Faith That Thinks: How Reason Serves Revelation

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The Place of Reason in Theology in Relationship Between Faith and Reason

We must see faith and reason not as opposing forces but as partners, with faith providing the foundation for true understanding. God has given us reason as a tool to help us grasp and articulate His truth, but we must always remember that it is subject to divine revelation rather than an independent judge over it.

We must also recognize that sin has corrupted human thinking, making natural reason insufficient for truly knowing God. While reason can acknowledge His existence, it cannot fully grasp His truth without the illumination of faith.

Faith is not blind—it invites reason to explore, defend, and delight in God’s truth. A renewed mind does not reject reason but redeems it, using it to love God with all our heart, soul, and mind.

A Case for Christian Theology in a Postmodern World.

There is always a temptation to reshape Christianity to fit contemporary thought, but history proves that when the church compromises its message for the sake of relevance, it loses its power. Looking back at Christian history, in the 19th and 20th centuries, theological liberalism led many churches to reject biblical truth, resulting in spiritual decline. More recently, the prosperity gospel has watered down Christianity, making it appealing but ultimately powerless. The truth of Scripture is not something to be redefined to meet the expectations and demands of a postmodern world but to be proclaimed with boldness and clarity.

This does not mean we should disengage from culture or ignore the real intellectual challenges of our time. Rather, it means standing firm on the authority and sufficiency of the Word, that the gospel is not just one competing perspective among many but the ultimate truth. Our role is not to make Christianity more acceptable by softening its claims but to declare its truth without compromise. The power of the gospel does not lie in its ability to adapt to cultural trends but in its unchanging reality.

The Certainty of Theological Knowledge

I’ve come to see that true learning, especially in matters of theology, isn’t about chasing new ideas or relying on human reasoning alone. If certainty is to be real and attainable, it must come from a source greater than myself—God’s revelation. Scripture, as God’s revealed Word, isn’t just a helpful guide; it’s the foundation of all true knowledge. Without it, learning becomes absolutely uncertain, always shifting with human opinion.
Learning is not just about endlessly considering possibilities but about submitting to what God has already made known. That doesn’t mean shutting down curiosity; rather, it means directing it toward understanding and applying the truth He has revealed. And the beauty of this is that it’s not just for theologians or scholars—it’s for every believer. God’s revelation is clear and sufficient, meaning certainty in what I learn is not only possible but expected when I anchor myself in His Word.

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A good recap of several of our class lectures.

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