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Saturday 28 November 2020

Theological philosophical models

Many when trying to understand God subscribe to an existing philosophical model of God, perhaps already picked out by their peers or church denomination. These models were formed over centuries since Roman Christians and others started to develop them on Hellenist philosophical lines in the third century, two hundred years after Christianity took shape. They called these models “orthodoxies”. The first two were Arianism and Trinitarianism as distinct from the more variant Gnosticism. Later Manichaeism, Muslim theology, Unitarianism and Binitarianism were added. Most recently Pentecostals added Oneness. They make approximations of understandings of scriptures and of philosophical theological theories about God and the Holy Spirit and Jesus. They also tend to distort scriptures to make them fit the model. Now a model is fine. We naturally create them. If say we make a phone-call to a loved one we know well, we might make a model in our minds of their likely situation. We picture how they might be. Maybe they are working and the kinds of things they might be doing could make it awkward to answer the phone. However, then when they do answer, and we get a real picture of their situation we quickly put that model picture on hold and replace it with reality. So too with our knowledge of God. Once we get the reality we can replace our model with that. We need to accept that the model might be replaced with reality once the connections are made with God. We need not cling to it. But danger comes when our social contacts and circles depend on maintaining that model. To get a grip on reality when it comes, if the social contacts tie us too tightly to the shared, agreed model we might do well to loosen those ties so we are not hindered when reality comes and God shines it into our minds. Love God enough to do this. Love God the most. Love Jesus the more than other loves. Truth sets free from sin and we need that truth more than the model and the ties that come with it.