Outline of Christian theology
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Christian theology:
Christian theology is the study of Christian belief and practice. Such study concentrates primarily upon the texts of the Old Testament and the New Testament as well as on Christian tradition. Christian theologians use biblical exegesis, rational analysis and argument. Theology might be undertaken to help the theologian better understand Christian tenets; to make comparisons between Christianity and other traditions; to defend Christianity against objections and criticism; to facilitate reforms in the Christian church and to assist in the propagation of Christianity.
Divisions of Christian theology
There are many methods of categorizing different approaches to Christian theology. For a historical analysis, see the main article on the History of Christian theology.Sub-disciplines
Christian theologians may be specialists in one or more theological sub-disciplines. These are the kinds of phrases that one finds in certain job titles such as 'Professor of x', 'Senior Lecturer in y':- Apologetics/polemics – studying Christian theology as it compares to non-Christian worldviews in order to defend the faith and challenge beliefs that lie in contrast with Christianity.
- Biblical hermeneutics – interpretation of the Bible, often with particular emphasis on the nature and constraints of contemporary interpretation.
- Biblical studies – interpretation of the Bible, often with particular emphasis on historical-critical investigation.
- Biblical theology – interpretation of the Bible, often with particular emphasis on links between biblical texts and the topics of systematic or dogmatic theology.
- Constructive theology – generally another name for systematic theology; also specifically a postmodernist approach to systematic theology, applying feminist theory, queer theory, deconstructionism, and hermeneutics to theological topics.
- Dogmatic theology – studying theology as it developed in different church denominations.
- Ecumenical theology – comparing the doctrines of the diverse churches with the goal of promoting unity among them
- Exegesis – interpretation of the Bible.
- Historical theology – studying Christian theology via the thoughts of other Christians throughout the centuries.
- Homiletics – in theology the application of general principles of rhetoric to public preaching.
- Moral theology, specifically Christian ethics – explores the moral and ethical dimensions of the religious life
- Natural theology – the discussion of those aspects of theology that can be investigated without the help of revelation scriptures or tradition.
- Patristics or patrology—studies the teaching of Church Fathers, or the development of Christian ideas and practice in the period of the Church Fathers.
- Philosophical theology – the use of philosophical methods in developing or analyzing theological concepts.
- Pragmatic or practical theology – studying theology as it relates to everyday living and service to God, including serving as a religious minister.
- Spiritual theology—studying theology as a means to orthopraxy; scripture and tradition are both used as guides for spiritual growth and discipline.
- Systematic theology —focused on the attempt to arrange and interpret the ideas current in the religion. This is also associated with constructive theology.
- Theological aesthetics – interdisciplinary study of theology and aesthetics/the arts.
- Theological hermeneutics – the study of the manner of construction of theological formulations. Related to theological methodology.
Major topics
- Bible – the nature and means of its inspiration, etc.; including hermeneutics
- Eschatology – the study of the last things, or end times. Covers subjects such as death and the afterlife, the end of history, the end of the world, the last judgment, the nature of hope and progress, etc.
- Christology – the study of Jesus Christ, of his nature, and of the relationship between his divinity and humanity;
- Divine providence – the study of sovereignty, superintendence, or agency of God over events in people's lives and throughout history.
- Ecclesiology —the study of the Christian Church, including the institutional structure, sacraments and practices thereof
- Mariology – area of theology concerned with Mary, the Mother of Jesus Christ.
- Missiology —God's will in the world, missions, evangelism, etc.
- Pneumatology – the study of the Holy Spirit, sometimes also 'geist' as in Hegelianism and other philosophico-theological systems
- Protology - the study of first things, such as God's creation of all things.
- Soteriology – the study of the nature and means of salvation. May include hamartiology, God's Law and the Gospel. It is the discussion of what God is not, or the investigation of how language about God breaks down. Apophatic theology often is contrasted with "Cataphatic theology".
A traditional pattern
- Exegetical theology
- Historical theology
- Systematic theology
- Practical theology
1. Exegetical theology:
- Biblical studies
- Biblical introduction
- Canonics
- Biblical theology.
- The Patristic Period
- * The Ante-Nicene Fathers
- * The Nicene Fathers
- * The Post-Nicene Fathers
- The Middle Ages
- The Reformation and Counter-Reformation
- The Modern Period
- Prolegomena
- Theology Proper
- * The existence of God
- * The attributes of God
- * The Trinity
- * Creation
- * Divine Providence
- Doctrine of Man
- Christology
- Soteriology
- * Justification
- * Sanctification
- Pneumatology
- Ecclesiology
- Eschatology and the afterlife.
- Moral theology
- Ecclesiology
- Pastoral theology
- * Liturgics
- * Homiletics
- * Christian education
- * Christian counseling
- Missiology
Roman Catholic theology
- Biblical canon ;
- Absolution ;
- The apostolic succession ;
- Christology;
- Ecclesiology since Vatican II;
- Infant Baptism;
- Ecumenism ;
- Ecumenical Councils ;
- Icon veneration;
- The Immaculate Conception of Mary;
- Real Presence;
- Liturgy since Vatican II;
- Models of the Church ;
- Moral Theology/Ethics;
- Natural Law;
- Indulgences ;
- Mary ;
- The Pope ;
- Purgatory ;
- Sacerdotalism, Mass ;
- The Sacraments; Transubstantiation; Fermentum;
- Sainthood, canonization and beatification;
- Papal Infallibility ;
- Tradition.
Controversial movements
Pre-Reformation
- Alogi – rejected the doctrine of the Logos
- Arianism – doctrines regarding Christ's divinity;
- Donatism
- Ebionitism
- Gnosticism – Generally rejected the goodness of the physical to emphasize the spiritual, also emphasized "hidden teachings."
- Judaizers
- Manichaeism
- Marcionism
- Monarchianism – doctrines regarding Christ's divinity
- Monophysitism – doctrines regarding Christ's divinity
- Montanism
- Nazarene
- Nicolationism
- Nontrinitarianism
- Novatianism
- Pelagianism – denial of original sin and helplessness of sinner to save himself, strong affirmation of libertarian free will
- Quartodecimanism – Easter controversy
- Sabellianism – doctrines regarding the Trinity, also known as "modalism."
- Simonianism
Post-Reformation
- Adventism – Typified by the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
- Anabaptism
- Anglicanism
- Anglo-Catholicism – High church theology of Anglicanism.
- Arminianism – Reaction to Calvinist soteriology, which affirms man's freedom to accept or reject God's gift of salvation; identified with Dutch Reformed theologian Jacobus Arminius, developed by Hugo Grotius, defended by the Remonstrants, and popularized by John Wesley. Key doctrine of Anglican and Methodist churches, adopted by many Baptists and some Congregationalists.
- Brethrenism: Anabaptist-Pietist, with Open and Exclusive streams.
- Calvinism – System of soteriology advanced by French Reformer John Calvin, which espouses Augustinian views on election and reprobation; stresses absolute predestination, the sovereignty of God and the inability of man to effect his own salvation by believing the Gospel prior to regeneration; principle doctrines are often summarized by the acronym TULIP.
- Charismaticism – Movement in many Protestant and some Catholic churches that emphasizes the gifts of the Spirit and the continual working of the Holy Spirit within the body of Christ; often associated with glossolalia and divine healing.
- Congregationalism – Form of governance used in Congregationalist, Baptist, and Pentecostal churches in which each congregation is self-governing and independent of all others.
- Counter-Reformation : The Roman Catholic response to the Protestant Reformation.
- Creation Spirituality – Panentheist theology.
- Deism – The general doctrine that no faith is necessary for justified belief in God's existence or the doctrine that God does not intervene in earthly affairs.
- Dispensationalism – Belief in a conservative, Biblically literalist hermeneutic and philosophy of history that, by stressing the dichotomy between Israel and the Church, rejects supersessionism.
- Evangelicalism – Typically conservative, predominantly Protestant outlook that prioritizes evangelism above all or most other activities of the Church.
- Fideism – The doctrine that faith is irrational, that God's existence transcends logic, and that all knowledge of God is on the basis of faith.
- Latitudinarianism: Broad church theology of Anglicanism.
- Liberalism – Belief in interpreting the Bible to allow for the maximum amount of individual freedom.
- Low church – Puritanical / Evangelical theology of Anglicanism.
- Methodism – Form of church governance and doctrine used in the Methodist Church.
- Modernism – Belief that truth changes, so doctrine must evolve in light of new information or trends.
- Latter Day Saint movement : Belief that the Book of Mormon and others to be additional divine scriptures; belief in living prophets; generally reject the Nicene creed and other early creeds.
- New Thought – Movement based on 19th century New England belief in positive thinking. Several denominations arose from it including Unity Church, and Religious Science.
- Nonconformism – Advocacy of religious liberty; includes Quakers, Methodists, Baptists, Congregationalists and Salvationists.
- Nontrinitarianism – Rejection of the doctrine of Trinity.
- Open Theism – A rejection of the exhaustive foreknowledge of God, by attributing it to Greek philosophy.
- Pentecostalism
- Pietism – A stream of Lutheranism placing renewed emphasis on the Bible and a universal priesthood of all believers.
- Presbyterianism – Form of governance used in Presbyterian and Reformed churches.
- Puritanism: Movement to cleanse Episcopalianism of any "ritualistic" aspects.
- Supersessionism – Belief that the Christian Church, the body of Christ, is the only elect people of God in the new covenant age.
- Restoration Movement – 19th century attempt to return to a New Testament model of the Church.
- Restorationism – The doctrine that most of the modern Church is apostate; includes the Millerites, Seventh-day Adventists, Jehovah's Witnesses, and Latter Day Saints.
- Salvation Army – An offshoot of the Methodist Church known for its charitable activities
- Tractarianism – Oxford Movement. It led to Anglo-Catholicism.
- Ultramontanism – A movement within 19th-century Roman Catholicism to emphasize papal authority, particularly in the wake of the French Revolution and the secularization of the state
- Unification Church
- Unitarianism – Rejects a holy "Trinity" and also the divinity of Christ, with some exceptions.
- Universalism – In various forms, the belief that all people will ultimately be reconciled with God; most famously defended by Origen.
Contemporary theological movements
- Augustinianism
- Black theology
- Catholic Christianity
- Anarchism
- Christian fundamentalism
- Covenant Theology
- Dalit theology
- Dispensationalism
- Eastern Orthodox Christianity
- Emerging church
- Evangelicalism
- Feminist theology
- Fundamentalism
- Holocaust theology
- Liberal theology
- Liberation theology
- Lutheranism
- Methodism
- Molinism
- Narrative theology – studying a narrative presentation of the faith rather than dogmatic development.
- Neo-orthodoxy
- Neo-scholasticism
- New Church
- New Covenant Theology
- Palamism
- Paleo-Orthodoxy
- Pentecostalism
- Personalism
- Postliberal theology
- Postmodern theology
- Process theology
- Progressive theology
- Prosperity theology
- Queer Theology
- Quakerism
- Restoration Movement
- Revisionist theology
- Scotism
- Thomism
- Transcendental Theology
Christian theology organizations