For some time popular systematic theology has been dominated by an approach that presents our knowledge of God in terms of facts and propositions. In these propositional systems, statements are made about God which can be evaluated for truth value. Knowing the right propositions and being able to demonstrate their truth is sometimes considered to be the core of theological knowledge. "Systematic theology" is often taken to mean "abstracted theology" or "propositional theology".
The most basic problem with this approach is that God is a person, not merely a concept. God's divine personhood goes so far beyond our human personhood that we have trouble understanding it; but still God is not simply a mindless force but a person with mind and will, with love and desire. Given that God is not a mere concept, knowing God must extend beyond knowing the truth value of propositions. Limiting ourselves to propositions -- even propositions about God's personhood -- is an affront to the reality of that personhood. Would any of us imagine that someone could make a set of propositions about us as a person which could substitute for meeting and knowing us? But we have often made this mistake with God, and then theology becomes a means by which we keep God at a safe distance rather than coming to know him. God will not be a mere object of study. Given that God is a person, knowing God must include interacting with him as a person and knowing him as a person. God did not present himself to us as a set of propositions to be studied. He presented himself to us in Christ, the divine word coming to us not as a proposition but as a human person, Jesus Christ. These are the terms on which God would have us know him; beginning our systematic theology anywhere else but Christ is an affront to God's self-revelation.
So is Systematic Theology a matter of asking, “What does it mean to say that Jesus Christ is the cornerstone of the Biblical witness?” Certainly, for every serious student of the Bible, this is easy to see and easy to state. And the corresponding confession – ‘Jesus is Lord' - is also clear and easily understood. Perhaps the recognition that Jesus is a Person and not a concept prevents me from doing systematic theology at all. I seem to constantly wrestle with the problem of how Jesus Christ is to be interpreted and explained in my everyday life? How can systematic theology help me? What do Christians need to ascertain and continually seek after?
ReplyDeleteWorship & enjoy, ron
And all good questions. Still, some people stop too soon with the "Jesus at the center" approach and basically neglect building on that foundation. To borrow an analogy from C.S. Lewis, our theology must be baptized. We have to rebuild our understanding of election, predestination, salvation, sanctification, baptism, and so on all in light of what the Bible already says about these things dependence on Christ.
ReplyDeleteFor the practical part about living our lives is also about Christ. Too much to cover in the comments section, so I'll just keep on bloggin'.
Take care & God bless