NOT MERELY JABBERWOCKY:THE MEANINGFULNESS OF THEOLOGICAL LANGUAGE AND THE DOCTRINE OF ANALOGY
Abstract This essay examines the meaningfulness of theological language by tracing three classical positions on predication—equivocalism, univocalism, and analogical realism—and arguing that Thomas Aquinas's doctrine of analogy, understood within a Protestant framework shaped by Calvin's concept of divine accommodation, provides the most defensible account of how finite human language genuinely refers to God. The logical positivist challenge is taken as a clarifying provocation rather than a decisive refutation, and the essay demonstrates that contemporary theological concessions, particularly the claim that human speech about God carries an inherent degree of falsehood, reproduce the positivist error under the guise of creaturely humility. Drawing on the imago Dei grounding of language, patristic precedent, and the canonical presupposition that divine self-disclosure in human words is genuinely cognitive rather than merely evocative, the essay defends analogical realism as...