Last week we examined the roots of the tree. These are the foundational issues of the faith that anchor all other doctrines and practices without which there would be no Christianity. This week we examine the next part of the Christmas tree analogy, the trunk.
From the roots grows the trunk of the tree. The trunk stands tall and gives the tree its height and girth. A strong trunk means resistance to the wind and other forces of nature. It also means there can be many branches that grow from it, each able to fan out and cover a lot of ground.
If the roots of our tree are issues directly pertaining to who God is and what God has done, then the trunk is what grows directly out of that. God has revealed himself to us. This leads directly to the Bible and our definitions of authority, inspiration, and so on. God made human beings. This goes into the concept of being made in God's image. God is our savior, which naturally means that there is something that God is saving us from.
The trunk is again a pretty broad place. It is the home of important concepts such as the inspiration of Scripture, the imago dei, how we are saved, sin, and more. From these trunk issues comes the branches that flesh out these topics, which we will discuss next week.
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