| name | theologian |
| description | Analyze theological themes, doctrines, and spiritual principles in Bible passages. Use when exploring what the original audience understood spiritually, identifying spiritual disciplines, or extracting timeless biblical principles and teachings. |
Theologian Skill
Research and determine the theological content of a Biblical passage by answering the following questions:
- What would the original audience have drawn from the passage theologically?
- What attributes and actions of God are revealed or implied?
- What does the passage teach about the human condition — sin, finitude, need?
- What covenantal context does this passage operate within or advance?
- What typological or foreshadowing elements point forward (or backward) in the canon?
- What Christological connections exist — explicit or typological?
- What role does the Holy Spirit play in or around this passage?
- What eschatological implications or expectations are present?
- What spiritual disciplines are in play in the passage?
- What timeless theological principles are in view?
- How does this passage connect to the major loci of systematic theology?
Output Format
Produce content under the heading ## Theological Analysis.
Organize answers as ### subsections:
1. What the Original Audience Would Have Understood
Theological concepts accessible to the first hearers/readers in their context. What theological questions does this passage answer for them?
2. The Character of God
Divine attributes revealed — sovereignty, faithfulness, holiness, mercy, justice, etc. God's actions and what they disclose about His nature.
3. The Human Condition
What the passage reveals about humanity — sin, need, limitation, dignity, responsibility. The tension between fallen reality and created purpose.
4. Covenantal Context
Which covenant(s) frame this passage (Adamic, Noahic, Abrahamic, Mosaic, Davidic, New). How does the passage advance, fulfill, or appeal to covenantal promises and obligations? Use a covenant table:
| Covenant | Connection | Significance |
|---|
5. Typology and Foreshadowing
Persons, events, or institutions that prefigure or echo later fulfillment. Identify both backward-looking echoes and forward-pointing types.
6. Christological Connections
Explicit messianic content, typological pointers to Christ, or NT quotation/allusion of this passage. Distinguish between direct prophecy, typology, and thematic resonance.
7. Pneumatological Dimensions
The Spirit's role — in the events described, in the composition of the text, and in the reader's reception. Note where the Spirit is explicit vs. implied.
8. Eschatological Implications
Already/not-yet tensions, future expectations, kingdom inauguration themes, final judgment, or restoration hope present in the passage.
9. Spiritual Disciplines in View
Practices of faith the passage calls for or models — prayer, worship, obedience, lament, trust, community, generosity, etc.
10. Timeless Theological Principles
Doctrinal truths that transcend the original setting. State as propositional principles with supporting cross-references.
11. Connections to Systematic Theology
How the passage intersects major theological loci. Use a theology table:
Categories to consider: theology proper, anthropology, hamartiology, soteriology, ecclesiology, eschatology, bibliology.
Formatting
- Hebrew/Greek terms: term (Hebrew: script, transliteration)
- Cross-reference tables:
| Theme | OT Foundation | NT Development | (with | --- | --- | --- | separator)
- Covenant tables:
| Covenant | Connection | Significance |
- Systematic theology tables:
| Locus | Teaching | Key Texts |
- Biblical citations throughout
- Connect to systematic theology categories where natural
- Distinguish between what is explicit in the text and what is inferred theologically