Title: Mark A. Woeltge
1Thinking About God
Thinking the Faith for Today
Session I
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5Tough Situations
- What are some difficult life situations that you
have had to face? - How did you go about making sense of these
situations?
6Worldview
- Is the model by which we evaluate, interpret,
and explain reality and allow it to inform our
actions within this world
7- Where is God in all of this?
8Objective Of The Course
- To learn to intentionally Think About God in
light of our daily life experiences.
9Overview
- What does it mean to Think About God?
- Why do we Think About God?
- How do we Think About God?
- How does what we Think About God inform our
decisions and actions?
10- What does it mean to -
- Think About God?
11Thinking about God
Theology
- A fundamental attempt to make positive and
constructive statements about who God is and
who we are in light of who God is - Michael Jinkins
12Thinking about God
Communal Activity
- We can only fully understand who God is and
who we are in light of who God is - in community
in conversation with the other.
13Thinking about God
Relevancy
- Theology, when intentionally done within the
community, and not secluded in academia, will
inherently be contextual addressing the
communities realities and therefore have a
higher degree of relevancy.
14The Trap of Measurability
- Separates into opposing spheres the spirit and
the flesh, the intelligible and the sensible and
only acknowledges the authority of the material
and sensible and consigns the spirit and
intelligible to the realm of opinion and values.
15The Trap of Utility
- States that value is measured by a things
utility if it brings us personal gain, then it
is of value to us. -
16Critique of Measurability and Utility
- Measurability assumes a separation between what
is spirit and what is flesh that is unfounded,
particularly in light the incarnation. - Utility There are some things that transcend the
merely useful.
17Summary Thinking About God means
- Our attempt to know who God is and who we are
in light of who God is. - A communal event in that we can only truly know
God and ourselves in Community. - Necessarily contextual and relevant - when done
in community
18Thinking About God
Thinking the Faith for Today
Session II
19Overview
- What does it mean to Think About God?
- Why do we Think About God?
- How do we Think About God?
- How does what we Think About God inform our
decisions and actions?
20Thinking About God means
- Our attempt to know who God is and who we are
in light of who God is. - A communal event in that we can only truly know
God and ourselves in Community. - Necessarily contextual and relevant - when done
in community
21Why do we Think About God?
22Why do we Think About God?
- To make sense of our lived experience
-
- We Think About God in order to
- not only better evaluate, interpret and explain
our lived experience - but also in order to inform our response to our
particular experience
23Why do we Think About God?
- Christian thinking is a dimension of Christian
being - Christianity isnt a veil to shield us from
the world, but rather a way to think through the
world
24Why do we Think About God?
- Christendom in America is no longer a reality
- Christianity can no longer claim an exclusive
or even privileged position in a postmodern
American society
25Summary - Why do we Think About God?
- To make sense of our lived experience
- Christian thinking is a dimension of Christian
being - Christendom in America is no longer a reality
26How do we Think About God?
27 28Tell me about God
- How do we know these things about God?
- From where did we get our information?
- How reliable are your resources?
- Which resources do we assign greater authority?
29How do we Think About God?
Scripture
- Historical
- Older and Newer Testaments
- Received by Faith
- It is learned
- Authoritative
- Reveals the God of faith
30Scripture
- Christianity contains a vital and indispensable
historical component - The Bible. It is of
immediate and primary significance because it is
the sole witness to this foundational history.
31The Role of Scripture and Thinking About God
- The Secularist View
- The Fundamentalist view
32The Secularist Charge
- The Bible cannot claim Ultimate Truth because it
was written by human beings and therefore is
relative by very nature
33A response to the Secularist Charge
- We can insist that the Bible, being the only or
the primary testimony to occurrences which we
believe to be ultimately significant, is
indispensable to our faith and Thinking About God
-
-
Douglas John Hall
34The Fundamentalist Charge
- Insists that the Bible be accepted literally and
uncritically elevates the Bible to the level of
absolute
35A response to the Fundamentalist Charge
- The Bible points to the absolute God and is
not an absolute itself.
36How do we Think About God?
Tradition
- Doctrinal
- Creeds and Confessions
- Domestic
- Received from church
- and family
37Tradition
- Tradition means to hand over. Christian faith
is an historical faith which is handed over not
only from the early church but also from our
parents and grandparents
38The Role of Tradition and Thinking About God
- The Modernist/Individualist view
- The Traditionalist view
39The Modernist/Individualist agenda
- The modernist seeks to minimize, and in
extreme expressions, to eliminate the regulative
role of tradition in Thinking About God. The
modernist feels free to eliminate anything from
the past that does not seem readily applicable to
the present. - Douglas John Hall
40A response to the Modernist agenda
- It is impossible for one to escape the
informative and influential character of
tradition upon all of our long-held assumptions.
41The Traditionalist agenda
- Sees its primary responsibility that of upholding
in all of its purity the orthodox doctrinal
teachings of their particular tradition
42A response to the Traditionalist agenda
- Unquestioning preservation of a given tradition
not only discourages original reflection upon our
present context but also fails to recognize that
even tradition itself is contextually informed
43How do we Think About God?
Experience
- Personal
- Individual Experience
- Communal
- Cultural Experience
44Personal Experience
- Experience is something that we do not receive
from others but rather something we gain for
ourselves
45Personal Experience and its relation to Thinking
About God
- Middle Ages universal categories of Man
- Renaissance the re-birth of the individual
- Reformation transfer of authority to scripture
opens door to personal reception and
interpretation - Enlightenment - made an absolute of the human
intellect, reducing essential humanity to sheer
mind - Romanticism - point of departure for faith is not
reason nor authority but experience, the feeling
of absolute dependency - Post Modern - Thinking About God is not rational
thought but broad experientially based intuition
or feeling
46Assessment of Personal Experience
- Positive A touch stone for truth What
corresponds to human experience is acceptable,
what does not should be discarded as irrelevant - Negative - experience becomes the primary canon
of authenticity in theology leaving no vantage
point upon which to reflect upon experience
47Communal Experience
- Is a society or community structured by mutually
accepted and agreed upon values, beliefs,
attitudes, and behaviors.
48How do we Think About God?
Scripture Older Testament Newer Testament
Thinking About God
Tradition Doctrinal Domestic
Experience Personal Communal
49How do we Think About God?
Scripture Older Testament Newer Testament
Traditionalist
Modernist
Thinking About God
Tradition Doctrinal Domestic
Experience Personal Communal
Secularist
50Thinking About God
Thinking the Faith for Today
Session III
51Overview
- What does it mean to Think About God?
- Why do we Think About God?
- How do we Think About God?
- How does what we Think About God inform our
decisions and actions?
52Thinking About God means
- Our attempt to know who God is and who we are
in light of who God is. - A communal event in that we can only truly know
God and ourselves in Community. - Necessarily contextual and relevant - when done
in community
53Why do we Think About God?
- To make sense of our lived experience
- Christian thinking is a dimension of Christian
being - Christendom in America is no longer a reality
54How do we Think About God?
Scripture Older Testament Newer Testament
Thinking About God
Tradition Doctrinal Domestic
Experience Personal Communal
55Thinking About God the textbook model
Scripture
has priority over
Tradition
has priority over
Experience
56Thinking About God in reality
Experience
has priority over
Tradition
has priority over
Scripture
57- How Does What We Think About God
- Inform Our Decisions and Actions?
58A Method for Thinking About God
We begin to engage God through our lived
experience and it is those experiences that
initiate our reflecting upon where God is in all
of this.
59Thinking About God A Method
- Articulate
- Define what the issue is that you are seeking
to explore - What took place?
- When did it take place?
- Where did it take place?
- Who was involved?
- How did you feel?
- How did you react?
60Thinking About God A Method
- Attend
- Begin to retrieve elements from your
religious tradition related to this experience. - Scripture Bible, Commentary, Concordance,
Dictionary, and Pastor/Professor - Tradition Doctrinally (Creeds and Confessions)
Domestically (family and church) - Experience What has been your personal
experience and what does your social context have
to say
61Thinking About God A Method
- Assert
- honestly and openly engage all other voices
through the process of attending in order to
challenge and be challenged correct and be
corrected.
62Thinking About God A Method
- Agree
- Attempt to reach some agreement on your
assertions is there some common ground which you
can explore?
63Thinking About God A Method
- Act
- Establish an action plan upon which you will act
out your decisions based on Thinking About God
64Thinking About God A Method
- Assess
- After a period of time, assess your progress
towards making positive and constructive
statements about who God is and who you are in
light of who God is within this current
experience. This should lead you into further
Thinking About God.
65Thinking About God A Method
66Review
67Thinking About God means
- Our attempt to know who God is and who we are
in light of who God is. - A communal event in that we can only truly know
God and ourselves in Community. - Necessarily contextual and relevant - when done
in community
68Why do we Think About God?
- To make sense of our lived experience
- Christian thinking is a dimension of Christian
being - Christendom in America is no longer a reality
69How do we Think About God?
Scripture Older Testament Newer Testament
Thinking About God
Tradition Doctrinal Domestic
Experience Personal Communal
70Thinking About God A Method
71Thinking About God
- A life long process of intentionally Thinking
About God who God is and who we are in light of
who God is - in all of our daily life
experiences.
72Thanks Be To God!
73Thinking About God
Thinking the Faith for Today