The Text
Theology Proper begins where God Himself chose to reveal His name. When Moses encountered the burning bush—the place where holiness itself became visible—he asked the most fundamental theological question:
This self-declaration—"I AM WHO I AM"—is not merely a name. It is an assertion of absolute being. God does not derive His existence from anything external. He does not depend on the cosmos, on creatures, or on time itself. He simply is. This name (in Hebrew, YHWH or the Tetragrammaton) echoes throughout Scripture as the personal name of the covenant God, emphasizing both His transcendence and His relational intimacy with His people.
The prophet Isaiah later captured the cosmic scope of this revelation:
Here the being of God is inseparable from His knowledge and power. He who simply is also knows all things and decrees all things. Theology Proper, therefore, must hold together the ontological (God's existence), the epistemological (God's knowledge), and the volitional (God's will and decrees). To know God rightly is to know Him as the one who is absolutely independent, infinitely wise, and completely sovereign.
Definition
Theology Proper is the systematic study of God's nature, attributes, and perfections as revealed in Scripture and illuminated by the work of the Holy Spirit through the church. It is the foundation upon which all other theological disciplines rest. Before we can rightly understand salvation, the church, the sacraments, or the future hope, we must first answer the question: Who is God?
The Priority of God Knowledge
John Calvin began his Institutes of the Christian Religion with a profound observation: the true knowledge of God and the true knowledge of ourselves are inseparably connected, and the former must take precedence. We cannot know ourselves without knowing God—our smallness, our dependence, our depravity—and we cannot know God rightly without understanding His absolute aseity and sovereignty.
Aseity (from the Latin a se, "from himself") is the doctrine that God is entirely self-existent and self-sufficient. God depends on nothing outside Himself. He did not create the world because He needed anything; creation is not necessary for God's being or happiness. Rather, the cosmos is an expression of His free, sovereign will. This doctrine fundamentally distinguishes the Christian God from all false conceptions: the impersonal force of deism, the limited deity of open theism, the material world of pantheism, or the many gods of polytheism.
Why Theology Proper Matters
Theology Proper undergirds the entire structure of Reformed soteriology—the doctrine of salvation. If God is not absolutely sovereign, then salvation cannot be assured. If His knowledge is not infinite, then the future is uncertain to Him. If His will is not free, then His decrees are contingent. But if God is what Scripture reveals Him to be—the self-existent, all-knowing, all-powerful sovereign—then:
- Salvation is certain: Nothing can thwart God's purpose to save His elect.
- Faith is real: We rest not on our own strength but on God's immutable character.
- Prayer is powerful: We petition the one who has decreed all things and who loves His children.
- Worship is proper: We glorify God not for what we imagine Him to be, but for who He actually is.
The doctrine of God's attributes, therefore, is not abstract metaphysics. It is the ground of Christian comfort, assurance, and obedience. To know God truly is to love Him more deeply, to trust Him more fully, and to worship Him more fervently.
The Divine Attributes
The attributes of God are not external additions to His being; they are His perfections, the way His nature reveals itself to creatures. In God, all attributes are identical with His essence and with each other—this is the doctrine of divine simplicity. When we speak of God's justice, mercy, wisdom, and power, we are not speaking of separate components, but of the one simple, infinite, eternal being viewed from different angles by our finite minds.
These attributes, far from being exhaustive, represent the primary perfections God has revealed. But they all flow from one foundational truth: God is God. He is not subject to anything beyond Himself. He is not the product of His creation. He is not bound by time or space. He is the infinite, eternal, unchangeable, all-knowing, all-powerful sovereign of all things. And this God, who owes nothing to anyone, has shown infinite grace to His people through Jesus Christ.
Biblical Foundation
The doctrine of God's nature and attributes is not a philosophical construct imposed on Scripture. Rather, Scripture itself repeatedly testifies to these truths. Let us examine key passages that provide the foundation for Theology Proper:
Exodus 3:14 — The Divine Name
This is the foundational revelation of God's name. Ehyeh asher ehyeh literally means "I will be what I will be" or "I am what I am." The name establishes God's absolute self-existence and freedom. He is not contingent, not dependent, not subject to necessity. He simply is—and His being is the ground of all other being.
Isaiah 40:12-31 — The Incomparable God
Isaiah presents a powerful rhetorical argument for God's absolute uniqueness. The universe—infinite to our perception—is trivial in God's hands. His knowledge is infinite; no one instructs Him. His power is immeasurable; none can teach Him. This chapter emphasizes the incomparability of God and the futility of comparing Him to idols (40:18-20). Yet despite His transcendence, God cares for the weak: "He will tend his flock like a shepherd; he will gather the lambs in his arms" (40:11).
Romans 11:33-36 — The Doxology of Divine Wisdom
Paul's doxology celebrates the infinite wisdom and unsearchable judgments of God. The rhetorical questions from Isaiah 40 are repeated here, emphasizing that no one has counseled God or given Him anything. All things exist from Him (as Creator), through Him (as Sustainer), and to Him (as Final End). This passage anchors Theology Proper in worship and doxology, reminding us that sound doctrine leads to thanksgiving and praise.
Psalm 115:3 — The Sovereign God
This brief verse encapsulates two essential truths: God's transcendence ("in the heavens") and His sovereignty ("does all that he pleases"). His pleasure is not arbitrary whim but the expression of His perfect will. Whatever God decrees, He accomplishes. Nothing can obstruct His purposes or thwart His counsel.
1 Timothy 6:15-16 — The Blessed and Only Sovereign
Paul's description of God encompasses sovereignty ("only Sovereign"), power ("King of kings and Lord of lords"), eternality ("alone is immortal"), and transcendence ("unapproachable light"). God's infinity means He cannot be directly perceived by creatures; the Incarnation is the singular exception, where the infinite entered the finite to accomplish redemption. Yet this inaccessible God is not distant; He is intimately present to His people through the Holy Spirit.
Historical Development
The church's understanding of God's nature and attributes deepened throughout history as theologians labored to express biblical truths in systematic form and to defend them against heretical distortions. This historical progression is not a drift away from Scripture but a deepening meditation on Scripture's meaning.
The Early Church: Nicene Theology and Divine Simplicity
The Council of Nicaea (325 AD) defended the divine nature of the Son against Arianism, which denied that Christ was fully God. The Council affirmed that the Son is homoousios (of one substance) with the Father. This controversy forced the church to clarify what it meant to say that God is God—that the divine nature cannot be derivative, created, or less than fully infinite.
The church fathers, particularly in Alexandria and Cappadocia, developed the doctrine of divine simplicity—the conviction that God, unlike creatures, is not composed of matter and form, essence and accidents, or any other metaphysical composition. God is pure actuality; all His attributes are identical with His essence. This doctrine preserved God's transcendence and uniqueness.
Augustine: God as Pure Act and Immutability
Augustine (354-430) deepened the church's understanding of God's immutability and His knowledge. He emphasized that God is not affected by time; rather, God exists in an eternal "now" in which all events are simultaneously present to Him. This understanding of God's relationship to time undergirds the doctrine of predestination and reconciles divine foreknowledge with human freedom. Augustine also stressed that God's will is never constrained from without; it is the only truly free will, for it is bound by nothing but its own nature.
Anselm: That Than Which Nothing Greater Can Be Conceived
Anselm (1033-1109) offered a definition of God that became influential: "That than which nothing greater can be conceived." This formula captures something essential—God is the supreme reality, incomparable and infinite. Anselm's ontological argument (whether successful or not) attempted to show that the concept of God's greatness necessarily entails His existence. More importantly, Anselm's definition oriented theology around the idea of God's transcendent perfection.
Thomas Aquinas: The Five Ways and Classical Theism
Aquinas (1225-1274) synthesized Aristotelian philosophy with Christian theology to develop what became known as classical theism. His Five Ways offered arguments for God's existence based on motion, causation, contingency, degrees of perfection, and divine order. Aquinas affirmed divine simplicity, immutability, eternality, and absolute necessity. His systematic presentation of God's attributes—in terms of being, knowledge, will, and power—provided a framework that has shaped Catholic and Reformed theology for centuries.
The Reformers: Sovereignty as Pastoral Comfort
John Calvin (1509-1564) and the Protestant Reformers grounded their understanding of God's sovereignty not in abstract metaphysics but in the pastoral reality of salvation. For the Reformers, the doctrine that God absolutely decrees all things was a comfort to troubled consciences. If God is truly sovereign, then the elect are secure. If God has foreordained all things, then sin and death are not ultimate realities; God's purpose will be accomplished. Calvin's theology was saturated with the conviction that God's sovereignty is the foundation of Christian assurance.
The Westminster Confession: The Reformed Summary
The Westminster Confession of Faith (1647) provided a comprehensive summary of Reformed theology. Chapter II presents a classical articulation of God's attributes:
This statement reflects centuries of reflection on Scripture and stands as a hallmark of Reformed orthodoxy. Its precision and comprehensiveness make it a touchstone for Protestant theology.
Jonathan Edwards: God's End in Creation
Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758) offered a profound meditation on God's purposes in creation. For Edwards, God created the world not from necessity but from sovereignty and freedom. God's end in creation is ultimately His own glory—the manifestation and communication of His perfections. Edwards reconciled this with God's goodness by showing that God's self-glorification and the highest good of creatures are not opposed: creatures are most blessed when they behold and enjoy God's glory. This understanding elevated Theology Proper to the center of a God-glorifying worldview.
Common Objections and Responses
Theology Proper, especially the doctrines of sovereignty and God's attributes, faces persistent objections from both secular philosophy and from well-meaning Christian thinkers. Let us consider some major objections and Reformed responses:
Response: This is the oldest theological question, and it deserves careful treatment. The Westminster Confession addresses it by distinguishing between primary causation (God's causation) and secondary causation (creaturely causation). God decrees that creatures will act, but He is not responsible for their sin because sin involves the creature's rebellion against God's law.
Consider King David's adultery and murder (2 Samuel 11-12). David freely chose these evil acts, for which he was morally culpable and faced God's judgment. Yet God had decreed these events and used them in His providence (to bring David's heir Solomon to the throne, to teach David repentance, and to foreshadow Christ). God's decree did not make the acts good; it did not compel David's will; but it foreordained that David would choose evil and that God would turn it to good.
God is not the author of evil in the sense of being its origin or endorser. God is the author of all things, but not in the same way He is the cause of sin. Sin is a deficiency, a turning away from what is right. God ordains the occasion of sin and the sinner's action, but the evil quality—the rebellion—is solely the creature's responsibility. God's holiness is incompatible with sin; He neither causes sin nor approves it. Yet in His unsearchable wisdom, He ordains that sinners will sin, and He brings about His purpose through their actions without becoming implicated in their guilt.
Response: This objection confuses immutability with impassibility and misunderstands what these doctrines actually teach. Immutability means God does not change in His being, character, or resolve. It does not mean God is unmoved or indifferent to His creation. God genuinely grieves over human sin (Genesis 6:6 speaks of God's heart being grieved). God genuinely experiences the worship of His people and takes pleasure in their obedience.
However, God's emotions are not inconsistent with His immutability in the way human emotions are. We humans change our minds, swing between moods, and are slaves to our passions. God's feelings are eternal, unchanging expressions of His character. When Scripture speaks of God's anger, it describes His eternal opposition to sin—not a sudden loss of composure. When Scripture speaks of God's love, it describes His eternal commitment to His people—not a whimsical affection that might change.
Impassibility (God's freedom from passive emotion) does not mean indifference. Rather, it means God is the subject of His own experiences, not subject to external forces. God's compassion is not something that happens to Him; it is an eternal aspect of His character. The Incarnation reveals this most clearly: in Jesus Christ, God experienced genuine human emotion—Jesus wept, was angry at injustice, suffered on the cross. Yet even in the Incarnation, Christ's character remained perfectly consistent with His eternal nature. God is thus neither impersonal nor emotionally erratic, but eternally constant in His holy love.
Response: This objection assumes that God's predestination contradicts His love, but Scripture holds both truths together. God's attributes are not in tension; they are unified in the one infinite God.
First, we must clarify what predestination means: God has eternally decreed that some will be saved through faith in Christ and others will not. This decree is the expression of God's sovereign will. Second, we must note that God's love is sovereign and free. God does not love humans because they are worthy; He loves them because He wills to love them. His love is not a passive reception of human worth but an active, divine commitment.
Third, reprobation (God's passing over some who remain in their sin) is not God actively causing sin; it is God's decision not to intervene with saving grace. Those who perish do so because of their sin; they are justly condemned. God owes no one salvation. That some are saved at all is due entirely to God's mercy in Christ.
Finally, while we may not fully comprehend how God's sovereignty and human responsibility coexist, or how God's love for all people coheres with His particular choice to save some, these are not logical contradictions. They are mysteries of Scripture that call us to humble submission and worship. God is love (1 John 4:8), and God is sovereign (Psalm 115:3). We trust God's character even when we cannot resolve every philosophical puzzle.
Response: This objection rests on a misunderstanding of freedom. Compatibilism—the view that divine sovereignty and human freedom are compatible—argues that true freedom consists not in freedom from causation (which would be random, not free) but in acting according to one's nature and desires. A person is free when they act according to their will, even if that will is itself determined.
When you freely choose to do what you want to do, you are acting freely. That God has decreed your choice does not make it unfree; rather, God has decreed that you will freely choose according to your nature. God ordains the end and the means: He ordains that you will have the nature, desires, and circumstances that lead you to freely choose.
Example: A child freely chooses to enjoy candy. The child's enjoyment of candy is both free and caused—caused by the child's taste buds, his preferences, and the sugar's chemical properties. Likewise, a sinner freely chooses to sin, and a believer freely chooses to believe, even though God has foreordained these choices. Our freedom is not diminished by God's knowledge and decree; our freedom is established by them, for it is God who gives us the ability to freely choose at all.
For a detailed exploration of this doctrine, see the Compatibilism page.
Witnesses
The church throughout history has reflected on God's nature and offered profound testimonies to His glory. These witnesses—theologians, pastors, saints—speak to us across centuries with the voice of those who have encountered God in Scripture and known Him by grace.
Tozer's observation is deceptively simple but profound. Our theology—what we actually believe about God, not what we profess—shapes everything: our worship, our obedience, our love, our hope. If we think God is weak, we will not trust Him. If we think He is arbitrary, we will fear Him rather than love Him. If we think He is limited, we will despair when difficulties arise. But if we know God as He truly is—infinite, good, sovereign, and loving—our lives will be transformed.
Charnock reminds us that Theology Proper is not merely intellectual. While reason plays a role in understanding biblical revelation, true knowledge of God comes through the inward testimony of the Holy Spirit. Faith is not credulity; it is a confident trust in God's character as revealed in Scripture and witnessed to by the Spirit.
Calvin insists that Theology Proper, properly understood, leads to the gospel. To know God rightly is to know Him as He is revealed in Christ. The God of infinite power and holiness would be an enemy to sinners were it not for Christ. But through Christ—the God-man who satisfied divine justice and poured out infinite mercy—the infinite God becomes our Father. Theology Proper, therefore, is never abstract; it is always soteriological (focused on salvation).
This catechism answer encapsulates the purpose of knowing God: to glorify Him and to enjoy Him forever. Knowledge of God is not an end in itself but a means to His glory and our blessedness. The highest worship is both thanksgiving for who God is and delight in His person. Theology Proper, therefore, culminates not in abstract doctrine but in doxology—the joyful praise of the infinite God.
Connections
Theology Proper stands at the foundation of systematic theology, and it connects to and illuminates every other doctrine. The nature of God determines how we understand redemption, the church, and the future hope. Below are key connections worth exploring:
Each of these doctrines presupposes and deepens the truths of Theology Proper. God's attributes are not static abstractions but the living foundation of His redemptive work. To understand any part of Christian doctrine fully, one must return again and again to the question: Who is God?
Continue Exploring
Return to the main systematic theology hub to explore other core doctrines.
How God's eternal counsel decrees all things in perfect wisdom.
God's self-commitment to redeem His people through covenants.
Deep dives into the lives and thought of great Christian thinkers.
Continue Your Journey
Divine Decrees
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The Trinity
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Romans 9: Election and Choice
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Is God Unfair?
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Augustine
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Compatibilism
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