A Sketch of My Theological Method

While thinking about a certain book on the history of religious ideas, I considered how my own approach to theology might fit into that enormous history. This led me to the following summary statement, for what it is worth, which I submit for your perusal.

I am, roughly speaking, a follower of Thomas Reid’s method of common sense. But I do not say, as Reid (and others, like Plantinga) did, that the existence of God may be known as a principle of common sense. Rather, I think that various specialized skeptical and critical challenges to both natural theology and systematic theology can receive useful support from common sense. My view is that we should not be over-impressed by what are, ultimately, merely speculative possibilities that critics simply make too much of (such as Descartes’ dreaming doubt and adventuresome naturalistic theories of the origin of the faith of Abraham). For this reason, I find myself with no small contempt for much of that approach to Bible study that goes under the self-congratulatory title “Historical Critical Method.”

I am a rationalist to this extent: I think hard questions are necessary and indeed are the lifeblood of deeper understanding of the things of God. I think it is possible to build a systematic defense of theism, but I think it is a serious strategic (and rhetorical) error to portray the arguments as anything other than elements in an overall argument to the best explanation. A certain notion is common in the practice of analytic philosophy of religion but rarely conceded in so many words, namely, that we can logically demonstrate things about philosophy of religion. This is a mistake. In their logical or philosophical method, these philosophers often mistakenly fail to see and properly employ the inherently and importantly inductive features of their arguments. In their implicit rhetoric or apologetic method, they mistakenly treat the arguments as compelling or constraining, rather than persuasive or worldview-shifting.

Similarly, I hold that it is possible and useful to defend biblical doctrine, and make it appear quite coherent, not resting on a simple (fideistic) reading of the Bible or stolid adherence to Church doctrine. Rather, we should seek to lay bare the coherence of doctrine with a rational, common-sense approach to natural theology or philosophy of religion. We should take an equally rational, common-sense approach to hard exegesis, archaeology, text criticism, and the like. While I say such things, I am not a “rationalist” of the old Anabaptist type, to the extent that reason and its “natural light” stand in judgment of Scripture. Nothing stands higher than Scripture.

Underlying this commitment, I hold that God and his creation are perfectly rational and thus amenable to right use of our reason; I think our reason is part of his creation. Hence, it does not surprise me that there are sensible inductive arguments in favor of it, nor that the word of God can be propounded in profoundly rational systematic theologies, nor that it can be defended with surprising strength against skeptical challenges. These projects—philosophy of religion, theology, and apologetics—require time and patience to engage properly. But, for some people, like myself, they elegantly express just why we can accept and advocate for the fundamentals of Christian doctrine.


by

Posted

in

, ,

Comments

Please do dive in (politely). I want your reactions!

5 responses to “A Sketch of My Theological Method”

  1. Bear Saik

    Larry, I can tell you that the Holy Spirit (as part of the trinity and active) does not work in the rational. I think a person can try and rationalize God’s existance but you would be missing out on the faith aspect of how God works his “his story”. How can you rationalize miraculous healings that are 100% verified and no explanation other then prayer and having faith that God may choose to heal that person to use that person to further his kingdom and strengthen peoples faith

  2. Mark

    I admit to being a bit conflicted about this.
    – On one hand, this is well plowed ground. Christan theology, scriptural analysis, etc has been ongoing, with considerable effort and high-horsepower mental rigor, for 20 centuries.
    -On the other hand, I cant say Ive read a “unified explanation” of it all that appeals to today’s thoughtful reader. Language has changed, culture has changed, and available resources (esp access to previous sources and especially the searchable accesd to previous analytical thought) has improved.
    The second argument is stronger I think.

  3. To ask a question is to note that you care about whatever you are asking about – and the harder the question, the greater the love you show it. Thank you.

    1. Yeah, I don’t know about that one though. I can ask lots of questions about Satan, for example.

  4. Jonathan Michael Rake

    Thank you Larry.
    Interesting and clearly articulated
    I appreciate all youre doing.
    I think and have gathered many things from Scripture alone which enlighten me as to theological method. Being a busy dad and grandad and husband I hardly have time to put pen to paper but i have many notes and notebooks full!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *