My first great theological mentor was the pastor during my
college years, Earl Palmer. Actually, my “college years” were my first years as
a Christian. So I learned by Theological ABCs at the same time I began to take
steps as what is now called “emerging young adulthood.”
During
those sermons in the sanctuary of First Presbyterian Church of Berkeley, I
heard Earl declare (and everything in the pulpit is an enthusiastic declaration
for him):
Every Christian is a theologian! As soon as you answer the question, ‘What do you believe?” you are a theologian. You’re either a good theologian or a bad one, but you’re a theologian!
And
ever since that time, I’ve yearned to be in that “good” category. I’ve also wanted
the same for as many other Christians as possible.
In
an historical sense, Earl has a crucial point: The earliest confession—found,
for example, in 1 Corinthians 12:3—is “Jesus is Lord.” This statement most
likely answered the question, “What do you believe?” on the way to a first-century baptism. (This letter to the churches at Corinth was written around 55
AD.) This confession of faith then expanded to not just a paragraph on Jesus as
Lord, but included one before and one after. So we find the fourth century
Nicene Creed outlining “the faith once delivered” (to quote Jude 1:3) on these
three paragraphs—a theology structured on God the Father, God the Son, and God
the Holy Spirit.
And
so I preach, teach, and write theology based on this threefold, and ultimately
Trinitarian, framework as a means to answer the question, “What does the
Christian community believe?” and therefore to help fellow followers of Jesus
to become, in Earl’s words, “good theologians.”
There
will be successes in this endeavor, and of course, failure. But I would be bold
enough to say (so why not say it?) that, if this theology—or one like—is done
right, it should be read by all types of thoughtful Christians. This
theological task is for mothers and fathers, mechanics, professors, real estate
agents, morticians, plumbers, and students.
In
other words, let’s not just leave this work for the professionals, as it were,
to answer the question “What do you believe?” Nonetheless, the professionals can certainly help in this crucial task.
1 comment:
I like your post, Greg. It seems harder and harder to find great numbers of people (even pastors) who care much about these matters anymore.
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