The Will in Its Theological Relations addresses human freedom and God's decrees within a nineteenth-century debate over full-blown determinism. More specifically, John L. Girardeau challenges Jonathan Edwards's doctrine of the will and its tendency to identify certain foreknowledge with causal necessity. While appreciative of Edwards as a brilliant thinker and spiritual giant, Girardeau respectfully exposes Edwards's theory of necessity as an injurious incursion into Reformed theology. Here is one of the clearest and fullest cases against Edwardsian determinism. It is also an articulate restatement of the orthodox Reformed perspective on human bondage to sin against Arminian theology. Amazon Link: https://www.amazon.com/Will-Its-Theological-Relations/dp/B0BZZM2H98/ref%3Dsr_1_1?crid=28RUMXHPP2X2V&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.iobHnXrNi8j-V7mqsuJ8uw.9TRP9RXtVHGX_kR99GgQYw7QSbW16KoFLetbvkH26ts&dib_tag=se&keywords=The+Will+in+Its+Theological+Relations%2C+Girardeau&qid=1739698021&s=digital-text&sprefix=confession+of+the+christian+religion%2Cdigital-text%2C1066&sr=1-1
+1
Right in my wheelhouse.
1. Hebrew New Testament with Niqqud, based on Delitzsch's translation 2. Franz Delitzsch 3. 1877-1889 But maybe also the 1892 Gustaf Dalman revision. This is the 11th edition of Delitzsch Personal Book: https://community.logos.com/forums/p/181299/1048716.aspx#1048716…
It presents a unique dialogue between science and faith, featuring scientific arguments for evolution and theological critiques. Since Bales was a theologian associated with Christian apologetics, this book would be especially valuable for Logos users interested in the intersection of science, faith, and theology.…
Kenneth Baily tells us that we need, "a re-evaluation of the life and teachings of Jesus… to rethink deeply held attitudes toward Jesus as a teacher and to see him as a serious theologian; … the fact that his intellectual acumen is no less significant than the matchless quality of his ethics. For if Jesus is an uneducated…
You already sell it as Faithlife Audio, but are lacking the text. It is an ACBC-recommended book, with a review posted. I've been reading a paper copy, but I'd appreciate being able to search it : )
it offers a classic, concise evangelical exposition that complements more recent critical commentaries. Including the original Stibbs edition in Logos would benefit those studying historical evangelical perspectives and allow users to compare theological development across editions within the TNTC series. It also fills a…