Luther on Ubiquity and a Theology of the Public |
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Authors: | Allen G. Jorgenson |
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Affiliation: | St James Evangelical Lutheran Church, Mannheim, Kitchener, Canada |
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Abstract: | Abstract: In this article, I contest Milbank's critiques of Luther by underscoring the participatory theme in his treatment of faith. After considering faith's relation to the presence of Christ, I explore Luther's treatment of real presence in his theology of the Lord's Supper. His appeal to ubiquity in this regard functions doxologically to counter the possibility of the orchestration of Christ's presence. The promised nature of that presence, however, emphasizes that God graciously elicits a faith which apprehends absence as a profound mode of presence and so grounds a theology of the public in which the church, by theosis , shares Christ's definitive, rather than ubiquitous, presence. |
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