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Theoretical Exploration

Reflection

After their participation in the Seminary Chapel Colloquium, each individual was asked to answer a few key questions for reflection.  Their answers are below:

1. In our time together, what was the most significant thing you learned about worship and theological education?

2. What is one question you will continue to wrestle with during the coming year?

3. What is one new thing you are eager to try in the coming year? i.e. one practice that you may introduce, a current practice you wish to modify, etc.?

Notable Quotes:

Theology and Doxology

It is important to note from Romans 1-11 that theology (our belief about God) and doxology (our worship of God) should never be separated.  On the one hand, there can be no doxology without theology.  It is not possible to worship an unknown god.  All true worship is a response to the self-revelation of God in Christ and Scripture, and arises from our reflection on who he is and what he has done.  It was the tremendous truths of Romans 1-11 which provoked Paul's outburst of praise in verses 33-36 of chapter 11.  The worship of God is evoked, informed and inspired by the vision of God.  Worship without theology is bound to degenerate into idolatry.  Hence the indispensable place of Scripture in both public and private devotion.  It is the Word of God which calls forth the worship of God.

On the other hand, there should be no theology without doxology.  There is something fundamentally flawed about a purely academic interest in God.  God is not an appropriate object for cool, critical, detached, scientific observation and evaluation.  No, the true knowledge of God will always lead us to worship, as it did Paul.  Our place is on our faces before him in adoration.

As I believe Bishop Handley Moule said at the end of the last century, we must "beware equally of an undevotional theology and of an untheological devotion."

— John Stott, Romans: God’s Good News for the World, InterVarsity Press, 1994.

For more notable quotes, see Chip Stam’s Worship Quote of the Week website.

A prayer for Seminary Chapel:

Holy Spirit,
Help me to withhold judgment
of what is strange and new to me.
Use this service of worship
to deepen my belief in God,
to expand my understanding of the gospel,
to strengthen my bonds with all people
and to serve more faithfully Jesus Christ
in whose name I pray.  Amen.

— Thomas Troeger in Trouble at the Table, Doran & Troeger (Abingdon, 1992), p. 148.

(Photo from Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary)