44
It is very easy to explain how it comes about that Marheineke did not notice the secret meaning of this theological article or at least could not develop it with clear consciousness; he lives in the prison and does not know that he is a prisoner, is a prisoner even when he makes the pretence to himself as if he had all the free movement that man can only demand or make for the care of his health. He not only does not want "that theology be convulsively enclosed by religion, by faith from knowledge", he not only demands for religion "all freedom of inner movement, all independence on its own territory", but he is also, as we have already remarked, of the conviction that science is "set free" by the magnanimity and grace of the church. According to him, science is not the slave, but the freedwoman of the church, it is no longer subject to the car tel est notre bon plaisir of the church, but the authority which is set over it by the grace of God has, of its own resolve, in order to comply somewhat with modern ideas, most graciously octroyed freedom, voting rights and even the right of granting taxes, the right to determine the heavenly budget. By pointing to this octroyed charter, Marheineke says (p. 65): "if piety begins to judge theologically from faith alone, then judging thereby transforms itself into prejudging." However, the freedom which is only a gift of grace of the absolute lord is no real freedom, rather every moment, if it wants to prove itself as freedom, i.e., if it forgets its origin from grace, wants to disavow its origin, the lord has a right to intervene and to let the presumptuous freedwoman feel his superiority. This freedom, however, in fact always remembers at the right time its origin from grace, it confesses its dependence from above and then says: "the teachings and truths of religion want to be known, proven i.e. comprehended", i.e., the will of religion is the decisive thing, philosophy must obey, religion wants its truths to be proven and philosophy most obediently presupposes that the knowledge of religion is its proof, the proof of its correctness, the proof of the correctness of the religious presuppositions. Religion wants it so and philosophy throws itself into the arms which convulsively enclose it. Philosophy no longer has the right to give itself the determination which lies in its essence, to know and to let it depend solely on what the result of its research is, but religion prescribes to it what it has to do, and its determination is now (p. 38) "to justify the Christian teachings before reason", as if it were established that the knowledge of religion would prove the presuppositions of the same as correct. Of course it is established; but only because religion wants it so, because religion prescribes it so and philosophy "convulsively encloses in its arms." Here, on this standpoint of obedient philosophy, religion exercises the harshest tyranny and its exertion of force is the greatest, since it has to bring a freedwoman, who had already completely renounced it, back to reason or rather to unreason.
[Notes for 44 here]