This may be a question for GreekTim. If I have books on repentance, the law and the gospel, legalism, and Jesus Christ how can I tell if they are biblical or systematic?
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Not sure if you understand the question.The Holy Spirit
Again... you misunderstand the difference in disciplines of biblical theology vs. systematic theology. In fact, your concepts convey your entrenchment to systematic theology, confirming what I stated in my post above.Your question suggests views that are biblical could not also be systematic. Thus I suspect you have a "special" meaning in mind for systematic.
If you study all that the Bible says about different subjects, say like, God, Jesus, Salvation, End Times, the result will be biblical views that are systematic. So the concepts are not mutually exclusive.
The problem with reading the work of others, such as a book on repentance, is you do not know if the author "cooked the books" to fashion an agenda driven outcome.
For example, God grants repentance. Now a Calvinist would claim, that means God alters someone with total spiritual inability, using irresistible grace, and causes the person to willingly repent. Non-Calvinists would say, no, God allows people who understand the gospel to receive it wholeheartedly. Only by doing your own prayerful study could you reconcile those two systematic, yet differing views.
Not sure if you understand the question.
Evan, is it a synchronic study or a diachronic study? In other words, does it treat all "relevant" passages in equal terms or does it treat all "relevant" passages as they progress the idea/theme of the gospel, legalism, repentance, and etc.? Are predetermined philosophical categories used to study a theme (Christology, anthropology, hamartiology, etc.) or is the narrative of Scripture determining the theme to be studied (kingdom, covenant, God's presence, etc.)? These are just a few ways to know. You can also tell by the author. Some authors are totally engrossed in one or the other that they can't think outside of that realm. I speak mostly of systematicians, but it is true of biblical theologians as well.
This may be a question for GreekTim. If I have books on repentance, the law and the gospel, legalism, and Jesus Christ how can I tell if they are biblical or systematic?
or, you might not understand the answer lol.Not sure if you understand the question.
Nope... pretty sure you didn't understand the distinction between the academic disciplines of systematic theology and biblical theology.or, you might not understand the answer lol.
Doubtful... Walvoord was a systemetician through and through. And most dispensationalism is pretty weak on biblical theology b/c they want a hard discontinuity. That makes for a difficult biblical narrative.John Walvoord is one author and the rest are Calvinists. So perhaps the book on Christ by Walvoord may be biblical theology. I don't know.
Doubtful... Walvoord was a systemetician through and through. And most dispensationalism is pretty weak on biblical theology b/c they want a hard discontinuity. That makes for a difficult biblical narrative.
My guess is, based on the subjects mentioned, they are likely studied from a systematic approach.
Again... you misunderstand the difference in disciplines of biblical theology vs. systematic theology. In fact, your concepts convey your entrenchment to systematic theology, confirming what I stated in my post above.
The fact that you think this has anything to do w/ Calvinism tells me you don't understand the difference. And your pride won't let you admit that there is still more to learn from someone who, though you disagree w/ him theologically and has probably studied more than you, there may be some benefit from listening. But alas...Greektim thinks he is a mind reader like Mr. Rippon. I did not even attempt to address the difference between Greektim's distinctions, I addressed to OP.
The view I expressed matched completely the view expressed by others. Note that the issue, cooked books, was spot on with the disclosure that many of the books were from Calvinists. I will leave it to others to discern whether Greektim is an entrenched Calvinist.
How in the world could I address your distinctions, based on the OP. Nonsense.
Go watch the Hobbit. This board and all the fighting reminds me of middle earth.
How in the world could I address your distinctions, based on the OP. Nonsense.
Geerhardus Vos explains the differences between Biblical Theology and Systematic Theology. He writes,“In Biblical Theology the principle is one of historical, in Systematic Theology it is one of logical construction. Biblical Theology draws a line of development. Systematic Theology draws a circle.” (Biblical Theology, 16).If these two clarifications adequately summarize the differences between these two disciplines, shouldn’t we agree that both disciplines are equally important? We need both the historical storyline and the logical conclusions, right?
Basically, what I posted in post #3 was spot on, and the middle earth response of post #5 was unnecessary.Biblical and systematic theology are two different ways of studying the Bible. The main difference is what the theologies study.
Biblical theology is focused on studying a portion of the Bible and how that relates to the rest of the Bible. An example may be specifically studying a portion of Isaiah. The person studying may look back at what led up to one of Isaiah's prophecies and how that prophecy is fulfilled in Christ.
Systematic theology focuses on different topics and studies what the Bible says about that topic. An example here may be studying the attributes of God. A person studying the attributes would start by finding all the scripture which mentions the attributes of God. After having all the scriptural references, they could then build a doctrine based on that scripture.
These methods of theological study are complimentary. While biblical theology may give you insight into a specific portion of scripture, it may not be the best way of building a doctrine since it may not give you all that scripture says on a specific topic. On the other hand, systematic theology can give you a very detailed view on a topic, but that view can be enhanced by providing even more context to the specific scripture which discusses a view.