Friday is for quotes: John Caputo on the interplay between philosophy & theology

I’m taking an online class this semester called “The Way of Emergent Church and Ministry,” taught by the one and only Tony Jones. This week we read John Caputo‘s book/essay Philosophy and Theology. It’s a great, short, and thought provoking read. I imagine I’ll be rereading it and using it for reference often. In less than 100 pages, Captuo provides a concise history of continental philosophy whilst suggesting the theology and philosophy need not be completely divorced as modernity has insisted. On page 14 Caputo writes:
“Religion needs theology and theologians need philosophy if they are going to anything more than tell us that God told them so when pressed about their faith.”
Several pages prior he states the same thing in a different way:
“If we think of philosophical thinking and thoelogical thinking as two different acts or modes of thinking, as two different dimensions of a whole human life, then we can imagine the two acts cohabiting happily in the same head, yielding a person who would be a thinking believer, or a believing thinker, a person of learning and faith.”
The overall thrust of Caputo’s thesis is that orientation and turn toward the postmodern is opening up many new — or not so new if you look back prior to the Enlightenment, which he does – possibilities for the playful interaction between philosophy and theology. The two are usually pitted against one another, a mistake Caputo credits to the overall modernization and fragmentation of disciplines. But for him, the two overlap more than not.
What do you think of this idea? How are philsophy and theology related? And, for you, which one comes first? That is, to which act or mode is your thinking fundamentally rooted?
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