Herman Bavinck on Antirevolutionary Politics by George Harinck Herman Bavinck on Antirevolutionary Politics George Harinck George Harinck (PhD, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam) is Professor of History at Theological University Kampen and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, and Director of the Neo-Calvinism Research Institute at Theological University Kampen. He published widely on the history of the Neo-Calvinist tradition. Introduction…
Category: Theology
Introduction to Herman Bavinck (1854-1921): A Centenary Celebration by N. Gray Sutanto and Justin McLendon
Introduction to Herman Bavinck (1854-1921): A Centenary Celebration by N. Gray Sutanto and Justin McLendon Introduction to Herman Bavinck (1854-1921): A Centenary Celebration N. Gray Sutanto and Justin McLendon N. Gray Sutanto is Assistant Professor of Theology at Reformed Theological Seminary, Washington D.C. Justin McLendon is Associate Professor of Theology at Grand Canyon University and serves…
Papal Bull: A Response to Contemporary Papal Scholarship by Tyler Dalton McNabb
Papal Bull: A Response to Contemporary Papal Scholarship by Tyler Dalton McNabb Papal Bull: A Response to Contemporary Papal Scholarship Tyler Dalton McNabb Associate Professor of Philosophy at USJ – University of Saint Joseph Peter Lampe, in his work, From Paul to Valentinus, argues that until the second part of the second century, the church…
A Reply to Gregory Bock by James S. Spiegel
A Reply to Gregory Bock by James S. Spiegel A Reply to Gregory Bock James S. Spiegel Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Taylor University I want to thank Gregory Bock for his critical response to my JBTS article “‘It’s the Wrath of God’: Reflections on Inferring Divine Punishment.”[1] In my article I pose the…
The Trouble with Inferring Divine Punishment: A Response to James S. Spiegel by Gregory L. Bock
The Trouble with Inferring Divine Punishment: A Response to James S. Spiegel by Gregory L. Bock The Trouble with Inferring Divine Punishment: A Response to James S. Spiegel Gregory L. Bock Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Religion The University of Texas at Tyler In a recent JBTS article, “‘It’s the Wrath of God’: Reflections on…
Understanding and Applying Exodus 19:4-6: A Case Study in Exegesis and Theology by Jason S. DeRouchie
Understanding and Applying Exodus 19:4-6: A Case Study in Exegesis and Theology by Jason S. DeRouchie Understanding and Applying Exodus 19:4-6: A Case Study in Exegesis and Theology Jason S. DeRouchie Research Professor of Old Testament and Biblical Theology Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary [email protected] / https://jasonderouchie.com Perhaps more than any other single text, Exodus 19:4–6…
Performing the Surgery, Saving the Patient: Reduplication, Proper Christological Predication, and Critiques of Christus Odium by Ty Kieser
Performing the Surgery, Saving the Patient: Reduplication, Proper Christological Predication, and Critiques of Christus Odium by Ty Kieser Performing the Surgery, Saving the Patient: Reduplication, Proper Christological Predication, and Critiques of Christus Odium Ty Kieser Guest Assistant Professor of Theology at Wheaton College Abstract: In response to the christological objections to Christus Odium raised by…
The Father’s Love for the Son in Penal Substitutionary Atonement by Ryan Rippee
The Father’s Love for the Son in Penal Substitutionary Atonement by Ryan Rippee The Father’s Love for the Son in Penal Substitutionary Atonement Ryan Rippee President, The Cornerstone Bible College and Seminary Abstract: In what Joshua Farris and S. Mark Hamilton label the Christus Odium variant of penal substitutionary atonement, the Son becomes the object…
It Was the Will of the Father to Crush Him: The Day of Atonement and the Cross of Christ by Owen Strachan
It Was the Will of the Father to Crush Him: The Day of Atonement and the Cross of Christ by Owen Strachan It Was the Will of the Father to Crush Him: The Day of Atonement and the Cross of Christ Owen Strachan Provost and Research Professor of Theology at Grace Bible Theological Seminary Abstract:…
A Less Odious Atonement Requires a More Classical God: Engaging Farris and Hamilton on Christus Odium by Derek Rishmawy
A Less Odious Atonement Requires a More Classical God: Engaging Farris and Hamilton on Christus Odium by Derek Rishmawy A Less Odious Atonement Requires a More Classical God: Engaging Farris and Hamilton on Christus Odium Derek Rishmawy Campus minister with Reformed University Fellowship at University of California Irvine and Ph.D. Candidate at Trinity Evangelical Divinity…