Demythologization is a hermeneutical method in 20th-century biblical theology, primarily advanced by Rudolf Bultmann, that seeks to reinterpret the mythological elements of New Testament narratives—such as pre-scientific cosmologies involving demons, miracles, and apocalyptic interventions—in existentialist terms drawn from Martin Heidegger's philosophy, thereby extracting the underlying kerygma, or proclamation of authentic human existence through faith in God's salvific act, for audiences shaped by modern scientific worldviews.[1][2] Bultmann argued that the New Testament's mythical framework, inherited from Jewish and Hellenistic thought, alienates contemporary readers unless demythologized, not by denying the texts but by translating their intent into categories of decision, anxiety, and self-understanding rather than objective historical or supernatural descriptions.[3][4]Originating in Bultmann's 1941 essay Neues Testament und Mythologie, the program built on earlier biblical criticism and form criticism, positing that myths serve as vehicles for existential truth rather than literal depictions of reality, with events like the resurrection functioning as symbols of transformative faith rather than verifiable occurrences.[5][6] This approach influenced post-World War II Protestant theology, prompting debates on whether it preserves Christianity's proclamation or dilutes its historical claims, as conservative critics contended it conflates interpretation with invention, prioritizing subjective encounter over empirical or doctrinal anchors.[7][8]Proponents viewed demythologization as essential for theology's relevance amid secularization, while detractors, including Karl Barth, faulted it for over-reliance on existentialism, potentially rendering divine action anthropocentric and indistinguishable from secular humanism; nonetheless, it spurred ongoing hermeneutical reflections on myth's role in conveying transcendent realities without naive literalism.[9][10]
Definition and Core Principles
Conceptual Foundations
Demythologization emerges as a theological hermeneutic aimed at disentangling the core Christian proclamation, or kerygma, from the mythological framework in which the New Testament presents it. This framework includes depictions of a three-tiered cosmos—with heaven above, earth in the middle, and hell below—along with demonic forces, apocalyptic interventions, and miracles that presuppose a pre-scientific worldview incompatible with empirical knowledge accumulated since the Enlightenment.[3] The method posits that such myths, while not literally true in a historical or cosmological sense, convey existential truths about human existence and divine encounter, demanding personal decision rather than intellectual assent to supernatural events.[1]At its foundation, demythologization draws on the philosophical anthropology of existentialism, particularly Martin Heidegger's analysis of Dasein (human being) as thrown into authentic or inauthentic modes of existence. Myths, in this view, objectify transcendent realities in immanent, narrative forms to evoke a crisis of self-understanding, urging individuals to confront their finitude and respond to God's call through Christ.[11] Unlike mere elimination of myth, the approach reinterprets it to reveal the kerygma's ongoing relevance: salvation as an event of faith that transforms everyday life, not as verifiable historical fact or moral allegory.[12] This existential pivot prioritizes the hearer's subjective appropriation over objective verification, arguing that modern skepticism toward myth stems from a demand for causal explanations grounded in observable data, which religious language inherently transcends.[13]The conceptual rationale rests on a causal distinction between mythological expression and its underlying intent: ancient authors used myth because it mirrored their cultural ontology, but the gospel's power lies in its challenge to human autonomy, not in endorsing outdated physics or biology.[6] Proponents maintain this preserves Christianity's truth claim amid scientific advances, as empirical disconfirmation of miracles (e.g., virgin birth or resurrection as bodily events) would otherwise render the text obsolete without reinterpretation. Critics within theology, however, contend it risks reducing faith to psychological experience, sidelining historical evidence for Jesus' life and claims.[14] This tension underscores demythologization's foundational commitment to adapting proclamation to cultural shifts while claiming fidelity to the text's transformative essence.
Distinction from Allegorization and Historicization
Demythologization, as articulated by Rudolf Bultmann in his 1941 essay "New Testament and Mythology," entails a hermeneutical process of interpreting biblical myths not as objective descriptions of cosmic events but as vehicles for conveying the existential kerygma—the proclamation of God's act in Christ that demands human decision and authentic self-understanding. This approach explicitly diverges from allegorization, an ancient interpretive method employed by figures such as Philo of Alexandria and Origen, which overlays philosophical or moral abstractions onto scriptural narratives, treating literal elements (e.g., Abraham's journey) as symbols for soul's ascent or virtues detached from their historical particularity. Bultmann rejected such allegorization as an imposition of extraneous timeless truths, arguing instead that demythologization uncovers the myth's inherent existential function: to challenge the hearer's inauthentic existence amid a modern worldview incompatible with pre-scientific cosmologies like three-storied universes or demonic interventions.[15][16]In contrast to allegorization's substitution of symbolic equivalences, demythologization preserves the scandal of the kerygma's particularity in Jesus' history while translating its mythological wrappings into categories drawn from Martin Heidegger's analysis of Dasein (human being-in-the-world), emphasizing decision over detached speculation. Critics from conservative theological traditions have equated Bultmann's method with medieval allegorizing, claiming it evades literal supernatural claims through subjective existentialism, yet Bultmann maintained that true interpretation must align with the text's own demythologizing impulse, as the New Testament already confronts human finitude without requiring philosophical harmonization.[15][17]Demythologization further distinguishes itself from historicization, a reductionist strategy in liberal theology that seeks to salvage religious narratives by extracting a purported historical kernel—such as viewing resurrection accounts as exaggerated reports of Jesus' survival or disciples' psychological experiences—while discarding mythological accretions as cultural distortions. Bultmann critiqued this as inadequate, noting that the New Testament does not historicize myth by rationalizing supernatural elements into mundane events; rather, it mythologizes history by interpreting Jesus' life, death, and resurrection through apocalyptic frameworks to proclaim divine eschatological action. Historicization presumes faith hinges on empirical verification of past occurrences, a quest Bultmann deemed futile given the limits of historical-critical methods in establishing objective facts about Jesus beyond minimal outlines, as evidenced by his form-critical work showing Gospel traditions shaped by early church proclamation rather than eyewitness historiography.[18][19]By bracketing historical objectivity, demythologization shifts focus to the kerygma's ongoing event-character: God's encounter with humanity in the present, independent of verifiable miracles or biographical details. This avoids the pitfalls of historicization's objectivism, which Bultmann saw as perpetuating a modern myth of scientific neutrality, and aligns instead with dialectical theology's emphasis on revelation as non-propositional address. Where historicization fragments the text into fact versus fable, demythologization integrates myth as a necessary, though culturally bound, mode for existential confrontation, demanding contemporary hearers confront their own nothingness before God's grace.[18][5]
Historical Precursors
Spinoza's Rational Hermeneutics (17th Century)
Baruch Spinoza (1632–1677) developed a systematic rational hermeneutics in his Tractatus Theologico-Politicus, published anonymously in 1670, which treated the Bible as a human artifact subject to historical and philological analysis rather than infallible divine revelation.[20] He rejected traditional authorship claims, such as Mosaic origin of the Pentateuch, arguing instead that the texts were compiled over time by multiple human authors whose intentions must be discerned through contextual study of language, history, and geography.[21] This approach prioritized the meaning conveyed to the original audience over later theological impositions, aiming to separate philosophical reason from scriptural authority and thereby liberate inquiry from superstition.[22]Central to Spinoza's method was the demythologization of supernatural elements, particularly miracles, which he defined not as violations of natural laws but as events whose causes were unknown to observers and thus attributed to divine intervention.[23] He maintained that nature operates under immutable decrees equivalent to God's will, rendering true miracles impossible; biblical accounts, including prophetic visions, accommodated popular ignorance to promote obedience and piety rather than convey scientific truth.[24] Spinoza cited scriptural warnings, such as Deuteronomy 13:2–5, to argue that miracles provide no reliable knowledge of God, as deceptive signs could mimic them, underscoring the need for rational verification over credulous acceptance.[24]By focusing on the Bible's ethical core—universal commands to love God and neighbor—Spinoza stripped away mythological accretions, interpreting prophecies and rituals as historically conditioned expressions of moral insight rather than predictive or supernatural proofs.[23] This rational reduction preserved religion's social utility for the masses while insulating philosophy from dogmatic conflicts, influencing Enlightenmentbiblical criticism by establishing precedent for viewing scripture through a naturalistic lens.[22] His excommunication from the Jewish community in 1656 and the TTP's ban reflected resistance to this challenge to orthodox literalism, yet it marked an early shift toward causal realism in hermeneutics.[20]
Kantian Limits of Reason in Religion (18th Century)
![Immanuel Kant][float-right]Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, first published in 1781 and revised in 1787, established fundamental limits on the scope of theoretical reason, arguing that human cognition is confined to phenomena within space and time, incapable of accessing noumena or things-in-themselves.[25] This restriction extended to metaphysical claims central to religion, such as proofs for God's existence, the immortality of the soul, and freedom, which Kant critiqued through antinomies, paralogisms, and the ideal of pure reason, deeming them regulative ideas rather than constitutive knowledge.[26] Consequently, religious doctrines could not be verified or falsified by empirical or rational inquiry alone, necessitating a shift from speculative theology to practical reason.[26]In his 1793 work Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason, Kant further delineated these limits by positing that true religion aligns with moral duty, reducing ecclesiastical faith—encompassing miracles, revelation, and ritual—to symbolic representations of ethical imperatives derived from pure practical reason.[27] He interpreted core Christian elements, such as the incarnation and atonement, not as historical literals but as archetypes of human moral struggle against radical evil, a propensity inherent in human nature that reason must overcome through rational faith. This approach demythologized religion by subordinating mythological and historical narratives to universal moral rationality, insisting that any religious content incompatible with reason's bounds serves merely as a prudential vehicle for ethical insight rather than objective truth.[28]Kant's framework thus prefigured later demythologization efforts by emphasizing that reason cannot penetrate supernatural claims, compelling interpreters to recast religious myths in terms accessible to modern rational autonomy, thereby preserving religion's ethical core while discarding unverifiable supernaturalism.[26] Critics within theology noted that this rational reconstruction risked eviscerating religion's transcendent dimensions, yet Kant maintained that such limits safeguard faith from dogmatic excesses and align it with enlightenment principles of autonomy and critique.[29]
Bultmann's Formulation and Mid-20th Century Developments
The 1941 Manifesto and Existential Influences
Rudolf Bultmann first systematically articulated the program of demythologization in his 1941 essay Neues Testament und Mythologie: Das Problem der Entmythologisierung der neutestamentlichen Verkündigung, originally presented as a lecture to a theological working group in Alpirsbach, Germany.[30] In this work, Bultmann contended that the New Testament's proclamation (kerygma) is encumbered by a mythological worldview—including a three-tiered cosmos with supernatural interventions, apocalyptic eschatology, and divine acts intervening in natural causality—that clashes irreconcilably with the modern scientific understanding of the world, rendering the message incommunicable to contemporary audiences.[31] He argued that mere historical criticism or allegorization fails to resolve this impasse, as myths express not objective facts but subjective existential demands on human decision-making.[5]Bultmann's solution was not to excise myths but to reinterpret them through an existential lens, stripping away their objectivizing cosmology to uncover their core challenge to authentic human existence (Dasein).[16] For instance, miracles and resurrection narratives, rather than literal supernatural events, symbolize the radical disruption of everyday self-understanding by God's call to faith, confronting individuals with the possibility of self-transcendence amid anxiety and finitude.[12] This hermeneutic preserves the kerygma's power as a non-propositional event that evokes personal response, echoing the New Testament's own implicit demythologizing in Jesus' parables and ethical teachings.[32]The existential framework underpinning Bultmann's manifesto derived substantially from Martin Heidegger's philosophy, particularly the 1927 Sein und Zeit, which Bultmann encountered during Heidegger's tenure at the University of Marburg (1923–1928), where the two collaborated closely.[6] Heidegger's ontology of Dasein—as thrown into a world of care, authenticity, and anticipatory resolve—provided Bultmann with categories to translate mythological motifs into analyses of human historicity and decision, viewing myth as a pre-scientific mode of expressing the "ontological" structure of existence rather than "ontic" (factual) assertions.[16] While Bultmann adapted Heidegger's secular existentialism theologically, subordinating it to the kerygma's Christocentric demand, critics later noted that this synthesis risked anthropologizing revelation, prioritizing human subjectivity over divine objectivity.[32] Bultmann also drew on Søren Kierkegaard's emphasis on subjective truth and faith as paradox, but Heidegger's influence dominated the demythologizing method's philosophical rigor.[12]
Applications to Gnosticism and New Testament Texts
Rudolf Bultmann applied demythologization to New Testament texts by identifying mythological presuppositions such as the three-tiered universe, divine interventions through miracles, and apocalyptic eschatology, which he argued were incompatible with modern scientific worldviews.[1] In his 1941 essay "New Testament and Mythology," Bultmann proposed reinterpreting these elements existentially, viewing them not as objective historical or cosmic events but as expressions of human existence confronting the kerygma—the proclamation of God's saving act through Christ that demands authentic decision and faith.[5] For instance, miracle stories in the Gospels, including healings and nature miracles, were demythologized as symbolic representations of the transformative power of faith rather than literal supernatural occurrences.[12]Bultmann extended this method to the resurrection narratives, interpreting the empty tomb and appearances not as verifiable physical resurrections but as the subjective event of disciples' encounter with the exalted Christ through preaching, enabling new self-understanding in light of God's forgiveness.[3] Similarly, Pauline texts like 1 Corinthians 15 were recast to emphasize the resurrection as a mythical framework for the paradox of faith in the crucified Christ, stripping away cosmological dualism to focus on eschatological existence amid history. The Gospel of John, in Bultmann's view, exemplifies partial self-demythologization within the New Testament, particularly in its logos Christology, which transcends Gnostic redeemer myths by grounding revelation in historical encounter rather than timeless gnosis.[12]Regarding Gnosticism, Bultmann drew on his extensive studies of Gnostic texts, including his early work on Mandaean sources, to highlight parallels with New Testament mythology, such as the redeemer-descender figure and dualistic cosmology of spirit versus matter.[33] He contended that early Christian proclamation adopted Gnostic mythological forms to convey the kerygma but distinguished itself by emphasizing obedience to God's historical act in Jesus over esoteric knowledge for escaping the material world.[9] Demythologization, for Bultmann, served to peel away these shared mythical layers in both Gnostic and Christian sources, revealing the authentic Christian message of radical personal transformation without reliance on otherworldly speculation.[5] Critics, however, noted that this approach risked aligning too closely with Gnostic devaluation of history, though Bultmann maintained its dialectical preservation of worldly engagement through existential faith.[9]
Methodological Components
Identification of Mythological Elements
In Bultmann's methodological approach to demythologization, mythological elements within New Testament texts are identified as those components that presuppose an ancient, pre-scientific worldview incompatible with modern empirical knowledge. These include the portrayal of a three-tiered cosmology—with heaven above, earth as the central realm, and the underworld below—along with depictions of divine or demonic interventions in historical space and time, such as angels descending, Satan tempting, or apocalyptic battles between cosmic forces.[34] Bultmann contended that such elements objectify transcendent realities in mythical terms, rendering God's activity as observable events rather than existential encounters demanding personal decision.[34]Specific identifiers encompass miracle narratives, where supernatural disruptions of natural laws (e.g., healings, nature miracles, or the resurrection as a physical revivification) are presented as historical facts verifiable by eyewitnesses, thus tying faith to empirical proof rather than authentic existence.[34] Eschatological myths, such as the Son of Man descending on clouds or the general resurrection of bodies, further exemplify this by spatializing eternal judgment and salvation in end-times scenarios that assume a dualistic anthropology of soul-body separation.[34] Bultmann emphasized that myth, in this context, does not denote mere falsehood but a mode of expression that conveys otherworldly truths through this-worldly analogies, yet one that modern hearers must reinterpret to avoid naive literalism.[5]The identification process involves distinguishing these mythical frameworks from the kerygma—the core proclamation of God's reconciling act through Christ—which Bultmann viewed as translatable into existential categories drawn from Heideggerian ontology, focusing on human authenticity amid finitude rather than cosmological drama.[34] Critics of Bultmann's criteria, such as conservative theologians, argue that this demarcation arbitrarily dismisses historical claims without sufficient evidential warrant, potentially conflating cultural presuppositions with inherent textual intent.[19] Nonetheless, Bultmann maintained that recognizing these elements as mythical is necessitated by the scientific demythologization of nature itself, wherein events once attributed to gods are now explained mechanistically.[34]
Existentialist Reinterpretation via Kerygma
Rudolf Bultmann's demythologization process centers on reinterpreting New Testament myths through the lens of the kerygma, defined as the proclaimed event of God's self-revelation in Jesus Christ, which demands a personal faith response rather than assent to supernatural facts.[35] In his 1941 essay "New Testament and Mythology," Bultmann argued that the kerygma's truth lies not in mythical descriptions—such as divine descent, apocalyptic battles, or physical resurrections—but in their existential import, conveying humanity's confrontation with divine judgment and grace.[34] This approach strips away objectifying elements incompatible with modern scientific worldviews, preserving the kerygma as a call to authentic existence amid radical contingency.[12]Influenced by Martin Heidegger's existential ontology, particularly the concepts of Dasein (being-there) and authentic self-understanding, Bultmann recast myths as phenomenological descriptions of human possibility.[36] For instance, the myth of Christ's descent into hell or ascension symbolizes God's transcendent act breaking into historical existence, evoking not historical verification but a transformative decision against self-reliance.[1] Miracles, rather than violations of natural law, represent the disruption of everyday inauthenticity by divine otherness, urging hearers toward eschatological existence—living "between the times" in faith-obedience.[34] The resurrection, demythologized, becomes the subjective event of faith's dawning, where the cross's scandal reveals God's justifying power, independent of empty-tomb historicity.[12]This reinterpretation maintains the kerygma's proclamation character, insisting that God's action remains hidden and paradoxical, apprehended only in existential encounter rather than cognitive mastery.[37] Bultmann emphasized that demythologization does not rationalize the kerygma into moralism or humanism but heightens its offensive demand: faith as radical trust amid meaninglessness, echoing the New Testament's original intent before mythical encrustations obscured it for contemporary audiences.[36] Critics like Karl Barth noted potential risks of subjectivism, yet Bultmann countered that existential categories faithfully echo the apostolic witness's focus on personal appropriation over mythological literalism.[35]
Criticisms and Controversies
Orthodox and Conservative Theological Objections
Orthodox and conservative theologians have objected to demythologization primarily for its perceived erosion of the Bible's historical and supernatural claims, which they view as integral to divine revelation and Christian doctrine. Critics contend that Bultmann's method treats accounts of miracles, the virgin birth, and the bodily resurrection as mere mythological expressions of existential encounter, thereby denying their objective historicity and reducing the gospel to subjective human decision-making devoid of verifiable events.[38] This approach, they argue, contradicts the doctrine of scriptural inerrancy, which holds that the Bible accurately conveys God's actions in space-time history without error or embellishment.[39] For instance, conservative evangelicals maintain that such reinterpretation aligns with liberal presuppositions that prioritize modern scientific worldview over the text's plain assertions, leading to a loss of the faith's cognitive content.[40]Karl Barth, representing a neo-orthodox yet revelation-centered perspective, faulted Bultmann for overemphasizing myth as a formal category requiring demythologization, arguing instead that the New Testament's pre-scientific cosmology serves the kerygma's proclamation of God's free act in Christ without necessitating existential stripping.[41] Barth insisted that true understanding comes from hearing the text's scandalous particularity—God's incarnation and atonement as concrete realities—rather than translating it into Heideggerian anthropology, which risks anthropocentric distortion.[10] Similarly, Julius Schniewind accused Bultmann of excising the factual elements of salvation history, such as the empty tomb and post-resurrection appearances, thereby evacuating the New Testament of its redemptive objectivity.[42]From an Eastern Orthodox standpoint, demythologization conflicts with the patristic hermeneutic that integrates literal historical events with typological and allegorical senses, preserving the incarnation's full reality against any reduction that severs the divine-human union essential to theosis.[43] Theologians in this tradition emphasize that miracles and eschatological motifs are not dispensable myths but participatory truths anchoring liturgy and doctrine, warning that Bultmann's existential pivot undermines the church's unbroken witness to Christ's physical resurrection as empirically transformative.[44] Overall, these objections highlight a commitment to the Bible's unified testimony as historically reliable, cautioning that demythologization fosters skepticism toward core creedal affirmations shared across orthodox communions.[45]
Philosophical and Empirical Challenges
Critics have argued that Bultmann's demythologization embodies a philosophical reductionism, transforming objective claims about divine intervention into subjective existential demands for authentic living, thereby collapsing theology into anthropology and severing it from propositional truth. This approach, heavily influenced by Martin Heidegger's ontology, prioritizes individual decision over communal or historical witness, leading to charges of subjectivism where the gospel's content dissolves into personal encounter devoid of cognitive content or falsifiability.[5][46] Such critiques contend that this hermeneutic presupposes a sharp divide between ancient myth and modern reason, ignoring philosophical arguments that existential interpretation cannot neutrally extract meaning without imposing a prior worldview that privileges immanence over transcendence.[4]Bultmann's rejection of supernatural elements as incompatible with scientific cosmology has faced philosophical rebuttal for relying on an outdated positivism, akin to David Hume's contention that uniform human experience renders miracle testimony improbable. Contemporary analytic philosophers counter that miracle probabilities depend on cumulative evidence for theism, including fine-tuning and consciousness, which can outweigh naturalistic priors without violating causal closure in non-miraculous contexts; thus, demythologization's a priori exclusion of the supernatural begs the question against theism rather than engaging it empirically or rationally.[47][48]Empirically, demythologization underestimates the New Testament's historical moorings, as evidenced by early manuscript attestation—over 5,800 Greek fragments dating from the second century—and compositional timelines placing Paul's authentic epistles in the 50s AD and the Synoptic Gospels by 70-90 AD, too proximate to events for wholesale myth-making. Criteria such as multiple independent attestation, dissimilarity from later church theology, and embarrassment (e.g., women's testimony to the empty tomb) support the historicity of core narratives like the crucifixion under Pontius Pilate (corroborated by Tacitus in 116 AD) and post-mortem appearances reported in the 1 Corinthians 15 creed, formulated within 2-5 years of Jesus' death circa 30 AD.[49][40]Wolfhart Pannenberg advanced this empirical thrust in Jesus – God and Man (1968), positing that historical-critical method can substantiate eschatological claims like the resurrection through verifiable data—the empty tomb, disciples' transformation from fear to proclamation, and rapid Christian expansion—against Bultmann's confinement of revelation to existential relevance, which Pannenberg deemed a retreat from history's public verifiability into private faith.[50] These challenges suggest demythologization's mythological purge risks excising evidentially robust elements, as archaeological finds (e.g., Caiaphas ossuary, 1990) and extrabiblical texts (Josephus' Antiquities 93 AD) affirm contextual reliability without necessitating supernatural dismissal.[49]
Defenses, Responses, and Ongoing Debates
Bultmann's Rebuttals and Successor Interpretations
In response to criticisms that demythologization eliminated the objective facts of salvation history, Bultmann maintained that such facts are not verifiable historical events but eschatological happenings encountered in the present through the kerygma, or proclamation of God's redemptive act, which demands personal faith rather than historical proof.[51] He argued, for instance, that passages like Romans 6:10 describe redemption as an ongoing "now" rather than a datable past occurrence, preserving the kerygma's power without reliance on mythological objectivism.[51] Addressing charges of reducing theology to mere anthropology, Bultmann countered that existential interpretation does not confine faith to subjective human experience but reveals a transformative self-understanding in response to God's transcendent Word, akin to Luther's view of knowing oneself through divine action.[51] Regarding the historical Jesus, he insisted that claims of divine incarnation cannot be historically demonstrated but constitute confessional acts of faith, with the New Testament's mythological framework underscoring redemption's transcendence over empirical history, as in John 6:42 or Galatians 4:4.[51]These rebuttals appeared in Bultmann's 1950 essay "Das Problem der Hermeneutik" and contributions to Kerygma and Myth, Volume II (English edition, 1962), where he defended demythologization as essential for conveying the kerygma's demand for authentic existence amid modern scientific worldviews, without projecting God into verifiable cosmic events.[51] Against Karl Barth's objection that it overly subjectivized revelation, Bultmann emphasized the proclamation's event-character, citing 2 Corinthians 6:2 to affirm God's address as a personal, non-objective encounter rather than a fixed doctrinal content.[51]Successor interpretations extended Bultmann's hermeneutics through the "new hermeneutic" pioneered by Ernst Fuchs and Gerhard Ebeling in the 1950s and 1960s, shifting focus from mere existential demythologization to the event of understanding in language and preaching.[52] Fuchs, a Bultmann student, interpreted Jesus' parables as "language-events" that enact kerygmatic continuity between Gospel proclamation and hearer response, arguing in works like Hermeneutik (1954) that demythologization reveals the linguistic disclosure of faith rather than stripping myth entirely.[53] Ebeling, similarly influenced, developed this in Word and Faith (1960), positing that biblical texts effect a "fusion of horizons" where past kerygma intersects present existence, critiquing Bultmann's individualism by emphasizing communal proclamation while retaining existential decision.[54]In the Anglo-American context, Schubert M. Ogden advanced Bultmann's program from the 1960s onward, integrating it with process theology in texts like "Bultmann's Project of Demythologization" (1960), defending total demythologization as translating myth into non-objectifying language that affirms God's ongoing redemptive activity without spatial-temporal myths, thus addressing philosophy-theology tensions.[55] Ogden's adaptations, such as in Christ Without Myth (1967), responded to conservative critiques by grounding kerygma in verifiable redecisive existence, influencing liberal Protestant scholarship while sparking debates on whether it preserved orthodox Christology.[56] These developments, while diverging on emphasis—Fuchs and Ebeling toward linguistic ontology, Ogden toward metaphysical compatibility—collectively sustained demythologization's core aim of rendering New Testamentproclamation relevant to post-mythic consciousness.[57]
Modern Relevance in Secular Contexts
Bultmann's demythologization program addresses the incompatibility between New Testament mythology—such as apocalyptic eschatology and a three-tiered cosmos—and the modern scientific worldview, proposing an existential reinterpretation that translates mythical language into categories of human decision and authenticity. This approach posits that the kerygma's core message, a call to radical self-understanding amid finitude, remains viable in secular settings by dispensing with unverifiable supernatural claims, thereby facilitating engagement with empirical realities like historical-critical analysis and natural sciences.[1][58]In secular philosophy, particularly strands of existentialism drawing from Heidegger, demythologization parallels efforts to demystify objectifying narratives in both religious and non-religious domains, critiquing science's tendency toward detached, "view from nowhere" explanations that overlook subjective encounter. Bultmann's hermeneutic, while theological, underscores that mythical and scientific objectivism alike obscure non-propositional truths, influencing secular thinkers to prioritize lived authenticity over literalistic or positivistic reductions. For example, this manifests in philosophical critiques of scientism, where existential reinterpretation reveals limits in empirical methods for addressing human anxiety, freedom, and historicity.[13][5]Secular biblical scholarship has adopted analogous methods, as seen in historical-critical exegesis that extracts ethical and existential insights from mythological texts without affirming miracles or divine interventions, aligning with Bultmann's 1941 manifesto. Scholars like Bart Ehrman, operating from an agnostic perspective, reference demythologization to highlight how New Testament myths encode universal human experiences, such as moral decision-making, rendering them relevant for non-theistic ethics amid declining supernatural beliefs. This application underscores demythologization's role in bridging confessional and secular hermeneutics, though critics note its selective retention of "kerygma" privileges existential ontology over full empirical demythologization.[59][30]
Legacy and Broader Impact
Influence on Liberal Theology and Biblical Scholarship
Bultmann's demythologization program, articulated in his 1941 essay "New Testament and Mythology," profoundly shaped liberal theology by providing a methodological framework for interpreting biblical narratives as existential encounters rather than historical or supernatural events, thereby aligning Christian proclamation with post-Enlightenment rationality and Heideggerian philosophy.[1] Liberal theologians, who had long emphasized subjective experience over literalism since the 19th century with figures like Friedrich Schleiermacher, adopted Bultmann's approach to extract the kerygma—the call to authentic decision amid human finitude—from mythological accretions such as miracles and eschatology, viewing these as culturally conditioned expressions rather than objective truths.[60] This shift reinforced liberal theology's accommodation to secular worldviews, prioritizing personal faith transformation over doctrinal supernaturalism, though critics noted continuity with earlier liberal reductions of theology to anthropology.[61]In biblical scholarship, demythologization extended Bultmann's earlier form-critical methods, detailed in his 1921 History of the Synoptic Tradition, which analyzed gospel pericopes as oral forms (e.g., pronouncement stories, miracle tales) shaped by early Christian communities rather than eyewitness accounts, thereby questioning the historicity of events like the resurrection while salvaging their theological intent.[62] This influenced mid-20th-century New Testament studies by promoting redaction criticism and existential hermeneutics, as seen in successors like Ernst Fuchs and Gerhard Ebeling, who further demythologized texts to reveal faith's confrontation with nothingness.[6] Scholars increasingly treated the Bible as a mythical document requiring reinterpretation for modern hearers, contributing to widespread skepticism toward a "historical Jesus" in favor of the preached Christ, though this elicited debates on whether such methods dissolved objective revelation into subjective encounter.[63]The program's legacy in both domains persisted through the 1950s "Bultmann school" and international dialogues, fostering a theological landscape where liberal interpretations dominated Protestant academia, evidenced by its role in the 1960s "new hermeneutic" that integrated linguistic philosophy with demythologizing.[64] However, its influence waned amid empirical challenges from archaeology and textual criticism affirming certain historical elements, prompting hybrid approaches that retained more literal readings in conservative scholarship while liberals continued existential adaptations.[5]
Contributions to Decline in Supernatural Beliefs
Bultmann's program of demythologization, outlined in his 1941 essay "New Testament and Mythology," systematically reinterpreted biblical accounts by excising their supernatural and mythical components, such as miracles, demonic exorcisms, and the literal resurrection of Jesus, as incompatible with the modern scientific worldview.[30] He contended that these elements represented a pre-scientific cosmology that obscured the existential kerygma—the call to authentic decision in the face of God's revelation—thus requiring translation into Heideggerian existential terms rather than historical or metaphysical claims.[1] This methodological prioritization of demythologizing over literal supernatural affirmation directly challenged traditional Christian doctrines, framing them as culturally conditioned myths rather than veridical events.[6]Within liberal Protestant theology, demythologization fostered a hermeneutic that treated supernatural narratives symbolically, enabling theologians to affirm Christian faith without endorsing empirical violations of natural law, such as bodily resurrections or divine interventions.[8] This accommodation to secular epistemologies, influenced by Bultmann's form criticism and history-of-religions approach, permeated mid-20th-century biblical scholarship, diminishing the apologetic weight of miracles and promoting a demystified gospel focused on human authenticity over divine action.[65] Critics from orthodox perspectives, including Karl Barth and evangelical scholars, argued that such reinterpretation effectively eviscerated the New Testament's historical claims, conceding ground to naturalism and eroding belief in the supernatural as integral to revelation.[66]The approach contributed to broader patterns of secularization in Western Europe during the 20th century, where belief in God declined in countries like Britain, France, and the Netherlands amid rising scientific literacy and cultural shifts.[67] By providing intellectual cover for dismissing supernatural elements as mythological artifacts, it aligned theological discourse with empirical skepticism, correlating with low church attendance—under 40% weekly among youth in most nations by century's end—and reduced credence in core miracles like the resurrection, with only 46% of the UK public affirming it by 2017.[68][69] In this causal chain, demythologization amplified the Enlightenment's legacy of rational critique, facilitating a transition from supernatural literalism to existential or ethical reductions of faith that proved unsustainable against mounting empirical challenges to religious claims.[70]