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How Reformed Theology Built a Habitable System

How Reformed Theology Built a Habitable System

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Is systematic theology merely a dry catalog of abstract propositions, or is it something more dynamic? In this episode, we explore the concept of "architectonic" theology—the idea that doctrine possesses form, space, and structural integrity designed to create a spiritual dwelling for the church.We trace the structural evolution of Reformed theology, beginning with the definitive blueprint found in John Calvin’s Institutes, which is anchored by the "duplex cognitio"—the twofold knowledge of God the Creator and God the Redeemer. We discuss how the Reformation shifted from the "Loci Communes" (common places) method to the sophisticated "Systema" of the 17th-century scholastics, who used reason to secure the perimeter of orthodoxy.Listen in as we dismantle the 19th-century "Central Dogma" theory, which falsely claimed Reformed theology was a deterministic system deduced entirely from predestination. Finally, we examine the practical "technometry" of William Ames, who defined theology as the art of living to God, and the modern "organic" synthesis of Herman Bavinck, who viewed truth not as a machine, but as a living organism.Key Topics:The Architectonic Principle: Why theology is a "habitation" rather than a "utopia."• Calvin’s Design: The Apostles’ Creed as an external shell and the history of salvation as the internal logic.• Federal Theology: How the covenants of Works, Grace, and Redemption became the organizing scaffold of the 17th century.• Method Wars: The debate between the Analytic (ends to means) and Synthetic (causes to effects) methods.• The Organic Motif: Bavinck’s Trinitarian response to modernity.

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