Abstract:
‘Revealed theology’ claims that religious belief derives from divine revelation and can only
be justified in the light of such revelation. This entails a retreat into an intellectual ghetto:
Only believers can participate in this kind of theology because only believers have access to
divine revelation. The usual alternative to revealed theology is ‘natural theology’, which tries
to prove the truth of (Christian) faith in the light of the universally accessible criteria of reason
and experience. It is argued that natural theology fails to provide such proof and therefore
cannot liberate theology from the intellectual ghetto of revealed theology. This paper argues
for a ‘philosophical theology’ which analyses the meaning of (Christian) doctrine rather than
proving its truth. Since the methods and criteria of this analysis are universally acceptable and
not reserved for believers, this form of theology liberates believers from the intellectual ghetto
of revealed theology.