The word 'theology' combines two Greek roots of immense cultural weight: 'theos' (θεός, god) and 'logos' (λόγος, word, discourse, reason, rational account). The compound 'theologia' (θεολογία) literally means 'discourse about god' or 'rational account of the divine.'
In classical Greek, 'theologia' had a specific and somewhat narrow meaning. It referred to discourse about the gods — particularly the mythological narratives told by poets. Plato used the word in the 'Republic' when discussing how poets should portray the gods. For Plato, 'theology' was not yet a systematic discipline but rather the content of what poets said about divine beings. Aristotle expanded the term significantly in his 'Metaphysics,' where he distinguished three branches of theoretical philosophy: mathematics, physics, and 'theologikē' — the study of the divine, the unmoved mover, the first principles of reality
The word acquired its specifically Christian meaning during the patristic era (roughly the 2nd-8th centuries CE). Church Fathers like Origen, Augustine, and the Cappadocian Fathers used 'theologia' and its Latin equivalent for the systematic study and articulation of Christian doctrine — the attempt to give a rational 'logos' (account) of 'theos' (God) as revealed in Scripture and tradition. This became the dominant meaning in medieval Europe, where theology was 'the queen of the sciences' — the highest intellectual pursuit, to which all other forms of knowledge were subordinate.
The Greek root 'theos' (god) is extremely productive in English. 'Theocracy' (god-rule) describes government by divine authority. 'Atheism' (without god) denies the existence of deities. 'Monotheism' (one god), 'polytheism' (many gods), and 'pantheism' (all is god) describe different religious frameworks. 'Theism' itself is the belief in the existence of a god or gods. 'Enthusiasm' originally meant 'having god within' (en + theos) — divine inspiration or possession.
The '-logy' suffix from 'logos' extends theology's structural pattern across all of academic life. Just as theology applies logos (rational discourse) to theos (God), biology applies logos to bios (life), psychology applies logos to psychē (mind), and technology applies logos to tekhnē (craft). Each '-logy' word claims that its subject deserves — and can sustain — systematic rational inquiry.
The opening of the Gospel of John — 'En arkhē ēn ho Logos' (In the beginning was the Word/Logos) — represents one of the most consequential intersections of Greek philosophy and Christian thought. By identifying Christ as the 'Logos,' John drew on the full weight of Greek philosophical meaning: logos as rational principle, as the ordering intelligence of the cosmos, as the bridge between the divine and the human. This identification profoundly shaped Christian theology and, through it, the entire intellectual history of the West.