Monday, September 8, 2014 at 6:06PM
rebecca in bloggy business
I started posting definitions and explanations of theological terms way back in September of 2007. That’s seven years of almost weekly theological terms. It’s almost weekly because I’ve had a few short breaks from blogging. But if I was blogging anything at all, there would be a weekly theological term.
The very first term ever was perspicuity of scripture.(The linked post has been updated to a newer format, so it looks a little different than it did originally.)
I’ve never run out of theological terms to define. I’ve thought I was close a few times, but someone would suggest a term or I’d come across a term while reading, and we’d be off to the races again. Once in a while, I’ll read something that leads to a whole new category of theological terms, like recently when I read What’s Your Worldview?, for instance.
Some of the terms are not really theological terms. I’ll use any Christian or biblical word that a new believer or child might not understand.
I’m still taking suggestions for theological terms. What’ve you got?
The theological terms are the most popular thing on my blog, and the page that lists all the terms gets as much traffic as the rest of the posts put together.
I have plans to turn this one unwieldy page listing all the terms into several pages, with one page for A-E, one for F-J, and so on—and one page for each of the categories. I’m not sure when I’ll get this done, but it is on my list of things to do.
If I link to something in a theological term post, I’ve read it or listened to it, and judged the information to be useful, although I may not agree with every single thing in it. If a piece contains what I judge to be false teaching, it will include a warning. For instance, I’ve sometimes quoted people who advocate a heretical view so the reader can see the arguments used to support it, but I’ve noted that the doctrine defended is defective.
Because links die or move over time, I should probably spend as much time updating old term posts as I do composing new ones, but that’d be no fun.
Once in a while, I get an email from someone telling me how they use the theological terms. Recently, someone told me they’re using them for Bible students in Africa who read English but aren’t familiar with technical doctrinal terms. Emails like this make me very happy and give me incentive to keep on defining and explaining theological terms.
Article originally appeared on Rebecca Writes (http://rebecca-writes.com/).
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