FollowingCovenant and EschatologyandLord and Servant, this concluding volume of a four-part series examines Christian salvation from the perspective of covenant theology. InCovenant and Salvation, Michael Horton surveys law and gospel, union with Christ, and justification and theosis, conversing with both classical and contemporary viewpoints.
This is the ideal book for those seeking a short, accessible synopsis of the Christian worldview. Sprinkled with anecdotes and illustrations, the book eases readers into a succinct yet comprehensive discussion of biblical thought.
Dennis J. McCarthy , S.J. , Old Testament Covenant : A Survey of Current Opinions ( Atlanta : John Knox Press , 1972 ) , 5. A similar move of the sort McCarthy criticizes here was made in dogmatics by Karl Barth , who argued that grace ...
... unlimited by death, eternal life, life in illo tempore, sacred time, always new, always just created.”14 Levenson quotes the sages, who intensified the biblical imagery: “Both [heaven and earth] were created from Zion.
While this is not incorrect, nor unbiblical, this definition of salvation is incomplete. Where does Israel fit into salvation? And what about the covenant? Most importantly, what about the kingdom of God that Jesus preached fervently?
In Covenant of Dominion: The Salvation of the World in Christ, G. Michael Rowe explains the proper context that brings the New Testament into focus and can dispel the many doctrinal issues that are dividing the church.
The Book of Covenants is a fresh perspective on the story of redemption as found within the covers of the Christian Bible.
This work is found in the covenant between the Father and the Son, called in theology, “The Covenant of Redemption.” Willard clearly and biblically explains the Covenant of Redemption dividing the entire treatise into two general heads ...
This work by master theologian Edmund Calamy is a work of the highest order on covenant theology. Calamy says that there are two covenants, following the received standards of the Westminster Confession.
"The Mystery of Christ is well-written, displays ample knowledge of issues discussed concerning covenant theology by Baptists and paedobaptists, grounds its arguments in scriptural exegesis and theology, recovers old arguments for a new day ...
8:3 NIV)? Robertson is skeptical, therefore, of M. G. Kline's defense of the classic federal view, which identified Israel's national covenant (Sinai) with law (indeed, the republication of the covenant of creation), and personal ...