This article reconceives Christian freedom as dependence. It diagnoses how modern Protestant semantics, despite relational rhetoric, tend to default to the autonomous subject. It retrieves Luther's paradox ‘lord of all/servant of all’ and reads Bonhoeffer's freedom as responsibility and vicarious representative action in his Ethics as a test case: a Christologically framed ethic that, because it requires judgment and decision, remains vulnerable to subject-centred recoding. Disability theology functions as a hermeneutical correction, relocating freedom within vulnerability, shared agency, and enabling relations. Dogmatically, in the unio hypostatica and communicatio idiomatum , the crucified-and-risen Christ's enduring wounds disclose divine freedom as shared self-commitment. Returning to Bonhoeffer, the article unfolds the imago Dei within an ‘ontology of the Name’, proposing a Christologically grounded, relational anthropology. It finally asks whether the difficulty of thinking beyond autonomy reflects a tacit split between anthropology and soteriology, and explores how a Christological reorientation might reconfigure the field.
Nadine Hamilton (Sun,) studied this question.
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