about how human beings experience God, but about how reality itself is rendered intelligible before God? What if they name not anthropological postures, but ontological structures? What if they belong not merely to theology’s linguistic grammar, but to the grammar of being itself?

This is the wager of the reflection that follows.

The inquiry does not begin with salvation, piety, or the psychology of faith. It begins with intelligibility itself, with the question of what must be the case for finite being to be knowable at all. If intelligibility is real and not merely projected by human cognition, then it must exhibit distinct and irreducible modes. Finite being is intelligible either as grounded in itself or as grounded in another. There is no tertium quid.

This fundamental differentiation yields the primal metaphysical distinction between necessity and contingency. What is necessary is intelligible in virtue of itself. What is contingent is intelligible only by reference to another. Yet necessity and contingency cannot stand as isolated poles. Contingency must be intelligible as received rather than arbitrary, as given rather than brute. At this juncture possibility emerges, not as a merely logical modality, but as ontological openness, the teleological space within which being can be bestowed, received, and sustained.

Intelligibility therefore exhibits a twofold structure. There is intelligibility in se, in which being is measured by what it must be in virtue of itself, and intelligibility ab alio, in which being is constituted by what it receives from another. These are not optional perspectives. They are the only two ways in which finite being can stand as intelligible at all.

At this level, what theology will later name Law and Gospel are already operative as the two basic structures of intelligibility. Law names the mode of necessity, that which is self-measured and self-grounded. Gospel names the mode of donation, that which lives from another and by gift. These are not affective states, moral descriptions, or linguistic conventions. They are ontological modalities of intelligibility itself.

To collapse one into the other is not a minor theological error. To moralize the Gospel is to convert gift into requirement. To reduce the Law to description is to evacuate necessity of its binding force. In either case, the architecture of intelligibility is destroyed.

Only on this basis can Luther’s distinction be properly understood. The polarity of Law and Gospel is not a pastoral invention, nor a merely rhetorical contrast within preaching. It is a faithful theological articulation of a metaphysical differentiation already inscribed into being itself. The Word of Law and the Word of Gospel do not merely address human consciousness in different ways. They disclose different modes of being and therefore different structures of understanding. Human beings do not generate this polarity. They find themselves always already located within it.

The priority of Law and Gospel is therefore neither chronological nor epistemic. It is ontological. They name the two fundamental ways in which finite being stands before God, either under the intelligibility of self grounded necessity, which is Law, or under the intelligibility of gifted contingency, which is Gospel.

Theology does not invent this distinction. It confesses it. For when reality is pressed for intelligibility, it yields nothing else.

Law and Gospel Are Older Than We Are

The claim is simple to state and difficult to absorb. Law and Gospel are ontological before they are experiential. They do not arise from moral reflection, religious sentiment, or linguistic convention. They are not products of human awareness. They are conditions that make awareness itself possible. They name two real and irreducible ways in which intelligibility is given.

Law names the order of intelligibility grounded in itself. It designates the mode in which what is stands under necessity, coherence, and closure. In the Law, reality is intelligible as that which must be so. This is not moralism but metaphysics. It names the structure of being that is self measured, self contained, and internally determined. In this mode, being is intelligible because it conforms to its own necessity.

Gospel, by contrast, names the order of intelligibility grounded in another. It designates the mode in which what is stands as gift, as reception, as donation. In the Gospel, reality is intelligible not as what must be, but as what is given. This too is not sentiment but ontology. It names the structure by which being receives itself from beyond itself. In this mode, what is depends upon generosity rather than necessity, upon grace rather than self-sufficiency.

Law and Gospel are therefore not two competing interpretations of a neutral world. They are not alternative descriptions imposed upon the same reality. They are the two real modes in which reality itself can stand as intelligible. One names necessity. The other names gift. One is self-grounding. The other is received.

Human beings do not invent these structures. We discover and inhabit them. We find ourselves always already located within their tension, already addressed by their grammar. To exist at all is to dwell within the polarity of Law and Gospel, to live between the closure of necessity and the openness of donation.

To say that Law and Gospel are older than we are is to recognize that they belong to the constitution of creation itself. They are woven into the fabric of reality, into the rhythm of being’s self coherence and being’s givenness. They are not doctrines imposed upon the world from without. They are the world’s own ways of standing before God, the measure of what must be and the gift of what is.

Why Speak of Intelligibility at All?

A fair question arises at this point. In speaking of Law and Gospel, why turn to intelligibility at all? Why not remain with Scripture, proclamation, or experience? Why introduce a term that sounds abstract, philosophical, perhaps remote from the concrete life of faith?

The answer is unavoidable. Theology already presupposes intelligibility. The only question is whether this presupposition will be acknowledged or left unexamined. To speak of God, to confess Christ, to distinguish Law and Gospel, to proclaim grace, to discern truth from falsehood, already assumes that reality can be understood. Theology does not create intelligibility. It depends upon it. The task is therefore not to stipulate that the world is intelligible, but to ask what must be true of reality for theology to be possible at all.

Modern thought has trained us to assume that intelligibility is something we supply. Meaning is said to arise from the subject, from cognition, language, or social practice. When meaning becomes difficult to ground, it is psychologized, reduced to experience. Or it is linguisticized, reduced to use. Or it is proceduralized, reduced to rule following. Despite their differences, these strategies share a single conviction: intelligibility is derivative of human activity.

What if this conviction were mistaken? What if intelligibility were not the product of thought, but its precondition? What if intelligibility were ontologically prior to perception, judgment, language, and will? On this account, human understanding does not generate meaning but participates in it. We do not first think and then discover a meaningful world. We awaken within a world that already gives itself as capable of being understood.

For this reason, intelligibility must be addressed as such. If it is not, it will be quietly replaced by something else, by consciousness, discourse, power, or will. When this substitution occurs, theology is forced to speak of God within a framework that God did not give.

Once intelligibility is acknowledged as real and prior, several consequences follow.

First, Law and Gospel can no longer be treated as human reactions to divine address. They are not psychological responses but ontological orders. Law names intelligibility closed upon itself and grounded in necessity. Gospel names intelligibility opened as gift and grounded in another. They are not rhetorical tools of preaching but conditions that make preaching truthful.

Second, grace can be conceived without arbitrariness. Grace is not a rupture in an otherwise self-sufficient system. It is the manifestation of how reality itself is constituted, as reception rather than possession, as givenness rather than achievement. What metaphysics names possibility, theology encounters as the work of the Spirit.

Third, truth itself must be rethought. Truth is not merely the correspondence of language to fact. It is participation in the Logos through whom being and meaning coinhere. To inquire into intelligibility is to ask after the deepest grammar of truth.

In this light, the question of intelligibility is not a speculative luxury. It is a theological responsibility. It is the refusal to allow theology to borrow its foundations from accounts of reality that cannot sustain them. The move is bold because it reverses the settled habits of modern thought. Instead of asking how human beings make sense of God, it asks about the conditions under which anything can make sense at all.

When intelligibility is once again recognized as a real feature of creation, the Lutheran distinction between Law and Gospel is freed from the confines of psychology and proclamation. It appears instead as something far more basic: a differentiation woven into the very fabric of reality itself.

Why the Modern Turn Went Wrong

Much of modern thought has operated with a single, rarely questioned assumption: if intelligibility exists, it must be grounded in the subject. Kant’s so-called "Copernican Revolution" marks the decisive articulation of this conviction. When it became untenable to anchor meaning directly in the empirical self, Kant reconstituted the self as transcendental, assigning it the task of supplying the conditions under which anything could appear as meaningful at all. The move was extraordinary in its rigor and fertility. It yielded lasting insights into cognition, judgment, freedom, and normativity. Yet it carried a cost that has only gradually become visible.

Necessity was relocated into the structures of experience itself. What must be so was no longer a feature of reality but a function of the mind’s synthesizing activity. Contingency was displaced into the realm of practical reason. Teleology was retained only in attenuated form, as purposiveness without purpose. Nature no longer possessed an end of its own. Intelligibility ceased to be something reality had and became instead a heuristic imposed upon it. Meaning survived, but only as method.

The outcome of this shift was not atheism but anthropocentrism. Reality increasingly appeared as a mirror reflecting our own operations back to us. Theology, often without realizing it, absorbed this posture. Law and Gospel were reinterpreted as expressions of conscience, existential moods, or linguistic practices. The deeper question was quietly abandoned: What must reality itself be like for Law and Gospel to be true? Once that question falls away, theology becomes commentary on experience rather than confession of what is.

Luther stands on the far side of this modern reversal. For him, the human being is not an origin but a site. The spirit is not sovereign but inhabited. His unsettling image remains decisive: the human being is like a beast that is ridden, either by God or by the devil. This is not a piece of religious psychology. It is an ontological claim about how intelligibility is borne.

To live curvatus in se ipsum is not merely to feel guilt or anxiety. It is to exist under a false grounding, to live as though intelligibility could be secured by the self. The Law exposes this condition and kills precisely because it names what is. It strips away the illusion that being can justify itself from within.

To live by the Gospel is not to adopt a new affective posture or a more hopeful interpretation of existence. It is to be re-grounded in reality itself, to exist as gift rather than possession. The Gospel does not negate the Law. It relocates intelligibility. What was falsely assumed to be self-grounded is revealed to live from another.

At this point the governing metaphysical problem comes fully into view. How can necessity and contingency both be real without collapsing into determinism on the one hand or arbitrariness on the other? The answer is possibility, understood not as unrealized potential but as the ontological openness of intelligibility itself. Possibility names the space in which contingency can be received rather than forced, and necessity can give without coercion.

What metaphysics names possibility, theology encounters as grace. Grace arises necessarily from God, who is love, yet it is received contingently by creatures. This contingency is not a defect. It is the very form divine love takes in time. The Holy Spirit is not an addition to this structure but its living enactment, the divine act by which eternal necessity becomes temporal gift. Grace is not God’s response to us. It is the continual donation of reality itself anew.

This same structure extends into the nature of truth. Theology cannot rest content with defining truth as correspondence between propositions and an already settled world. That account presupposes what it cannot explain. Christian theology confesses something deeper. The Logos gives being and meaning together. Reality is intelligible because it is spoken.

Truth, therefore, is not merely descriptive. It is participatory. We do not stand outside the world and measure it. We are drawn into the act by which reality becomes intelligible at all. Law, Gospel, grace, and truth are not late theological overlays. They belong to the primal order of creation, to the rhythm by which being is both coherent and given.

None of this requires the rejection of modern philosophy, nor does it indulge nostalgia for a pre modern certainty. Kant’s detour was illuminating. Existentialism disclosed genuine anxiety. The linguistic turn taught us to attend to the density of speech. But the time has come to recover what these movements forgot. Reality does not depend on being human. Humanity depends on reality.

Law and Gospel do not arise from within us. They name the way the world itself stands before God. Only because this is so can preaching still kill and make alive, grace still arrive as surprise, and truth still exceed the mirror of our own reflection.

This is not an argument for demolition but an invitation. It is an invitation to leave the playground of self-enclosed thought and return to the open field of reality itself. At this point one may cautiously recover Luther’s language of the Left and Right Hands of God, provided it is properly understood. Law and Gospel are not two competing principles, nor are they reconciled by a higher synthesis. They arise from a single ground of intelligibility, the teleological space in which reality stands before God. As the Left and Right Hands are united in the one God without confusion of their work, so Law and Gospel are united in their ground without collapse of their modes. The unity is ontological, not dialectical. The distinction remains irreducible. The Law still kills. The Gospel still makes alive. And precisely because their unity does not neutralize their opposition, preaching can still strike reality itself rather than merely reflect our own thought back to us.

Disputatio XLVIIIa: De Lege et Evangelio ut Structuris Intelligibilitatis

 On Law and Gospel as Structures of Intelligibility

Quaeritur

Utrum distinctio inter Legem et Evangelium sit tantum ordo sermonis divini ad conscientiam humanam, an potius structura ontologica intelligibilitatis ipsius, prior omni perceptione, cognitione, et agentia humana; et utrum haec distinctio radicetur in ipso Logō, per quem omnia facta sunt.

Whether the distinction between Law and Gospel is merely an order of divine speech addressed to human consciousness, or rather an ontological structure of intelligibility itself, prior to all perception, cognition, and human agency; and whether this distinction is rooted in the Logos through whom all things are made.

Thesis

The distinction between Law and Gospel is not first a distinction within human consciousness, moral experience, or religious language, but a real differentiation within intelligibility itself. Law names intelligibility grounded in se, closure upon necessity; Gospel names intelligibility grounded in alio, openness as gift. Both precede human awareness and agency. The human subject does not constitute this distinction but inhabits it. Law and Gospel are thus not psychological states, existential possibilities, or homiletical strategies, but ontological structures grounded in the Logos, who is the unity of necessity and contingency without their collapse.

Locus Classicus

Lex iram operatur.
Romans 4:15
“The law brings about wrath.”

Quod impossibile erat legi, in quo infirmabatur per carnem, Deus misit Filium suum.
Romans 8:3
“What the law could not do, weakened as it was through the flesh, God did by sending His own Son.”

Πάντα δι’ αὐτοῦ ἐγένετο.
John 1:3
“All things came to be through Him.”

Θεὸς γάρ ἐστιν ὁ ἐνεργῶν ἐν ὑμῖν καὶ τὸ θέλειν καὶ τὸ ἐνεργεῖν.
Philippians 2:13
“For it is God who works in you both to will and to work.”

Homo est sicut iumentum, quod equitatur a Deo aut a diabolo.
Martin Luther, paraphrasing De Servo Arbitrio
“The human being is like a beast that is ridden either by God or by the devil.”

These witnesses converge upon a single claim: Law and Gospel do not originate in human self-relation but in the way intelligibility itself is ordered and inhabited.

Explicatio

Modern theology has largely treated Law and Gospel as modes of address: words spoken to human subjects, experiences within conscience, or existential postures toward God. Such construals are not false, but they are secondary. They presuppose precisely what must be explained.

The distinction between Law and Gospel does not arise because human beings reflect upon themselves, experience guilt, or seek meaning. Rather, these phenomena arise because intelligibility itself is differentiated in a way that precedes all subjectivity.

Law names intelligibility as self-grounding. It is the structure in which what is stands under necessity, coherence, and closure. In Law, being is intelligible as that which must be so. This is not moralism. It is ontology. Law is the grammar of necessity.

Gospel names intelligibility as gift-grounded. It is the structure in which what is stands not by self-sufficiency but by donation. In Gospel, being is intelligible as received. This too is not sentiment. It is ontology. Gospel is the grammar of contingency redeemed.

These are not two interpretations of one neutral world. They are two real modes in which intelligibility itself is given. The human being does not generate them. The human being finds itself within them.

Here the anti-existentialist force of the claim must be stated without apology. Law and Gospel are not responses to anxiety, finitude, or absurdity. They are not horizons of meaning projected by a suffering subject. They are ontological realities that make suffering, finitude, and meaning possible at all.

The Enlightenment reversal, paradigmatically expressed in Kant, attempted to relocate these primal differentiations within the subject. The empirical subject was transmogrified into the transcendental subject and charged with supplying the conditions of intelligibility that creation itself already bore. Necessity was grounded in the algorithm of experience; contingency was relocated to practical reason. In the Critique of Judgment, teleology itself was reduced to purposiveness without purpose. Nature lost its end. Intelligibility became heuristic rather than real.

This was a brilliant detour. It was also a decisive displacement.

Reflective judgment did not recover ontology but replaced it with methodological reconciliation. The move was no longer “this is how reality is,” but “we might think of it this way.” The bomb had already fallen. The playgrounds of modern Europe were rearranged, not rebuilt.

Luther stands on the other side of this move. For him, the spirit is not an origin but a space of inhabitation. The human being is not a sovereign agent but a site of grounding. One is always ridden. The only question is by whom.

Thus curvatus in se ipsum is not a psychological pathology but an ontological posture: intelligibility falsely grounded in the self. And to be opened by the Gospel is not to adopt a new perspective but to be re-grounded in reality itself.

The Holy Spirit is not merely the subjective appropriation of this distinction. The Spirit is the divine act by which the openness of intelligibility is inhabited by God rather than by a false ground. What metaphysics names possibility, theology here names Spirit.

Law and Gospel are therefore not reconciled by dialectic, synthesis, or historical progress. They are united in the Logos, who is not an algorithm but living intelligibility itself, in whom necessity and contingency coincide without confusion.

This is not a return behind Kant but a movement beyond him. The Copernican Revolution was instructive. It is no longer determinative. It is time to return to serious work.

Objectiones

Ob. I. Law and Gospel arise only where there is conscience. Without human awareness, the distinction has no meaning.

Ob. II. To ontologize Law and Gospel risks collapsing theology into metaphysics and losing the evangelical character of proclamation.

Ob. III. This account reintroduces a Manichaean dualism by granting ontological reality to false grounding.

Ob. IV. Scripture treats Law and Gospel as words spoken in history, not as structures of being.

Responsiones

Ad I. Conscience presupposes intelligibility; intelligibility does not presuppose conscience. Law and Gospel become experienced in conscience because they are already real.

Ad II. Ontological grounding does not negate proclamation; it makes it intelligible. The Word does not create Law and Gospel but reveals and enacts them.

Ad III. False grounding is real but derivative. The devil is always God’s devil. There is no rival ground of being, only parasitic mis-inhabitation of intelligibility.

Ad IV. Scripture speaks historically because history is the arena in which ontological truth becomes manifest. The economy presupposes ontology.

Nota

The so-called “two hands of God” name the same differentiation here articulated as Law and Gospel. The left hand corresponds to intelligibility ordered by necessity; the right hand to intelligibility given as gift. These are not two divine wills but two modes of divine giving, unified in the Logos and enacted through the Spirit.

Determinatio

  1. Law and Gospel are ontological structures of intelligibility, not human constructions.
  2. Law names intelligibility grounded in itself and ordered by necessity.
  3. Gospel names intelligibility grounded in another and received as gift.
  4. Both precede human perception, cognition, language, and agency.
  5. The human spirit inhabits this distinction; it does not generate it.
  6. The Holy Spirit is the divine inhabitation of intelligibility as gift.
  7. In the Logos, necessity and contingency are united without collapse.
  8. Therefore, Law and Gospel belong to the very fabric of reality and find their unity not in the subject, but in God.

Transitus ad Disputationem XLIX

If Law and Gospel are structures of intelligibility, then creation itself must be ordered toward a final unity in which gift is not annulled by necessity nor freedom by law. The question of final cause now presses with full force.

Accordingly, we proceed to Disputationem XLIX: De Fine Creationis et Gloria Dei, wherein it shall be asked how the intelligibility differentiated as Law and Gospel is gathered into its ultimate end, and how the glory of God names the consummation of intelligibility itself.

Tuesday, October 09, 2012

Getting Clear on the Nature of Law


Lutherans have always argued about the law.  Is there only a first and second use, or is there also a third use?  Does the law go away when grace arrives?  Is the law eternal?   Is there sin prior to law, or  is law only possible on the basis of sin?  Is living out "the form of the Gospel" a living according to the law or not?   Moreover, are good works necessary for salvation, and, if so, how can there doing not be legalistic?

Lutherans have tried mightily to say precisely what separates law and gospel, and what makes Christian living free, that is, what makes it not living underneath the law.  While I will not answer all the questions above, I want to offer a fairly commonsense way of looking at things that might help us address these questions.

I like sometimes to step away from the particularity of Christian language and describe situations using another vocabulary.  The reason for this is that we can sometimes can get more clear on what we are asserting when we employ a vocabulary that is not that to which we are accustomed.   I will proceed in this way in the remainder of this reflection.

Broadly conceived, the Christian story is one supposing that the way that things are simply is not the way things are supposed to be.   God created the universe good, but it is no longer so.   How this came to be is, of course, a matter that is not altogether clear.   How precisely is a wholly good creation nevertheless one in which elements of it become disoriented from the good?   But the mystery of the Fall is not my concern here.    I am interested merely in the distinction between the "is" and "ought."   The world is a particular way, but it ought to be a different way.

Theories of atonement specify how it is that the way things are, but are not supposed to be, nonetheless becomes again the way things are supposed to be.   In traditional language, God who is displeased with the world, nonetheless comes to accept the world.   That which is displeasing becomes pleasing to Him.

Law in Christian theology is tied to ought.   God intends the world to proceed X-ly, but the world does not proceed in this way.   The "is" of the world does not correspond to its "ought."  In a late medieval sense, law is that which is reasonable, promulgated by a competent authority, and capable of being enforced.   The contour of the world which is, is not that which is reasonable, promulgated by God, and capable of being enforced by Him.

When talking about law in the first and second senses, Lutheran theology clearly wants to address the "supposed to be-ness" of things.   We might use a semantics of possible worlds in discussing this.   Because we are speaking of conformity with God's will, we should probably avoid "deontologically possible worlds" (or some such jargon) in favor of speaking about worlds varying in conformity with divine intent.   A world fully in accordance with divine intent would thus be very distant from us, while one wholly not in accordance with this intent would be proximal to the actual world.

What I am thinking of is conceiving a World set S with the actual world and a set of worlds w1, w2, w3, etc., where the higher number indicates greater conformity with God's will and greater distance from w0, the actual world.   The first and second uses of the law can thus be analyzed as follows:  God demands x, is to say that there is some world w such that w is not the actual world and that w is, in fact, suitably distant from the actual world, and that x is in w, though x is not in the actual world.   To say that God wills x is simply to say that x is in every world w in S.  In other worlds, the w containing x is now actual.

What about the third use of the law?   Is it also to be analyzed in this way?

I think that we must make a distinction here between two senses of 'law'.  The sense which I have alluded to above clearly carries the weight of the "ought."   Traditional Christian natural law theory evinced this sense.   There was a "way that things are supposed to go" to things, even if things did not go that way.   The way that things were supposed to go was a simple as 'bodies ought to fall'.

But at the birth of modern science the old "way that things are supposed to go" of things, the teleological sense of things was lost and replaced by "the way things inexorably do go" of things.  Laws that once spoke of the divine ought were replaced by universal regularities that were, in some sense, necessary.  That two objects attract each other directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them is not the way things ought to be, but merely the way that things are.   Laws of motion express how things simply are.  With respect to physical actualizations, there are no worlds other than the actual world that could be different than the actual world.

If we understand the third use of the law descriptively in this fashion, then we are simply saying that the actual world with its particular contour could not have been other than it was given certain conditions.   What I am saying is that the particular contour of the Christian life is free because it simply could not be other than it is; its freedom is found in its necessity.   We are freed by Christ and as free men and women in Christ we are what we are given the conditions that God has wrought in Christ.

When listening to Christian preaching, one must ask if the preacher is advocating that a world that is not the actual world should be the actual world.   If she or he is advocating this, the law is being preached.   On the other hand, if the preacher is describing what is the case and cannot be other than the case for the one graced by the Living Christ, then the "form of the gospel" is being described, and there is occasion for the law's "third use" - - which is not the law at all.   Law avers that a world that is not the actual one should replace the actual one.  The Gospel discomfits this way of proceeding, claiming that the actual world needs no replacement.

More needs to be said to justify the claim that the actual world is necessary when the Gospel is preached and lived.   Surely there are physically different actualizations of the preached and lived Gospel!

But what I am claiming is that the Gospel is necessary in the sense that there is no longer any set of worlds, w1, w2, w3, etc., such that there is nomological distance between these worlds and the actual one.   All of this can and should be made more clear, but the general point should be apparent.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

The Ruins of Christendom


The Institute of Lutheran Theology will sponsor a theological conference on October 23-24 at its administrative offices located at The Old Sanctuary in Brookings, South Dakota, called "The Ruins of Christendom."

The conference description reads:  "Like post-modernity, this post-Christian era features a retreat into the self, a retreat from objective truth, and a retreat from the objective reality of God as distinct and separate from the self.  This conference will explore how the preaching of God's Word as Law and Gospel breaks through the curvatus in se, establishes Christ as the Way, as the Truth and the Life; and reveals the one true God as an objective reality capable of theophysical causality."

ILT faculty members Dr. Jonathan Sorum, Dr. Jack Kilcrease, Dr. Mark Hillmer, Dr. Dan Lioy, Dr. Dennis Bielfeldt and Dr. George Tsakiridas will offer papers, and there is ample opportunity for discussion.    

At a time when the scandal of the Cross has become for many theologically supine, this ILT conference seeks to return to the pith of Christianity itself: the truth of the Divine's incursion into time, His diremption into suffering and death, and His reconciliation of the world unto Himself. This is all scandalous, of course.  How is it that a particular, concrete historical man suffered, died, was buried and then was resurrected, and that this particular One carries universality?   How does preaching Law and Gospel to our ontologically feckless and insouciant generation discomfit the refractory self?  How does the "wording of the Word" finally avoid theological irrealism?  All and more will be discussed.  Come and join us here!