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Just what do you mean

kiwimac

Brother Napalm of God's Love
When you say the word 'theology'? What do you think theology encompasses? Is it more or less ignored today in favour of comparative religion or ministry training?

Kiwimac
 

michel

Administrator Emeritus
Staff member
Strictly speaking:-

(http://www.gotquestions.org/systematic-theology.html)
The word "theology" comes from two Greek words meaning "God" and "word." Combined, the word "theology" means "study of God." Systematic refers to something be put into a system. Systematic theology is, therefore, the division of theology into systems that explain its various areas. For example, many books of the Bible give information about the angels. No one book gives all the information about the angels. Systematic theology takes all the information about angels from all the books of the Bible, and organizes it into a system - angelology. That is what systematic theology is all about - organizing the teachings of the Bible into categorical systems.

Theology Proper or Paterology is the study of God the Father. Christology is the study of God the Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. Pneumatology is the study of God the Holy Spirit. Bibliology is the study of the Bible. Soteriology is the study of salvation. Ecclesiology is the study of the church. Eschatology is the study of the end times. Angelology is the study of angels. Christian Demonology is the study of demons from a Christian perspective. Christian Anthropology is the study of humanity. Hamartiology is the study of sin.

Biblical theology is studying a certain book (or books) of the Bible and emphasizing the different aspects of theology it focuses on. For example, the Gospel of John is very Christological since it focuses so much on the deity of Christ (John 1:1,14; 8:58; 10:30; 20:28). Historical theology is the study of doctrines and how they have developed over the centuries of the Christian church. Dogmatic theology is a study of the doctrines of certain Christian groups that have systematized doctrine, for example Calvinistic theology and dispensational theology. Contemporary theology is the study of doctrines that have developed or come into focus in recent times. Systematic theology is an important tool in helping us to understand and teach the Bible in an organized manner.
 

sojourner

Annoyingly Progressive Since 2006
kiwimac said:
When you say the word 'theology'? What do you think theology encompasses? Is it more or less ignored today in favour of comparative religion or ministry training?

Kiwimac

Theology is a discipline, just like other "ologies," (philosophy, geology, psychology, genaeology, etc.) It is the discipline concerned with perceiving and talking about the universe from a basis of divinity. It is not the same thing as doctrine, dogma, belief, or practice, though it encompasses all these things.
 

lunamoth

Will to love
Theology is talking about/thinking about God.

What is the difference between dogma and doctrine? My answer is that dogma are tenets of a religion that can't be thrown out without substantially changing the religion. Doctrines are ideas that help us in our understanding of God consistent with our religion, but are not required for understanding/practicing the heart of that religion.

It would an interesting discussion to see how people would sort our various Christian (or Buddhist or Islamic or ....) dogmas and doctrines...
 
A

angellous_evangellous

Guest
For me, theology is thinking about God. It can be either theoretical = analyzing what a prophet says about God by the study of what the prophet says from merely an academic standpoint. It can be experiential = believing what the prophet says or engaging in the work of the prophet. Experiential theologians actually theologize = produce myths or interpretations of myths that are authoritative for their belief or the beliefs of their group.
 
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