Sold Out
Book Categories |
Contents
Foreword by Kevin Vanhoozer
1 Evangelical Theology Belongs to the Christian West
Section 1: The purpose of the study of theological geography
Section 2: The different mentalities of the East and West
Section 3: The doctrinal differences between the East and West
2 Evangelical Theology Belongs to Reformation Theology
Section 4: The development of the Roman Catholic church
Section 5: The Reformers set the Word of God above the church
Section 6: The Reformers claimed that the Scriptures contained their own power of self-authentication
Section 7: The Reformers returned to the canon of the Hebrew Testament with regard to the canon of the Old Testament
Section 8: The Reformers rejected the Roman Catholic doctrine of tradition
Section 9: The Reformers rejected the authority of the Fathers and the councils
Section 10: The Reformers rejected the Roman Catholic doctrine of the clarity of Scripture
Section 11: The Reformers taught justification by faith alone
Section 12: The Reformers reconstructed the doctrine of the church
3 The Divided House of Protestantism
Section 13: The sacramental issue
Section 14: The Anglican Reformation
Section 15: The Reformed division into Calvinists and Arminians
4 The Evangelical Heritage in Scholastic Orthodoxy
Section 16: The written heritage of the Reformation
Section 17: The evangelical heritage in scholastic Protestant orthodoxy
5 The Mortal Wound to Orthodox Protestantism by the Enlightenment
Section 18: The characteristics of the Englightenment
Section 19: The specific attacks on Protestant orthodoxy
Section 20: An evangelical assessment of the Enlightenment
6 The Collision of Liberalism with Evangelical Theology
Section 21: Schleiermacher
Section 22: American religious liberalism
Section 23: The evangelical response to religious liberalism
7 An Evangelical Appraisal of Neoorthodoxy
Section 24: The emergence of neoorthodoxy
Section 25: The evangelical response to neoorthodoxy
Section 26: Elements of value in neoorthodoxy for evangelical theology
8 Evangelical Theology in the Right Perspective
Section 27: Evangelical theology seen askew
Section 28: Contemporary divisions among evangelicals
Section 29: Some guiding convictions of contemporary evangelical theology
9 The Future of Evangelical Theology
Section 30: Evangelicals must be students of Holy Scripture
Section 31: Evangelicals must know the inner structure of evangelical theology
Section 32: Evangelicals must know their cultural climate
Section 33: Evangelicals must be diligent students of linguistics, philosophy of language, and communications
Section 34: Evangelicals must rethink the manner in which God is related to the world
Login|Complaints|Blog|Games|Digital Media|Souls|Obituary|Contact Us|FAQ
CAN'T FIND WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR? CLICK HERE!!! X
You must be logged in to add to WishlistX
This item is in your Wish ListX
This item is in your CollectionThe Evangelical Heritage : A Study in Historical Theology
X
This Item is in Your InventoryThe Evangelical Heritage : A Study in Historical Theology
X
You must be logged in to review the productsX
X
X
Add The Evangelical Heritage : A Study in Historical Theology, Traces history of evangelicalism through the great theological crises of the church., The Evangelical Heritage : A Study in Historical Theology to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
X
Add The Evangelical Heritage : A Study in Historical Theology, Traces history of evangelicalism through the great theological crises of the church., The Evangelical Heritage : A Study in Historical Theology to your collection on WonderClub |