I am once again inspired by the thoughts of Thomas F. Torrance, a great theologian whom I consider a genius and a man blessed by God with so much wisdom and understanding about the Triune God and science. Here are some quotes I got from him recently:
“I sometimes argue that you can be a good scientist or a good mathematician without being a morally upright person. An immoral person can be a good mathematician but you cannot be a theologian without being a good person.
Theology Transforms
“It is relatively true that in mathematics where you are concerned with impersonal or abstract truth, your personal being is relatively unaffected. But that is not possible in our relations with one another, when you know other human beings. You cannot engage in that kind of knowledge without being affected by it. In fact, you are able to know another only in so far as you enter into such a reciprocal relation with the other that you are affected by the other. And it’s certainly not possible in our relation with God.
Knowing God and Holiness Belong Together
“If it is an ultimate scientific principle, that you can only know something in accordance with its nature, you know it only as you allow its nature to dictate to you the mode in which you must know it, and therefore determine for you the way in which you must behave toward it, then it is certainly true that in knowing God in accordance with his nature as he discloses himself to you, you need to be adapted to the nature of God.
“Knowing God and being reconciled to him, knowing God and being called to holiness, belong together. It is the pure in heart that see God.
“To know and to be holy, to know God and to worship him and to commit yourself to him in utter dedication and consecration, they go together.
Cognitive Union, Radical Transformation
“So here then we have this principle that genuine knowledge involves cognitive union with God and genuine knowledge of God which is in accordance with his nature as holy love cannot but involve radical transformation of our being and reconciliation to God in our estrangement.
“Knowledge of God and holiness then are locked together in an intense interrelationship.”
Knowing Involves Being and Doing
Clearly, knowing, being and doing go together. Or we can also say, that the head, heart and hand ought to go together. We have the tendency sometimes to dissect and dichotomize because maybe of the influence of Western thinking.
Knowing Affects Our Personal Being
When one studies about God, when he learns more and more about God in accordance with his nature as holy love, he cannot but be transformed by his relation with God. Yes, theology transforms a person. It’s not just mere head knowledge. Knowing God who is love does affect our very being.