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Theisim, Deisim, and Theology |
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ON THIS PAGE
- Theism
- Deism
- Mono Theism
- Pantheism
- Faith
- Theology
- Xenophanes
When men can no longer be theists, they must, if they are civilized, become humanists.
Walter Lippmann (1889–1974), U.S. journalist. A Preface to Morals, pt. 1, ch. 7, sct. 7 (1929).
Dogmatic theological statements are neither logical propositions nor poetic utterances. They are "shaggy dog" stories; they have a point, but he who tries too hard to get it will miss it.
W. H. Auden (1907–73), Anglo-American poet. A Certain World, "God" (1970).
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Theism |
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Theism, from the term theos (Greek for "god"), belief in one God who is personal and worthy of worship, who transcends the world but takes an active interest in it, and who reveals his purpose for human beings through certain individuals, miraculous events, or sacred writings. A theistic God is personal if he can be understood by analogies drawn from human experience and if human beings can enter into a personal relation with him and petition him in prayer. Such a God is considered worthy of worship because he is believed to be morally perfect and infinitely powerful.
Broadly speaking, theism is the belief in any god or gods. However in its typical philosophical and theological usage, theism is a form of monotheism, the belief in only one God. In contrast to theism, pantheism is the view that God is identical with the world or is completely immanent, pervading everything that exists in the world. Deism is the belief that God created the world but then had no further connection with it. Theism should also be contrasted with atheism and agnosticism, both of which have several variations. In the broadest sense, positive atheism is a disbelief in all gods including the theistic God, whereas negative atheism is simply the absence of belief in any god. Negative atheism is compatible with agnosticism, the denial that a person can know either that God exists or does not exist. Some agnostics draw the conclusion that one should suspend one’s belief, a view known as agnostic atheism. Other agnostics choose to believe in a theistic God on the basis of faith, a view known as agnostic theism.
Scope of Theism
Three of the major world religions—Christianity, Islam, and Judaism—are primarily theistic and today comprise about 3 billion followers. Theistic strands can also be found in Hinduism, although this religion usually interprets God in an impersonal and pantheistic way. Several other Eastern religions, including Theravada Buddhism and Jainism, reject the theistic idea of God as creator of the universe. Although it is uncertain if the ancient Chinese philosopher Confucius believed in some kind of God, it is clear that a theistic God plays little, if any, role in Confucianism, the moral, social, and political practices associated with his name.
The theistic religions of Christianity and Judaism, and to a lesser extent Islam, have greatly influenced the laws, morality, science, culture, and political institutions of the West. However, the rise of modern science and scientific Biblical criticism beginning in the 17th century has put theistic religions on the defensive. Theistic religions have been challenged to integrate a belief in miracles, divine purpose, and revelation with an increasing acceptance of a scientific worldview and with the acknowledgment of inconsistencies and errors revealed by Biblical scholarship.
Faith and Reason
In Western theistic religions, especially Christianity, faith is often contrasted with reason. The precise nature of this contrast varies from denomination to denomination and from theologian to theologian. In the 13th century, Italian theologian Saint Thomas Aquinas maintained that the truths of faith are compatible with and supplement the truths of reason. He held that while one can prove the existence of God by reason, doctrines such as the Trinity (the doctrine that God exists as three persons united in one being) must be accepted on faith. Aquinas also argued that since the doctrine of the Trinity is derived from the Bible, and because there is good reason to believe the Bible was divinely inspired, such acceptance is reasonable. On the other hand, 19th-century Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard argued that it is inappropriate to base belief in God on reason. Instead Kierkegaard emphasized the necessity of irrational leaps of faith. He claimed that religious belief is a passionate and unconditional commitment to God that not only transcends reason and evidence but also stands in direct conflict with it.
Arguments for Theism
Despite Kierkegaard’s skepticism about the value of reason in supporting belief in God, many philosophers have attempted to demonstrate the existence of God by rational argument.
The Ontological Argument
One of the most important attempts to demonstrate the existence of God is the ontological argument of Saint Anselm, an 11th-century theologian. Anselm’s argument maintains that God, defined as the greatest being that can be conceived, must exist, since a being that does not exist would by virtue of that fact lack an attribute that contributes to its greatness. Critics have questioned, however, whether existence actually contributes to a being’s greatness.
The Cosmological Argument
Another important attempt to provide a rational justification for the existence of God is the cosmological argument, also called the argument from first cause. This justification was expounded by Aquinas and 18th-century English philosopher Samuel Clarke, among others. One important version of this argument contends that to explain the existence of the contingent universe it is essential to postulate a necessary being, a being whose existence is not contingent on anything else. This necessary being is God. Critics have argued that the existence of the universe might be a brute fact—a fact without any explanation. They assert that proving the existence of a necessary being is not the same as proving the existence of God. A necessary being might lack some of the properties considered essential to God, such as being all good. In a version of the cosmological argument found in contemporary scientific cosmology, God is postulated as the explanation for the big bang, the theory that a gigantic explosion created the material universe. Although contemporary theists, such as American philosopher William Lane Craig, maintain that a first cause is necessary to explain the big bang, critics contend that recent scientific theories indicate that the universe could have arisen spontaneously.
The Teleological Argument
According to the teleological argument for the existence of God—also known as the argument from design—the universe is analogous to a machine. The best known exponent of this view is 18th-century theologian William Paley. According to this theory, because machines are created by intelligent beings, and because the universe may be thought of as a single, highly complex machine, it is likely that the universe was created by a great intelligence, understood to be God. The classic critique of this argument, presented by 18th-century Scottish philosopher David Hume, maintains that the analogy to a machine is weak and that other analogies are just as strong. For instance, the universe may be thought of as a living organism, in which case the universe would have been created by reproduction rather than by design.
The Moral Argument
The moral argument for the existence of God was developed by 18th-century German philosopher Immanuel Kant. Kant maintained that the highest good includes moral virtue, with happiness as the appropriate reward for this virtue. He held it is humanity’s duty to seek this highest good and that it must therefore be possible to realize it. Furthermore, Kant claimed that this highest good cannot be realized unless there is "a supreme cause of nature," one that has the power to bring about harmony between happiness and virtue. Such a cause could only be God. Critics of the moral argument counter that it is by no means clear that the highest good is what Kant supposed.
Pascal’s Wager
Another well known argument for the existence of God purports to show that even if God’s existence cannot be known through reason, it is still practically advantageous to believe in God. Thus, 17th-century French philosopher Blaise Pascal held that belief in God is a better wager than nonbelief because there are infinite rewards to gain and little to lose by believing versus infinite rewards to lose and little to gain by not believing. Critics have argued that God might reserve a special place in Hell for people who believe in him on the basis of Pascal’s wager.
Problems for Theism
Two significant problems that arise in connection with theism are the existence of evil and the apparent inconsistencies in the concept of God. The existence of seemingly gratuitous evil makes the existence of a theistic God unlikely, critics reason, because if God were all powerful he could eliminate evil, and if he were all good, he would want to do so. Critics of theism have also charged there are inconsistencies in God’s attributes. For example, if God were all good he could not sin, but if he were all powerful he could. Other paradoxes connected with God’s alleged omnipotence may be generated by posing questions such as whether God is powerful enough to create a stone so heavy he could not lift it.
Of the many contemporary philosophical defenders of theism, two of the best known are British philosopher Richard Swinburne and American philosopher Alvin Plantinga. Using induction, Swinburne defends versions of the cosmological and teleological arguments by attempting to demonstrate that God’s existence, if not necessary, is probable. He also points to the seemingly genuine nature of religious experience. Plantinga defends some versions of the ontological argument and what is known as reformed epistemology (theory of knowledge). Reformed epistemology earned its name because its proponents were sympathetic with certain ideas of the Protestant (reformed) tradition associated with 16th-century French theologian John Calvin. According to reformed epistemology, religious beliefs are basic and therefore do not need to be supported by arguments.
Contributed By:
Michael Martin
Excerpt Encarta98 Encyclopedia
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Deism |
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Deism , a rationalist religious philosophy that flourished in the 17th and 18th centuries, particularly in England. Generally, Deists held that a certain kind of religious knowledge (sometimes called natural religion) is either inherent in each person or accessible through the exercise of reason, but they denied the validity of religious claims based on revelation or on the specific teachings of any church.
Deism emerged as a major religious and philosophical view in England. The most prominent 17th-century Deists were Edward Herbert, John Toland, and Charles Blount, all of whom advocated a rationalist religion and criticized the supernatural or nonrational elements in the Jewish and Christian traditions. In the early 18th century, Anthony Collins, Thomas Chubb, and Matthew Tindal sharpened the rationalist attack on orthodoxy by attempting to discredit the miracles and mysteries of the Bible.
Although these challenges to traditional and orthodox interpretations of Christianity aroused much opposition, the Deists did much to establish the intellectual climate of Europe in the 18th century. Their emphasis on reason and their opposition to fanaticism and intolerance greatly influenced the English philosophers John Locke and David Hume. In France, the philosopher Voltaire became a particularly effective proponent of Deism and intensified his predecessors' rationalist critique of Scripture. Nonetheless, he retained the English Deists' view that a deity certainly exists. Versions of Deism, some of them approaching atheism, were advocated by many other prominent figures of the European Enlightenment.
Deism was also influential in late-18th-century America, where Deistic views were held by Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and George Washington. The most vociferous American Deists were Ethan Allen and Thomas Paine.
Deism in Europe and America played an important role both in exposing traditional religion to rationalist criticism and in encouraging the development of rationalist philosophy. Elements of the Deists' ideas have been absorbed by Unitarianism, Modernism, and other modern religious tendencies.
See Also Rationalism.
Contributed By:
Richard H. Popkin
Excerpt from Encarda98 Encylopedia
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MonoTheism, Pantheism, Faith |
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Monotheism , belief in the unity of the Godhead, or in one God. It is opposed to pantheism and polytheism. Because they believe the Christian doctrine of the Trinity to be incompatible with monotheism, some groups reject Trinitarianism in favor of Unitarianism. Monotheism is a firm tenet of Muslims and Jews.
Pantheism , doctrine that identifies the universe (Greek pan, "all") with God (Greek theos). The thinker may start from an awareness of the divine reality and then begin to speculate on the relationship of the nondivine to the divine; this position is commonly called acosmic pantheism. Conversely, the thinker may start from an apprehension of the full reality of finite, changing entities and give the name God to their all-inclusive totality; this is called cosmic pantheism.
The most typical presentations of acosmic pantheism come from the Hindu tradition, the greatest philosophical exponent of which was the Indian philosopher Sankara (flourished 8th? century AD). The difficulties of acosmism are visible in his system: tendencies to deny the full reality of the changing finite, to deny the reality of evil, to deny the reality of freedom and chance, and to see individual personality as ultimately unreal.
In Western thought, the Dutch philosopher Baruch Spinoza is the greatest exponent of a position that is almost unqualifiedly pantheistic. His view represents an important criticism of the "orthodox" view, that God's reality is somehow external to the reality of the world.
In fact, simple equations of "God" and "world" are hard to find in the major writings in philosophy or theology. Usually qualifications abound to cope with such traditional problems as those of the one and the many, good and evil, necessity and accident, and permanence and change. A view recently termed pantheism has been espoused by some philosophers, including the American Charles Hartshorne, who seek to overcome at once the paradoxes of pantheism and of "classical" theism.
Faith , an attitude of the entire self, including both will and intellect, directed toward a person, an idea, or—as in the case of religious faith—a divine being. Modern theologians agree in emphasizing this total existential character of faith, thus distinguishing it from the popular conception of faith that identifies it with belief as opposed to knowledge. Faith indeed includes belief but goes far beyond it, and in the history of theology the distinction has more often been drawn between faith and works than between faith and knowledge. This distinction was powerfully expressed by the apostle Paul, who argued that the sinful human being cannot achieve salvation through good works, but only through faith in the free grace of God. In this view, forcefully revived by Martin Luther at the time of the Reformation, good works are consequences of faith. The faithful relation to God enables the believer to transcend limitations and bring forth good works.
New Testament Conception of Faith
The most evocative description of faith in the New Testament is found in Hebrews 11:1, where faith is heralded as "the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen." Here, the word for faith is the Greek pistis, which denotes the act of giving one's trust. The New Testament conception of faith involves an amplification and an alteration of the older, Hebrew idea of faith as that quality of stability and trust that informs the living relationship between two beings. For the New Testament writers, faith has found its center in the believer's relationship to Jesus Christ. But the New Testament idea of faith goes beyond that of the Hebrew scriptures in its addition of the concept of "belief in" or "belief that." Hence, Christian theology has traditionally distinguished between the "subjective" element in faith, which involves the supernatural action of God upon the human soul, and faith's "objective" component, which is characterized as adherence to a body of truth found in creeds, in definitions of church councils, and especially in the Bible.
Later Christian Conceptions
During the Middle Ages, Roman Catholic theologians distinguished two kinds of separate but ultimately compatible religious truths: those that are accessible to unaided human reason, such as belief in the existence of God; and those that require faith in order to be grasped, such as belief in the resurrection of the dead. Historically, the Roman Catholic church has defined faith as the complete acceptance of doctrine and of the absolute authority of God in what he reveals or promises to reveal.
Not all Christians have believed that the demands of faith are compatible with those of reason. Many early Christians, including St. Paul and the 2nd-century theologian Tertullian, insisted that faith resembles folly to the eye that has not been opened by the grace of God. In a similar vein, the 19th-century Danish thinker Søren Kierkegaard felt that a chasm separates human reason from faith, and that the would-be believer must make a "leap of faith" across this abyss in order to find salvation. In general, modern Protestant theologians have emphasized, as Kierkegaard did, the subjective or individualistic aspect of faith and have concentrated on the risk and moral effort involved in attempting to lead the life of faith, rather than on the acceptance of creeds as an expression of faith.
Contributed By:
John Macquarrie
Excerpts Encarta98 Encyclopedia
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Theology, Xenophanes |
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Theology , a discipline that attempts to express the content of a religious faith as a coherent body of propositions. Theology is narrower in scope than faith, for whereas faith is a total attitude of the individual, including will and feeling, theology attempts to bring to expression in words the elements of belief that are explicitly or implicitly contained in faith.
Not every verbal expression of faith is theology, however. The first verbalizations of faith were naive and mythological. Theology arose out of reflection upon these first naive utterances. For instance, in the New Testament the disciple Thomas exclaims to Jesus, "My Lord and my God!" but a long process of reflection and speculation came between that simple confession and the theological declaration, made by the Council of Nicaea (325), that Jesus Christ is "one in substance with the Father" (see Nicaea, Councils of). This example demonstrates the tendency to move from concrete language ("Lord") to conceptual language ("substance").
Although theology ultimately concerns God, many theologians maintain that concepts of him necessarily fall short. In the Judeo-Christian tradition, God is often described in such negative terms as invisible or incorporeal. If this negative theology is not to become sheer agnosticism, it has to be supplemented by indirect ways of speaking about God (involving analogy, symbolism, and metaphor) so that the language of theology never becomes purely conceptual, instead retaining some of the imagery from the pretheological stage of belief. A careful analysis of theological language is a necessary prelude to the theological enterprise. It reveals a language that employs both images and concepts and that is both critical and confessional.
Theology and Science
Theologians as diverse as the 13th-century Italian St. Thomas Aquinas and the 20th-century Swiss Karl Barth have held that theology is a science. Both, however, were careful to point out that sciences are of many sorts. Theology resembles a science to the extent that orderly, critical intellectual procedures are employed in the study of its subject matter, but it radically differs from the natural and even from the human sciences because its ultimate subject matter, God, is not accessible to empirical investigation. The problem of establishing a rigorous way of reasoning about God is therefore crucial in theology. Aquinas began his theological system by offering five proofs for the existence of God as a basis for all his other arguments. Barth, on the other hand, began with God's revelation or communication of himself (the word of God), believing that only thus can one avoid the danger of approaching God as a mere object of investigation. Those who follow Barth's method argue that every science has to begin with some assumptions and that the assumption of a self-communicating God is the correct starting point for theology; those who follow Aquinas's example hold that intellectual integrity demands that the theologian begin with the question of whether God exists. Clearly, in both views theology must be concerned as much with human beings and their capacities as with God. Indeed, Barth has said that theology would be more properly called "theanthropology," because its subject matter is not God in isolation, but rather the divine and the human as they are related to each other.
Sources of Theology
The oldest theology of all—that of the Greek philosophers, who invented the word theology—was based on rational reflection on God, the world, and human life. These philosophers explicitly contrasted the rational theological approach to the problem of God with the mythological stories of the gods told by the Greek poets. The rational approach has continued to have many adherents, such as Aquinas, but the appeal to revelation as the source of theological truth has also been strong in the Christian, Jewish, Islamic, and several Eastern traditions. These religions are traced back to founders who offered some new and striking insights into the questions of God and human destiny. Subsequent generations of theologians reflected on the content of these illuminations, drew their implications, applied their insights in new situations, and tested and criticized the interpretations that had been previously offered. The distinctive insights of the founders, whether or not the word revelation is used, have been stamped on the theologies of the different religions, and it is a testimony to the depth and richness of these insights that so much has been drawn from them and that they still seem inexhaustible.
The Role of Scripture
Most developed religions of the world possess scriptures, or sacred writings. These are usually taken to be the work of the founders themselves or of their earliest disciples. The Torah, long attributed to Moses; the New Testament, much of it attributed to disciples of Jesus; the Koran, attributed to Muhammad; and the voluminous scriptures of Hinduism and Buddhism are all examples of the transmission of original revelations through written documents. Within the various traditions, the status of scripture varies. Among Christians, Jews, and Muslims, scripture is accorded an authority—sometimes as the very word of God—that it does not have in Hinduism or Buddhism. Even in Christianity, however, differences exist between Fundamentalists, for whom the Bible is divinely inspired, and liberals, for whom it is the fallible human attestation of revelation, but not revelation itself (see Fundamentalism; Modernism). Nonetheless, wherever scriptures exist, they provide an important source for theology, even when modern critical methods are applied.
Tradition and Experience
Tradition is another means by which the original revelation is conveyed and mediated. Tradition precedes scripture, in the sense that stories and teachings of the founders were passed on by word of mouth before they were written down and assumed a fixed form. But tradition also follows scripture, for where scripture is unclear or inconsistent, the believing community has to interpret it, and a whole body of interpretation may evolve alongside the original scripture and may even be written down. This has happened in both Judaism and Islam, although the body of tradition in these religions is not accorded the same status as scripture.
In Christianity, Roman Catholicism has assigned a high value to tradition as the living voice of the church (see Roman Catholic Church). Protestants have stressed the principle of relying on the authority of the Bible alone, but because the Bible is read and taught in the context of the church—especially in the liturgy—it is virtually impossible to hear it without overtones of traditional interpretation (see Protestantism). Finally, experience has become an important influence on theology, especially in modern times. Respect for the authority of scripture, tradition, and even revelation has diminished, and consequently the theologian tends to draw more and more on present experience, either personal or that of the community. The theologian searches for the meaning of God not only in such religious experiences as mysticism and conversion, but also in the general cultural, social, and political experience of the time.
Theological Method
There is no single, universally recognized method in theology. Method varies from one theologian to another and largely depends on the degree of importance attached to the various sources. The 11th-century theologian St. Anselm is a good example of a theologian who used the method of rigorous logical argument. In his Proslogion, Anselm sought to prove the existence of God from the concept of a perfect being (the ontological argument; see Metaphysics), and in Cur Deus Homo he argued that, given the existence both of a benevolent God and of the sinfulness of humanity, the Christian doctrines of incarnation and atonement may be deduced by logical necessity. Few theologians have been as rigorously logical as Anselm, but most have aimed at logical coherence. A minority, however, including the 2nd-century church father Tertullian and the 19th-century Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard, have denied that theology can be conceived as a rational system and have held that the human experience of God reveals discontinuities and paradoxes.
A quite different method can be observed among Reformation and post-Reformation Protestant theologians, who have attempted to base theology on the Bible alone. In its crudest form, this has meant a constant appeal to the Bible to prove theological assertions. With the development of biblical studies, however, this type of theology has become much more sophisticated. The method is, first of all, to establish the biblical text from the manuscripts and variant readings and, next, to subject this text to the closest scrutiny, taking note, for example, of linguistic considerations, literary sources, and historical background. This constitutes the work of exegesis, which aims at ascertaining as far as possible the meaning that the writer intended. The theologian must then go on to ask how the original meaning of the text has been developed in the course of doctrinal history, and what it might be taken to mean in the theologian's own time and cultural situation. This step involves hermeneutics, the science of interpretation. Some hold that interpretation is itself a creative, innovative act, not just the transposition of meaning from an ancient to a modern context. Even a transposition intended to reproduce the exact meaning of the original text may result in substantial changes. The 20th-century German theologian Rudolf Bultmann advocated a method of "demythologizing" on the assumption that the essential meaning of the New Testament is an understanding of human existence that must be disengaged from the mythological language current at the time when the New Testament was written. Bultmann's project involved the translation of this "essential meaning" into the language of modern existentialist philosophy (see Existentialism).
Formally similar to the biblically based theologies of Protestant writers are those of Roman Catholic writers who have tried to develop theologies based on the dogmatic pronouncements of the church. This was done somewhat naively in the older handbooks, but it is now recognized that hermeneutical questions are as relevant to dogma as they are to scripture, and that even the most venerated dogmas periodically need reinterpretation and may lead to new insights.
Theologians who are reluctant to begin with an appeal to authoritative texts, whether biblical or dogmatic, begin the task from the opposite end, analyzing human experience and its problems, and then asking how traditional wisdom might illuminate or resolve these problems. The 20th-century German theologian Paul Tillich has used the expression "method of correlation" to describe this procedure in theology. He and others have made much use of phenomenology in their analysis of human experience.
The principal types of theological method are obviously capable of being combined in different ways. Every major theologian has a method that in its detail is unique, but which nonetheless involves many procedures similar to those of other theologians. It is also important to notice that many of the methods of theology are the same as those employed by historians, students of language and literature, philosophers, and others.
The Branches of Theology
The word theology is sometimes used in a broad sense, meaning not only the study of doctrine, but also biblical studies and church history, as when one speaks of a faculty of theology in a university. More often, however, theology means systematic theology—the sense in which it has been discussed in this article—that is, the ordered exposition of the beliefs of a religious faith as a whole. Christian systematic theology is subdivided into the doctrine of God (theology in the strictest sense); Christology, the doctrine of the person of Christ; soteriology, the doctrine of salvation; anthropology, the doctrine of humanity; pneumatology, the doctrine of the spirit; eschatology, the doctrine of the "last things," or the end of time; and ecclesiology, the doctrine of the church. Further divisions are sometimes made, but truly systematic theology always emphasizes the unity and mutual implication of the various parts.
The distinction between natural theology, which is based on reason and common experience, and revealed theology, which is based directly on revelation, has already been noted. Similarly, a distinction should be made between apologetics—the attempt to state religious belief while taking note of, and responding to, objections and criticisms—and dogmatics, the straight exposition of beliefs. Some theologians, however, reject apologetics, because it seems to allow their opponents to set the agenda, arguing that the best apologetic is simply a clear statement of belief.
The rise and development of religious doctrines is the subject of historical theology, which has important implications for current theological speculation. Somewhat less central to the theological enterprise are several disciplines in which insights are derived from systematic theology but applied to various specialized problems. In moral theology, the insights of faith are applied to questions of moral conduct. Because of the variety of these issues, moral theology tends to become an interdisciplinary task. When the problems are connected with social and institutional aspects of human life, one may speak of social theology and even political theology. Pastoral, or practical, theology has to do with the exercise of ministry in such matters as counseling and the cure of souls.
Early Christian Theology
Although the Bible contains much theological material, it is obviously not a textbook of systematic theology. Paul's Epistle to the Romans is perhaps the nearest approach to a theological treatise in the New Testament; beginning with the sinful human condition, Paul develops a doctrine of justification by faith and sketches a scheme of universal salvation. As has already been mentioned, theology began among the Greeks as a scientific discipline, and it was the convergence of Greek philosophy and biblical faith that gave rise to the great age of patristic theology (see Fathers of the Church). Although the German theologian Adolf von Harnack lamented the "Hellenization" of the Gospel, most theologians would agree with Tillich that biblical faith had to respond to the intellectual challenge of Greek philosophy.
In the East, the 3rd-century writer Origen, of the school of Alexandria, was perhaps the most influential theologian of the early Christian era: De Principiis (On First Principles) covers the major topics of theology, and Contra Celsum (Against Celsus), in which Origen answers the criticisms of a pagan philosopher, is a notable example of apologetics. The great patristic theologian of the West was St. Augustine. His principal work is The City of God (413-26), a vast study in which human history is presented as a struggle between the forces of good and evil. Another profoundly influential theological work of Augustine is his lengthy treatise On the Trinity (400-16). Both Origen and Augustine also wrote commentaries on books of the Bible, and both were much influenced by philosophies derived from Plato. It was during the patristic period that the major Christian doctrines received their definitive formulation.
The Middle Ages
The next upsurge of theological activity occurred during the Middle Ages. Anselm and his principal works have already been mentioned, but the outstanding figure in medieval theology was Thomas Aquinas. His great Summa Theologica (1265-73), running to 2 million words and still unfinished at the time of his death, is a detailed systematic exposition of the doctrines of God, human nature and right conduct, and incarnation and salvation. It subtly interweaves philosophical and theological themes and has exercised an unparalleled influence, especially in Roman Catholic theology. Aquinas also wrote a major work of apologetics, the Summa Contra Gentiles (1261-64; trans. 1956). He made considerable use of the philosophy of Aristotle, which was being rediscovered about this time.
The Reformation
The Protestant Reformation in the 16th century marked a return to the Bible and a more practical, ethical, and less speculative tone in theology, and therefore an attempt to reduce the role of philosophy in theological work. Martin Luther was not a systematic theologian, but the new teaching was ably presented by his colleague Melanchthon in his Loci Communes Rerum Theologicarum (1521). By far the greatest Reformation theologian was John Calvin, whose Institutes of the Christian Religion (1536) remains the classic of Reformed systematic theology. Calvin stressed the sovereignty of God to the point of constructing a doctrine of strict predestination, but he tried to base all his teachings on the Bible.
Modern Theology
After the Reformation, a period of theological stagnation set in as the Roman Catholic and Protestant orthodoxies faced one another in rigidly entrenched positions. In the 17th and 18th centuries, both camps were threatened by the rise of rationalist philosophy and empirical science. The long reign of theology as "queen of the sciences" was ending. In the face of these threats, the 19th-century German theologian Friedrich Schleiermacher brought new life to theology. The authority of orthodoxy was gone, and the old natural theology had been discredited by two 18th-century philosophers, the English skeptic David Hume and the German idealist Immanuel Kant. Thus, Schleiermacher boldly made his appeal to regarding the present experience of the believing community as the new basis for theology. In his major work, The Christian Faith (1821-22; trans. 1948), doctrine is treated as the transcript of experience. With Schleiermacher, the focus of theology seems to shift from God to humanity, and this was generally true of the liberal theology that dominated the 19th century. Its development was interrupted by the work of Karl Barth, whose monumental Church Dogmatics (1932-62; trans. 1936-62) represents a return to biblical theology. In the last half of the 20th century, a variety of theological schools has coexisted. Notable among them is the revitalized Roman Catholic theology springing from the Second Vatican Council (1962-65; see Vatican Council, Second). Other schools employ the principles of the 20th-century English philosopher Alfred North Whitehead, the 20th-century German philosopher Martin Heidegger, and even Karl Marx for theological construction.
Theology and Other Disciplines
Theology's oldest partner in dialogue has been philosophy. Successive schools of philosophy have inspired innovative theological thinking, offered categories for elucidating theological ideas, and interpreted the changing interests of society.
Judeo-Christian theology in particular has been intimately involved with history, because in the biblical tradition, history is the medium of revelation, and the historical assertations of faith have to be scrutinized and tested like other historical assertions. Psychology, sociology, and anthropology all involve the study of religion, and although their methods and aims are different from those of theology, they often throw light on the course of theological development. Theology must also draw on the natural sciences—for instance, in investigating how the doctrines of creation and providence are related to the world described by science. Finally, during the late 20th century, theologians of the great world religions have entered into dialogue with one another, establishing a common ground and exploring differences.
See Also Religion.
Contributed By:
John Macquarrie
Excerpt from Ecarta98 Encylopedia
Theology
Theology , discipline attempting to express the content of a religious faith as a coherent body of propositions. Theology attempts to express in words the elements of belief that are explicitly or implicitly contained in faith.
Sources of Theology
Theology resembles a science in its use of orderly, critical intellectual procedures to study its subject matter, but it radically differs from the natural and human sciences because the ultimate subject matter, God, is not accessible to empirical investigation.
The oldest theology— that of the Greek philosophers— was based on rational reflection on the divine, the world, and human life. Christian, Jewish, Islamic, and several Eastern traditions appeal to revelation as the source of theological truth. These religions are traced back to founders who offered some new and striking insights into the questions of God and human destiny. Most developed religions possess scriptures, or sacred writings. The Torah, long attributed to Moses; the New Testament, attributed to disciples of Jesus Christ; the Koran, attributed to Muhammad; and the scriptures of Hinduism and Buddhism are all examples of original revelations transmitted through written documents.
Tradition is another means by which original revelation is conveyed and mediated. Tradition precedes scripture in the sense that stories and teachings were transmitted orally before they were written down. But tradition also follows scripture in cases where scripture is unclear or inconsistent. Finally, experience has become an important influence on theology, especially in modern times. Respect for the authority of scripture, tradition, and even revelation has diminished, and theologians tend to draw increasingly on present experience, either personal or of the community.
Theological Methods and Branches
There is no single, universally recognized method in theology. Method varies from one theologian to another and largely depends on the degree of importance attached to various sources. Some theologians begin by analyzing human experience and its problems, and then examine how traditional wisdom illuminates or resolves these problems.
The word theology is sometimes used in a broad sense, meaning not only the study of doctrine, but also biblical studies and church history. Usually theology means systematic theology, the ordered explanation of the beliefs of an entire religious faith. Apologetics declares doctrines and responds to objections and criticisms. Dogmatics is the direct exposition of beliefs. Historical theology examines the development of religious doctrines. Moral theology applies the insights of faith to moral conduct. Social and political theology examine religious beliefs in relation to social and political institutions. Pastoral, or practical, theology involves ministering and counseling religious adherents.
History of Theology
The great age of patristic theology (see Fathers of the Church) developed from the convergence of Greek philosophy and biblical faith. Christian theologians Origen and Saint Augustine greatly influenced the early Christian era. The major Christian doctrines were formulated and defined during this period. The next upsurge of theological activity occurred during the Middle Ages (5th century to 15th century), when Saint Thomas Aquinas used philosophical and theological themes to present a detailed systematic exposition of doctrines of God, human nature, and right conduct.
During the 16th-century Protestant Reformation, German theologian Martin Luther and French reformer John Calvin expounded a return to the Bible and a more practical, ethical, and less speculative tone in theology. In the 17th and 18th centuries, both Protestants and Roman Catholics were threatened by the rise of rationalist philosophy and empirical science. The focus of theology shifted from God to humanity, and this was generally true of the liberal theology dominating the 19th century. The early 20th century marked a return to biblical theology, but the latter half of the century has been dominated by a variety of theological schools.
Successive schools of philosophy have inspired innovative theological thinking and interpreted the changing interests of society. History, psychology, sociology, anthropology, and natural sciences all involve the study of religion, often illuminating the course of theological development.
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Xenophanes (flourished late 6th and early 5th century BC), Greek poet, philosopher, and religious reformer, born in Colophon, Asia Minor. He left Colophon in 545 BC to be a wandering poet and minstrel in Greece and Sicily. In 536 BC, according to tradition, he settled permanently in the Phoenician colony of Elea, in southern Italy. There, reputedly, he founded the Eleatic school, the philosophical concepts of which were later broadened and systematized by his disciple, the Greek philosopher Parmenides. In his writings Xenophanes cleverly satirized the polytheistic beliefs of earlier Greek poets and of his own contemporaries. He ridiculed their deities as gods created in the image of the mortals who worshiped them. In a famous passage he asserted that if oxen could paint and sculpt, they would depict gods who resembled oxen. Humans, he felt, should reject polytheistic anthropomorphism and recognize instead a single nonhuman deity underlying and unifying all worldly phenomena. In other works he ridiculed the doctrine of transmigration of souls and deplored Greek preoccupation with athleticism and luxurious living at the expense of wisdom. Only fragments of his poems have survived.
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