Having set out their respective criticisms of each other, the Barthian and the Schleiermacherian, how am I proposing that they should reconcile and kiss?
I would hope that the point is easily made. We need both. If you have closely followed the last two posts, their implications should be obvious. Barthian theological postures need the Schleiermacherian in order to prevent sliding into chilly, inhuman, and positivistic denunciations of human experience. For its part, Schleiermacherian theological postures need the Barthian in order to prevent the eclipse of the prophetic voice in a humanistic reductionism. That is to say, the interplay of the Barthian and the Schleiermacherian has to be dialogical and dialectical. Theological distortions result when one voice in this conversation becomes silenced.
One way to describe the dialogical relation between the Barthian and the Schleiermacherian is what I will call “cruciform attunement.”
By “attunement” I mean how human experience must find “resonance” with the ontological claims of Christianity. I am borrowing the notion of “resonance” from Hartmut Rosa. Following Rosa, by attunement or resonance I mean that we experience an “I-Thou” relation, to use Martin Buber’s language, with reality. Something warm and alive is addressing us, something independent of my own reality. Following Barth, this reality is other than my own and falls outside my control. You can see both the Barthian and Schleiermacherian dynamics at play. The warmth and aliveness of the encounter speak to human experience, to the mystical, affective, intuitive, and aesthetic. I am wooed and drawn. And yet, from the Barthian side, the reality I encounter is, to borrow again from Rosa, uncontrollable and cannot be put at my disposal. As William James described, in these mystical experiences I occupy the passive role rather than the active one. The reality addressing me is wholly other than my own.
So I use the word “attunement” to describe how the address of God is fully humanistic. God’s voice is warm, resonant, appealing, and alive. What is human in me is being addressed. And yet this humanism of the address does not baptize all that I might gather within myself under the label of “human.” I might be tempted to name all that is twisted, dark, and distorted within myself as "human." And in a sense it is human, in that it is descriptive of universal human experience. But in the address of God I experience all this as failure and depravity, as a denial of what is most truly and fully human. Thus, in my confrontation with “the humanity of God,” to borrow from Barth, I experience exposure and alarm. I shrink back from the light. I experience my sin, my failure to be truly human, and I quail.
The best term I have for this prophetic encounter with the truly human is “cruciform.” To become truly human, to experience deep attunement and resonance with God, my humanity must conform to the cruciform shape of Jesus’ life. This cross-shaped vision of the human escapes the humanistic capture of liberal theology because it stands as a sign of contradiction to all that we set up as visions of human flourishing, power, success, achievement, and well-being. The bloody body of Jesus exists as a prophetic indictment, one we experience as coming from a wholly other reality.
In short, Barth and Schleiermacher need to kiss because the voice of God is human, warm, and alive. We experience attunement and resonance. But that voice comes to us with a prophetic and paradoxical vision of the human. Being "fully human" is not what anyone had expected it to be.
.jpeg)













