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I guess I'm the first one to discuss this. Well, I can greatly expand this by going over a history of Biblical Theology starting with the early "Church Fathers" of the Christian Church and with early Hebrew talmuds on the Jewish Tanakh. Then I can bring it up to the history of now with current Biblical Theologians and exegisis with a counter-view of Biblical Fundamentalism, unless one finds that Biblical Fundamentalism doesn't belong in an article on Biblical Theology since monce Biblical Fundamentalism doesn't revolve around the exegisis on scripture but rather the complete subjecation to a fundamentalist view of the "infallble" Bible. Stephensj74 02:00, 13 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]

I'm not sure that I get what you're talking about with regard to Biblical Fundamentalism, but feel free to expand the article. --Flex 14:09, 13 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Bahá'í Progressive Revelation

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I removed the reference to Bahá'í progressive revelation because the paragraph stated that it is not close to brick layering, but in fact it is. Bahá'ís believe that the spiritual laws in progressive revelation do build up from revelation to revelation. It's the social laws that are replaced in each revelation to help humanity advance. See Progressive revelation for more information.

Additions to definition

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I think expanding this would prove really interesting to watch. In your definition you might consider adding two extra points. The first being the germinal nature of the progression and not the qualitative. In talking to some I've discovered that this is a major confusion. The second is that Biblical Theology does not place itself above any of the other theological schools. I could go into this further but I trust you understand the argument. --Frosty2433

Why don't you take a shot at it. That's what the Wikipedia is all about. --Flex 17:12, 29 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Trims & Possible expansion

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I deleted the line "This concern developed in the history of Israel's religion school, but the term eventually passed into its present usage." because it is not clear just what "Israel's religion school" actually is, and it just confused the paragraph. On the whole, Bibilical Theology has a subject began as a protestant Christian subject to recapture the Old Testament as a means of Christian ownership and direction. The mode of this looked different depending who wrote under it.

Recently, the subject has become less devotional to Christian and more academic. And as such, the concept of Jewish Biblical Theology, and Islamic Biblical Theology has come into play. I'll add the page to my watch list, and hopefully add to the article in the future. Noxiyu (talk) 23:43, 16 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]

The deleted line "This concern developed in the history of Israel's religion school, but the term eventually passed into its present usage" may have been an edit by a native German speaker meaning "The concept developed among the circle of scholars ("school") who discussed the "history of Israelite religion." de.wikipedia article makes more sense than en.wiki version. But, this seems to be a second-order theological weasel word, with different meanings for each generation of European intellectual history. Theologians don't want to give clear definitions because then the mustelinity of the term will be exposed.Vagabond nanoda (talk) 23:26, 4 February 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Defining the notoriously difficult

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If Biblical Theology is notoriously difficult to define, what this article needs is clear sections explaining each of the major views, not one muddled vague section. So to start, I added a section on the Evangelical Protestant view, with what I consider to be a helpful quote from Goldsworthy. Maybe not the best quote ever, but it's what I had on hand. I'd encourage others to add further sections explaining other uses of the term. Curiousdannii (talk) 03:41, 28 March 2018 (UTC)[reply]