[1] The so-called "Two Kingdoms Doctrine" is the label under
which a particular framing of the relationship between God's grace
and everyday life in the midst of its institutional realities has
been presented in 20th century Lutheranism. For over half a century
it has been the way Lutherans framed the relationship between
justification and justice. How did this "doctrine" come to be
regarded as a central piece in Lutheran theology when it has such a
remarkably short history as a doctrine and has for the last decades
even faded into oblivion?1 The reasons for this
phenomenon are closely connected to a particular modern (Western)
agenda fraught with the crisis of legitimacy of modern
institutions. 2
[2] And here we can be even more specific and locate the
discussions within the German context from the end of the Weimar
Republic through the post-World War II reconstruction. At the core
of it lies, obviously, the experience with Nazism. Regardless of
the answer, the question remains the same: In the face of the
increasing awareness of the erratic and potentially volatile
character of modern institutions how is the Christian faith to
relate to them? The question has been one of legitimacy (Under
which conditions can institutions claim the right to exercise
dominion?).3
And many times the Lutheran answer to the legitimacy question was
to grant these institutions autonomy vis-à-vis theological
demands.4 If
the advantage of such a separation of competences is to avoid
theocratic tendencies, exclusivism, and other "isms," it has also
often proven disastrous under the particular conditions in which it
was historically applied.5 Further, its recent demise
(who still discusses this doctrine today?6) is certainly linked with a
thesis that dominated the sociology of religion through most of the
20th century, now proven wrong, i.e., that modernization leads
inevitably to secularization.7 The clear distinction between
the spiritual and the earthly was thought to be the articulation of
a theology for a secularized world in which religion and everyday
life could and should be kept apart.
[3] My task here is to address the question of justification and
justice in the context of the "two kingdoms doctrine," and draw
implications for its relevance in contemporary theology and ethics.
I shall address the following questions. How and where did this
doctrine emerge and what are its problems? Can these problems be
traced back to Luther himself? Is there something that ought to be
retained from this "doctrine"? And, finally, can it be relevant for
a global multicultural reality?
The Genealogy of a "Doctrine"
[4] The two kingdoms "doctrine" is a 20th century creation. As it
is used in contemporary discussions, this concept was coined by
Franz Lau in an essay published in 1933.8 The main thrust of the
argument is the distinction between the spiritual reality
(spiritualia) and the earthly institutions, as the carnalia are
defined. The carnalia are for Lau expressions of the lex naturae,
but conditioned to change according to the jus positivum, the
positive law that adjusts itself to changing circumstances: tempora
mutant leges et mores. ("Time changes laws and
customs.")9 Lau
called this particular way of framing the issue in theological
terms the Two Kingdoms Doctrine (Zweireichelehre).
[5] Lau's essay is an attempt to address and overcome the
dispute within the Luther Renaissance early in the 20th century
between Ernst Troeltsch and Karl Holl on the question of Luther's
understanding of the relationship between the divine law and
natural law, and how they are institutionally embodied or
positively expressed. For Troeltsch, the "early Protestantism" of
Luther or Calvin was "simply a modification of Catholicism, in
which the catholic formulation of the problems was retained, while
a different answer was given."10 Early Protestantism, argues
Troeltsch, "exactly like the Middle Ages, everywhere subsumes under
itself the Lex Naturae as being originally identical with the law
of God."11
[6] Accepting Troeltsch's dating of the beginning of modernity
to the end of the 17th century, Holl, however, sees in Luther the
opposite of what Troeltsch has found. For Holl, "Luther did not
appeal to a natural law."12 Although using terminology
akin to natural law arguments, which admittedly causes some
confusion, Luther is seen by Holl as a forerunner of Hume, setting
apart the fundamental connection between is and ought that
sustained the medieval doctrine of the natural law along the lines
of Aristotelian entelechy.13 If Troeltsch's Luther is a
"restored" relic of medieval Catholicism, Holl's is the beacon of
modernity. Here the problem became one of adjustment or
non-adjustment to the earthly stations (Stände) of the state,
family, economy, and the church, as they were defined in medieval
times, and by Luther himself. If Troeltsch saw in Luther a
fundamental adjustment, Holl sustained a theonomic principle in
Luther's understanding of Christian morality, for which the norm
was lex charitatis and not lex naturae.
[7] However, in spite of the theonomic orientation of Holl's
exposition of Luther, the way in which he insisted on Luther's
break with the natural law tradition and on the separation between
is and ought brought the suspicion that for Holl Luther would be
defending the autonomy of institutions in the tradition of Kant's
definition of the private use of reason by which one is compelled
to accept their internal rules.14 After that the Lutheran
interpretation of the theory of law accepted the notion of divine
ordinances but rejected an abstract normative concept of natural
law.15 So the
question became one of relating freedom with legal obligation in
the sense of the "first use of the law."
[8] Lau's two kingdoms was in fact an attempt at rescuing the
uniqueness of the Reformation (over against Medieval Catholicism)
without succumbing to modern secular autonomy
(Eigengesetzlichkeit). But if the solution seems so simple, how do
we get to what a quarter of a century later was defined by Johannes
Heckel as a maze. For Heckel, "Luther's Doctrine of the Two
Kingdoms, as it has been articulated in protestant theology [read:
German], is like an ingenuous labyrinth whose creator lost its plan
in the middle of the work, so that [one] cannot find the way
out."16
The Design of the Labyrinth
[9] Fifty years of intense debate followed this initial argument.
But the parameters of the debate would remain basically the same
and would become, particularly in the 70s, the litmus test for
diagnosing a Lutheran's stance on any social issue. Flanked by the
classical Reformed tradition of a "third use of the law," on the
one side, and the Roman Catholic natural law tradition on the
other, the two kingdoms became the Lutheran identifying badge. Yet
within its own ranks the divisions were not less relevant. On the
one side there were the Barthians in the Lutheran camp calling for
the primacy of the lordship of Christ in dealing with questions of
justification and justice. On the other side we find an array of
liberally inspired theologies proclaiming a hands-off approach to
Christian claims over what were regarded as autonomous spheres of
public life. The issue was not settled; it was evaded by
exhaustion. Now, after two decades of only faint murmurs about it
being heard, it might be time to revisit the issue in a different
light, within different contexts and with a new agenda. And the
time is ripe, for it was when the debate ebbed that the theological
scenario worldwide changed. It was at the eclipse of the two
kingdoms debate that voices from around the world started to impose
their presence in the theological scenario. The traditional
dissemination centers of theology have since become aware of their
own location as a methodological and theological issue.
Christianity itself in its western, northern manifestation has
become aware of its particularity in a multi-religious world. It is
indeed interesting to probe under these different circumstances how
one would revisit the quandary plaguing the two kingdoms.
[10] The problem stems from two different theological models
that are unevenly blended in Luther's own theology over some
insightful musings that neither he nor the Confessions framed as a
doctrine as such. Luther was working simultaneously with two
theological blueprints of very different origins; two informing
theories, as the philosophers of science would call them. It was
almost like trying to get orange juice by squeezing together apples
and bananas. The first is related to Luther's understanding of the
relationship between law and gospel. The gospel is the end of the
law in the sense of bringing the power of law to termination. The
second was predicated upon the way earthly institutions (carnalia)
were connected to natural (and divine) law. The gospel is seen here
as restoring the law to its fullness, which is the other sense of
"end" or telos. So, out of these two sets of issues, efforts at a
systematic reconstruction of Luther's understanding of the
relationship between justification and justice have been attempted.
In general, these two models are distinguished by a somehow
consistent use of terms (at least in German): "kingdoms" (Reiche)
and "governances," or "regiments" (Regimente).17 The first model, when
"kingdom" is the dominant category, goes back to the Augustinian
tradition of the two cities (civitates), while the second, when
"governance" language is more often used, retrieves the main
elements of the medieval theory of two powers (potestates), or
swords (gladii).
[11] Depending on how Luther is read, emphasis on one or the
other of these informing theories is going to be the criteria for
the interpretation of the "two kingdoms doctrine." Some will lean
toward one end of the spectrum and could be characterized as having
an "Augustinian" reading of Luther, with emphasis on the negative
attitude toward institutions.18 On the other end of the
spectrum are the more conventional interpretations that see the
"Two Kingdoms" mainly along the lines of the medieval understanding
of the two swords which emphasizes Luther's positive appreciation
of the human institutions as founded in an original divine
ordinance.19
While the "Augustinian" emphasis sees Luther's concern in the
efficacy of the gospel in instituting the law of Christ, in
conforming reality to the lordship of Christ, the medieval reading
sets the emphasis on the conforming of Christian life to the orders
of creation. While the former has a Christological emphasis, the
latter has a social and institutional agenda. But both express the
same concern with social ethical criteria that shape institutional
commitments in politics, economy, the church, the family, etc. Both
are concerned in defining how justification is related to
justice.
[12] Luther's methodological eclecticism would then be too
easily dismissed as a theoretical blunder. There is more to it than
apparent inconsistencies. By combining the two traditions Luther
was attempting to ensure two things simultaneously: first, to
affirm the radical crisis that the Word represents in the midst of
the world and its régimes;20 second, to uphold also that
this world with its ordinances, its institutions and régimes
is still part of God's good creation, however much sin has
corrupted them.21 What once was an exception
(the Fall) is now disguised as the rule and has spread itself from
humans through their institutions to nature itself.22
[13] So here we are in the midst of the maze or labyrinth that
Heckel, in 1959, diagnosed: Luther tried to bring together
apparently incompatible theological constructions, and ended up in
a fossilized idea of the "orders" of creation, incompatible with
modern day institutions, or in a system incapable of unfolding a
social ethics out of its own premises, surrendering ethics and
morality to autonomous spheres in secular existence.
The Mask and the Word
[14] A careful examination of this problem and an insightful
Ariadne's thread out of the labyrinth is offered by an
unfortunately little known work by Gustav
Törnvall.23 Breaking with the dominant
institutional approach to the 2KD, Törnvall appeals to a
functional interpretation of Luther's categories that refer to what
is being discussed under "two kingdoms." Showing Luther's
inconsistent use of terms to refer to these
realities,24 he
argues that the institutional and substantive language that is used
only reveals Luther's concern in being concrete in his
imagery.25 The
two governances are fundamentally expressions of the
Creator/creature theme in God's self-revelation, through the
visible world as masks of God (larvae dei) and the invisible Word
of God (verbum dei). The result, for Törnvall, is that the two
kingdoms are two functional aspects of God's revelation: a kingdom
of listening (Hörreich) and a kingdom of seeing (Sehereich).
They are, for the most, perspectives of the single act of God's
creation and revelation, and only derivatively institutional
realities.26
The question then is how to relate the visible with the audible in
the midst of existence and recognize them in their
relationship.
[15] Hence, the basic distinction that is operative in Luther,
at least since the Heidelberg Disputation of 1518,27 is the one between the
visible and the Word, between creature and Creator, the outer and
the inner, between what the senses register and reason draws
together, and what grace reveals to the spirit. Between these sets
of categories there is a paradoxical and asymmetric relationship
with which Luther operates to formulate his understanding of God's
revelation.
[16] It is "paradoxical" in the sense that one (the visible)
points to the other (the Word), but is in it simultaneously
negated. This implies the rejection of analogical reasoning while
keeping the appearance of analogical correspondence, i.e., Luther's
mode of argumentation entails elements of irony, the breakdown of
analogical correspondence. It is impossible to read Luther without
constantly being faced with ironic moves that break up continuities
and systems of correspondence. It is "asymmetrical" because what
appears to be the case in one set of categories that belong to one
of the régimes (spiritual or earthly) is not simply
reflected in the other, but is shaped in it in unexpected ways.
Luther's use of two different theoretical models to articulate this
issue of relating the Word to the mask and vice-versa is what
allows him to keep the ironic tone alive and not succumb to analogy
and yet keep the search for correspondences. His theology is
neither synthesis nor a diastasis, yet simultaneously both. What
the mask reveals is the very Word hidden in its cracks, to keep
Luther's metaphor.
The Epistemological Turn
[17] Between the mask and the Word, between what the eyes see and
the spirit knows lies language; a strenuous search to convey a
theological view for which there is not a grammar available. How
would this help us to frame the question of God and justice?
[18] My own struggle over a text of Luther certainly does not
merit comparison to the dramatic dimension of Luther's own anguish
over a text of Paul. My struggle with Luther notwithstanding was to
understand these words in his commentary on Isaiah 53: "Behold the
new definition of justice (definitionen novam iusticiae): justice
is the knowledge of Christ (iusticia est cognicio
Christi)."28
The insight to understand this came when I once read the Heidelberg
disputation backwards, from the "philosophical" theses at the end
to the theological ones at the beginning. Such a reading allows one
to understand, as Gustav Aulén and others had already
noticed, Luther's struggle with language in order to bring to light
something new, some good news, while being a child of his old
world.
[19] His attack on philosophy (with its "reason"), the economic
system (with its "markets"), jurisprudence (with its "justice"),
the territorial states (with their "politics"), and the Church
(with its "polities") was not to remodel them. The Reformation was
not about "reforming," as when one restores a building or remodels
a house, but it is about a new formation. He was well aware of the
inefficacy in interweaving the new with the old (Luke 5:36). He
wanted to find or even provoke a crack, a crisis, in the systemic
arrangements that controlled, regulated, ordered and regulated
those institutions that Luther took as basic: ecclesia, oeconomia,
and politia. The new definition is not only redressing the old,
mending the fractures; it is something new, a gift. The new
definition cracks the surfaces, opens up the wounds behind the mask
and reveals the crisis. The new definition sets itself against the
old, which Luther explicitly mentions in the same text, the
proverbial suum cuique ("to each what to each is due"). The
classical definition presumed a correspondence between the order of
things (the Stände) and God's mercy toward us. The cognicio
Christi is precisely this new knowledge, this new way of knowing
that erupts in the very cracks of the systems of this world. The
genitive in cognicio Christi means to know Christ, but it also
means to have the cognicio of Christ, to have Christ's knowledge
and Christ's mind; it is a double genitive. And this is a different
knowledge of the order of things in the régime of this
world.
[20] It is in the same context of the commentary on Isaiah 53
that Luther talks about how this is accomplished: it is by a
"wonderful exchange" (mirabilem mutacionem). The danger in the
interpretation of this is to make the "wonder" of this exchange
into a readjustment of relations according to a demand of
satisfaction that would reinstate the integrity of the old rule.
For Luther this would be sophistry: "The sophists say that
righteousness is the fixed will to render to each his
own."29
[21] Now the justice of Christ has then two interrelated aspects
to it. It entails the grace of God toward us in the midst of our
condition. But it does so not by supplementing or even mending the
systems in the world but by disclosing the fissures in the systems
of knowledge and power. The new justice, the knowledge of Christ is
indeed foolishness. The power of Christ is indeed weakness. Paul's
antitheses convey the search for a language that breaks through and
breaks forth. Hence, it is not by chance the first "Philosophical"
Thesis of the Heidelberg Disputation says: "The one who wishes to
philosophize by using Aristotle without danger to his soul must
first become thoroughly foolish in Christ." ("Aristotle" functions
here as a metonymy for the standards of valid rationality, for the
accepted régime of truth.)
[22] While on our pursuit to be made just, to have our due share
and pay our dues, and yet not achieving it, the justice of Christ
breaks in and fragments the systems of the world, its philosophy,
ecclesial structures, legal rules, in short, its economies and
régimes. The possibilities of justice in the midst of this
world manifest themselves precisely where these economies and
régimes break down. However, this is still a negative if not
apocalyptic definition of justice. We need to know more than the
power of fragmentation, and indeed also that, which brings about
justice in the midst of everyday life in and in spite of the powers
and the knowledges (epistemes) that rule the world.
[23] The old quest for the Lutheran relation between
justification and justice has been a search for a doctrine, when
the very point is that ironically it is a "doctrine" that brings
doctrines itself into question. Addressed often from a moral
theological standpoint (What ought we to do in regard to our
faith?), or then from an ontological standpoint (How is the
creature related to the creator?), what is overlooked in the
discussion is the epistemological question about the conditions of
possibility for stating the problem. Luther's insight brings to
question the relation between revelation and the régimes
that control knowledge, establish rationalities, norm the market,
and rule the church (the visible church is an earthly regime, just
like the State or "economy"). It is my conviction that this reading
of the two kingdoms suggests that only when we understand that it
is in the fissures and ruptures in the order of things can a new
justice be shaped and the knowledge of Christ emerge. And this is a
renewed, a newly formed justice, not a particular Christian
justice, a Christian alternative to the world, but the alternative
of Christ in the midst of the world.30
[24] If there was a failure in the interpretations of Luther's
thought on justification and justice, it was not to recognize that
when and where the two meet we are in an eschatological
dimension.31
The irruption of justice comes from the ends of this world, exactly
where another world comes about. The Kingdom of God, which Paul
translated as justification, comes to us exactly at that point
where our work, reasons, and régimes end or break down.
There, where there is nothing, God creates. And this creation is
also the introduction of another knowledge that comes through
another way of reasoning, which Paul called the apokalypsis Iesou
Christou.32
Justice as Difference
[25] In its attempt to apologize for the rightfulness of its order,
the system hides its cracks. In the sermon on the "Two Kinds of
Righteousness" (1518 or 1519),33 Luther claims the priority
of the alien justice of Christ over our justice that is also God's
doing and can only be accomplished in divine/human cooperation.
Later in the Bondage of the Will, the Reformer had worked with this
distinction between the realm in which God works through grace
alone, and the other where we cooperate with God (cooperatio homine
cum Deo).34
However, there is a necessary logical priority between the first
realm and the second. Luther's attack on works, as much as on
reason, power and knowledge (as we would put it today), when framed
in this context should be able to dispel the recurring suspicion of
a Lutheran inherent quietism. And this is so because the earthly
régimes (with their second form of justice according to
Luther's sermon on the "Two Kinds of Righteousness") in which we
are called to cooperate with God are a logical result of God's work
in Christ. This is what conforms us to the law of love (lex
charitatis) and in no way offers us an alternative
realm.35 In the
regimes of power and knowledge, of work and reason that are in
place in this world, Luther's spiritual reality is a difference, a
counter-point in the order of things; it is another régime,
a different régime. In his late (probably 1541?) sermon on
Psalm 1 he phrased it like this: "When I say, 'Heaven' of the
heaven of the Lord, I do not mean heaven as a site and a place in
distinction to the Earth, I mean by it a
régime."36 Such a régime
functions as an antithetical factor in the midst of the
régimes that our reason and work erect. Luther's
understanding of revelation is indeed what in Greek apocalypse
means. Luther's thinking on the two kingdoms motif is an invitation
to recognize otherness, the difference that emerges in the midst of
our platitudes, as the locus for the insurgence of justice.
[26] What such a reading of the two kingdoms allows for is a
theological practice in which the voices and knowledge of those who
are subjugated will come to the fore. If justification is the Word
embodying forgiveness, this forgiveness will produce words; it will
authenticate the self-expression of those who have been defiled
under the weight of sin and oppression. Justification is the word
of the Author who authorizes. It authorizes the emergence of other
voices dissonant from the prevailing régimes of truth.
Justice begins here; it begins not by fulfilling the requirements
of the prevailing régime, but by setting other conditions,
other parameters, which indeed sound very foolish or mad.
[27] Instead of rejecting the two kingdoms in its classical 20th
century formulation as a useless relic of a superseded social and
theological problem in the West, we can read it as a frail
articulation on the part of Luther himself out of the conviction
that if justice is to be done it will have to come from the other,
and every other is ultimately irreducibly the other.
[28] By this new definition, justice not only addresses the
marginalized, heals the wounds of our world, and cares for the
poor, but above all listens to their plea (the Pentecost is after
all also a miracle of listening), and sees the faces of the
excluded ones. This is even more relevant because it reveals the
fissures in the mask of God in the midst of the crude realities of
this world that the régimes constantly try to hide, norm,
and regulate.
[29] In sermon XLV of the "Homilies on the Acts"37 Chrysostom illustrates what
I am trying to explain here. The church, recognizes Chrysostom, has
plenty of "money, and revenues." This was after all the early
Constantinian church. Institutions for the care of the poor and
strangers were created called Xenodoxeion. With his thundering
golden mouth Chrysostom launches an attack on them for they were
being used by the faithful to avoid the face of the poor
themselves. The incisiveness of Chrysostom's argument reveals
someone who was ashamed of his fellow Christians and knew where
justice starts; it begins by allowing the other, the poor, the
stranger to emerge, to have a voice, a face. The two kingdoms is
not a doctrine. It is an epistemic principle that teaches the
faithful that to know Christ is to know justice. And where justice
cries out, there we find Christ.
1 "For the last two or three decades, the
&=javascript:goNote(39doctrine of the two kingdoms' has been
one of the most debated aspects of Luther's theology." Heinrich
Bornkamm, Luther's Doctrine of the Two Kingdoms in the Context of
his Theology, trans. Karl H, Herz (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1966),
p. 1. Gerhard Ebeling sees in "the doctrine of the two kingdoms ...
the fundamental problem of theology" being expressed (Word and
Faith [Philadelphia: Fortress, 1963], p. 389).
2 See Jürgen Habermas, Communication and the
Evolution of Society (Boston: Beacon, 1979), pp. 178-205.
3 It is important to notice that the question behind it
was not one of authenticity (What are the practices by which
subjects truly constitute themselves--authenteo?).
4 To focus its criticism on this point of the Lutheran
heritage is the great merit of the Barmen Declaration.
5 This was the case not only in Germany but also in South
Africa under Apartheid and in Chile under Pinochet, and some East
European countries under Soviet régime or influence. See
Ulrich Duchrow, ed., Zwei Reiche und Regimente: Ideologie oder
evangelische Orientierung? (Gütersloh: Gerd Mohr, 1977).
6 To my knowledge the exception for over two decades is
Silfredo Dalferth, Die Zweireichelehere Martin Luthers im Dialog
mit der Befreiungstheologie (Frankfurt/New York: Peter Lang, 1996.
But see also Adolfo Gonzalez Montes, Religión y
nacionalismo: la doctrina luterana de los dos reinos como teologia
civil (Salamanca: Universidad Pontificia, 1982). I thank John
Stumme for calling my attention to this work.
7 Peter Berger, "Protestantism and the Quest for
Certainty," Christian Century (August 26-September 2, 1998):
782
8 Franz Lau, "Äusserliche Ordnung" und
"weltlich Ding" in Luthers Theologie (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck
& Ruprecht, 1933). Others would date it to the publications of
Harald Diem seminal work on Luther&=javascript:goNote(39s
hermeneutics "Luthers Lehre von den zwei Reichen untersucht von
seinen Verständnis der Bergpredigt aus: ein Beitrag zum
problem 'Gesetz und Evangelium'," in G. Sauter, ed., Zur
Zwei-Reiche-Lehre Luthers (München: Chr. Kaiser, 1973). See
Martin Honecker, Soziallehre zwischen Tradition und Vernunft
(Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr: 1977), p. 176.
9 Lau, "Äusserliche Ordnung,"p. 38.
10 Ernst Troeltsch, Protestantism and Progress (Boston:
Beacon, 1958), p. 59.
11 Ibid., p. 45.
12 Karl Holl, The Reconstruction of Morality (Minneapolis:
Augsburg, 1979), p. 103.
13 Ibid., pp. 145-147.
14 See Immanuel Kant, On History, ed. by Lewis W. Beck
(Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1963) pp. 5-7 (on the essay "What is
Enlightenment?").
15 See Wolfhart Pannenberg, Ethics (Philadelphia:
Westminster, 1981), pp. 26f.
16 Heckel, "Im Irrgarten der Zwei-Reiche-Lehre: Zwei
Abhandlungen zum Reichs- und Kirchenbegriff Martin Luthers,"
Theologische Existenz heute 55 (1959): 317
17 Even these terms are not consistently used by Luther.
While in German Reiche and Regimente suggest a clear distinction
between conceptual schemes, in Latin the term used for both is only
regnum. For the best description of the formation of these two
traditions, see Ulrich Duchrow, Christenheit und Weltverantwortung:
Traditionsgeschichte und systematische Struktur der Zweireichelehre
(Stuttgart: Ernst Klett, 1970), particularly his main thesis on pp.
440.
18 See, e.g,, Ernst Wolf, "Die
&=javascript:goNote(39lutherische Lehre' von den zwei Reichen
in der gegenwärtigen Forschung," Zeitschrift für
evangelisches Kirchenrecht 6(1958/59): 255-273; Hermann Diem,
"Luthers Predigt in den zwei Reichen," in: Gerhard Sauter, ed. Zur
Zwei-Reiche-Lehre Luthers (München: Chr. Kaiser, 1973), pp.
178-214; Heinrich Bornkamm, Luther's Doctrine.
19 See, e.g., Werner Elert, Morphologie des Luthertums,
2nd volume (München: Beck, 1931); Paul Althaus, "Luthers Lehre
von den beiden Reichen in Feuer der Kritik," Luther-Jahrbuch
24(1957): 40-68; and Lau, "Äusserliche Ordnung."
20 For reasons that later will become clear I find the
notion of "régime" the best way to translate either Regiment
or Reich, avoiding some of the connotations that "regiment,"
"governance," or "kingdom" carry. "Régime" is a regulated
social system or pattern that includes institutions and also
hegemonic patterns of thought. It combines power and knowledge.
21 In the case of the State (politia), unlike the other
orders (ecclesia and oeconomia) some would defend the prelapsarian
origin of the State. See Lau, "Äusserliche Ordnung," pp.
13-14; Werner Elert, Morphologie des Luthertums, 2 vols
(München: Beck, 1931) 2: 49-65; and, in a unique
interpretation that will be discussed later, Gustav Törnvall,
Geistliches und weltliches Regiment bei Luther (München: Chr.
Kaiser, 1947), p. 38. Others almost in a Hobbesean manner would
argue that it was an outer medicine (externum remedium) instituted
as a result of the fall. See Diem, Luthers Lehre, pp. 56-59, 70-72;
Heckel, "Im Irrgarten der Zwei-Reiche-Lehre: Zwei Abhandlungen zum
Reichs- und Kirchenbegriff Martin Luthers," Theologische Existenz
heute 55 (1959): 343-45; Bornkamm,
Luther&=javascript:goNote(39s Doctrine, pp. 34-35.
22 The metaphor of the mask (larva) Luther takes from the
medieval carnival in which the mask was both a disguise but also an
allegory to unveil the real situation that in fact was more masked
than the mask itself. Unlike Luther and his contemporaries we
suppose a ditch between nature and institution. For Luther the
distinction could be compared to the one between the buffoon and
the costumes he wears, while the modern ditch corresponds to the
crisis in natural law thinking since Hume. But for Luther such a
distinction can no longer be taken for granted, even if Holl is
right that he did not rely on the medieval concept of natural law.
Nature and culture are both "institutions", and only as such are
they also creation. For Luther the being of the world as creation
is nature and institution, institution and nature, at the same
time. (See Oswald Bayer, "Nature and Institution: Luther's Doctrine
of the Three Orders," Lutheran Quarterly 12/2 [Summer 1998]:
125-159) To put it still in other terms, nature was, for Luther,
artificial, while the reverse then is also true: institutions are
natural. The modern understanding of institutions, in the
definition of Anthony Giddens, "create settings of action ordered
in terms of modernity&=javascript:goNote(39s own dynamics and
severed from 'external criteria'... day-to-day social life tends to
become separated from 'original' nature" (Modernity and
Self-Identity [Standford: Standford University Press, 1991], p. 8).
Under these conditions the main question plaguing Lutheran social
ethics has been the one of relating God's justifying word, cast in
a forensic sense, to a reality of quotidian existence in which the
juridical sense for even grasping the passive character that this
justification implies is missing.
23 Törnvall, Geistliches und weltliches Regiment.
24 Ibid., pp. 94-95. He quotes 38 different couples of
terms to frame the distinction.
25 Ibid., p. 38.
26 Cf. p. 17 where he quotes Luther: "Quando dico: Celum
celi domini, non intelligo celum situ et loco distictum a terra,
sed ich meine das regiment mit." WA 49: 224, 30. In his
interpretation of the law in Luther, Gerhard Forde follows a
similar insight: "&=javascript:goNote(39law' is to be taken in
a functional rather than a material sense." see his locus on
"Christian Life" in Carl Braaten and Robert Jenson, eds. Christian
Dogmatics, 2 vols (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1984) 2: 400.
27 WA 1:353-74; LW 31:39-70.
28 This is my translation from WA 31/2:439,19-20. The
standard English translation (LW 17:230) reads: "You must therefore
note this new definition of righteousness. Righteousness is the
knowledge of Christ."
29 LW 17:229; Iusticia est constans voluntas reddenti
cuique, quod suum est. WA 31/2 :439, 5-6.
30 The "third use of the law" is excluded. Although Luther
can say that we can create new decalogues (WA 39/1:47; LW
34:112-113) it is always within the context of the inherited
tradition. Thus he writes from Coburg in 1530 a letter to Justus
Jonas saying …et coepi judicare, decalogum esse dialeticam
evangelii, et evangelium rhetoricam decalogi, habereque Christum
omnia Mosi, sed Mosem non momnia Christi. ("…to begin with a
distinction, the Decalogue is the logic of the Gospel, the Gospel
the rhetoric of the Decalogue, so that we have in Christ all of
Moses, but in Moses not all of Christ.")
31 To stress Luther's eschatological thinking in
connection with the 2KD is the merit of Ulrich Duchrow's
comprehensive study, Christenheit und Weltverantwortung.
32 See Alexandra Brown, The Cross and Human Transformation
(Minneapolis: Fortress, 1995) and the insightful epistemological
study on the theology of the Cross by Mary Solberg, Compelling
Knowledge (New York: SUNY,1 1997)
33 WA 2:145-152; LW 31:297-306.
34 WA 18:754, 1-16; LW 33:242-243.
35 Here lies a further problem with the forensic
understanding of justification. The first was to conform the logic
of grace to juridical models. The additional problem is that it
does not link causally and positively the work of redemption with
human emancipation. At most it does it negatively by the fact the
forgiven person is set free to act.
36 Quando dico: Celum celi domini, non intelligo celum
situ et loco distincto terra, sed ich meine das regiment mit. WA
49:224,30. A functional interpretation of the so-called "Two
Kingdoms Doctrine" has been offered by Gustav Törnvall,
Geistliches und weltliches Regiment bei Luther (München: Chr.
Kaiser, 1947).
37 The Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers. Vol. 11, Philip
Schaff, ed. (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1995), pp. 272-277.