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Biblical Theology
Seeks the authorially intended message of a Biblical book as part of the canon
Covenant
A binding agreement between God and man or between two people that seals a relationship.
Covenant Theology
Explains the Bible's message through the continuity of its covenants with each Biblical covenant reflecting the covenants of work and grace between God and man; it emphasizes continuity between Israel and the Church; it divides the law codes into moral, civil, and ceremonial with the church under its moral aspect.
Dispensationalism
Explains the Bible's message through the discontinuity of the covenants with each new covenant forming a distinct test of a person or group of people or all of humanity to show that man is in constant need of God's grace; it emphasizes a distinction between Israel and the church; the MC's law codes do not apply to the church.
Federal Theology
Another name for covenant theology, which explains the Bible's message through the continuity of its covenants with each Biblical covenant reflecting the covenant of redemption (within God) and the covenants of work and grace between God and man; it emphasizes continuity between Israel and the Church; it divides the law codes into moral, civil, and ceremonial with the church under its moral aspect.
New Covenant Theology
A compromise between covenant theology and dispensationalism that does not divide the law codes into moral, civil, and ceremonial; it offers continuity between God's people but discontinuity between the moral aspects of the Old Covenant and New Covenant.
Progressive Covenantalism
A reformed baptist compromise between covenant theology and dispensationalism that emphasizes the covenants as a guide through the Old Testament, giving the Old Testament time to speak on its own terms; Old Testament connects to the New Testament through typology
Progressive Dispensationalism
A compromise between covenant theology and dispensationalism that sees overlap between dispensationalism's emphasis on two people of God and in the covenants themselves.
Progressive Revelation
God reveals Himself over time rather than all at once.
Systematic Theology
Seeks an answer to a particular topic or question based upon reading the whole canon synchronically and the church's interpretations synchronically, being organized by key doctrines (man, God, and the cross), so that the church may proclaim and practice rightly.
The Book of Acts
The fifth book of the New Testament canon is a narrative that outlines how God's Spirit acted in the early church and that teaches how to wait for God's kingdom to come.
The Book of Revelation
The last book of the New Testament canon is an apocalyptic epistle that commands its readers to meditate on the Torah while waiting for God's kingdom to come.
The Epistles
The letters of the New Testament
The Former Prophets
The first half of the Prophets, which is the second part of the OT; it contains prophetic narratives of Israel's time in Canaan; Joshua, Judges, Samuel, Kings.
The Gospels
The four NT books that narrate the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
The Prophets
The second part of the Old Testament; it is one book unto itself; it divides into the Former Prophets (the story of Israel's time in the land of Canaan) and the Latter Prophets (prophectic reflections on this time in light of the Torah)
The Writings
The third part of the Old Testament; it is one book unto itself; it includes Psalms, Job, Proverbs, Ruth, Song of Songs, Ecclesiastes, Lamentations, Esther, Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Chronicles.
The Torah
The first part of the OT; it is one book unto itself; it contains five "books": Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy.
The Synoptic Gospels
The synoptic gospels are Matthew, Mark, and Luke; they share a lot of common material.
The Latter Prophets
The second half of the prophets, which is the second part of the Old Testament; it contains most of the prophetic (genre) books; Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the Twelve.
Orthopraxy
Right practice
Orthodoxy
Right doctrine
Historical Theology
Seeks an answer to how the church has understood, proclaimed, and practiced the Scriptures and its doctrines over different periods of time so that church may proclaim and practice rightly.