Category Archives: Life & Love

Relational Way of Thinking

Thomas F. Torrance

I have been listening to audio recordings of lectures done by a great theologian, Thomas F. Torrance and at times, I enjoyed taking down notes word for word. What I share below is just a portion of the whole lecture. May I share this part:

Dichotomous Ways of Thinking

“From time to time there have arisen in the history of Western thought dichotomous ways of thinking which have damaged areas of our knowledge and not least, our knowledge of God in Jesus Christ. The effects of these dichotomous ways of thinking had been to detach Jesus Christ from God, to detach Jesus Christ from Israel and to detach Christianity from Christ himself.

Now when this sort of thing happens the very essence of the Christian gospel is at stake. There takes place a disruption of the mediation between God and man. The Mediator, or rather our understanding of him, is torn apart and uprooted from God’s purpose in history.

“Now I could show you that this was the basic problem that afflicted the early centuries of the Christian church. For the Christian church and the rise and formulation of its theology struggled to preserve the New Testament doctrine of Christ as the one mediator. For example, the passage of Saint Paul in 1 Timothy 2:5 is found often in the early church — ‘there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus; Who gave himself a ransom for all,’

“Now epistemologically, the problem we have to face in ancient or in modern times, can be put in this way: In the analytic tradition of thought, there takes place an abstraction of Jesus Christ from the matrix of natural or inherent relation in which he is found and then an abstraction from the external appearance of Christ from the objective frame of reference in which he is lodged.

Analytical and Abstractive Modes of Thought

“Now one can state that epistemologically as exactly the same problem we have had to face in modern times when we’ve had to turn away from the analytical and abstractive modes of thought that we have derived from a Newtonian, classical physics and have had to turn to another more dynamic, more holistic and relational way of thinking, to which where we have been directed through the work of James Clark Maxwell and Albert Einstein above all.

Onto-relations

“Now if we take what I would call or refer to as a proper approach, then we consider something in its relation with other things where the relation between things have to do with what the things really are. These are what I call ‘onto-relations‘. And secondly, we then consider things in terms of their inner rational structure or their internal relations and neither of these ways or considerations are separable one from the other.

“And it is precisely in these two determinations that our modern scientific knowledge for example, in particle theory or in astrophysics and our whole understanding of the universe and its expansion have been built up.

Onto-relational Context

“Now so far as our knowledge of Jesus Christ is concerned, this means on the one hand we have to adopt an approach to Christ in the onto-relational context in which he is presented to us, the matrix of interrelations in which he meets us in the historical and dynamic context of Israel. And second, an approach to Christ in terms not of his appearances but in terms of his own self-communication and self-presentation to us in the wholeness and integrity of what he is in himself as he meets us in the evangelical tradition of the New Testament and the church.

“Now when we adopt this kind of approach whether in natural science or in theology, we find that progress in understanding is necessarily circular. What we do is to seek to understand something in its own complex of intelligibility. We seek to penetrate into its own internal reality, in its own intrinsic logos, its own internal structure. And when we do that, we come up with a basic clue in the light of which everything then is re-examined and interpreted. So that we understand things not by reference to some external framework of thought but we understand things by developing a framework of thought that they themselves impose upon us out of their inherent rationality.

“Now you know when — this is an analogy that I find very helpful — when you are trying to piece together the dismembered pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. And you have found the picture that they all make. You cannot possibly mess it all up again and start your puzzle all over again as though you did not know the picture that they make. Now, that’s what happens in any scientific procedure. Once you got the basic clue, once you gain the basic insight, then you take all the pieces and you reconstruct them in the light of that driving insight. Now granted that the insight may have to be revised in the scientific inquiry, but nevertheless, it’s in the light of that basic clue that you make your discovery and once you’ve done that, you cannot go back upon it. Something quite irreversible has taken place.

“Now I submit that it is precisely that profound scientific procedure that took place, unwittingly if you like, so far as formal science is concerned in the New Testament itself and in the early church. Because what the apostles and the fathers did was to come upon a basic clue in the light of which everything else was interpreted and understood in its own inner rational structure. And everything became highly luminous in virtue of that. And this basic clue was the relation of Jesus Christ the Jew of Bethlehem and Nazareth to God the Father on the one hand and to the whole history of Israel on the other hand.

“And was in that interrelation that they found themselves coming to grips with the Logos, the intelligibility inherent in Jesus and in the light of that Logos, then the whole gospel fell into place, the baffling mystery of Jesus revealed itself to them in intelligible ways and what is more, they understood the relation between the gospel of the new covenant and the age-old message of God that had been worked out in historical dialogue with Israel through the ancient covenant.”

That’s the end of my notes. I hope to continue taking down notes as time permits. You may want to listen to this lecture at this link. Just sharing.



God’s Love is the Reason for Creation



Jesus is Not a Political Messiah



On Palm Sunday, Jesus was welcomed by the Jews as their Messiah, the Anointed One foretold in Scripture to be the one who would usher in a new kingdom that would liberate them from the clutches of the Roman Empire which has ruled the Jewish nation for many decades. That’s what the Jews had in mind. But Jesus did not come as a political Messiah. After just a few days on Good Friday, the Jews crucified him because he was not what they wanted him to be — a political Messiah. So they chose Barabbas instead, the fake Messiah.

Jesus is the real Messiah, the Anointed One, the Savior of all mankind. Here’s an interesting quote from theologian Thomas F. Torrance which I find helpful in understanding this issue:

Jesus Refused to be a Political Messiah

“Jesus’ calling conflicted sharply with the role that contemporary Judaism wished to push upon him. Jesus was crucified by the political theology of his day. And Jesus continues to be crucified when we politicize his role because that is not the way he came, by the power structures of this world, to reconcile man to God, but through the weakness of the cross, to incarnational penetration into the depths of our guilty being, to lay hold upon us from below, where we are at enmity to God, the source of all violence, to conquer and destroy it by atoning sacrifice.”

We are loved, included and reconciled. Thanks be to our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, our Messiah, the Anointed One. Praise be unto him!

Life and Love in Jesus



For several weeks now, I’ve been listening to audio recordings of Thomas F. Torrance’s (TFT) lectures which I got on the internet. I’m so inspired by the things I’ve been learning through this great theologian about the life and love of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit in which all of humanity has been included through Jesus Christ.

This blog site is about life and love in Jesus Christ. May I share with you TFT’s closing prayer at the end of his Lecture 3 on the Mediation of Christ at the Princeton Theological Seminary in 1981. I find it quite inspiring and so filled with meaning:

God is Life and Love

Thomas F. Torrance

“O God, we are dumbfounded before the magnitude of thy love. Thou thyself has not held thyself aloof from us. But has become one of us, joined thyself to us in our littleness and in our estrangement in order to gather us, broken, divided humanity together into one in Jesus, that we may share in the life and love which thou eternally art as Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Mediate to us in a new way through this Jesus, communion with thee and communion with one another. And through him to thee, the Father and the Holy Spirit one God eternal, be our worship and thanksgiving. Amen.”

Life of a Ministerial Trainee in Bukidnon



I was sent to Bukidnon along with my wife and daughter as a ministerial trainee and we lived in Don Carlos, Bukidnon for about one year from May 1986 to May 1987. We served two local congregations of my denomination which was then called the Worldwide Church of God (WCG). The two congregations were the Maramag Church and the Kiara Church. May I share some photos below which reminds me of our life with the people whom we have grown to love. “Some are dead and some are living” as one Beatles song goes.

This was a photo at the residence of our senior pastor in Don Carlos, Bukidnon back in 1986. I forgot now what the occasion was.

WCG Maramag Church

The Maramag Church was composed mainly of church members who lived along the national highway and in the towns of Dangcagan, Don Carlos, Maramag, Quezon and other nearby areas including one or two from Malaybalay. In 1986, we met at one of the classrooms of Central Mindanao University (CMU), a state university in Maramag.

Worship service of the WCG Maramag Church at the Central Mindanao University.
After the worship service, we waited for a jeepney or bus ride to go back home to Don Carlos.

WCG Kiara Church

The other congregation is the Kiara Church. It is located in Barangay Kiara in the town of Don Carlos. The church building was then surrounded by cornfields all around it. Most of the members were and are farmers. But today, after the passing of several decades, many have become more successful in business aside from farming.

These were some of the members of the WCG Kiara Church back in 1986. Some are dead and some are still living in this photo. I’m the one seated/squatting at the rightmost side. My wife is wearing red at the right side with our little daughter in front of her held by the lady in white. This was on a Sunday where we had a “pahina” — Cebuano equivalent for the Tagalog “bayanihan” where we cleaned and beautified the church building. Attendance back then in this rural church could reach roughly around 200 to 300 on a regular worship day. Simple people but we have learned to love them.
On our way to the worship service in WCG Kiara Church. Little Veejay crossing the temporary bamboo bridge. My wife walks in style on a somewhat high heel shoes hahaha! The wooden bridge was damaged.
Attending church in style. My little daughter passes through cogon grass on her way to church. The wooden bridge was damaged. This was the Lalapoy Bridge which I called “Kakapoy Bridge.” Kakapoy in Cebuano means “it’s tiresome” hahaha! It’s now a concrete bridge.