There are two kinds of believing, and both are
essential for Christian life. They’re closely related and influence each
other, but they’re different. One is belief and the other, beliefs. One is
faith and the other, doctrine or theology.
Faith
is the basic orientation and
commitment of our whole being—a matter of heart and soul. Christian faith is
grounding our lives in the living God as revealed especially in Jesus
Christ. It’s both a gift we receive within the Christian community and a
choice we make. It’s trusting in God and relying on God as the source and
destiny of our lives. Faith is believing in God, giving God our devoted
loyalty and allegiance. Faith is following Jesus, answering the call to be
his disciples in the world. Faith is hoping for God’s future, leaning into
the coming kingdom that God has promised. Faith-as-belief is active; it
involves trusting, believing, following, hoping.
Theology
or doctrine is more a matter of
the head. It’s thinking together in the community of believers about faith
and discipleship. It’s reflecting on the gospel. It’s examining the various
beliefs we hold as a church. Some may say that theology is only for
professional theologians. This is not true. All of us, young and old, lay
and clergy, need to work at this theological task so that our beliefs will
actually guide our day-by-day actions and so that we can communicate our
belief to an unbelieving world.
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Lindale United Methodist Church |