Theology 1 – Introduction

04/01/2019 37 min
Theology 1 – Introduction

Listen "Theology 1 – Introduction"

Episode Synopsis


Happy New Year. I’m so excited to begin with you a new class that covers a whole range of biblical doctrines. In fact, I’m going to combine two classes into one and I think they will work together really well. The first class was originally titled “Basic Bible Doctrine” and it covered approximately fifteen different major beliefs. The goal was to explain these aspects of theology and give supporting scripture and reasons for them. I’m combining this with a more advanced class called “Solutions to Bible Texts,” which deals with commonly misunderstood verses on a bunch of doctrines. I’m going to attempt to interweave these two, so that you get a comprehensive understanding of theology.
Now I realize that you very well may disagree with my understanding on some of these beliefs, so we may have some exciting dialog in the comments on these episodes.  I will freely admit at the outset that I don’t know everything and that I have been wrong in the past.  I just ask that you give this class a charitable listen and check it against the scriptures to see if it is true.  Hopefully, this will be a good way to lay it all out there and see what you think.  To begin with, this episode is an introduction that covers some important basics about approaching truth and building biblical doctrines.
—— Notes ——
In one sense there’s nothing basic about bible doctrine. Constructing a coherent biblical theology on any topic takes immense effort from collecting the many texts on the topic to interpreting each of them based on their own literary, historical, and theological contexts to conceiving of an understanding that simply yet elegantly embraces the most texts possible while minimizing the number of difficult texts to comparing other doctrinal systems both ancient and modern—the process is anything but “basic.” Even so, the end result is often simple enough to comprehend and communicate, though it rests upon the work of teams of specialists drawn from a variety of fields.
the bereans

Acts 17.11
what was Paul trying to convince them to believe?
neither accepted nor rejected<–really impressed Paul
tested Paul’s message against the scriptures

 
why is it so important to be willing to change our beliefs?
b/c it’s easy to misunderstand the bible

geographic separation (what’s the Arabah?)
cultural separation (did they have divorce? could they read? did they have running water?)
different religious groups (what’s the difference between a Saducee and a Pharisee?)
language (what language did Jesus speak? how do we know that? ephphatha)
metaphysics: function over essence (why did God call the light day?)
anachronism: since everything is so different, it takes serious work to not read our own ideas into the bible

 
reasons why it can be hard to change our beliefs

easier to keep them the same
might need to leave our church
might lose friends, relationship with kids (Ray Faircloth), marriage (1 Cor 7)
might lose job opportunities
identity might be wrapped up in being 3rd generation church of God or whatever

remember when I went to BU and got asked what I was
anabaptist, adventist, biblical unitarian, restorationist
my core identity (what defines me at more core, but doesn’t change no matter where I am on my quest for understanding)




love God
follow Christ
seek truth

 
typical to think doctrine doesn’t matter or worse that it’s divisive

not taught to argue constructively
head knowledge vs. heart knowledge

mind vs. emotions vs. actions
fal