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Chapter 2
Begin with God
God has made the human mind in such a way that it is natural for man to want
to organize acquired information. This organizing instinct within man provides a
necessity for a systematic study of theology.
System and order are characteristics of God and His works. God always works in
an orderly way. One can observe system and order everywhere throughout nature
from the structure of atoms to the movements of stars. God's work of creation,
recorded in the first chapter of Genesis, reveals the progressive realization of
a definite plan and program. God instructed Noah to build the ark in an orderly
manner according to specific dimensions. The construction of the tabernacle was
according to a definite divine blueprint. The unfolding of God's plan of
salvation has been progressive, orderly, and systematic. A systematic study of
theology, therefore, finds its basis and necessity, not only in man's organizing
instinct, but also in God's nature and work. Paul exhorted: "Let all things
be done decently and in order" (I Cor. 14:40).
Systematic Theology is an organized, intensive study of revealed facts
concerning God and His plan of salvation for mankind. Systematic Theology
considers all Bible doctrines arranged and studied in a scientific, orderly
manner.
I. The Starting Point
The first four words of the Bible describe not only the origin of this
planet, but also the starting point of Systematic Theology --" In the
beginning God."
Systematic Theology begins with the doctrine of God and concludes with the
doctrine of the future. One division of Systematic Theology naturally leads
into, and lays the groundwork for, the succeeding divisions. Our thoughts travel
in a logical order from doctrine to doctrine--God, man, sin, Christ, salvation,
the church, and the future.
To begin with God, is to begin with the Ultimate. To start one's journey into
the light with Him is to begin with the Fountainhead of truth. "The fear of
the Lord is the beginning of knowledge" (Prov. 1:7). Belief in God and the
study of revealed facts concerning Him are the first requirements of Christian
theology.
An understanding of the doctrine of God forms the basis for true spirituality.
Although some men have head religion without heart religion, genuine heart
religion is produced by proper head religion. Religion apart from God is
man-centered and void. Men have inadequate faith in God because they have
insufficient knowledge concerning God. They find it difficult to pray because
they do not consider the nature of the one to whom they pray. Men's hearts
seldom bow in true worship because they do not recognize God's transcendent
wonder and infinite worth. To have an adequate Christian faith and a vigorous
spiritual life, one must begin with God.
The doctrine of God is the most important thought man can consider. It is the
loftiest subject one can study. Facts concerning God's nature and work
constitute the most significant realities in the universe. Jesus said,
"This is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and
Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent" (John 17:3). It is of major importance
that believers be fully informed concerning the nature, characteristics, and
works of God. Christians will spend eternity with God; they should desire to
become acquainted with Him today.
II. Men Normally Believe in God
God created man with an inborn ability to recognize His existence. It is
normal for man to believe in God; it is abnormal for him to be an atheist.
One is not surprised to discover, therefore, that belief in the existence of a
supreme being or beings is found among all men. Heathenism has corrupted the
glory of God into idolatry and the truth of God into mythology, but the
recognition of His existence is still there. The counterfeit proves the reality
of the true.
The existence of God is recognized as a fact by the writers of the Bible. It is
regarded as a reality that requires no proof. The opening words of the Bible
announce the fact and existence of God: "In the beginning God" (Gen.
1:1). The writer of Hebrews insisted, "He that cometh to God must believe
that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him"
(Heb. 11:6).
Dr. William Newton Clarke wrote:
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The Christian doctrine of God does not begin with proof, it begins with
the announcement that is made by Christian faith in pursuance of the
Christian revelation. Faith does not set out to find an unknown God, or to
assure itself that God exists: it has heard His voice, and begins in
confidence in His reality. It assumes the existence of God as its first
certainty, and then proceeds to learn about Him all that can be learned. .
. . There may be other ways of approaching the knowledge of God, but the
Christian way is the way of recognition rather than of demonstration.
(Clarke, William Newton. The Christian Doctrine of God. New York:
Scribners, 1909, p. 56.)
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III. Classical Arguments for God's
Existence
There are three classical arguments for the existence of God. These
arguments, derived from man's observation of nature and his reasoning concerning
God, have been used by religious thinkers since ancient time. They are the
Cosmological argument, the Teleological argument, and the Anthropological
argument.
The Cosmological argument reveals God as the eternal, self-existent First Cause.
The Teleological argument reveals that this great First Cause possesses
intelligence and will. The Anthropological argument leads one another step
further. It reveals this personal, intelligent First Cause as one who possesses
holiness, justice, and truth.
1. The Cosmological Argument. Existence of creatures requires the
existence of a Creator. Every effect must have an adequate cause. The universe
has not always existed. There was a time when the universe did not exist. The
universe must have had an origin. The Originator, the Source, the First Cause of
all existence is God. Of all existence, God alone is uncaused, without a
beginning. Before God created the universe, He existed alone. God is the First
Cause of the universe.
The writer of Hebrews stated this argument when he said, "Every house is
builded by some man; but he that built all things is God" (Heb. 3:4).
2. The Teleological Argument. God has left His fingerprints on everything
He has made. Everywhere one looks in nature he can see the fingerprints of God.
Order and design everywhere in nature identify the universe as the handiwork of
God.
"The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his
handiwork" (Psalm 19:1). "The invisible things of him from the
creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are
made, even his eternal power and Godhead" (Rom. 1:20). "He that
planted the ear, shall he not hear? he that formed the eye, shall he not
see?" (Psalm 94:9). "O Lord, how manifold are thy works! in wisdom
hast thou made them all: the earth is full of thy riches" (Psalm 104:24).
"When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers, the moon and the
stars, which thou hast ordained; what is man, that thou art mindful of
him?" (Psalm 8:3, 4).
3. The Anthropological Argument. The first two arguments consider proofs
derived from the universe as a whole. The Anthropological argument considers
indications of God's existence as derived from man himself.
Conscience in man testifies that a Moral Governor, Lawgiver, and Judge exists.
Apart from God's existence, man's conscience cannot be explained.
IV. The Witness of the Supernatural
God's revelation of Himself to mankind through supernatural events
constitutes additional indications of His existence. God has left witness of His
existence not only in the material universe and man's moral nature, but also in
the history of men's lives. God's revelation of Himself through the supernatural
implies His existence.
The Bible as a divine book proves God's existence. Apart from the existence of a
divine Author, the Bible cannot be explained. The fact that this amazing Book
itself exists proves the existence of its Author. The Bible records God's
revelation of Himself to mankind. The Bible, therefore, is an authentic source
of material for proof of His existence.
Fulfillment of countless Bible prophecies in minute detail proves the existence
of the One who foretold these events. (Isa. 45:21; 46: 9-11.) Miracles, which
have occurred in history and have been recorded in the Bible, can be explained
satisfactorily only as the working of God's supernatural power.
The supernatural life of Christ, including His unique birth, His ability to
perform miracles, and His resurrection to immortality, indicates God's
existence. An atheist remarked that it was not the Bible so much as it was the
Christ of the Bible which he could not explain away.
Christian conversion and the tremendous influence Christianity has exerted in
the world can be explained only by the existence of God. The testimony of
thousands of persons who have experienced remarkable transformations indicates
Christ's supernatural work and God's existence. As a blind man is assured that
the sun exists by feeling the warmth of the sunshine, so Christians are assured
that God exists because they feel the transforming effects of His power.
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