Theology
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“Oh c'mon, this is just too easy.”
~ Oscar Wilde on theology
“You say Theology, I say Theocracy, let's call the whole thing off.”
~ Oscar Wilde on theology
Theology, the study of imaginary friends, (from the Ancient Greek theo, "one of the Huxtables," and ology, "something you can major in") is a rational and systematic body of knowledge about the unknowable and nonexistent. A theologian, someone who studies theology, and is also someone who cannot distinguish what is true from what he would like to be true.
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[edit] History of Christian theology
[edit] Early theology
Christian theology was founded by Jesus. He wandered around for a while, gave some impromptu speeches, and was generally nice to people. Some people liked his speeches; others didn't. Like most people, Jesus died. (Unlike most people, he didn't stay that way.) A few years later, people who liked his speeches began writing them down. This was the first theology.
One of the people who liked Jesus was Paul. Paul thought, however, that Jesus' extemporaneous style was no way to found a religion. He also thought that Jesus hadn't been nearly hard enough on women and homosexuals. So, like so many middle aged men with a bee in their bonnet, Paul started writing letters and sending them to people. Paul became famous for his letters and sometime later, like most people, died.
Now whatever you think about Paul's letter-writing campaign, it was surely effective. Lots of people liked his letters and began to argue about what they meant. This is a little funny, as Paul was just arguing about what Jesus meant, which was all he cared about, so these later people seem to have missed the point entirely. But I digress.
[edit] Medieval theology
Some of the earliest major theologians were Ambrose, named for his love of oranges and coconut, Gregory, named for his habit of always carrying two logs, and Eusebius Sophronius Hieronymus, who went by "Jerome" because he was raised in a black neighborhood where he was regularly beaten for having such a pretentious name. Unfortunately none of their writings survive, but I thought I should mention them since this is an encyclopedia and all.
Certainly the biggest name at the time, though, was Augustine, named for his childhood pet hippopotamus. He founded scientific theology in 411 AD. While hiking through the vast Sahara Desert, he stumbled across a pack of wild gods. Unobserved by them, Augustine took detailed notes and video footage about their social interactions, grooming, flouting of physical laws, eating habits, and their tendency to smite humans by the thousands whenever they got ticked off. Years later, Augustine published his first bestseller Anthropomorphic Deities in the Mist and made millions.
[edit] Still Medieval, but somewhat later, theology
The next major theologian was Thomas Aquinas, so called because he was an asshole who created copies of his own books. Aquinas, like Paul, didn't like women and once chased a hot chick who was trying to blow him out of his room. (Fag.) He was obsessed with Aristotle. Aquinas is most famous for his books Commentary on the Sentences of Peter Lombard (he felt they were generally too long and wordy), his Summa contra Gentiles, and its New York Times best-selling sequel Summa Theologica. (The second sequel, Chicken Soup for the Summa Soul, was written after his death by an unscrupulous student.) Aquinas argued that theology was the greatest and surest of the sciences, and for reasons that are still poorly understood, no one laughed.
[edit] The Reformation
There were some more theologians, but the next big name was probably King Martin Luther. He is best remembered for his book "Der Papst ist ein Sackgesicht" and for living well into the 20th century, when he had a famous son who, in light of the unpopularity of monarchs in the US, made the "King" his last name.
Luther started the Protestant Reformation, but it got rather out of hand and lead to all manner of crazies coming up with their own theologies. Notable among those are John Calvin, an anthropomorphic tiger, and Wesley Crusher, a cute but irritating fellow who wrote the number one smash Reformation Polka.
[edit] Modern theology
Thanks to the intensive and path breaking work of Karl Barth, modern day theologians have classified all known gods (living and extinct) into approximately 470,000 species divided among 17 phyla. All of the estimated 73,000,000,000 gods are individually immortal, omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent, omnibenevolent, and absolutely supreme over the entire universe, of which each one created all by himself. Also, every single god categorically insists that all of the other gods are false gods, and really, really hates it when humans masturbate and fail to capitalize their pronouns in Uncyclopedia entries.
[edit] Postmodern theology
Postmodern theology was discovered in 1985 by Brian "Big Mac" Claren after a three week bender. It revolves around the central idea that "anything you can come up with, I can come up with something better". Postmodernism lives and breeds in coffee shops where hipster wannabe theologians ponder ideas like "If my mother was my sister, could I not be from Arkansas" and "If air was the consistancy of velveta cheese, how often would I have to replace my windshield wipers?".
Many prominent theologians have emerged from this movement including That Guy I Used To Sit Next To In English Class, The Chick Who Smells Like Chicken Soup, and The Guy With More Electronics Than Radioshack.
Most postmodern theologians can be overheard saying "would you like an extra shot" and "do you want whip cream?".
Postmodern theologians who actually find work theologizing are known to be able to use the word "ontological" three times within the same sentence. Those uncomfortable with the word "ontological" eventually turn to biblical literalism (q.v.) in order to make a living.