Philip Ruge-Jones

Cross in Tensions


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the crisis is a perpetual crisis of human beings in the presence of God Almighty. The crisis comes when “we in turn suffer the absolute and unconditional working of God upon us.”70 While Forde will have epistemological interest—he will ask about how we know God and what we must know about God—this epistemological interest is saturated with soteriology. To be a theologian of the cross means to be saved. Or, stated precisely, “the cross is the theo-logy.”71 The cross is God’s word as an attack on all human pretensions of righteousness in the presence of God. Conversely, being a theologian of glory is being lost. The theology of glory “is the perennial theology of the fallen race.”72 This theology is related to our sinfulness not only as a symptom of our fallenness; holding such a theology is the definition of sinfulness. The cross causes us to recognize that we have crucified Christ, that our sins have wrought his cross. Yet in the cross, where one stands condemned and is brought to give up on oneself, then and there the sinner is claimed by God and raised to new life. The cross does not stand apart from resurrection. Forde states, “The word ‘cross’ here and in the entire treatise that follows is, of course, shorthand for the entire narrative of the crucified and risen Jesus. As such it includes the Old Testament preparation, . . . the crucifixion and resurrection.”73

      Forde divides the Heidelberg Disputation into four parts. The treatise begins with reflection on the law of God and the judgment it brings and ends with the love of God. The Disputation itself literally moves us from life under the law to new life in the love of God. Yet it does not do so lightly or superficially, but by moving us through a process of despair and subsequent hope, of death and then life. The Disputation operates on us in the following phases:

      1. The Problem of Good Works (Theses 1–12)

      2. The Problem of Will (Theses 13–18)

      3. The Great Divide: The Way of Glory versus the Way of the Cross (Theses 19–24)

      4. God’s Work in Us: The Righteousness of Faith (Theses 25–28)