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10. Biblical Theology and Progressive Revelation

10. Biblical Theology and Progressive Revelation

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Download: Restoration Theology Student Notes

Introduction to Theology Series

  • This begins a 5-part theology section (5th floor of the tower).

  • Theology = discourse about God (θεος + λογος); broadly any Christian belief/doctrine.

Preliminaries before doing theology

  • Pray for help/illumination from the Spirit.

  • Be willing to change beliefs if Bible evidence is strong.

  • Truth has nothing to fear; hold beliefs loosely.

  • Never force Bible to fit your theology (example: never alter 1 John 5:7).

  • Better to live with uncertainty than adopt a flawed position.

Defining Biblical Theology

  • Bible is not flat/one-time revelation (unlike Koran or single-lifetime texts).

  • Written over ~2,000 years; God progressively revealed Himself and His story.

  • Biblical theology studies both what Bible teaches and how teaching develops over time.

  • Key quote (Michael Lawrence): Bible reveals progressively; biblical theology traces developments in redemptive history.

  • Highlights diversity among authors (different focuses, emphases, vocabularies).

  • Two main ways to do it:

    • Study theology of one book/author.

    • Trace major themes across whole Bible (e.g., kingdom, covenant, sin, redemption).

Progressive Revelation Explained

  • God reveals more and more over time (e.g., OT shadows → NT fulfillment in Christ).

  • Not contradiction, but development and maturity.

  • Must read earlier texts in light of later revelation (final form matters).

Major Example: Kingdom of God

  • Begins in Eden (perfect rule).

  • Lost through sin.

  • Abrahamic promise: land, descendants, blessing.

  • Mosaic covenant: Israel as kingdom of priests.

  • Davidic covenant: eternal king.

  • Prophets: future restoration.

  • Jesus announces kingdom arrived (Mark 1:15); demonstrates it with miracles.

  • Cross/resurrection: victory over sin/death.

  • Church: partial presence now.

  • Future: full consummation in renewed world

Major Example: Abrahamic Covenant

  • Promises: land, many descendants, blessing to nations (Gen 12, 15, 17).

  • Initial fulfillment: Joshua conquers Canaan.

  • Exile disrupts; return partial.

  • NT: Jesus as Abraham’s seed; Gentiles blessed/grafted in (Gal 3, Rom 4).

  • Land promise expands to whole world (Rom 4:13).

  • Future: immense multitude inherits earth forever.

Purpose of Biblical Theology

  • Understand Bible on its own terms before systematizing.

  • Topical/thematic grouping stays close to biblical language and history.

  • Quote (Köstenberger & Goswell): Synthesize within original settings; systematic theology goes broader/conceptual.

Conclusion: Biblical theology respects development and diversity within unity.

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