A1 — Prolegomenon: The Theological Form of Moral Identity Collapse
The preceding papers in this series have analyzed moral identity collapse as a cognitive, social, and institutional phenomenon—a cascade driven by identifiable pressures and sustained by identifiable feedback mechanisms. This appendix undertakes the same analysis from within the resources of the biblical and theological tradition, with the aim of demonstrating that what the earlier papers identified as a failure of moral and social reasoning is, at its deepest level, a theological failure: a functional denial of the doctrine of imago Dei, operating even in contexts where that doctrine is verbally affirmed.
The distinction between functional denial and verbal affirmation is essential to the argument of this appendix and must be established at the outset. A community may maintain the doctrine of imago Dei in its formal theological statements, its catechetical instruction, and its liturgical language while systematically violating its content in the actual conduct of its moral and social reasoning. The criterion for genuine affirmation of the doctrine is not whether it appears in a statement of faith or is regularly invoked in sermons; it is whether the doctrine actually functions as a constraint upon the treatment of persons—whether it operates as the load-bearing moral concept it is designed to be, producing determinate outcomes in contested cases rather than serving as decorative theological vocabulary. When the conduct of a community—in its speech, its judgments, its social enforcement practices, and its formation of its members—systematically treats certain persons as reducible to their worst belief or action, or as having been placed by their moral failures outside the bounds of meaningful moral community, that community has engaged in what must be called de facto ontological expulsion, regardless of what its doctrinal statements assert.
This is the theological form of moral identity collapse: the practical removal of the ontological floor that the imago Dei establishes beneath all human worth, enacted not through explicit theological revision but through the accumulated practices of moral discourse that treat the cascade’s characteristic operations—identity fusion, ontological judgment, and social enforcement—as expressions of moral seriousness rather than as violations of theological anthropology.
The framing scriptural texts for this appendix are two. The first is Genesis 1:26–27, which establishes the imago Dei as the universal ground of human status in the act of creation. The second is James 3:9, which draws the direct practical implication of that doctrine for the conduct of speech and judgment: “With it we bless our Lord and Father, and with it we curse people who are made in the likeness of God” (ESV). James’s observation is not merely an ethical complaint about inconsistency; it is a theological indictment. To curse human beings—to deploy against them the totalizing condemnatory language that the cascade’s terminal stages characteristically produce—is, in James’s account, a spiritual disorder, a violation not merely of social norms but of the doctrine of the divine image. The theological appendix that follows works out the full implications of this indictment across the range of scriptural, doctrinal, and practical-theological terrain that the doctrine of imago Dei occupies.
The problem that this appendix addresses is the convergence of two tendencies that are, individually, defensible but that, in combination, produce the theological form of moral identity collapse. The first is the intensification of moral judgment—the sharpening of the categories of right and wrong, the seriousness with which wrongdoing is identified and condemned, and the urgency with which those condemnations are communicated. This tendency is, in itself, not only permissible but required by biblical ethics: the prophetic tradition, the wisdom literature, the teaching of Jesus Christ, and the apostolic letters all model and demand serious moral engagement that does not shrink from naming wrong as wrong. The second tendency is the erosion of theological anthropology—the progressive diminishment of the practical force of the imago Dei as a constraint upon how persons, including those engaged in serious wrongdoing, may be treated and addressed. When these two tendencies converge—when the intensification of moral judgment proceeds simultaneously with the erosion of theological anthropology—the result is a discourse that retains the vocabulary of moral seriousness while losing the doctrinal framework that gives that seriousness its proper form and its proper limits.
A2 — The Scriptural Foundations of Imago Dei: Creation and Universal Human Status
The doctrine of imago Dei is grounded in the creation narrative of Genesis 1, and specifically in the divine declaration of Genesis 1:26–27: “Then God said, ‘Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.’ So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them” (ESV). The theological weight of this passage in the broader biblical canon is difficult to overstate. It establishes the most fundamental anthropological category available to the biblical tradition—the category of being human—and it defines that category by reference to a specific relationship: the bearing of the image of the God who creates.
Several doctrinal observations are essential to the proper theological deployment of this text.
The first is universality. The image is given to humanity as such—to ha’adam, the human being as a collective category—and not to any subset of humanity defined by moral performance, social status, ethnic identity, or any other differentiating characteristic. The text offers no qualification that would restrict the image to those who are righteous, or to those who belong to a particular covenantal community, or to those whose lives reflect the values the image is understood to carry. The image is the mark of the human being as such, and every human being possesses it by virtue of being human. This universality is not incidental; it is the feature that makes the imago Dei capable of performing its function as a constraint upon the treatment of all persons, regardless of their moral standing or communal membership.
The second observation concerns what may be called the non-revocability of the image, at least as implicitly established in the canonical shape of the scriptural witness. There is no post-creation text in which the imago Dei is explicitly revoked—no passage in which God declares that a particular individual or group has, by their conduct, forfeited the image and the dignity it confers. This canonical silence is theologically significant. It is consistent with the understanding, developed below in the treatment of Genesis 9 and James 3, that the image persists even after the fall and even in the face of serious moral failure. The absence of revocation is not merely an argument from silence; it is a feature of the canonical structure that coheres with the positive affirmations of the image’s persistence found in the post-fall texts.
The third observation concerns the ground of human worth that the imago Dei establishes. Human dignity, in the framework established by Genesis 1:26–27, derives from the divine relation—from the fact that the human being is created in the image of God—and not from any feature of human performance, achievement, or social recognition. This grounding is essential to the doctrine’s function as an absolute constraint. If human dignity derived from moral performance, it would be contingent upon the maintenance of that performance and revocable upon its failure; the cascade’s ontological downgrade would be theologically available as the appropriate response to moral failure. It is precisely because the dignity derives from the divine image—from a status conferred by the Creator in the act of creation—that it cannot be revoked by any human judgment, including the accurate moral assessment that a person has acted wickedly.
The supporting texts that extend the function of the imago Dei beyond the creation narrative are equally important for establishing the doctrine’s canonical range. Genesis 9:6 grounds the prohibition of murder explicitly in the image: “Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed, for God made man in his own image” (ESV). This is a post-flood text, addressed to humanity after the catastrophic moral failure of the generations preceding the flood—addressed, that is, to a humanity whose capacity for wickedness has been demonstrated on a scale that defies comprehension. Yet the image is invoked here not as a reward for righteousness but as a universal given that constrains the taking of human life even in a world saturated with moral failure. The image survives the flood. It survives the knowledge of what human beings are capable of doing. It remains the ground of the prohibition against murder because it remains an unrevoked feature of every human being, regardless of what that human being has done.
Psalm 8 extends the anthropological vision of Genesis 1 in the direction of wonder: “You have made him a little lower than the heavenly beings and crowned him with glory and honor” (Psalm 8:5, ESV). The psalmist’s reflection on human dignity is not an empirical observation about human moral performance—the psalmist is not claiming that human beings characteristically behave in ways worthy of the crown they bear—but a theological affirmation about human status in the order of creation. The crown is given, not earned; it belongs to human beings as such, not as a recognition of their achievements. This affirmation operates as a doxological intensification of the Genesis account, embedding the imago Dei in the context of worship and wonder rather than merely in the context of legal and ethical reasoning, and thereby expanding its formational significance beyond the cognitive to the affective and the liturgical.
The theological function of imago Dei as established in these foundational texts is twofold: it serves as a constraint upon violence—including the specific form of discursive violence that the cascade’s terminal stages produce—and as the foundation for moral accountability. Both functions are essential and must be held together. The image is not merely a protection for the innocent; it is the ground of the accountability of the wicked, because it is what makes the wicked moral agents whose choices and conduct are genuinely theirs and are therefore genuinely assessable. To remove the image from a person—to treat them as having forfeited it through their wrongdoing—is not only to remove their protection but to remove their accountability, since accountability presupposes the kind of agency that the image grounds. The cascade’s ontological expulsion is therefore self-undermining in a specifically theological sense: it removes precisely the status that makes the condemnation it is attempting to deliver coherent.
A3 — The Fall and the Persistence of the Image
The doctrinal challenge addressed in this section is among the most important for the argument of this appendix. The fall of humanity, narrated in Genesis 3, introduces into the biblical account a fundamental moral disorder—a corruption of human nature in its orientation toward God, toward other human beings, and toward the created order—that must be taken seriously by any theological anthropology that intends to provide an accurate account of human moral reality. The question that must be answered is how the affirmation of the imago Dei as a universal, inalienable, and non-revocable human status is compatible with the recognition that human nature has been deeply and genuinely disordered by sin. This question is not merely academic; it is the precise point at which the sentimental universalism described in the third paper of this series is generated: the failure to hold together the affirmation of the image and the recognition of the fall produces either a denial of the image’s persistence or a denial of the fall’s seriousness, and the latter is the characteristic move of the distortion that flattens the classical synthesis into a vague assertion of universal goodness.
The resolution offered by the classical theological synthesis is the distinction between the corruption of function and the loss of status. The fall, on this account, genuinely and seriously disorders the function of the image—the capacity for right reasoning, right desire, right relationship with God, and right conduct toward other human beings—without erasing the ontological status that the image confers. The human being after the fall is genuinely disordered: the intellect is darkened, the will is bent toward self rather than God, the affections are misdirected, and the capacity for the kind of moral performance that the image, in its unfallen function, would produce is genuinely compromised. This is the theological substance behind the biblical descriptions of the universal scope of human moral failure. At the same time, the disordered human being remains a human being—remains, that is, a being who bears the image, who is addressed by God as a moral agent, who is held accountable for their choices, and who retains the status that constrains how others may treat them.
The scriptural evidence for this resolution is found precisely in the texts that affirm the image in explicitly post-fall contexts. Genesis 9:6 has already been noted: its invocation of the image as the ground of the prohibition of murder occurs in a context that has just narrated the flood—the divine response to a world in which “every intention of the thoughts of his [man’s] heart was only evil continually” (Genesis 6:5, ESV). The image that grounds the prohibition of murder in Genesis 9 is the image of human beings whose moral failure has been comprehensive and catastrophic. This is not an invocation of the image as a recognition of moral achievement; it is an affirmation of the image’s persistence in the face of demonstrated moral failure of the most extreme kind. The canonical logic is deliberate and theologically precise: even the knowledge of what human beings are capable of doing does not revoke the ontological status that constrains how they may be treated.
The New Testament continuation of this affirmation in James 3:9 makes the same point in a context that is explicitly concerned with the disorder introduced by sin. James’s letter is addressed to communities struggling with the effects of pride, envy, conflict, and the misuse of the tongue—communities whose members are demonstrably failing to live up to the moral demands of their faith. It is in this context—not in a context of idealized humanity performing its moral obligations—that James prohibits the cursing of human beings on the grounds that they bear God’s likeness. The prohibition applies in the real world, where real moral failures are occurring, to the real human beings who are committing them. The image persists in the sinner, in the opponent, in the morally compromised, and in those whose beliefs and conduct are genuinely wrong. This is the canonical testimony, and it is unambiguous.
The implication of this resolution for the specific problem addressed in this series of papers is direct and decisive. The recognition that human beings are morally fallen does not provide theological warrant for the cascade’s characteristic move of ontological expulsion. On the contrary, it establishes the conditions under which the image’s persistence is most important as a theological constraint: not in situations where human moral performance is admirable and the constraint is easy to honor, but in situations where the moral failure is serious and the temptation to ontological expulsion is strong. The imago Dei does not function primarily as a recognition of the virtuous; it functions primarily as a constraint upon the treatment of the vicious, the corrupt, and the genuinely wicked—because it is precisely these persons whose status the social dynamics of moral panic and moral identity collapse press most urgently to revoke.
The further implication is that moral accountability itself is grounded in the persistence of the image through the fall. The reason that morally fallen human beings remain accountable for their choices is precisely that they remain image-bearers—beings with the kind of agency that makes their choices genuinely theirs and therefore genuinely assessable. The fall compromises the capacity for right moral performance but does not extinguish the status of moral agency. Paul’s account of the universal human accountability before God in Romans 1:18–32 is addressed to human beings whose moral failure he has just described in the most unsparing terms; the accountability presupposes the agency; the agency presupposes the image. To deny the image is therefore not to sharpen the moral assessment but to dissolve its theological ground.
A4 — Judgment Without Dehumanization in Biblical Law and Wisdom
The claim that the biblical tradition models the maintenance of strong moral judgment alongside the preservation of human dignity is not an inference from theological principles alone; it is a demonstrable pattern within specific textual traditions of the Hebrew scriptures. This section examines that pattern in the legal and wisdom literature, establishing that the refusal of ontological expulsion is not a modern softening of the biblical tradition but one of its most characteristic features.
A4.1 Legal Texts
The legal traditions of the Pentateuch are notable for their combination of genuine moral seriousness—their clear-eyed acknowledgment that human beings engage in serious wrongdoing and that such wrongdoing warrants proportional consequence—with an equally clear insistence that the dignity of the wrongdoer constrains the forms that accountability may take. Deuteronomy 25:1–3 provides a striking example. The text establishes a legal procedure for corporal punishment and then immediately limits it: “If the guilty man deserves to be beaten, the judge shall cause him to lie down and be beaten in his presence with a number of stripes in proportion to his offense. Forty stripes may be given him, but not more, lest, if one should go on to beat him with more stripes than these, your brother be degraded in your sight” (ESV). The phrase “your brother be degraded in your sight” is theologically precise. The limitation on punishment is not grounded in leniency toward the offense but in the status of the offender: he remains a brother, a fellow member of the covenant community and, more fundamentally, a human being whose dignity constrains the severity of the punishment even when the punishment is warranted. The wrongdoing is real, the accountability is real, and the proportional punishment is legal and appropriate; but even within the execution of that punishment, the offender’s dignity must not be obliterated.
This is not an isolated case. The legal tradition consistently distinguishes between intentional and unintentional wrongdoing (Numbers 15:27–31), between premeditated murder and killing without prior intent (Numbers 35:9–25), and between various gradations of offense that require proportionally differentiated responses—a structure that directly embodies the discipline of moral proportionality described in the fourth paper of this series. The legal apparatus of the Torah is, among other things, an institutional mechanism for preventing the collapse of proportional judgment that the cascade produces: it encodes the distinctions among error, negligence, and malice in specific procedural forms that require those distinctions to be maintained in practice rather than left to the vagaries of individual judgment under social pressure.
A4.2 Wisdom Literature
The wisdom literature of the Hebrew scriptures—above all Proverbs—develops an elaborate taxonomy of moral types: the wise and the fool, the righteous and the wicked, the simple and the mocker. This taxonomy is the most robust example of moral differentiation in the Old Testament, distinguishing among persons with a precision and a confidence that might appear to threaten the ontological unity that this appendix is concerned to defend. A careful reading of the wisdom literature reveals, however, that the distinctions it draws are consistently moral and characterological rather than ontological. The fool is not a different kind of being from the wise person; they are the same kind of being—an image-bearer—whose habitual choices, dispositions, and responses to correction have formed a character that the wisdom tradition assesses as deficient. The sharp language that Proverbs deploys against the fool and the mocker is language directed at conduct and character, not at ontological status.
The pedagogical structure of Proverbs reinforces this reading. The book is addressed to the young person in the process of formation—”My son” is the characteristic mode of address—and its purpose is to provide the formation that will prevent the development of the fool’s character and cultivate the character of the wise. This purpose presupposes that the person being addressed is not yet determined—that the choice between wisdom and folly remains genuinely open—and that the formation provided by the book can actually influence that choice. The fool is not a fixed ontological category into which some human beings are born; it is a character formed by accumulated choices, and the wisdom tradition’s strong language about the fool is in part designed to make the prospect of becoming one sufficiently unattractive that the reader will choose otherwise. The condemnation serves the formation; the formation presupposes the agency; the agency presupposes the dignity that the image grounds.
A4.3 The Imprecatory Psalms
The imprecatory psalms—those psalms that contain explicit calls for divine judgment against enemies and wrongdoers—present the most challenging material in the wisdom tradition for the argument of this appendix, because their language is the most extreme and the most seemingly incompatible with the maintenance of the wrongdoer’s dignity. Psalms 35, 58, 69, 109, and 137 contain passages whose severity—calling for the destruction, humiliation, and ruin of named enemies—seems to place their targets in precisely the category of ontological expulsion that this appendix is arguing the biblical tradition refuses.
The resolution of this apparent tension lies in the recognition that even the most severe imprecatory psalms operate within a theological framework that maintains, at its structural level, the distinction between condemnation and ontological expulsion. The imprecatory psalms are addressed to God—they are petitions for divine judgment, not assertions of human authority to expel persons from the moral community. They constitute a turning over of the case to the divine Judge rather than the execution of a human verdict that removes the offender from the category of those who warrant moral consideration. This structural feature is theologically significant: it places the ultimate judgment where the biblical tradition consistently places it—in the hands of God rather than in the hands of the aggrieved party—and it maintains the psalmist as a participant in a moral universe that he shares, even with his enemies, rather than as someone who has placed himself above that universe as its final arbiter.
The imprecatory psalms are also honest about the emotional reality of being genuinely wronged—about the experience of persecution, injustice, and betrayal that generates the intensity of their language. They do not domesticate this experience or pretend that the appropriate response to serious wrong is a mild and unaffected equanimity. The tradition has always recognized these psalms as legitimate expressions of genuine moral outrage, offered within a theological framework of trust in divine justice. What they do not model is the human arrogation of the divine prerogative of final ontological verdict. The pattern that emerges across the legal and wisdom literature, including the imprecatory psalms, is consistent: strong moral language that neither denies the seriousness of wrongdoing nor removes the wrongdoer from the framework of shared humanity and ultimate divine accountability.
A5 — Christological Fulfillment: The Perfect Image and the Pattern of Engagement
The Christological materials are theologically decisive for the argument of this appendix, because in Jesus Christ the two elements whose conjunction this appendix is concerned to establish—absolute moral clarity and absolute refusal of ontological expulsion—are simultaneously present in their fullest possible form. The doctrine of the imago Dei finds its Christological completion in the New Testament identification of Jesus Christ as himself the image of God in a sense that surpasses the derivative image-bearing of created human beings: “He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation” (Colossians 1:15, ESV); “He is the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature” (Hebrews 1:3, ESV). In Christ, the image is not a partial, derivative, and distorted reflection of the divine nature but its perfect and complete expression. This Christological identification is not merely a theological elevation of the imago concept; it establishes Christ’s engagement with human beings—the way in which the perfect Image relates to those who bear the image in their created and fallen form—as the normative pattern for what the maintenance of the doctrine requires in practice.
A5.1 Christ’s Engagement with Sinners
The pattern of Jesus Christ’s engagement with those identified in his cultural context as serious sinners is among the most theologically significant features of the Gospel narratives, precisely because it consistently demonstrates the conjunction that this appendix is arguing the biblical tradition maintains: the combination of unambiguous moral clarity about wrongdoing with the complete refusal to remove the wrongdoer from the status of a person deserving full moral address and genuine relational engagement.
The account of the woman caught in adultery in John 8:1–11 is paradigmatic. The scribes and Pharisees bring the woman before Jesus Christ as a test, invoking the Mosaic law’s prescription of death for adultery. The challenge is designed to force a choice between the law’s condemnation and the woman’s life; it assumes, in other words, that the seriousness of the moral condemnation and the preservation of the person’s status are incompatible alternatives between which a verdict must be chosen. Jesus Christ refuses this framing. His response—the written words in the dust, the invitation to those without sin to cast the first stone, and the departure of the accusers one by one—does not acquit the woman of wrongdoing; his final words to her are “go and sin no more” (John 8:11), a clear moral address that presupposes the reality of the sin and the obligation of moral change. What he refuses is the transmutation of the moral verdict into an ontological one—the use of the woman’s genuine wrongdoing as a ground for her destruction. The moral differentiation is maintained; the ontological expulsion is refused.
The account of Zacchaeus in Luke 19:1–10 operates through a different but structurally identical pattern. Zacchaeus is identified as a chief tax collector—a person whose occupation placed him, in the social and moral perception of his contemporaries, in the category of the definitively condemned. The crowd’s response to Jesus Christ’s invitation to his home—”He has gone to be the guest of a man who is a sinner” (Luke 19:7, ESV)—reflects precisely the logic of ontological expulsion: Zacchaeus’s class of conduct and social role have placed him in a category that renders him unfit for the company of the righteous. Jesus Christ’s initiative is a deliberate refusal of this logic. He addresses Zacchaeus as a “son of Abraham” (Luke 19:9)—an explicit affirmation of his ontological standing within the covenant community, which his conduct had not and could not revoke—while the encounter itself produces genuine moral transformation. The retention of Zacchaeus’s status as a person deserving full relational engagement is not indifference to his wrongdoing; it is the condition of the possibility of the moral change that the encounter produces.
A5.2 Christ’s Engagement with Moral and Religious Opponents
The engagement of Jesus Christ with his opponents—those who actively contested his authority, sought to entrap him, and ultimately pursued his death—exhibits a different register but the same structural pattern. Matthew 23 contains some of the most severe moral condemnation in the New Testament: the series of “woes” directed at the scribes and Pharisees deploys language of unambiguous moral censure—”hypocrites,” “blind guides,” “whitewashed tombs,” “serpents,” “brood of vipers”—that leaves no room for ambiguity about the gravity of the failures being condemned. This is not the language of gentle correction or diplomatic qualification; it is prophetic denunciation of a tradition in its full rhetorical force.
Yet even here, the structural refusal of ontological expulsion is maintained. The condemnation of Matthew 23 is followed immediately, in Matthew 23:37–39, by the lament over Jerusalem: “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not willing!” (ESV). The persons condemned in the woes are the same persons mourned in the lament; the severity of the condemnation and the depth of the grief exist simultaneously in the same address. This conjunction is not sentimentality, and it is not inconsistency; it is the model of what maximum moral clarity without ontological expulsion looks like in its most demanding form. The condemned remain within the universe of moral address—they are addressed as those who could have responded, who were invited to respond, and whose failure to respond is genuinely tragic precisely because the possibility was real.
The theological key to this pattern is the Christological identity itself. The one who engages sinners and opponents with both moral clarity and relational continuity is the one who is himself the perfect Image of God. His engagement is therefore not merely an ethical example to be imitated but a revelation of what the imago Dei looks like when it functions without distortion—a disclosure of the pattern that the imago in its fallen, distorted form is designed to approximate and that its redemption is designed to restore.
A6 — Apostolic Ethics: Speech, Judgment, and Community Across Moral Difference
The apostolic literature develops the theological anthropology of the creation and Christological narratives into specific ethical directives for the life of communities navigating serious moral differences—communities that include persons at different stages of moral formation, persons holding different and contested beliefs, and persons whose conduct deviates significantly from the community’s moral standards. The apostolic directives are relevant to the argument of this appendix not as isolated proof texts but as evidence that the earliest Christian communities understood the conjunction of moral seriousness and ontological respect as a non-negotiable feature of faithful community life.
A6.1 Speech Ethics
James 3:9–10 has already been cited as a framing text for this appendix and warrants more detailed treatment here. James writes: “With it [the tongue] we bless our Lord and Father, and with it we curse people who are made in the likeness of God. From the same mouth come blessing and cursing. My brothers, these things ought not to be so” (ESV). The theological structure of the argument is precise. The problem is not merely the inconsistency of using the same organ for blessing and cursing—though the inconsistency is real and is part of James’s point. The deeper problem is that to curse human beings is to curse those who are made in the likeness of God. The imago Dei is not merely a background doctrine here; it is the operative theological premise that grounds the prohibition. To curse a person—to deploy against them the totalizing condemnatory language that denies their standing as a member of the moral community—is to fail to honor the divine image that they bear.
The practical implication for the cascade’s Stage Five—social enforcement through shaming, silencing, and reputational destruction—is direct. The question that James’s text poses to any practice of social enforcement is not whether the target of the enforcement has acted wrongly but whether the manner of the enforcement honors or violates the divine image that the target bears. Strong moral condemnation, proportional accountability, and the expression of genuine moral outrage are not prohibited by James’s argument; the specific practices that deny the shared humanity of the condemned person are what the argument targets.
A6.2 The Nature of Legitimate Judgment
The New Testament teaching on judgment is frequently misread as a comprehensive prohibition of moral assessment—as if the instruction of Matthew 7:1 (“Judge not, that you be not judged,” ESV) established a general norm against moral evaluation. This misreading is corrected by the immediate context of the passage, which prohibits hypocritical judgment—the evaluation of others for faults that the evaluator shares without acknowledgment—rather than judgment as such. The corrective is reinforced by the direct instruction of John 7:24, where Jesus Christ commands his listeners to “not judge by appearances, but judge with right judgment” (ESV). Judgment is required; the standard of right judgment distinguishes between the accurate moral assessment that is obligatory and the hypocritical or superficial assessment that is prohibited.
The apostolic letters develop this framework with considerable nuance. Paul’s instruction to the Galatian communities to “restore” those caught in transgression, to bear one another’s burdens, and to examine their own conduct before addressing others’ failures (Galatians 6:1–4) encodes precisely the combination of moral seriousness and humility before shared fallenness that the classical synthesis requires. The one who restores is instructed to do so “in a spirit of gentleness”—not in the spirit of the cascade’s social enforcement, which is characterized by the certainty of ontological superiority—while the recognition that “you too will be tempted” invokes the shared moral vulnerability that is the apostolic application of the doctrine of universal fallenness. The restoration presupposes that the person being restored is genuinely in transgression; the gentleness presupposes that the restorer has not been elevated by their correctness to a different ontological category.
A6.3 Community Discipline and Its Limits
The most challenging apostolic material for the argument of this appendix is the instruction regarding community discipline in 1 Corinthians 5, where Paul instructs the Corinthian community to remove from their fellowship a person engaged in conduct that Paul describes as not even named among the Gentiles. The instruction is unambiguous: “Purge the evil person from among you” (1 Corinthians 5:13, ESV). This is a clear and serious exercise of community accountability that involves real exclusion from the community’s fellowship.
The theological point that must be maintained against the apparent tension between this instruction and the argument of this appendix is the distinction between the exclusion described in 1 Corinthians 5 and the ontological expulsion that this appendix identifies as a violation of imago Dei. Paul’s instruction is bounded and purposeful in a way that ontological expulsion is not. It is bounded in that it concerns the specific conduct within the fellowship—the person is not delivered to the state or subjected to violence, and their standing as a person addressed by the moral community is not revoked. It is purposeful in that its stated aim is redemptive: “so that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord” (1 Corinthians 5:5, ESV). The exclusion is a form of accountability aimed at the restoration of the person, not a verdict that removes them from the category of those for whom restoration is possible and desirable. This is precisely the distinction between accountability with retained status and permanent ontological exclusion that the fourth paper in this series identified as the essential institutional practice—and Paul’s instruction provides the apostolic model for that distinction.
The 2 Corinthians 2:5–11 passage, widely understood as a reference to the same situation, confirms this reading by instructing the community to restore and comfort the disciplined person, lest he “be overwhelmed by excessive sorrow” (2 Corinthians 2:7, ESV). The discipline is real and consequential; its conclusion is reintegration, not permanent exclusion. The person subjected to discipline retains the status of someone who is to be loved, forgiven, and welcomed back. The accountability is serious; the ontological expulsion never occurs.
A7 — Theological Synthesis: Ontology, Sin, and Accountability
The scriptural materials examined in Sections A2 through A6 converge upon a consistent and integrated theological account of human beings under the conditions of moral conflict. This account can be summarized in the following threefold distinction, which constitutes the theological synthesis that this appendix has been building toward:
| Category | Theological Status |
|---|---|
| Ontology | Image-bearing, shared humanity |
| Sin | Universal corruption |
| Judgment | Differentiated evaluation |
Each category carries a specific theological content that must be maintained without reduction to either of the others.
The ontological category affirms that all human beings, without exception and without gradation, bear the divine image and share the humanity that the image marks. This affirmation is absolute: it admits no exceptions based on moral failure, no gradations based on moral performance, and no revocations based on the severity of wrongdoing. It is the floor beneath which no theological assessment of any human being may descend, and it remains intact through the fall, through persistent moral failure, and through the execution of the most severe forms of accountability that the biblical tradition sanctions.
The category of sin affirms that all human beings, without exception, are morally corrupted—that the fall has introduced a genuine and serious disorder into human nature that affects the orientation of every person toward God, other human beings, and the created order. This affirmation is equally absolute: it admits no exceptions based on moral performance, no gradations that would exempt some persons from the recognition of shared fallenness, and no revocations based on genuine moral achievement. The universality of sin is the theological ground of the humility that the apostolic tradition consistently identifies as the appropriate affective context for moral assessment: the one who assesses is not elevated above the one being assessed by the correctness of their assessment, because they share the common condition of fallenness that makes the imago Dei a gift rather than an achievement for all parties.
The category of judgment affirms that, notwithstanding the universal sharing of both the image and the fall, human beings are genuinely differentiated by their beliefs, choices, and actions in ways that are morally significant and that warrant proportionally differentiated responses. Not all beliefs are equally true; not all actions are equally good; not all patterns of conduct reflect equally well-formed characters. This differentiation is real, it is morally important, and it provides the legitimate basis for the full range of moral evaluation—from the gentle correction of error to the strong condemnation of serious wrong—that the biblical tradition models and requires.
The integrated claim that these three categories together establish is that all human beings simultaneously bear God’s image, are morally fallen, and remain accountable for their actions. No human being is beyond moral judgment—the accountability is universal. No human being is beyond human recognition—the image is universal and non-revocable. These two negatives together define the theological space within which moral reasoning must operate: a space in which judgment and dignity are both required, neither is optional, and neither may be purchased at the cost of the other.
This synthesis provides the theological refutation of both distortions identified in the third paper of this series. Sentimental universalism is refuted by the universal scope of sin and accountability: to affirm the image is not to deny the fall, and to acknowledge shared fallenness is not to abandon moral differentiation. Selective humanization is refuted by the universal scope of the image: to apply the protections of the imago Dei only to those whose beliefs and conduct fall within the approved category is to deny the doctrine its essential universality and to transform it from a theological constraint into an instrument of group favoritism. Both distortions are, at their root, failures of the theological synthesis—reductions of the three-part account to a simpler formula that cannot sustain the dual commitment the synthesis is designed to maintain.
A8 — Doctrinal Errors to Avoid
This section serves as the polemic element of the appendix—an identification of the specific doctrinal errors that arise from the failure to maintain the theological synthesis described in Section A7, stated with sufficient precision to serve as a diagnostic tool for theological communities seeking to assess the adequacy of their own anthropological commitments.
Error One: Sentimental Universalism. This error resolves the tension between the imago Dei and moral differentiation by suppressing the latter. In its theological form, it denies that sin is serious enough to warrant strong moral condemnation, treats the affirmation of universal dignity as a grounds for the reduction or elimination of accountability, and produces a theological anthropology that cannot account for the biblical testimony to the seriousness of wrongdoing. This error is often generated by a genuine and commendable concern for the dignity of those who are being dehumanized by the cascade’s logic; its failure lies in the mistaken belief that the defense of dignity requires the abandonment of differentiation. The diagnostic test for sentimental universalism is whether a community finds itself unable to name serious wrongdoing as serious—whether the language of strong moral condemnation has been effectively prohibited by the community’s concern for universal affirmation.
Error Two: Functional Dehumanization. This error resolves the tension in the opposite direction, suppressing the ontological affirmation in favor of moral condemnation. In its theological form, it treats some human beings—those whose conduct, beliefs, or group membership place them in the morally condemned category—as effectively outside the scope of the imago Dei‘s protections, as persons whose humanity is conditional upon their moral and ideological conformity, and as beyond the reach of genuine moral address and the possibility of redemptive change. This error is often generated by a genuine and commendable concern for the seriousness of wrongdoing and for the protection of those who have been harmed; its failure lies in the mistaken belief that the seriousness of moral condemnation requires the denial of ontological unity. The diagnostic test for functional dehumanization is whether a community finds itself systematically applying the practical protections of the imago Dei only to those within its moral circle while treating those outside it as having forfeited their standing as persons deserving full moral engagement.
Error Three: Identity Reductionism. This error is the theological form of the identity fusion described in the second paper of this series. It equates belief with person and action with essence, producing a theological anthropology in which the assessment of a belief or action automatically constitutes an assessment of the being of the person who holds or performs it. In its theological form, it treats heretical belief as a permanent ontological disqualification rather than as a serious error requiring correction, and it treats sinful action as a definitive revelation of the person’s essential nature rather than as a failure of a moral agent who retains the capacity for repentance and the status that makes repentance meaningful. The diagnostic test for identity reductionism is whether a community’s language of doctrinal or moral condemnation routinely migrates from the level of belief or action to the level of the person’s essential character without the accumulation of the substantial evidence that character-level assessment requires.
Error Four: Selective Imago Dei. This error applies the dignity grounded in the imago only to persons within approved categories—those who share the community’s beliefs, practices, and affiliations—while treating the imago as effectively inoperative for those outside those categories. This is the most subtle of the four errors, because it is most easily concealed beneath formally correct theological language: the selective community will affirm the imago Dei in its doctrinal statements while consistently failing to honor it in its treatment of those who fall outside the approved category. The diagnostic test for selective imago Dei is whether the community’s practical moral protections—whose dignity is defended, whose mistreatment is protested, whose suffering is taken seriously—are distributed universally or only to the in-group.
The four errors share a common structure: each resolves the tension inherent in the classical synthesis by sacrificing one of the synthesis’s essential elements, and each generates characteristic pathologies that the synthesis is designed to prevent. The diagnostic function of these errors is not merely critical—not merely the identification of what communities are doing wrong—but constructive: by naming the specific forms of failure, they make the specific correctives available, and by identifying the pressures that generate each error, they point toward the formation and institutional practices needed to resist those pressures.
A9 — Practical-Theological Implications for Formation and Community Life
The theological synthesis developed in the preceding sections of this appendix has direct and concrete implications for the formation of individuals and the ordering of communities. This final section develops those implications across five domains: teaching, preaching, community life, public discourse, and personal formation.
A9.1 For Teaching, Especially of the Young
The theological and practical materials developed throughout this series converge upon the primacy of formation—and specifically of the formation of the young—as the most fundamental site of the recovery of moral clarity without dehumanization. The implications for teaching are specific and concrete.
Teaching that is faithful to the theological synthesis of this appendix will consistently emphasize the distinction between the person and the action—not as a rhetorical strategy for avoiding offense but as an accurate account of theological reality. Every human being encountered in the curriculum, whether as hero or villain, as exemplar or cautionary case, is to be understood and described as an image-bearer whose dignity constrains how they may be addressed even when their conduct warrants severe moral assessment. This is not a lesson that can be taught once and retained without reinforcement; it is a habit of perception that must be cultivated through repeated practice in contexts that reward its exercise.
Teaching must also provide language for disagreement without hatred—concrete linguistic tools that enable the student to express strong moral disagreement with an idea, a belief, or an action without deploying the totalizing condemnatory language that functions as ontological expulsion. The precision language disciplines described in the fourth paper of this series are, in their pedagogical form, tools for providing exactly this capacity. The student who has been taught to say “this idea is wrong because…” and “this action was harmful because…” has been equipped with the cognitive and linguistic resources needed to maintain the distinction between moral assessment and ontological verdict under conditions of genuine moral conflict. The student who has been taught only the vocabulary of totalizing condemnation—who has no other linguistic resources for expressing strong moral disagreement—will inevitably collapse the distinction, not because they are malicious but because they lack the tools to maintain it.
A9.2 For Preaching
The implications for preaching arise directly from the theological synthesis of Section A7. Preaching that is faithful to the full scope of biblical anthropology will consistently hold together the reality and seriousness of sin with the universality and endurance of dignity. This means, concretely, that sermons that engage with specific patterns of wrongdoing—whether in the congregation, in the culture, or in the biblical narratives—will resist the temptation to collapse their moral condemnation into an ontological verdict. The person or community whose wrongdoing is being addressed is addressed as an image-bearer, as one who remains within the scope of divine address and human moral concern, and as one for whom the possibility of repentance and restoration is real rather than rhetorical.
The homiletical tradition has a well-developed category for this conjunction in the pastoral function of the sermon as both law and gospel—the proclamation of the genuine demands and condemnations of the moral law alongside the genuine offer of grace and restoration through Jesus Christ. The two elements of this proclamation correspond precisely to the two elements of the classical synthesis: the law maintains moral differentiation in its most serious form, naming sin as sin and leaving no room for sentimental universalism; the gospel maintains ontological unity in its most profound form, addressing the sinner as one for whom redemptive change is possible and for whom it has been secured. The preacher who handles both elements with theological faithfulness and homiletical skill is demonstrating the synthesis in its most powerful available form.
A9.3 For Community Life
The implications for community life are perhaps the most demanding, because they concern the daily texture of communal interaction under conditions of genuine moral difference—the way that members of the community address one another, assess one another, hold one another accountable, and sustain their relationships across disagreements that are serious and sometimes deeply painful.
The practical standard that the theological synthesis establishes for community life is correction without contempt and discipline without expulsion of personhood. Correction without contempt means that the community’s internal accountability practices are conducted in ways that communicate the genuine moral seriousness of what is being corrected without communicating the contempt that ontological expulsion characteristically produces—the contempt that treats the corrected person as less than a full member of the moral community who deserves genuine engagement rather than performative condemnation. Discipline without expulsion of personhood means that the community’s formal accountability processes—including, where necessary, the bounded exclusion from fellowship that the apostolic tradition sanctions—are conducted with the explicit recognition that the goal is the restoration of the person being disciplined and that their status as an image-bearer and as a person for whom redemptive change is possible is not revoked by the discipline.
These standards are demanding precisely because they require the community to maintain its dual commitment under conditions of genuine moral conflict, where the social pressure toward the cascade’s simplifications is strongest. The community that maintains them will experience the tensions that the fourth paper identified as genuine risks: the appearance of insufficient seriousness to those whose moral framework has been shaped by the cascade’s logic, and the vulnerability to misuse by those who invoke the protections of the imago Dei to escape genuine accountability. These tensions do not dissolve when the community maintains the synthesis; they are managed rather than eliminated, which is why the maintenance of the synthesis requires the ongoing formation and institutional reinforcement that the fourth paper described.
A9.4 For Public Discourse
The implications for public discourse address the domain in which the pressures analyzed throughout this series are most intense and the resources for resistance are most attenuated. Communities of faith that have developed the capacity to maintain the theological synthesis internally are in a position to model, in their public engagement, a form of moral discourse that contemporary societies urgently need but that the dominant discourse environment actively discourages.
The specific contributions that theologically formed communities can make to public discourse are twofold. First, they can model the use of precise moral language—the language that locates moral assessments at the level of ideas and actions rather than at the level of the being of those who hold or perform them—in contexts where the social pressure toward totalizing condemnation is strong. This modeling requires the willingness to bear the social cost of appearing insufficiently committed to the cascade’s demands, a willingness that is itself a form of the moral courage that the formation of character is designed to produce. Second, they can model the refusal of ontological expulsion—the maintenance, even in the face of serious moral disagreement, of the recognition that those with whom the community disagrees are image-bearers whose dignity constrains how the disagreement is conducted and expressed.
These are not small contributions. In a discourse environment where the cascade’s logic has become so pervasive that the maintenance of the classical synthesis appears, to many participants, as a form of moral failure, the communities that can demonstrate its possibility and its productivity are performing a genuinely countercultural and genuinely prophetic function—not in the sense of delivering novel revelations, but in the classical prophetic sense of calling a culture back to the truths it has forgotten and the practices it has abandoned.
A9.5 For Personal Formation
The final domain of practical-theological implication is personal formation—the cultivation, within individual persons, of the habits of perception, speech, and judgment that the maintenance of the theological synthesis requires. The two habits that are most directly relevant to the argument of this appendix are the cultivation of humility before shared fallenness and the cultivation of restraint in speech and judgment.
The cultivation of humility before shared fallenness is the personal application of the second element of the theological synthesis: the recognition that all human beings are morally corrupted and that the moral assessor does not stand above this corruption by virtue of the accuracy of their assessment. This recognition, when it is genuinely internalized rather than merely acknowledged as an abstract proposition, has the practical effect of moderating the affective temperature of moral assessment—of making it possible to hold the assessment firmly without deploying it with the contempt that ontological superiority generates. The person who genuinely believes, because the doctrine of universal fallenness has been formed into their habitual perception, that they share the moral condition of those they are assessing, will assess with the “spirit of gentleness” that Paul identifies as the characteristic of genuinely restorative correction.
The cultivation of restraint in speech and judgment is the personal application of the first and third elements of the synthesis: the recognition that the image-bearer deserves the careful use of language that honoring their dignity requires, and that the accumulation of evidence required for proportional judgment takes time and attention that impulsive condemnation forecloses. Restraint is not silence; it is the discipline of allowing assessment to be governed by accuracy rather than by the social rewards that rapid and emphatic condemnation offers. It is the practical expression, in daily conduct, of the instruction to be “quick to listen, slow to speak, slow to anger” (James 1:19, ESV)—a discipline that, when genuinely formed into habit, makes the cascade’s characteristic operations resistant rather than attractive.
Concluding Claim
The doctrine of imago Dei, rightly understood and faithfully applied, provides the necessary theological structure to resist moral identity collapse by sustaining ontological unity alongside moral differentiation. The argument of this appendix has demonstrated that this structure is not an innovative theological proposal but a consistent feature of the biblical witness from creation through the apostolic period, embodied most fully in the ministry of Jesus Christ and developed with specificity in the apostolic letters that formed the earliest Christian communities in its practice.
The failure of this doctrine in practice—the drift toward either sentimental universalism or functional dehumanization, the collapse of the classical synthesis under the pressures of moral panic and moral identity collapse—represents not merely a cultural breakdown but a theological one. It is a failure of the communities that bear the tradition’s resources to deploy those resources in the defense of the anthropological truth that the tradition has always maintained: that every human being, without exception, bears the image of God; that every human being, without exception, is morally fallen and accountable; and that no assessment of any human being may drive their evaluation below the floor that the image establishes.
The recovery of this doctrine in its full force—as a load-bearing theological concept that produces determinate constraints upon the treatment of persons and determinate guidance for the conduct of moral assessment—is not peripheral to the renewal of moral discourse in the present moment. It is central to it. The communities that maintain this doctrine with disciplined articulation, that form their members in its practical implications, and that model in their common life the conjunction of moral seriousness and ontological respect that it requires, are performing an irreplaceable service—not only to the health of their own communal life but to the wider societies in which they are embedded and whose moral discourse is impoverished by the absence of exactly what the classical synthesis provides.
Notes
¹ The prolegomenon’s distinction between verbal affirmation and functional denial of the imago Dei is crucial to the diagnostic purpose of this appendix. A community’s doctrinal statements are a necessary but insufficient criterion of its fidelity to the doctrine. The criterion developed throughout is functional: does the doctrine actually constrain moral reasoning and produce determinate outcomes in contested cases? Where it does not, the verbal affirmation is decorative rather than load-bearing, and the practical effect is equivalent to the absence of the doctrine.
² The discussion of Genesis 9:6 in Section A2 is theologically significant because this text is sometimes cited in debates about capital punishment rather than in the context of theological anthropology. Its primary anthropological function—affirming the imago Dei in a post-fall, post-catastrophe context as the ground of the prohibition of murder—is more fundamental than its application in discussions of capital punishment and deserves the priority given to it here.
³ The resolution offered in Section A3—distinguishing the corruption of function from the loss of status—is structurally common to the major theological traditions within orthodox Christianity, though the specific accounts of the extent and nature of the functional corruption differ significantly. The Reformed tradition, following Calvin, tends to emphasize the radical extent of the corruption (total depravity) while affirming the persistence of the image; the Thomistic tradition distinguishes between the natural image (which persists) and the supernatural gifts (which are lost at the fall); the Wesleyan tradition emphasizes the ongoing work of prevenient grace in restoring functional capacity. The argument of this appendix does not adjudicate among these intramural debates; it identifies the structural feature that all three traditions share: the simultaneous affirmation of the image’s persistence and the fall’s seriousness.
⁴ The treatment of the imprecatory psalms in Section A4.3 is necessarily brief and does not pretend to resolve all the hermeneutical questions they raise. The point being made is the specific and limited one that even these most severe expressions of moral condemnation in the Hebrew scriptures operate within a theological framework that maintains the distinction between condemnation and ontological expulsion, because they direct the ultimate verdict to God rather than appropriating it for human execution.
⁵ The Christological materials in Section A5 are treated as providing a normative pattern rather than merely an ideal that cannot be approximated. The apostolic instruction to “be imitators of God, as beloved children, and walk in love, as Christ loved us” (Ephesians 5:1–2, ESV) establishes the pattern as a practical goal for communities formed in its image, not merely an object of admiration. The normative force of the Christological example depends upon the doctrine of the Spirit’s work of transformation and conformity to Christ, which is assumed throughout the apostolic literature as the context within which such formation is possible.
⁶ The four doctrinal errors identified in Section A8 are not presented as exhaustive of the possible distortions of the imago Dei but as the four most directly relevant to the argument of this appendix and the most commonly observable in contemporary discourse. Other distortions are possible, including purely intellectualized treatments of the imago that affirm it as a metaphysical proposition without drawing its practical implications for the treatment of persons—a failure that might be called theoretical affirmation without practical traction and that constitutes a fifth mode of the doctrine’s failure as a load-bearing concept.
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