Theology & Method (Mueller Intro)
Theology & Experience (Mueller Ch. 1 / Robinette)
Old Testament Foundations (Mueller Ch. 2)
New Testament Library (Mueller Ch. 3 / Kilhoffer)
Synoptic & Gospel Themes (Mueller Ch. 3)
100

The Greek roots theos and logos together suggest theology is:

Word about God grounded in reflection

100

Robinette argues theology begins in:

Prayerful orientation toward God

100

The three divisions of the Tanakh are:

Torah – Prophets – Writings

100

The New Testament contains:

27 books

100

The Synoptic Gospels are:

Mark, Matthew, and Luke

200

Mueller connects theology to the Latin religio, meaning.

to bind

200

Prayer, for Robinette, functions as:

Openness to divine mystery

200

The Exodus narrative centers on:

 Liberation from bondage

200

The earliest NT writings are:

Pauline Letters

200

The first Synoptic Problem asks:

Why the Synoptics are so similar?

300

For Mueller, theology is best described as:

Lived reflection on faith experience

300

Robinette describes wonder and perplexity as:

 Entry points into theological reflection

300

The Sinai covenant establishes Israel as:

A priestly kingdom and holy nation

300

The Gospel dated around 70 CE is:

Mark
300

The proposed solution that Mark served as a source is called:

Markan Priority

400

Theology emerges most authentically when it engages:

Human experience in dialogue with tradition

400

True theology, according to Robinette, integrates:

prayer and reflection

400

Apodictic law is best described as:

Absolute commands (“You shall…”)

400

Acts of the Apostles is best described as:

Selective history of early Christianity

400

Material shared by Matthew and Luke but absent from Mark is attributed to:

Q Source

500

Mueller emphasizes that theology is both:

 Individual and communal reflection

500

The saying “If you pray truly, you are a theologian” emphasizes:

Theology begins in lived encounter with God

500

Casuistic law takes the form of:

Conditional case rulings

500

Among the 21 letters, how many are attributed to Paul (no Deutero-Pauline):

7 letters

500

John’s Gospel is distinctive because it features:

Long theological discourses and signs

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