What is theology?

Theology

The academic study of languages is informative and educative. The practical learning of languages is necessary when living in the culture where it is used. It is important to recall, in comparison, in terms of vocabulary, English is like a pint glass, Hebrew is like a shot glass, a more ancient language logically more limited, and Greek is like a pitcher, or so I have been told. I think this is important to remember as we tease apart terms, and all rationality is about defining one’s terms.

Dr. Benedict Nguyen is the new Diocese of Venice Director of Communications and Office of Worship. He began his position on June 30 2015 and comes from the Diocese of La Crosse, Wisc.
Dr. Benedict Nguyen is the new Diocese of Venice Director of Communications and Office of Worship. He began his position on June 30 and comes from the Diocese of La Crosse, Wisc.

-by Dr. Benedict Nguyen, M.T.S., J.D./J.C.L., D.Min (ABD) Dr. Nguyen taught me my Intro to Theology course at the Avila Institute.

“What is theology? If we talk about spiritual theology, before we can dive into that, we have to see what is theology. So the etymology of the word – which is the place, the root of the word – comes from two Greek words. “Theos” meaning God. “Logos” meaning a whole host of things. If you take a Greek lexicon – and for us academic nerds we call Greek, for some reason, a lexicon as opposed to a dictionary – really, it’s such a generic – if you take a Greek lexicon, and you look up the word logos, and if it’s a good lexicon, you’ll see that the entry for logos goes on for column after column after column, sometimes even pages. The word logos is so rich in meaning, it means logic. Logic. A logic. You know that logic itself comes from logos. So it’s science, a reason, a body of knowledge.

But we also know that John in his gospel starts with Ἐν ἀρχῇ ἦν ὁ λόγος (logos), “In the beginning was the Word”-Jn 1:1. So, yes, it is the study of God that if you think logos, the word itself, and start to unpack its meaning you’ll see that theology is so much more than just an academic study; so much more that just a body of knowledge. That you can see that God is so much more than some type of mathematical formula. St. Thomas puts it this way: the study of God and all things in relation to God. So it’s not just this fact about God, that fact about God. So when we speak about theology, it has to be more than just a body of knowledge. It has to be more than just facts about God. In other words, in our Christian tradition, which we’ll see if we follow this to a logical conclusion about logos, if we follow it through to that, we can see very clearly that you cannot be truly a theologian if you are not a theist, a Christian, a believer in that. You would have to qualify that word theology, such and such theology, such and such theology. We in our Christian Catholic tradition, we would have to say “No!”,theology is the entirety of truth, in the relation to God.

That’s what St. Thomas says theology is. It’s not just a bunch of tidbits of information. How we view theology is what we see everything in relation to God. So I always tell my students, if someone were to ask me, “Why are you Catholic? Why are you Christian?” My response would have to be “Because I accept everything that is real. Anything that is real, I accept that.” That entirety of knowledge, that entirety of truth starting from the existence of God all the way down to minutiae of scientific experimentation, and things like that. Is it true? Yes. And if it is, then that entire thing is what we would call theology, or what we would call Christianity, and what I would call Catholicism because those questions have to be there.

Does God exist? If you say yes, that separates you from the atheists and agnostics, those who don’t believe in God. We would accept that it’s true, but they must accept something that they hold not to be true. It is a contradiction. So with that then, do you accept that it’s a Trinity, that there are three persons in one God? I’d say yes. The Muslim and the Jew would say no. We’d part ways. We’d really go and go and going all the way to these truths, all of these truths that are laid out, that is the theology. That is the “theos logos”. That is this something that we study that is not just tidbits of information, but is ALL things in relation to God.

What is theology then? We’re distinguishing out between philosophy and theology. Theology is the study of supernatural truth. Theology is the study of God and pursuing God via not just natural revelation, but also supernatural revelation. What do we mean by this? Natural revelation is the things that God has created. Natural revelation – I’m sorry, yeah, natural revelation is the things God has created. The world, science, things like that. Supernatural revelation is those things that God simply has revealed to us. Supernatural revelation is usually those things that we could never have come up with on our own. Things are at least very difficult to come up with on our own; that we would need help in order to grasp, and to know, and to understand.”

Love,
Matthew