Philip Ruge-Jones

Cross in Tensions


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he offered the first sustained and appreciative attempt at understanding Luther’s theology of the cross within the whole corpus of the reformer’s theological writings.1 Loewenich breaks with prior interpreters in two ways. First, he sees the theology of the cross as the decisive element in all of Luther’s theology. Thus he attempts to formulate the positive relationship between, for example, the use of the “Hidden God” in the relatively early Heidelberg Disputation, Luther’s mid-career Bondage of the Will, and the later Lectures on Genesis. He argues that what on the surface appear to be contradictions can in fact be harmonized. Yet by the fourth edition of this book, he expresses reservations about the harmoniousness he had seen.2

      Secondly, Loewenich appreciates the theology of the cross and is unwilling to view it as an unfortunate, medieval, monkish remnant as prior interpreters had. He understands the theology of the cross as more than a point of historical debate; it becomes a contributing resource in contemporary theological construction. This new appreciation occurs within the crisis of Post-World War I Germany. Karl Barth, Emil Brunner, Eduard Thurneysen, and other crisis theologians felt disillusionment at the support that their liberal teachers gave to the German government’s war policies. In light of this crisis, they pursued a new direction for theological activity. God is the great negation of all human assertions. Humanity stands in a perpetual state of crisis before God. Yet, these theologians’ generic critique of humanity also represented a conflict between alternative human communities of discourse. The concept of God’s universal negation pitted the theologians of crisis against their liberal teachers. The conflict that they identified was not only between God and humanity, but also between certain humans who glimpsed God faithfully and others who had betrayed the God revealed in Jesus Christ. Their critique profoundly shifted power relationships in twentieth-century theology. Older great lights grew dim as a space opened for others to shine.

      Because of this commitment to the public battle, Loewenich is uninterested in tracing the theology of the cross back to Luther’s experience as a monk; while he does incorporate later writings, he always understands them as further developments of the central insights of the earlier, conflictive period.