Theology for Everybody: Romansنموونە

The previous 100 years of philosophy, thought, and social theory is what Paul prophesies about in Romans chapter 2. It is being fulfilled today on the nightly news. There are four phases to this kind of philosophy and social theory. The first is critical theory. In essence, critical theory is the human pursuit of heaven without God. How
can we have justice? How can we have equality? How can we have peace? How can we have unity? How can we have health without God? The truth is there is no heaven without God. Critical theory stands in opposition to something called traditional theory. Traditional theory is how you build something, and critical theory criticizes what has been built.
Which is easier: building something or criticizing something that was built? Criticizing is significantly easier. Imagine you are watching an American football game. The two teams are on the field, and up in the broadcasting booth, at a very safe distance from all the collisions, are men who comment on the work of the professional athletes. It’s much easier to say, “You should have run faster,” than to actually run faster. It’s much easier to say, “You should have held on to the football,” than to actually hold onto the football, especially when you’re getting hit by a grown man the size of a small car.
Our society loves to write reviews because we are a culture of judges. It’s a lot easier to criticize than it is to build. It’s easier when you’re single to tell somebody how to have a good marriage. It’s easier when you have no kids to walk up to parents whose kids are having a nervous breakdown in a store and give them parenting advice.
Critical theory consists of two parts: deconstruction and reconstruction. Deconstruction means we must tear down marriage, gender, sexuality, law, politics, capitalism, academics, etc., because we see problems. Now there is a partial truth in this because we are imperfect people. Everything we build is, to varying degrees, imperfect. You could tear it down and then have another person build something else, but that, too, would be imperfect. Then the next generation of judges comes along, tears that down, and builds something else that is imperfect.
Reconstruction is a longing for heaven, for utopia. It’s the desire that things would get better and the world would be as it should be. But it is heaven without God, and that type of place simply does not exist.
Today’s Reflection
Why is it easier to tear something down than to build something up?
کتێبی پیرۆز
دەربارەی ئەم پلانە

After Pastor Mark got saved in his college dorm room reading the book of Romans, this 365-day devotional is the culmination of more than 30 years of studying this incredible book. Chapter-by-chapter, verse-by-verse, this book digs into topics covered in the great book of Romans, such as justification, grace, predestination, legalism, deconstruction, and more.
More
پلانە پەیوەستەکان

I Received Jesus! Now What?

Everyday Evangelism: Practical Ways to Share Jesus

The Novelty Detox for Lent: Letting Go of Novelty and Being Present in the Everyday

Pour Out Your Heart Through Prayer

Born for Such a Time as This!

What Do Christians Believe?

Words We'll Sing Forever: A 4-Day Devotional

More Than Just a Story - the Book of John

Competing Kingdoms: Lessons From Joanna
