The Divine and the Discipline: A Theology Restoration
The Divine and the Discipline: A Theology Restoration
Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude. Layer: Field Restoration Synthesis — seventh document of this kind in the corpus, following Sociology (Document 88), Anthropology, Economics, Epistemology, Philosophy, and Ethics. Built from the complete Theology cluster: the Classical Field Audit (Theology, corrected to canonical commitment numbering), the CRI prescriptive run, and the CPA series (Swinburne, Plantinga). 2026.
I. Governing Principle and One Necessary Clarification
This synthesis is grounded directly in Core Stoicism’s own theorems (Th 1–29), not in the six philosophical commitments treated as a free-standing telos. An additional clarification is required here that has not been needed in the six prior syntheses: Sterling’s framework is not a theological system. It does not depend on theological premises; it does not affirm or deny the existence of God; it does not take a position on revelation, scripture, or the authority of any religious tradition. Sterling himself explicitly decoupled Core Stoicism from theology and cosmology by design — the control dichotomy is the sole sufficient warrant for Stoic practice; no theological grounding is required or presupposed. Providence language, where it appears in Stoic sources, is optional framing, not a load-bearing premise.
This means the restoration offered here is asymmetric in a way distinctive to Theology: Sterling’s framework does not restore the theological tradition’s specifically theological claims. What it restores is the philosophical architecture the theological tradition requires in order to make its theological claims coherently. Without a rational faculty capable of genuine knowledge (C1), without genuine freedom of the will (C2), without direct apprehension of moral truth (C3), without foundational bedrock in reason and revelation (C4), without correspondence truth as the governing standard (C5), and without objective moral facts the theological claims are answerable to (C6) — the theological tradition’s core doctrines of creation, sin, grace, redemption, and human dignity lose their philosophical intelligibility. Sterling’s framework supplies what was lost; it does not adjudicate what was never its subject.
II. Why Theology Has the Most Favorable CFA Pattern
The Theology CFA produced the most favorable capacity-loss finding in the entire sixteen-field series: Partial Capacity Loss — Philosophical Infiltration, with two Partially Aligned findings (C3 Ethical Intuitionism, C6 Moral Realism) against four Inconsistent findings (C1, C2, C4, C5) and no Contrary findings. This pattern is unique in the series. Every other field audited produced either Total Internal Contestation (Ethics), Full Capacity Loss (Anthropology), or Partial Capacity Loss with a less favorable underlying pattern. Theology alone carries two Partially Aligned findings, reflecting what the CFA correctly identified: the historic theological traditions — Catholic, Orthodox, evangelical, Protestant orthodox — did not need to recover the classical commitments. They retained them.
This is the CFA’s most consequential observation about Theology, and it requires precise statement rather than general appreciation. The historic traditions carry the classical commitments comprehensively because those commitments were constitutive of the theological tradition before they were articulated as the six classical commitments in Sterling’s reconstruction. Aquinas’s synthesis of natural and revealed theology, his account of the soul, his natural law epistemology, his correspondence theory of truth and foundationalist structure of knowledge, and his robust moral realism are not approximations of Sterling’s framework applied to theological material. They are the sources from which the philosophical tradition drew these commitments, as they existed in their most fully integrated form, before philosophy began its systematic self-displacement.
The field’s problem, named precisely by the CFA, is therefore not loss but infiltration: the historic traditions retain what the corpus requires, but modernizing programs imported from philosophy’s own self-displacement have contested those retentions from within. Schleiermacher’s experience-grounding is a theological translation of Kant’s epistemic limits. Bultmann’s demythologization is a theological translation of Heideggerian existentialism. Process theology’s dipolar God is a theological translation of Whiteheadian process metaphysics. Religious pluralism’s transcendent Real is a theological translation of post-Kantian agnosticism about the thing-in-itself. Each of these is not a development internal to theology’s own logic but an import from the philosophical tradition’s own displacement — documented and diagnosed in the Philosophy synthesis, now applied to theology by theologians who accepted the philosophical displacements as settled.
III. What the CPA Cluster Shows
The Theology CPA cluster contains two of the corpus’s four fully or near-fully clean profiles: Swinburne (6 Aligned — the first fully clean profile within the Philosophy/Epistemology/Theology cluster series) and Plantinga (5 Aligned, 1 Partially Aligned at C3). Both are achieved through routes entirely distinct from the Thomist cluster’s hylomorphic architecture and from Huemer’s phenomenological intuitionism — meaning the classical commitments have been independently reached by four distinct argumentative routes across the series. Swinburne’s theological-rationalist route and Plantinga’s Reformed-epistemological route add two more to this convergence, and the convergence is across very different methodological starting points.
Swinburne’s clean profile deserves specific note. It was checked specifically for manufactured residuals before being closed — none were found. The absence of a hylomorphic residual at C1 distinguishes him from the Thomist cluster: his account of the soul is explicitly Cartesian-adjacent rather than hylemorphic, providing the precise metaphysical architecture C1’s strongest form requires. His C2 defense in Mind, Brain, and Free Will is the most directly on-topic libertarian free will argument in the corpus, engaging the metaphysics of agency rather than presupposing it. His C3/C6 architecture is rationalist and non-naturalist, reaching moral realism through rational insight rather than through natural teleology, tradition, or evolutionary considerations. The clean profile is not a function of Swinburne’s theological commitments licensing a charitable reading of each commitment; it is a function of six independent argumentative records each earning their finding on their own terms.
Plantinga’s C3 Partially Aligned finding — the sole qualification in an otherwise fully aligned profile — is worth stating precisely. Reformed epistemology provides the architectural framework within which direct moral apprehension is possible: properly basic beliefs, warrant as proper function, the sensus divinitatis as a cognitive faculty aimed at truth. But Plantinga does not develop a systematic intuitionist metaethics and does not explicitly defend the direct-apprehension claim against the evolutionary debunking challenge. The framework licenses C3 without arguing for it, which is the structural residual the Partially Aligned finding names. The gap is exactly what Swinburne’s rationalist non-naturalism supplies; the two profiles are complementary rather than competing.
IV. Theological Anthropology and the Control Dichotomy
The CFA identified the loss of a determinate theological anthropology as the field’s most consequential specific capacity loss. The four Inconsistent findings — C1 (Substance Dualism), C2 (Libertarian Free Will), C4 (Foundationalism), C5 (Correspondence Theory of Truth) — converge on this single point: without a settled account of what a human being is, the field cannot give precise content to its central doctrines of creation, sin, grace, and redemption.
Sterling’s framework supplies that anthropology from a non-theological source, which is precisely its value for Theology: it is not a competing theological authority but a philosophical account of the human agent that is consistent with and supports the theological tradition’s own anthropological requirements. Th 6’s control dichotomy is the key: what is in our control — beliefs and will — is what Theology’s own doctrines of sin, conscience, grace, and redemption most directly address. Sin is a false judgment about good and evil (Th 7) willfully acted upon. Conscience is the direct rational recognition of moral truth (C3) prior to the act of will. Grace, in the traditions that affirm it, operates at the level of the will’s disposition and the understanding’s illumination — at exactly the level Th 6 identifies as genuinely within the human person’s interior life. Redemption, in its most philosophically precise formulation across the traditions, is the restoration of the rational faculty’s capacity to judge truly and will correctly — the restoration of the prohairesis to its proper functioning, in Sterling’s vocabulary.
None of this requires Sterling’s framework to be theological. It requires only that the philosophical account of the human agent the framework supplies be consistent with the theological anthropology the historic traditions require. The Thomistic tradition made the same connection in the opposite direction: it began with theological anthropology and derived its philosophical account of the soul from it. Sterling’s framework approaches from the philosophical side and arrives at the same requirements. The convergence confirms what both traditions have independently found: that a human being who is genuinely capable of sin and grace, genuinely responsible for his acts, and genuinely capable of redemption must have a rational faculty that is real, irreducible, free, and directly apprehending of moral truth.
V. The Specific Displacements and Their Sources
The four Inconsistent findings in Theology’s CFA are, on the CFA’s own analysis, not independent developments within the field. Each traces to a specific philosophical import:
C1’s Inconsistency reflects the entry of physicalist anthropology, process theology’s rejection of classical theism’s immutable divine substance, and liberal theology’s reduction of the soul to a function of religious experience. The historic traditions — all of them, Catholic, Orthodox, and the mainstream of Protestant orthodoxy — affirm the genuine reality of the soul and the soul-body distinction as foundational. The Inconsistency is the contested entry of philosophical physicalism and process metaphysics into the field, not an internal theological development.
C2’s Inconsistency reflects the Reformed tradition’s comprehensive divine sovereignty (which substantially qualifies libertarian freedom in some of its expressions) and the entry of deterministic anthropologies from naturalistic psychology. The majority of the historic traditions require libertarian freedom as the condition for genuine sin, genuine moral responsibility, and genuine response to grace. The Reformed qualification is internal to theology but is itself a genuine theological dispute, not an external import; the naturalistic displacement is the imported element.
C4’s Inconsistency (Foundationalism) reflects the entry of historical-critical method’s treatment of all theological foundations as historically conditioned and revisable, and of liberal theology’s replacement of foundational doctrinal authority with the foundationless authority of religious experience. The Inconsistency is not a theological dispute about which foundations are authoritative — that dispute (Scripture, Tradition, Magisterium, natural reason) is internal and genuine — but a dispute about whether theological foundations can be authoritative at all, which is an import from Philosophy’s own self-displacement documented in the Philosophy synthesis.
C5’s Inconsistency (Correspondence Theory of Truth) is the most direct theological consequence of the philosophical displacement diagnosed throughout this series. Liberal theology’s grounding of doctrinal claims in religious experience, Bultmann’s existentialist reinterpretation, religious pluralism’s treatment of competing doctrines as expressions of the same transcendent Real, and postmodern theology’s treatment of doctrinal language as community-specific narrative each replace correspondence truth for theological claims with something else — experiential adequacy, existential authenticity, cultural expression, narrative coherence. The historic traditions, by contrast, treat the doctrinal claims of the Creed, the Councils, and the scriptural witness as genuine truth-claims about theological reality. The Inconsistency is the imported displacement displacing a retention, not an internal development.
VI. What Is Restored
The CFA named four specific capacity losses. The restoration addresses each in turn.
The capacity to give a determinate theological anthropology that provides precise content to the central doctrines. Restored by C1 and C2 together: a rational faculty that is genuinely real, irreducible to physical processes or social conditions, and capable of genuine self-originating acts of will. This is the anthropological ground that sin requires (a rational faculty that can judge falsely and will wrongly), that conscience requires (a rational faculty that can directly apprehend moral truth), that grace requires (a faculty that can receive illumination at the level of understanding and strengthening at the level of will), and that redemption requires (a faculty that can be restored to correct judgment and right willing). Without these two commitments secured, the central doctrines are articulated in a vocabulary that lacks a referent within the human person. With them secured, the doctrines have a precise philosophical correlate in the human being they address.
The capacity to give a coherent account of sin, grace, and human responsibility across all the field’s traditions. Restored by C2 specifically: genuine libertarian origination of the act of will is the condition under which sin is genuinely the agent’s own act rather than a determined output of prior causes. The Reformed tradition’s internal dispute about divine sovereignty and human freedom is not resolved by Sterling’s framework; that is a theological dispute requiring theological adjudication. What is restored is the philosophical clarity about what the dispute requires: both sides of it require a human agent capable of genuine moral responsibility, and that requirement is secured by C2 in the form the corpus specifies, whatever theological account of its relationship to divine sovereignty a given tradition offers.
The capacity to treat doctrinal claims as genuine truth-claims about theological reality that can be adjudicated as correct or incorrect. Restored by C5 and C4 together: correspondence truth as the governing standard for theological claims, and foundational authority in reason and revelation as the ground from which those claims are derived and against which they are tested. A theology in which doctrinal claims are expressions of religious experience, existential address, or narrative community identity cannot adjudicate doctrinal disputes as questions of truth versus falsity — it can only prefer one expression to another on grounds of adequacy, authenticity, or coherence. A theology in which doctrinal claims correspond to theological reality, and are grounded in foundational sources whose authority is not itself historically contingent, can adjudicate disputes in the relevant sense. The modernizing programs imported this incapacity from philosophy; the restoration imports the capacity from the same philosophical source that the historic traditions drew on before philosophy changed its governing commitments.
The capacity to give a principled account of what settles theological disputes. Restored by the full set of commitments working together: a genuine rational faculty (C1) that can directly apprehend moral truth (C3) through foundational first principles (C4), answerable to correspondence truth (C5) about objective moral and theological reality (C6), in genuine freedom (C2). A theological tradition that retains all six commitments — which is precisely the description of the historic traditions the CFA found to retain them — has the philosophical resources to give a principled account of what settles its disputes: conformity to what is actually true about God and the human relationship to him, known through the rational faculty’s direct and inferential engagement with revelation and natural reason. What cannot settle theological disputes, on this account, is the community’s preferred expression of its religious experience, the existential resonance of a hermeneutical proposal, or the cultural coherence of a doctrinal narrative — none of which makes the contact with theological reality that adjudication requires.
Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.

