On Divine Causality and Theological Speech
Quaeritur
Utrum causalitas divina non sit externa actio super mundum, sed interna ratio tam essendi quam loquendi; cum Spiritus Sanctus, qui est amor subsistens, causet non solum esse rerum sed etiam recte loqui de Deo, ita ut omnis loquela theologica sit ipsa participatio in causatione divina.
Whether divine causality is not an external action upon the world but the inner reason both of being and of speaking; since the Holy Spirit, who is subsistent love, causes not only the existence of things but also the right speaking of them, such that every theological utterance is itself a participation in divine causality.
Thesis
The Spirit’s causality extends from being to language. The God who causes creatures to exist also causes them to be spoken truly. Hence theological discourse is not a human representation of divine acts but a divinely grounded participation in those acts.
Locus Classicus
1. Philippians 2:13 (NA28)
ὁ θεὸς ἐστιν ὁ ἐνεργῶν ἐν ὑμῖν καὶ τὸ θέλειν καὶ τὸ ἐνεργεῖν
“For it is God who works in you both to will and to act.”
Divine agency is interior, not extrinsic; God is the cause of both the act and the willing of the act.
2. Augustine, De Gratia et Libero Arbitrio 17.33
Non enim per solam gratiam fit ut faciamus, sed etiam ut velimus.
“It is by grace that we are enabled not only to act but even to will.”
Grace is the inner principle of creaturely freedom.
3. Gregory of Nyssa, In Canticum Canticorum II
Ἡ θεία ἐνέργεια πάντα κινεῖ ἀκινήτως
“The divine energy moves all things while itself unmoved.”
The divine act is the stable ground of every creaturely operation.
4. John of Damascus, De Fide Orthodoxa II.12
Ἡ τοῦ Πνεύματος ἐνέργεια διδοῖ τὸ εἶναι καὶ τὸ λέγειν
“The energy of the Spirit bestows both being and speech.”
The Spirit is the cause both of existence and of the words that manifest it.
Across these witnesses a single confession emerges: Divine causality does not stand outside creaturely action, but grounds its very possibility. The Spirit is the inward cause of willing, acting, and speaking. Theology therefore speaks truly only where it participates in this causal order.
Explicatio
The preceding disputations established that theological language T possesses: 1) syntactic order (a logic of predication), 2) pneumatic felicity (authorization by the Spirit), and 3) external correspondence (modeling within divine reality). Yet such correspondence itself presupposes a deeper ground:
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The realities to which theology refers exist only because God causes them to exist.
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The speech that refers to them exists only because God causes it to be spoken.
Thus divine causality operates in two inseparable modes: the causalitas essendi where God gives being to creatures and the causalitas loquendi where God gives utterance to theological truth. Both belong to the Spirit as causa principalissima—the inner cause through whom secondary causes act according to their natures.
We may formalize this through our earlier notation: Let D_G denote a divine property (e.g., wisdom). Let D denote its participated creaturely share. Then: D_G → D signifies not metaphor but causal procession: the Spirit communicates divine perfections analogically to creatures, grounding both their being and their capacity to declare divine reality.
Thus theological discourse is a theophysical participation: human words become instruments of divine causality, bearing the reality they signify.
Explicatio Analytica: De Causalitate Constitutiva in Horizonte Analytico
Modern analytic philosophy seeks to clarify causation through precise criteria—counterfactual dependence (Lewis), event-causation (Davidson), grounding (Fine, Schaffer), and truthmaker adequacy (Armstrong). These analyses collectively illuminate what causation must accomplish to count as explanatory. Constitutive causality, as articulated in the doctrine of constitutive satisfaction, not only satisfies these criteria but reveals their deeper presuppositions.
1. Counterfactual Dependence (Lewis)
If the divine constitutive act had not obtained, no creaturely being, power, or predicate—including theological speech—would obtain. Thus constitutive causality grounds the modal space in which counterfactuals are meaningful.
2. Event-Causation (Davidson)
Davidson treats causes as events related by explanatory necessity. The Spirit’s actus essendi is precisely an event-like, continuous operation sustaining all secondary causes—more fundamental than any efficient event.
3. Grounding (Fine, Schaffer)
Grounding presupposes ontological facts. Constitutive causality supplies those facts; it is not one ground among others but the ground of all grounding, the reality in virtue of which grounding relations obtain.
4. Truthmaker Theory (Armstrong)
Truthmaker adequacy requires entities of ontological “heft.” Constitutive causality provides the robust reality that makes theological propositions true, constituting both the res and the verbum in a single causal act.
Thus constitutive causality fulfills analytic criteria, grounds their intelligibility, and aligns perfectly with patristic and scholastic insights. It is the transcendental condition for causation, meaning, and truth.
Objectiones
Ob I. According to Aristotelian naturalism, human speech belongs to the domain of secondary causes.
If God is its cause, human agency collapses.
Ob II. Nominalist voluntarism claims that theological language expresses obedience to divine decree but cannot share in divine causality.
Ob III. If God directly causes every act (occasionalism), humans contribute nothing. If humans contribute, divine causality must recede. The view is contradictory.
Ob IV. Analytic philosophy of language locates meaning in convention and intention, not metaphysical causality. Divine causality is irrelevant to semantics.
Responsiones
Ad I. Primary and secondary causes do not compete. The Spirit acts as primary cause precisely by enabling secondary causes to act freely and fully. The theologian truly speaks, yet speaks only by the Spirit’s inward act.
Ad II. Nominalism preserves sovereignty but denies divine presence. The Spirit’s causality is participatory: human signs remain human, yet become transparent to divine reality through the Spirit’s interior enabling.
Ad III. The dilemma arises only if divine and human causality inhabit the same plane. In theology, divine causality is in esse: it grants being and efficacy to secondary causes without replacing them. God causes the act to be the creature’s act.
Ad IV. Analytic semantics describes proximate structures of meaning but cannot ground them. The Spirit is the transcendental condition of theological reference: He makes divine predicates possible, determinate, and true. Meaning is conventional; theological adequacy is causal.
Nota
Relating causality and language secures theology’s realism. If to be is to act, then truthful speech must participate in divine action. Felicity is the form of divine causality in language. When the Spirit renders an utterance felicitous, He does more than permit it: He empowers it.
The felicitous word is causal because it breathes with the Spirit’s energy. It accomplishes what it signifies because God speaks through it. Without causal participation, divine predicates become empty abstractions. With causal participation, they become acts of communion—finite words bearing infinite life.
Determinatio
From the foregoing it is determined that:
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Divine causality operates in the order of being and in the order of speaking.
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The Holy Spirit is the principal cause of every felicitous and truthful theological utterance.
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Theology speaks truly only insofar as it participates in divine causality.
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Felicity is the formal manifestation of this causality within language; truth is its ontological fulfillment.
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The Spirit binds ontology and discourse in a single causal order, causing both what is spoken and what is spoken of.
Transitus ad Disputationem VII: De Participatione et Ontologia Theoseos
In the sixth disputation, divine causality was shown to be the inner act by which the Spirit grants both being and discourse. Theological utterance is thus not an autonomous human construction but participation in the causal energy by which God constitutes reality.
Yet causality that gives both being and speech points toward a deeper unity: to be is already to participate in God; to speak truly is to participate knowingly. Creation, therefore, is not merely an effect but a participation in the divine life. The Spirit who causes speech to be true is the same Spirit who causes being to be radiant with God.
Thus we proceed to Disputatio VII: De Participatione et Ontologia Theoseos, where it will be asked how creaturely existence is constituted as participation in the divine, how the Spirit effects real union without confusion of essences, and how this participatory ontology grounds the Lutheran doctrine of theosis.