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Just as in the case of religions themselves, so also their theological reflections are not limited to a special religious sphere, separated from common life. Whoever speaks of God and the gods speaks at the same time of humanity and of the meaning of existence. He makes therewith statements about the world, its conditions of being created, its estrangement from the purpose of creation (e.g., sin), and its determined goal (eschatology, or view of the last times). Out of these statements result normative directives for life in the world, not only for the purpose of gaining salvation but also for concrete ethical behaviour in the context of the I-Thou (or person to person) relationship, of the clan, of the nation, and of society. In ancient times, all aspects of life (e.g., the relationship between the sexes, hygiene, and work, among others) were determined religiously and permeated by cultic forms and practices. In this regard, every religion contains the totality of being that its “theology” intends to express—if one also includes certain rudiments of reflection in primitive religion in the concept “theology.”

In primitive religions the tribe represents the pivot around which all worldly relations turn. The primeval (or mythical) time to which the tribe traces its own origins is also the time of salvation and fulfillment. Therefore, primitive religions primarily concern themselves with the ancestral cult. Involved in tribal concerns in the realm of religious thought are conceptions of mana (spiritual power, or force)—i.e., the teaching that tribal heads, medicine men, and sorcerers are subjects of special charisma (spiritual power or influence) and more potent powers of life. In Eastern religions, as in Western religions, this understanding is infinitely refined, developed, and theologically reflected. In regard to the relationship of humanity to the world, many Eastern religions (especially Hinduism) have a definite skeptically tinged negative view of all reality, which is especially pronounced in contrast to the Christian doctrine of creation. Although this doctrine points to a “happy event” in Christianity, the call to life and reality is understood in Eastern thought in the opposite manner. As the Scottish religious scholar and missionary Stephen Neill wrote:

To be man implies being cut off from all true reality. Creation should have never happened, and its faults should be eliminated as soon as possible.…The illusion that I am is a calamity. Not death is to be explained, but rather birth. The cultural importance of theology

Since theology does not remain restricted to transcendent statements and to an esoteric and sacred realm, and since it rather encompasses all worldly dimensions (cosmology, anthropology, historiography, and other areas), it has always had important significance for cultural evolution and general intellectual life. Western historians hardly need to be reminded of the fact that the prophetic theology of history in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament)—e.g., the 8th-century-bce Hebrew prophets Amos and Isaiah—decisively influenced the origins of the concept of history and, indeed, made this concept possible in the first place. A Hebrew Bible theology of history is based on the understanding of history as a linear process, as directed to a goal (i.e., the Kingdom of God) and as qualified by the characteristic of singularity. This view of history contrasts with a cyclical understanding of successive events—i.e., the view that history repeats itself. The fact that university and school were originally initiated by the church (as is still very often the case in mission fields) is based on the fact that theology has thematized in its various subjects the various dimensions of life (nature, history, ethics, and other disciplinary areas). Also, much of modern philosophy has emerged out of theological themes and categories; even in the works of Karl Marx remnants of this fact are still observable. Modern philosophy has, by and large, only gradually emancipated itself from this theological origin, but this emancipation also has taken place in a manner that has retained the dialectical relationship of theology and philosophy. That theological questions in the modern age of secularism are less openly posed than in the time of the Middle Ages does not reduce their lasting significance. They always reemerge, often in disguised form, such as in the quest for the meaning of life and existence or in the nihilistic resignation regarding that quest; furthermore, they reemerge in the quest for the dignity of human existence, the inviolability of life, the determination of human rights, and many other such questions. The German American theologian Paul Tillich investigated specifically the secular realm in view of the relevance of these latent theological questions. Theological themes

The themes discussed by theology are of universal dimensions. They encompass the doctrine of God, of humanity, and of the world. Even when no “doctrine of God” exists in the strict sense of the term, as in the case of what are sometimes called “atheistic” religions (e.g., certain forms of Hinduism and Buddhism), humanity and the world are understood in the context of finality and therefore have religious aspects. The inclusion of the world in theological discussion also implies that behaviour in the world—that is, ethics—is included in theology; in some areas (e.g., Confucianism) this aspect gains a dominating position. Ethical conceptions—derived from theological concepts in the broad meaning of theology—are developed in contradictory forms: they can lead to ascetic world denial but also to a definite world affirmation. The first form is realized in Buddhism and Hinduism, the second in Confucianism. In Christianity both forms are represented. The theological theme of the relation of humanity and the world has been described by the 17th-century French scientist and philosopher Blaise Pascal as the doctrine of the “dignity and poverty of man”—i.e., the doctrine of creation and fall—and, related to this, the proclamation of salvation and the presentation of a path to salvation. This path leads, in the various religions, into greatly diverging directions. It can be placed under the exclusive direction of divine grace (as in Amida Buddhism and in Protestant Christianity); it can be left to the activity and initiative of humanity (as in Confucianism); or it can be characterized by a combination of the two principles (as in Zen Buddhism and in the Roman Catholic combination of grace and merit). Finally, theology also includes among its various themes statements concerning the process and goal of history (eschatology), especially concerning the relation of secular history and the history of salvation. Functions of theology

The vastness of theological interests and aspects implies that theology can master the material with which it is confronted only within a broad spectrum of partial disciplines. Since theology is based on authority (revelation), and since this authority is documented in the scriptures (especially in Christianity), it is constrained to engage in philological and historical studies of these sources and, related to these studies, also with hermeneutical (critical interpretive) questions. This historical task broadens into a concern with the history and tradition of the religion that a particular theology represents. In this concern many difficult and controversial questions arise, including whether and to what extent the canon (scriptural standard) of the sources of revelation is glossed over and modified by tradition and what normative value the modifying tradition has or should have. These problems play an important part in the relationship between Protestantism and Catholicism, even though the problems are also treated independently by each confession.