Why study theology?
"Don’t talk to me about theology. Just teach me the Bible."
To the average Christian, theology might sound like something
hopelessly complicated, frustratingly confusing and thoroughly irrelevant.
Anybody can read the Bible. So why do we need head-in-the-clouds theologians
with their long sentences and fancy terms?
Faith seeking understanding
Theology has been called "faith seeking understanding." In
other words, as Christians we trust God, but God has made us to want to
understand who we are trusting and why we trust him. That’s where theology comes
in. The word theology comes from a combination of two Greek words,
theos, meaning God, and logia, meaning knowledge or study—study of
God.
When properly used, theology can serve the church by
combating heresies, or false teachings. That is because most heresies come from
wrong understandings of who God is, understandings that don’t square with the
way God has revealed himself in the Bible. The church’s proclamation of the
gospel, of course, needs to rest on the firm foundation of God’s own revelation
of himself.
Revelation
Knowledge about God is not something that we humans can just
come up with on our own by thinking it out. The only way we can know anything
true about God is to listen to what God tells us about himself. The main way God
has chosen to reveal himself to us is through the Bible, a collection of
inspired writings compiled over many centuries under the supervision of the Holy
Spirit. But even diligent study of the Bible cannot convey to us right
understanding of who God is.
We need more than mere study—we need the Holy Spirit to
enable our minds to understand what God reveals in the Bible about himself. The
bottom line is that true knowledge of God comes only from God, not merely by
human study, reasoning or experience.
The church has an ongoing responsibility to critically
examine its beliefs and practices in the light of God’s revelation. Theology is
the Christian community’s continuous quest for truth as it humbly seeks God’s
wisdom and follows the Holy Spirit’s lead into all truth. Until Christ returns
in glory, the church cannot assume that it has reached its goal.
That is why theology should never become a mere restatement
of the church’s creeds and doctrines, but should rather be a never-ending
process of critical self-examination. It is only as we stand in the divine Light
of God’s mystery that we find true knowledge of God.
Paul called that divine mystery "Christ in you, the hope of
glory" (Colossians 1:27), the mystery that through Christ it pleased God "to
reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by
making peace through his blood, shed on the cross" (verse 20).
The Christian church’s proclamation and practice are always
in need of examination and fine-tuning, sometimes even major reform, as it
continues to grow in the grace and knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Dynamic theology
The word dynamic is a good word to describe this
constant effort of the Christian church to look at itself and the world in the
light of God’s self-revelation and then to let the Holy Spirit conform it
accordingly to be a people who reflect and proclaim God as God truly is. We see
this dynamic quality in theology throughout church history. The apostles
reinterpreted the Scriptures when they proclaimed Jesus as the Messiah.
God’s new act of self-revelation in Jesus Christ brought new
light to the Bible, light that the Holy Spirit opened the eyes of the apostles
to see. In the fourth century, Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria, used
descriptive words in the creeds that were not in the Bible in order to help
Gentiles understand the meaning of the biblical revelation of God. In the 16th
century, John Calvin and Martin Luther contended for the renewal of the church
in light of the demand of the biblical truth that salvation comes only by grace
through faith in Jesus Christ.
In the 1800s, John McLeod Campbell attempted to broaden the
Church of Scotland’s narrow view on the nature of Jesus’ atonement for humanity
and was thrown out for his efforts.
In modern times, no one has been more effective in calling
the church to a dynamic theology rooted in active faith than Karl Barth,
who "gave the Bible back to Europe" after liberal Protestant theology had nearly
swallowed up the church by embracing Enlightenment humanism and the "natural
theology" of the German church.
Listening to God
Whenever the church fails to hear the voice of God and
instead gives in to its own assumptions and presuppositions, it becomes weak and
ineffective. It loses relevance in the eyes of those it is trying to reach with
the gospel message. The same is true of any part of the Body of Christ when it
wraps itself up in its own preconceived ideas and traditions. It becomes bogged
down, stuck or static, the opposite of dynamic, and loses its
effectiveness in spreading the gospel.
When that happens, the church begins to fragment or break up,
Christians become alienated from one another, and Jesus’ command that we love
one another fades into the background. Then, gospel proclamation becomes merely
a set of words, a proposition that people unthinkingly agree with. The power
behind it to offer healing to sinful minds loses its force. Relationships become
external, only surface contacts that miss the deep union and communion with
Jesus and one another where genuine healing, peace and joy become real
possibilities. Static religion is a barrier that can prevent believers from
becoming the real people God intends them to be in Jesus Christ.
‘Double predestination’
The doctrine of election or double predestination has long
been a distinctive, or identifying doctrine, in the Reformed theological
tradition (the tradition that stands in the shadow of John Calvin). This
doctrine has frequently been misunderstood, distorted and the cause of endless
controversy and distress. Calvin himself struggled with this issue, and his
teaching on it has been interpreted by many as saying, "From eternity God has
decreed some to salvation and others to damnation."
This latter interpretation of the doctrine of election is
usually described as hyper-Calvinistic. It fosters a fatalistic view of God as
an arbitrary tyrant and an enemy of human freedom. Such an approach to the
doctrine makes it anything but good news as proclaimed in God’s self-revelation
in Jesus Christ. The biblical witness describes the electing grace of God as
astonishing, but not dreadful! God, who loves in freedom, offers his grace
freely to all who will receive it.
Karl Barth
In correcting this hyper-Calvinism, the preeminent Reformed theologian of the
modern church, Karl Barth, recast the Reformed doctrine of election by centering
rejection and election in Jesus Christ. He carefully laid out the full biblical
doctrine of election in Volume II of his Church Dogmatics in a way
that is consistent with the whole of God’s revelation.
Barth forcefully demonstrated that within a Trinitarian context, the doctrine
of election has one central purpose: it declares that God’s works in creation,
reconciliation and redemption are fully realized in the free grace of God made
known in Jesus Christ.
It affirms that the triune God who lives eternally in loving communion
graciously wills to include others in that communion. The Creator Redeemer
deeply desires a relationship with his creation. And relationships by nature are
dynamic, not static. Relationships penetrate the abyss of our existence and turn
it into real life.
In the Dogmatics, where Barth rethought the doctrine of election in a
Trinitarian, Creator Redeemer context, he called it "the sum of the gospel." In
Christ God elected all of humanity in covenant partnership to share in
his life of communion by freely and graciously choosing to be God for humanity.
Jesus Christ is both the Elected and the Rejected for our sakes, and
individual election and rejection can be understood as real only in him. In
other words, the Son of God is the Elect on our behalf. As the universal elected
man, his vicarious, or substitutionary, election is at the same time both to the
condemnation of death (the cross) in our place and to eternal life (the
resurrection) in our place. This atoning and reconciling work of Jesus Christ in
the incarnation was complete in the redeeming of fallen humanity.
We must therefore say yes to God’s yes for us in Christ Jesus and embrace and
begin to live in the joy and light of what he has already secured for us—union,
communion and participation with him in a new creation.
New creation
In his important contribution to the doctrine of election, Barth writes: "For
in God’s union with this one man, Jesus Christ, he has shown his love to all and
his solidarity with all. In this One he has taken upon himself the sin and guilt
of all, and therefore rescued them all by higher right from the judgment which
they had rightly incurred, so that he is really the true consolation of all."
Everything changed at the cross. The entire creation, whether it knows it or
not, has been, is being and will be redeemed, transformed and made new in Jesus
Christ. We are becoming a new creation in him.
Thomas F. Torrance, premier student and interpreter of Karl Barth, served as
editor when Barth’s Church Dogmatics was translated into English.
Torrance believed that Volume II was some of the finest theology ever written.
He agreed with Barth that all of humanity has been redeemed and elected in
Christ. Professor Torrance, in his book The Mediation of Christ,
lays out the biblical revelation that Jesus is not only our atoning reconciler
through his vicarious life, death and resurrection, but serves as our perfect
response to God’s grace.
Jesus took our fallenness and judgment on himself, assuming
sin, death and evil in order to redeem the creation at all levels and transform
everything that stood against us into a new creation. We have been freed from
our depraved and rebellious natures for an internal relationship with the One
who both justifies and sanctifies us.
Torrance goes on to explain that "the unassumed is the
unhealed." What Christ has not taken upon himself has not been saved. Jesus took
our alienated mind on himself, becoming what we are in order to reconcile us to
God. He thereby cleansed, healed and sanctified sinful humanity in the depths of
its being in his vicarious loving act of incarnation for us.
Instead of sinning like all other human beings, he condemned
sin in our flesh by living a life of perfect holiness within our flesh, and
through his obedient Sonship he transformed our hostile and disobedient humanity
into a true, loving relationship with the Father.
In the Son, the triune God took up our human nature into his
Being, and he thereby transformed our nature. He redeemed us and reconciled us.
By making our sinful nature his own and healing it, Jesus Christ became the
Mediator between God and a fallen humanity.
Our election in the one man Jesus Christ fulfills God’s
purpose for the creation and defines God as the God who loves in freedom.
Torrance explains that "all of grace" does not mean "nothing of humanity," but
all of grace means all of humanity. That is, we cannot hold onto even one
percent of ourselves.
By grace through faith, we participate in God’s love for the
creation in a relational way that was not possible before. That means that we
love others as God loves us because by grace Jesus Christ is in us and we are in
him. This can happen only within the miracle of a new creation. God’s revelation
to humanity comes from the Father through the Son in the Spirit, and a redeemed
humanity now responds by faith in the Spirit through the Son to the Father.
We have been called to holiness in Christ. We enjoy freedom
in him from the sin, death, evil, misery and judgment that stood against us. We
reciprocate, or return, God’s love for us through thanksgiving, worship and
service in the community of faith. In all his healing and saving relations with
us, Jesus Christ is engaged in personalizing and humanizing us—that is, in
making us real people in him. In all our relations with him, he makes us more
truly and fully human in our personal response of faith. This takes place in us
through the creative power of the Holy Spirit as he unites us to the perfect
humanity of the Lord Jesus Christ.
All of grace really does mean all of humanity. The grace of
Jesus Christ who was crucified and resurrected for us does not depreciate the
humanity he came to save. God’s unconditional grace brings into the light all
that we are and do. Even in our repenting and believing we cannot rely on our
own response, but in faith we rely only on the response that Christ has offered
to the Father in our place and on our behalf! In his humanity, Jesus, the
new Adam, became our vicarious response to God in all things, including faith,
conversion, worship, celebration of the sacraments and evangelism.
Ignored
Unfortunately, Karl Barth has generally been ignored or
misinterpreted by American evangelicalism, and Thomas Torrance is often
presented as too hard to understand. But to fail to appreciate the dynamic
nature of theology displayed in Barth’s reworking of the doctrine of election
causes many evangelicals and Reformed Christians alike to remain caught in the
behavioralism trap, struggling to understand where God draws the line between
human behavior and salvation.
The great Reformation principle of ongoing reformation should
free us from old worldviews and behavior-based theologies that inhibit growth,
promote stagnation and prevent ecumenical cooperation within the Body of Christ.
Yet today doesn’t the church often find itself robbed of the joy of grace as it
shadowboxes with all its various forms of legalism? For this reason the church
is not uncommonly characterized as a bastion of judgmentalism and exclusivism
rather than as a testament to grace.
We all have a theology—a way that we think about and
understand God—whether we know it or not. And our theology affects how we think
about and understand God’s grace and salvation.
If our theology is dynamic and relational, we will be open to
hear God’s ever-present word of salvation, which he freely gives us by his grace
though Jesus Christ alone. On the other hand, if our theology is static, we will
shrivel into a religion of legalism, judgmentalism and spiritual stagnation.
Instead of knowing Jesus as he is in a way that seasons all
our relationships with mercy, patience, kindness and peace, we will know
judgment, exclusivity and condemnation of those who fail to meet our carefully
defined standards of godliness.
New creation in freedom
Theology does make a difference. How we understand God
affects the way we understand salvation and how we live the Christian life. God
is not the prisoner of some static, humanly reasoned idea about what he must and
should be.
Humans are not capable of reasoning out who God is and what
he must be like. God tells us who he is and what he is like, and he is free to
be exactly how he chooses to be, and he has revealed himself in Jesus Christ as
being the God who loves us, is for us and who chooses to make humanity’s
cause—including your cause and my cause—his own.
In Jesus Christ, we are freed from our sinful minds, from our
boasting and despair, and graciously renewed to experience God’s shalom
peace in his loving faith community.
Terry Akers and Mike Feazell, 2005
Recommended reading:
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Michael Jinkins , Invitation to Theology
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Thomas Torrance, The Mediation of Christ
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Karl Barth, Dogmatics in Outline
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James Torrance, Worship, Community and the Triune God of
Grace
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Thomas Torrance, The Christian Doctrine of God, One
Being Three Persons
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Thomas Torrance, The Trinitarian Faith
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Ray Anderson, Theology, Death and Dying
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C. Baxter Kruger, The Great Dance
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Robert Farrar Capon, Parables of Judgment
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Donald Bloesch, The Christian Foundations series (seven
books)
Copyright © 2005
