The Notebooks of Schubert Ogden

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What makes a statement properly a confessional statement?
Elsewhere I have argued, in effect, that what makes a statement properly a confessional statement is that it is a second-rather than a third-person statement. But if this may take account of some confessional statements--e.g., Peter's second-person statement in Mt 16:15 f.: uYou are the Christ, the Son of the living God!"-it fails to take account of others, such as the third-person statement of which Paul speaks in Rom 10:9, when he talks about confessing that uJesus is Lord" with your lips.
But, then, what does make a statement properly a confessional statement?
It would seem that the only likely defining characteristic left is that the
.. 'r-" '
statement be a statement ofbelief-. whether second-or third-person-as distinct
-.
from an assertion oftruth, which is to say~:an assertion that as such claims to be true. Of course, anystatewent of belief, sincerely made, necessarily implies just
,',such
an assertion. But,~/(I believe that) Jesus is the Christ" is one kind of
utteranc~namelya.~onfessi(;mal statement, properly so-called-whereas "Jesus
" .
is the Christ (is true)'~is ano~erkind of utterance-namely, a propeF,assertion,
?
of either witness or th~o19g'y. ' l,;,
So what I now think I should say is something like<this:Jt:l&t;as there is a constitutive Christian confession in the form of a statement of belief, so there is a constitutive Christian witness in the form of a twofold assertion of truth (or two such assertions): (1) the properly christological assertibrrtm.at Jesus is the Christ, or, more formally, that he is of decisive significance for human existence; and (2) the strictly theological assertion that the meaning for human existence of the strictly ultimate reality rightly called "God" is the pure unbounded (Le., unconditioned) love that Jesus decisively re-presents.
14 October 2001; rev. 15 June 2002

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