This week we are highlighting five new volumes in the Studies in Historical and Systematic Theology (SHST) series recently published in July. Today we interview Jennifer Rosner about her new book Healing the Schism: Karl Barth, Franz Rosenzweig, and the New Jewish-Christian Encounter. Lexham Press: What sparked your interest in this topic? And why Barth
Read moreHidden and Revealed: An Interview with Dmytro Bintsarovskyi
This week we are highlighting five new volumes in the Studies in Historical and Systematic Theology (SHST) series recently published in July. Today we interview Dmytro Bintsarovskyi about his new book Hidden and Revealed: The Doctrine of God in the Reformed and Eastern Orthodox Traditions. Lexham Press: What sparked your interest in comparing Reformed and
Read moreCarl Henry on the Holy Spirit: An Interview with Jesse Payne
This week we are highlighting five new volumes in the Studies in Historical and Systematic Theology (SHST) series recently published in July. Today we interview Jesse Payne about his new book Carl F. H. Henry on the Holy Spirit. Lexham Press: What sparked your interest in Carl F. H. Henry and his thought on the
Read moreFederal Theology: An Interview with Gilsun Ryu
This week we are highlighting five new volumes in the Studies in Historical and Systematic Theology (SHST) series recently published in July. Today we interview Gilsun Ryu about his new book, The Federal Theology of Jonathan Edwards: An Exegetical Perspective. Lexham Press: What sparked your interest in Jonathan Edwards and this topic in particular? Gilsun
Read moreCarl F. H. Henry on … the Holy Spirit?
In this excerpt from Carl F. H. Henry on the Holy Spirit, Jesse M. Payne explains the broad contours of Carl F. H. Henry’s pneumatology. In the January 30, 1961, issue of Christianity Today, editor Carl F. H. Henry devoted a section to what he feared was a growing neglect of the Holy Spirit in
Read moreThe Origins of Jonathan Edwards’s Federal Theology
In this excerpt from The Federal Theology of Jonathan Edwards, Gilsun Ryu provides an overview of the origins of Jonathan Edwards’s federal theology and it’s roots in biblical exegesis. Jonathan Edwards (1703–1758), one of the most intriguing federal theologians, inherited classical federalism from Reformed orthodoxy. Federal theology is a form of Reformed covenant theology, which
Read moreLuther and Biblical Studies: An Interview with Robert Plummer and Channing Crisler
Whatever the theological malady, Martin Luther prescribed the same remedy: the word of God. For Luther, the Word was central to the Christian life. As a lover, translator, and interpreter of Scripture, Luther believed the Bible was too important to be left to academics. God’s word has always been and must always be for God’s
Read moreTheology for Preaching, Preaching for Theology
In this excerpt from Theology Is for Preaching, Chase R. Kuhn argues that the most biblical sound form of preaching is deliberately theological. There appears to be a growing hesitancy towards the discipline of systematic theology amongst some evangelical leaders. There is a concern that theological systems pollute a pure reading of the Bible, so
Read morePraise Upon Praise for Abraham Kuyper’s on Business and Economics
In his volume introduction to On Business and Economics, Peter S. Heslam notes that there is a distinct lack of engagement by theologians with enterprise. This disconnect between these two spheres makes this anthology of Abraham Kuyper’s writings on these subjects all the more important. This timeliness has certainly been recognized by prominent contemporary economists,
Read moreAbraham Kuyper on the Positive Potential of Business
Common grace in business: putting these four words together implies a link between theology and enterprise, the existence of which is barely evident from the output of most theologians and business writers. The long-standing paucity of engagement between these groups reinforces the widespread perception that trying to mix commerce and religion is like trying to
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