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Volume II: Rediscovering Precious Values,
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Final Examination Answers, History of Christian Doctrine[19 May 1953]
[1. Compare the theological methods of Thomas Aquinas, Wesley and Schleiermacher.] 1. Thomas Aquinas argues that there are two ways of gaining religious truth. The first way is that of philosophy. Here inferences are made from sense data. The movement is upward from particular things to God. The second way is that of theology. Here everything is revealed. The movement is downward from God to particular thing. In Thomas we get a synthesis of revealed theology and natural theology. Wesley starts out affirming with the general reformation teachers that the Bible is authorative. Indeed he affirms that the Bible is a sufficient source of religious truth. Yet he does not stop here. He makes it very clear that reason has a place in theological construction. Althought reason is not the source of doctrine, it must be used to interpret doctrine. We need reason to infere and judge. So he concludes that we must use our finite reason as far as possible and then we must depend on revelation. Here we can see that Wesley has something in common with Thomas. Both find reason {to be} a valid instrument in theological construction and yet both are equally insistent that reason must be suplimented by revelation. It is probably true to say that Wesley places more emphasis on the authority of the Bible than Thomas. Thomas, following the Catholic emphasis, places a deal of importance and authority in the councils. Schleiermacher starts out attempting to discover what is universal in religion. He discovers that it is a feeling of absolute dependence, rather than dogmas or ethical teachings. All theology is an attempt to explicate the teachings implied in this feeling of absolute dependence. In other words Schleiermacher's method is to describe didactically the religious consciousness, and state its implications regarding the attributes of God, the nature of the world and the relation of God and man. Herein we see the difference between Scheiermacher, Wesley and Thomas.
Wherein Thomas would begin with reason and revelation, and Wesley would
begin with the Scripture [2. Compare Schleiermacher's and Ritschl's teachings on the person of Christ.] 2. Both Schleiermacher and Ritschl opposed the orthodox doctrines concerning the person of Christ. Both doubted the orthodox doctrine of the trinity. Both rejected the two nature doctrine of Christ. Both insisted that if Christ was divine it was not due to any substantial unity with God. For Schleiermacher the essence of Christ person was found in his unique God consciousness. The feeling of absolute dependence ruled in Christ supreme. Every action and attitude in his life was determine by this absolute God consciousness. So dominant was this God consciousness that Christ had the slightest inclination for sin. He was never even tempted. Schleiermacher was convinced that Christ was unique and could be replaced by non other. But his uniqueness was found in the complete God consciousness that ruled in him rather than in any substantial unity with God. Ritschl made it very clear that Ritschl, like Schleiermacher, affirmed that Jesus is unique and replacable
by no other. God worked in him as he worked through no other human being.
But this does not mean that Christ possesses a different nature from other
men. Both Ritschl and Schleiermacher would affirm that Christ possessed
the same nature as other men. [3. Show the place of philosophy in relation to the theology of Duns Scotus, Edwards, Ritschl and Kierkegaard.] 3. Duns Scotus used philosophy to some degree in his theological construction,
accepting basically the Christian Aristoteleanism of Aquinas. But he restricted
the domain of philosophy quite a Edwards found philosophy to be quite a useful tool in relation to theology.
His whole doctrine of the world is Ritschl excluded, or rather attempted to exclude, philosophy almost completely from theological construction. His watchword could have well been: theology without metaphysics. Following the Kantian epistemology, he insisted that all knowledge is of phenomena. One can never get to the Ding an sich through reason. He goes on to argue that all religious knowledge consist of independent value judgments, in constrast to scientific and philosophical knowledge which is based on causal and factual judgments. So religion does not have to wait on philosophical proof to operate. Kierkegaard had no use for philosophy. System making was at best a game.
Philosophy is based on the false premise that one can be objective. But
in the realm of Christianity one is called upon to make a choice which
has ultimate significance. To make such a choice the individual must give
his whole self to God or reality rather than wait for all the answers.
Knowledge of existence is individual subjective and [strikeout illegible]
existential. Universals do not give us knowledge because universals do
not exist. So Kierkegaard ends up affirming that the chief instrument
of philosophy, viz., reason must be crucified. [4. How appropriate is the designation of Barth's theology as a "new orthodoxy"? Discuss as fully as possible within the available time.] 4. It seems that the designation of Barth's theology as the "new orthodoxy"
is quite appropriate at some points and quite inappropriate at other point.
It is appropriate in the sense that it calls us back to [5. Summarize the characteristic theological teachings of Channing.] 5. Theological teachings of Channing
6. Fisher's treatment of late medieval and modern Christian thought is
presented quite objectively and in a lucid style. He never seems to be
bias toward a particular view because it isn't in line with his religious
tradition. This is especially true of His treatment of the influence of philosophy on Christian thought in this period is very good, and shows a real understanding of philosophical trends. AHDS. MLKP-MBU: Box 115, folder 34. |