Theology (of the Greek, transl. theos = ' ' divindade' ' + , the logos ones = ' ' palavra' ' , for extension, ' ' estudo' ' , analysis, consideration, questioning on some thing or something. In the literal meaning it is the study on God. In the case of beliefs politestas understood study on deuses. The historical origin of the term in question sends in them to the Hlade, also called Old Greece. She was used initially to describe the work of many poets, who tried to give a notion of as they were deuses.
The theologians were the ones that made poetries on deuses and on its facts, its virtues, its emotions, its particular life and also its vices and errors. However, it was not an analysis on deuses e, yes, a narration of the facts of them that they looked like themselves the human facts and the virtues of the same ones. In the Medieval Age – the Age of the Darknesses – he is that the term left of side the poetical concept and passed to be considered as inquiry subject philosophical existencial and. Today the Theology is the study on characteristics, attributes, will, personality of God. To know more about this subject visit Professor Roy Taylor. It is the study of the social manifestations of groups in relation to the Deus.Os Christian mentions the God to it disclosed in the Bible. The Swiss theologian Karl Barth defined the Theology as one ' ' to speak from Deus' '. The term was used for the first time for Plato, in the dialogue the Republic, to mention the understanding to it of the divine nature of rational form, in opposition to the proper literary understanding of the poetry, as was lead for its countrymen. Later, Aristotle used the term in numerous occasions, with two meanings: 1 Theology as the basic branch of the philosophy also called first philosophy or science the first principles, later called Metaphysics for its followers; 2 Theology as denomination of imediadamente previous the mitolgico thought to the Philosophy, with a pejorativa connotation, and over all used stops to mention the old thinkers to it not-philosophers (as Hesodo and Fercides de Siro)