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Comment: Migrated to Confluence 4.0

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According to Bultmann, "theology does not 'teach' in the sense in which philosophy 'teaches' when philosophy seeks the truth and, to the extent that it thinks it has found the truth, 'teaches' it. Theology, on the contrary, in a certain sense already has the truth in the proclamation of the New Testament. In philosophy, science and teaching are identical, and the right philosophy itself would be right teaching. Theology, by contrast, 'teaches' what the New Testament 'teaches.' It 'teaches' what is 'right teaching;' that is, it interprets the New Testament. . ." (NTM: 58 f., changing "what 'right teaching' is" to "what is 'right teaching"').

Wiki MarkupUnless I am mistaken, Bultmann's point is the same I am concerned to make when I say, for example, that theology is "unlike philosophy in that its origin is not simply in what I call 'original revelation,' meaning thereby the primal disclosure of reality as such received somehow \ [_sc_. authentically or inauthentically\] through our common faith as selves. Theology originates, rather, in a special revelation which represents its relation to original and all other special revelations as that of _the_ answer to a question" (_OT_: 86).

Or, again, I make the same point Bultmann makes when I distinguish "philosophical theology" as "the type of theological reflection constituted by human existence as such" from, say, "Christian theology" as a specific case of "the type of theological reflection for whose constitution human existence simply as such is insufficient," because also necessary for it is "the claim of some specific religion or other to decisive authority" (126 f.).

Wiki MarkupAnd there are still other ways in which I have made the same point (e.g., by distinguishing with Hartshorne between a philosophical theology developed from "the standpoint of the minimal common faith or experience of men in general" and a theology grounded in "revelation" and thus developed from "the standpoint of the faith or religious experience of a person or group" \ ["Theology and Philosophy: A New Phase of the Discussion": 15 f.\]).

Were I to make the point now, I might very well do so in yet another way, by saying that, whereas, for religion and therefore for theology, also, there has to be some explicit primal ontic source of authority – i.e., a historical as well as a transcendental source authorizing its claim to decisive existential authority – for philosophy, there neither is nor can be any such explicit primal ontic source, its only primal source being strictly transcendental.

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