Study Element 05 of 12

Themes

The central ideas the passage is advancing: named, not assumed.

What it is

The Themes element identifies the major theological and pastoral ideas at work in the passage. These are not invented categories imposed from outside; they are the ideas the passage itself is explicitly developing. Themes are the answer to the question: 'What is this passage actually about, theologically?' They are broader than a single verse and narrower than the whole book.

Why it matters

A passage can be read at multiple levels simultaneously: narrative, doctrinal, pastoral, and canonical. Themes give you the doctrinal and pastoral level: the ideas the author is deliberately advancing. Knowing the themes lets you read any given verse as a contribution to a larger argument rather than as an isolated statement. It also helps you see when two passages are in conversation with each other because they share the same theme from different angles.

How to read it

When you open this element in the study workspace, here is what to look for and how to engage it:

  1. Read the theme list and ask: 'Is this actually in the text, or is it being imported?'
  2. For each theme, find the verse or verses where it is most directly stated.
  3. Notice which themes repeat across multiple passages in the same book; those are the author's signature concerns.
  4. Ask: 'Which of these themes is primary: the one everything else is serving?'
Live example: Colossians 1:15–20

Colossians 1:15–20 carries themes of Christ's supremacy, cosmic reconciliation, and the unity of creation and new creation under one Lord. Each theme is directly present in the text: 'firstborn over all creation' (verse 15), 'all things were created through him and for him' (verse 16), 'reconciling to himself all things' (verse 20). Understanding that cosmic reconciliation is a distinct theme (not just an implication of the others) shows the full scope of what Paul is claiming.

How to use it
Personal study
  • Choose one theme per reading session and trace how the passage develops it.
  • Journal: 'What does this theme require me to believe? What does it require me to do?'
  • Compare themes across related passages to build a richer understanding of each idea.
Teaching preparation
  • Let the themes determine the scope of your teaching; resist adding themes the passage is not advancing.
  • Name the primary theme explicitly and early: 'This passage is fundamentally about X.'
  • Use secondary themes as supporting structure, not as competing main points.
Group study
  • Ask the group to name the themes before revealing the system's list; compare the answers.
  • Focus group discussion around one theme: 'Where do you see this in the text? Why does it matter?'
  • Use themes to help group members understand why two different passages they have read this month are related.
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