• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

  • Christian Forums is looking to bring on new moderators to the CF Staff Team! If you have been an active member of CF for at least three months with 200 posts during that time, you're eligible to apply! This is a great way to give back to CF and keep the forums running smoothly! If you're interested, you can submit your application here!

Book Recomendation for Reformed believers

Knight

Knight of the Cross
Apr 11, 2002
3,395
117
51
Indiana
Visit site
✟4,472.00
Faith
Calvinist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Republican
I recently started a book that I think is essential to all believers wether Reformed or not. Though, since it is written by Reformed Theologian R. C. Sproul I thought it of interest to Reformed believers.

The book is titled, "The Holiness of God." I've only read through the first two chapters and I would recommend this book to anyone seeking a deeper understanding to the character of God.

A must for any Christian bookshelf.
 

Knight

Knight of the Cross
Apr 11, 2002
3,395
117
51
Indiana
Visit site
✟4,472.00
Faith
Calvinist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Republican
Good recomendations guys....

I suggest the Sproul book because I firmly believe that if more people had a better understanding of this aspect of God's character there would be less confusion of Reformed Theology and a better understanding of Christianity in general.
 
Upvote 0

rnmomof7

Legend
Feb 9, 2002
14,502
735
Western NY
✟86,584.00
Gender
Female
Faith
Calvinist
Marital Status
Private
Politics
US-Libertarian
Knight said:
I recently started a book that I think is essential to all believers wether Reformed or not. Though, since it is written by Reformed Theologian R. C. Sproul I thought it of interest to Reformed believers.

The book is titled, "The Holiness of God." I've only read through the first two chapters and I would recommend this book to anyone seeking a deeper understanding to the character of God.

A must for any Christian bookshelf.

When I saw the title of the thread , that was the book I was going to recommend . It is not a strong doctrinal teaching book, but it is one that touches the reader and it is worthy of a read by every Christian
 
Upvote 0

cygnusx1

Jacob the twister.....
Apr 12, 2004
56,208
3,104
UK Northampton
Visit site
✟87,226.00
Faith
Calvinist
Marital Status
Married
The great debate : Calvinism, Arminianism and salvation
• By: Alan P F Sell
• Publisher: Grand Rapids : Baker Book House, 1983.
• ISBN: 0801082277

This is one of my all time favs,it makes History so interesting,it brings so many parts of Christian thinking and ideas together in one book.
I don't know a better book on Calvinism. :wave:
 
Upvote 0

Reformationist

Non nobis domine sed tuo nomine da gloriam
Mar 7, 2002
14,273
465
52
✟44,595.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Single
Knight said:
I recently started a book that I think is essential to all believers wether Reformed or not. Though, since it is written by Reformed Theologian R. C. Sproul I thought it of interest to Reformed believers.

The book is titled, "The Holiness of God." I've only read through the first two chapters and I would recommend this book to anyone seeking a deeper understanding to the character of God.

A must for any Christian bookshelf.

Great book. I've read it about 10 times. Definite must have, as is anything by Dr. Sproul. :)

God bless
 
Upvote 0

cygnusx1

Jacob the twister.....
Apr 12, 2004
56,208
3,104
UK Northampton
Visit site
✟87,226.00
Faith
Calvinist
Marital Status
Married
Eternal Security by A W Pink.


One of my favs,I love the way the first few chapters make you doubt Pink believes in eternal security,an then he goes on to give the doctrine a very deep and balanced understanding. I give this book 100 out of 100. :cool:
 
Upvote 0

5solas

Ephesians 2:8.9
Aug 10, 2004
1,175
91
✟24,308.00
Faith
Calvinist
Marital Status
Married
discerning_1810_93888414

The First Comprehensive Treatment of Justification in 150 Years!


The history of the Christian church pivots on the doctrine of justification by faith. Once the core of the Reformation, the church today often ignores or misunderstands this foundational doctrine. Theologian James White calls believers to a fresh appreciation of understanding of, and dedication to the great doctrine of justification and then provides an exegesis of the key Scriptural text on this theme.

In today's culture where tolerance is the new absolute, James White proclaims with passion the truth and centrality of the doctrine of justification by faith.



Finally -a contemporary, exegetical, doctrinal, and able defense of the historic Protestant doctrine of justification by God's free grace by faith in Jesus Christ alone. This is the best book on justification since James Buchanan's mid-nineteenth-century classic. We need to teach this material to our congregations.
Joel Beeke


I lost sleep over this book! I simply couldn't put it down. James White writes the way an exegetically and theologically oriented pastor appreciates. This is no book for casual reading; there is solid meat throughout. An outstanding contribution in every sense of the words!
Jay Adams


diamonds_4-5.gif

A well-argued theological defense of the Reformed understanding of justification by faith — as distinct from Roman Catholic and Lutheran understandings. James White has done an excellent job bringing together some of the best statements from Reformed theologians of the last 450 years and integrating them with his own apologetic insights as one who regularly debates Roman Catholics, Mormons and others. The result is a definitive restatement of the central doctrine of Reformed Theology. Essential reading for beginning and intermediate students of the Bible. Advanced students will want to ponder the more exegetical — less theological — arguments from contemporary New Testament scholars such as Tom Wright, Paul Barnett, Don Garlington and others. In fact, the real weakness of the book is that it fails to address the issues that are truly on the forefront of today's theological discussions. One would hope that a future revision of The God Who Justifies will do so — through careful exegesis of the texts, as opposed to merely thoughtful citations from the confessions and theologians of the Reformed past. That would truly serve us in coming to a final conclusion as to what Paul (especially) is saying on the matter.




The Discerning Reader
Published by Baker Book House (400pp/hb).





 
Upvote 0

adam149

Active Member
Sep 23, 2003
236
18
Ohio
Visit site
✟457.00
Faith
Calvinist
Politics
US-Others
Great, another book to put on my already-too-long reading list. You should know better than recommend books! We reformers can't resist a scholarly tome, you know! ;)

Ah, well, these are very good as well, and have benefited me personally very greatly:

Christian Apologetics, Cornelius Van Til
The Defense of the Faith, Cornelius Van Til
Predestination in Light of the Cross, J.B. King
The Great Christian Revolution, O. Scott, M.R. Rushdoony, R.J. Rushdoony, J. Lofton, and M. Selbrede
The Mythology of Science, R.J. Rushdoony
The Death of Meaning, R.J. Rushdoony
The Word of Flux: Modern Man and the Problem of Knowledge, R.J. Rushdoony
A New Systematic Theology of the Christian Faith, Robert Reymond
The Institutes of Biblical Law, in 3 volumes, R.J. Rushdoony
Salvation and the Godly Rule, R.J. Rushdoony
Christianity and Liberalism, G. Machen
Systematic Theology, R.J. Rushdoony
Infallibility and Interpretation, R.J. Rushdoony and A. Sandlin
The Church is Israel Now, C.D. Proven
Creation According to the Scriptures, A. Sandlin (editor)

Knight said:
I recently started a book that I think is essential to all believers wether Reformed or not. Though, since it is written by Reformed Theologian R. C. Sproul I thought it of interest to Reformed believers.

The book is titled, "The Holiness of God." I've only read through the first two chapters and I would recommend this book to anyone seeking a deeper understanding to the character of God.

A must for any Christian bookshelf.
 
Upvote 0

5solas

Ephesians 2:8.9
Aug 10, 2004
1,175
91
✟24,308.00
Faith
Calvinist
Marital Status
Married
adam149 said:
Ah, well, these are very good as well, and have benefited me personally very greatly:A New Systematic Theology of the Christian Faith, Robert Reymond
I strongly agree! :thumbsup: (though I have a different position concerning baptism)

read this review
source: http://www.trinityfoundation.org/journal.php?id=140

A New Systematic Theology of the Christian Faith
Robert L. Reymond (Reviewed by W. Gary Crampton*)
[size=-1]Dr. Robert L. Reymond is Professor of Systematic Theology at Knox Theological Seminary in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. He holds B. A., M. A., and Ph. D. degrees from Bob Jones University and has done doctoral and post-doctoral studies in other seminaries and universities. Mr. Reymond, an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church in America, has lectured in various countries in Europe and the East. Prior to taking the Chair of Systematic Theology at Knox Theological Seminary, he taught at Covenant Theological Seminary for more than twenty years. He has authored numerous articles in theological journals and various reference works, and has written some ten books. To say the least, Mr. Reymond is a well-educated, highly trained, and skilled theologian.

In A New Systematic Theology of the Christian Faith,1 Reymond has given the church a comprehensive and contemporary statement of Christian theology. As stated on the dust cover, this book "is saturated with Scripture" and Biblical exegesis, and the author is "always encouraging the reader to measure the theological assertions by the ultimate standard of Scripture itself." In Reymond’s own words, "this present volume attempts to set forth a systematic theology of the Christian faith that will pass Biblical muster" (xix). In the opinion of the present reviewer, it does just that. Reymond’s book is the best one-volume systematic theology in English.

This is not to say that it is without defect. There are several areas in which it is weak. To cite a few, Dr. Reymond holds to the "critical" or Alexandrian Text theory of New Testament manuscript analysis, rather than the Majority Text view (569n, 575n, 951). Further, he speaks of a form of "non-propositional" revelation (5), a problematic idea, if revelation is the revelation of truth, for truth is a quality of propositions alone. He believes that sensations (whatever they are) play a role in the acquisition of knowledge (147).2 And more than once he refers to knowledge being justified by means of history and experience (478, 468), whereas Scripture alone is the sole means of justifying knowledge, a truth which Reymond himself attests to, both in this book (111-126), and, in much greater detail, in another volume as well.3 These glitches (and two others that will be dealt with below), however, should be viewed as mere aberrations in an otherwise outstanding work.

Dr. Reymond, unapologetically Reformed and Calvinistic in his thinking, is a strong adherent to the Westminster Standards. He follows the theological outline of the Westminster Confession of Faith in this volume. After the "Introduction," one section of which–"The Justification of Theology as an Intellectual Discipline"--is worth the price of the book itself, Part One studies Scripture ("Bibliology"); Part Two assesses the doctrines of God ("Theology Proper") and man ("Anthropology"); Part Three deals with the Covenant of Grace, the doctrine of the Person and work of Christ ("Christology"), and salvation ("Soteriology"); Part Four examines the church ("Ecclesiology"); and Part Five inquires into the last things ("Eschatology"). The volume concludes with seven Appendices, including a "Selected General Theological Bibliography." In each and every one of the sections, Reymond, in a very scholarly fashion, interacts with various opinions of scholars of antiquity and the present era.

Like Calvin and the Westminster Assembly, Reymond begins his treatise with epistemology (the theory of knowledge). He does not begin with how we know there is a god, and then go on to seek to prove that this god is the God of the Bible. (In fact, in chapter six the author reviews the "Traditional Proofs" for God’s existence and shows them all to be fallacious [132-152].) He begins with revelation. The doctrine of God follows epistemology.

Further, Reymond’s approach to Scripture is presuppositional, in Clarkian (not Van Tilian) fashion. There is no higher proof than God’s infallible, inerrant Word. It is the pou sto ("[a place] where I may stand") for all knowledge. Says the author: "When God gave his Word to us, he gave us much more than simply basic information about himself. He gave us the pou sto, or base that justifies both our knowledge claims and our claims to personal significance" (111).

To his credit, Robert Reymond will have nothing to do with a paradoxical theology. As a breath of fresh air, he calls for a rational theology (103-110). This is not a Cartesian rationalism, which is free from Biblical revelation, presupposing the autonomy of human reason. Rather, it is a Christian rationalism, as espoused by men such as Augustine, John Calvin, B. B. Warfield, J. Gresham Machen, and Gordon Clark. It is a Biblical view that claims that "God is rational…[and] this means that he thinks and speaks in a way that indicates the laws of logic…are laws of thought original with and intrinsic to himself" (109). Hence, God’s "inscripturated propositional revelation to us--the Holy Scripture--is of necessity also rational" (110). Without such a rational theology, the systematizing of Scripture would be impossible.

Moreover, due to the nature of Biblical truth, that is, that it is rational, we are to understand that God’s revelation to us is "univocally true." Here the author correctly takes issue with Cornelius Van Til (96-102) and John Frame (and his "multiperspectival" approach to theology [103]), both of whom maintain that Biblical revelation is analogical. What we have in Scripture, says Reymond, is not just an analogy of the truth. We have the truth itself. Since God is omniscient (knowing all truth), if we are to know anything, we must know what God knows. Necessarily, then, there is an univocal point at which our knowledge meets God’s knowledge. To be sure, man does not know as much as God knows, that is, he does not have the same degree of knowledge as God does, but he has the same kind of knowledge (95-102).

Commendably, in the face of so much controversy in our day over the issue of the "spiritual gifts" and the canon of Scripture, the author is a strong advocate of the Confessional view4 : the gifts have ceased and the canon is closed. (In this section, Reymond corrects Wayne Grudem’s teaching that prophecy is a legitimate gift for the church today [57].) In his What About Continuing Revelations and Miracles in the Presbyterian Church Today,5 a book wholly devoted to this subject (which the reader is encouraged to study for further insight on this matter), Reymond effectively presents his case in greater detail, efficiently dismantling the opposing view. Particularly relevant is his exegesis and analysis of 1 Corinthians 13:8-13, a passage in which Paul deals with, not the second advent and the final state, but the cessation of the spiritual gifts and the close of the canon.

Part Two ("God and Man"), like the rest of the book, is excellent. But several things should be highlighted. First, the author adheres to a literal six-day creation and a relatively young Earth. He writes: "I can discern no reason...for departing from the view that the days of Genesis were ordinary twenty-four hour days" (392); "the tendency of Scripture...seems to be toward a relative young Earth and a relatively short history of man to date" (396).

Second, Reymond argues against the traditional view of "The Eternal Generation of the Son" (324-341), showing that it is (at least) implicitly subordinationistic. He analyzes the writings of the Nicene Fathers, revealing how their uncareful use of language, as well as their misuse or misunderstanding of the Greek monogenes ("only begotten"), led to this subordinationist view. Reymond buttresses his position by citing Calvin at length. The conclusion reached is that "John Calvin contended against the subordinationism implicit in the Nicene language" (327).

Third, Dr. Reymond’s "A Biblical Theodicy" ("the justification of God in the face of the existence of evil"), is very well done (376-378). In summary: "The ultimate end which God decreed he regarded as great enough and glorious enough that it justified to himself both the divine plan itself and the ordained incidental evil arising along the foreordained path to his plan’s great and glorious end" (377). To his merit, the author does not "duck" the Biblical truth, so aptly stated by the Westminster Confession, that "the almighty power, unsearchable wisdom, and infinite goodness of God so far manifest themselves in his providence, that it extends itself even to the first Fall, and all other sins of angels and men."6

In this section we do, however, encounter another glitch; it has to do with the author’s teaching regarding "God and time." The traditional or Augustinian view is that "time is the succession of ideas in a finite mind" (173); hence, God is to be viewed as "timeless" in his being. Reymond demurs. He opts for the term "everlasting" when referring to God, rather than "eternal." The purpose: This suggests that God dwells in everlasting or eternal time, not eternal timelessness. Reymond properly contends that although God does not have a succession of ideas, he does, nevertheless, have an idea of succession. But somehow he maintains that this is not logically possible under the traditional view. The present reader disagrees with the author and suggests that a more Biblical approach to this matter is to be found in Gordon Clark’s chapter on "Time and Eternity" in the first edition of his book God’s Hammer.7

Part Three ("Our ‘So Great Salvation’ ") begins with "God’s Eternal Plan of Salvation" (461). Here the author forcefully (and convincingly) argues in favor of a supralapsarian view (that God logically [not chronologically] decreed to elect and reprobate prior to his decree to bring about the Fall of man) of the logical order of the decrees, rather than the infralapsarian view (that God logically decreed to bring about the fall of man prior to his decree to elect and reprobate). God, writes Reymond, "has a single eternal purpose or plan at the center of which is Jesus Christ and his church" (465). Or, in other words, God’s singly eternal plan is redemptive in nature: "Creation’s raison d’etre then is to serve the redemptive ends of God" (398).

This being the case, the logical order of the decrees must begin, not with the creation of the world and all men, as infralapsarians would have it (480), but with "the election of some sinful men to salvation in Christ" (489). Whereas infralapsarians maintain that their view is correct because it is closer to the historical order of the events as they take place, the supralapsarian disagrees. A rational mind, of which God’s is the epitome, first makes a plan (the decrees) and then executes the plan in the reverse order of the decrees (492-496). Thus, the logical order of the decrees is not just a matter of theological hairsplitting, as some would contend. The rationality of God is at stake. And Reymond has expounded for us the Biblical position.

As mentioned above, prior to studying the doctrine of Christ, the author examines "The Unity of the Covenant of Grace" (503-541). He then goes on to explore Christology, including "The Supernatural Christ of History" (545-581) and "The Christ of the Early Councils" (583-622). The historical theology discussed in this latter section is superb. It is here, however, that we encounter another problem. Reymond affirms the traditional view of the incarnation and the hypostatic union of the divine and human natures in Christ, as stated in the Chalcedonian Creed. That is, that "the eternal Son of God took into union with himself in the one divine Person that which he had not possessed before--even a full complex of human attributes--and became fully and truly man for us men and for our salvation" (546). But if Christ is now one divine Person, with two natures (one divine and one human), as clearly averred by Chalcedon, how can it be said that he "became fully and truly man?" In other words, if he is not a human person, is he fully man? How does this teaching square with Hebrews 2 which asserts that Christ, having "partaken of flesh and blood" (verse 14) has now "in all things" been "made like his brethren" (verse 17)? This problem has plagued the traditional view for centuries. For rational solutions to these problems, the reader should study the last book Gordon Clark ever wrote: The Incarnation.8

Dr. Reymond completes his study of Christology with an analysis of Christ’s "cross work" and the limited atonement (Reymond prefers the term "particular redemption"), from a Calvinistic perspective (623-702). Once again, his work is exemplary.

Part Three concludes with a study of "The Application of the Benefits of the Cross Work of Christ" (703-794); that is, the order in which the salvation merited by Christ is applied to the elect (the ordo salutis), from "effectual calling" through "glorification." Particularly laudable in this section is the author’s strong stand against the Roman Catholic Church and its false teachings. Dr. Reymond does not minimize the difference that exists between Protestantism and Roman Catholicism. Rather, he sharply criticizes the "Evangelical and Catholics Together" movement that (sadly) is gaining a foothold in the allegedly Protestant camp. With Paul and the Reformers, the author claims that Rome’s gospel is "another gospel which is no gospel at all" (734n).

In Part Four ("The Church") Reymond sets forth a Biblical Ecclesiology. In "The Nature and Foundation of the Church," he studies this doctrine from a "Biblical theological" standpoint, that is, how it historically unfolds, beginning in the Old Testament and continuing into the New (805-836). The writings of all of the New Testament authors are considered in some detail. The author then goes on to examine "The Attributes and Marks of the Church" (837-862), stressing "faithfulness to and the pure and true proclamation of the Word of God" (851), and "The Authority and Duties of the Church" (861-893), again pressing home the fact "that the church must ever be committed to the study, the preaching, and the teaching of the Word of God" (878). Reymond’s teaching in this latter section on the "regulative principle" of worship (868-877), that is, that "true worship may include only those matters which God has either expressly commanded in Scripture or which may be deduced from Scripture by good and necessary consequence" (870),9 is particularly refreshing. This is especially the case in a day when we see so many alleged Reformed scholars denying this Scriptural duty of worship. Reymond takes issue with J. I. Packer in this matter, because Packer rejects the regulative principle, calling it a "Puritan innovation." States Reymond: "Whatever else one might say about this [regulative] principle, it must be said it is not a Puritan innovation, Calvin having stated that ‘whatever is not commanded, we are not free to choose’ " (870n). He then goes on to explore the Biblical view of church government.

Dr. Reymond is a Presbyterian, and presents his case for this form of government with Biblical thoroughness (895-910). In so doing he exposes the errors in Episcopacy, Congregationalism, and Erastianism. Part Four ends with "The Church’s Means of Grace" (911-976), wherein the author deals with Scripture (as a means of grace in itself), and the Sacraments and prayer (which are means of grace only as understood and applied by and with the Word of God). Once again, noteworthy is Reymond’s strong stance on Scripture as "the most important of the means of grace available to the church" (913).

Finally, Reymond gives us an impressive Biblical "Eschatology" (979-1093). First, he investigates five eschatological theories that have surfaced over the last one hundred and fifty years: the Liberal Eschatology of the nineteenth and early twentieth century, the Consistent Eschatology of Albert Schweitzer, the Realized Eschatology of C. H. Dodd, the Existentialist Eschatology of Rudolf Bultmann, and the eschatological views of Dispensationalism. All of these are heretical (in greater and lesser degrees) in one form or another. And Reymond dispenses with them in short order. He concludes: "With such eschatological confusion running rampant today in scholarly circles, never has the need been greater to return to Scripture and to see what God’s Word says concerning this vital, all-important, capstoning locus of theology" (986).

The author proceeds to do just that. He begins in the Old Testament, which eschatologically views the coming of God’s kingdom as an undivided unit. But then when we come to the New Testament, we find that this kingdom unfolds itself in two stages. The first stage is one of grace, whereas the second is one of glory. Reymond traces this theme, beginning with John the Baptist, and continuing in the ministry of Christ and his kingdom parables, and then through the balance of the New Testament writings. He trenchantly argues his case that a proper Biblical eschatology must hold to what he calls an "eschatological dualism," espousing both the "already" of an inaugurated kingdom, and the "not yet" of a future cosmic kingdom of glory, which will be ushered in at the second advent of Jesus Christ. In the author’s own words: "Old Testament eschatology pointed forward both to today’s ‘now’ (soterically oriented) eschatology and to the ‘not yet’ (consummating) eschatology of the age to come that will commence with Jesus’ return, but eschatological clarity awaited Jesus’ prophetic insights to distinguish these two ages" (1064). And within this Biblical eschatological framework there is no room for a 1000-year reign of Christ on Earth. In other words, according to Reymond (and here he differs from the historic premillennial view of Reformed thinkers such as John Gill, Charles Spurgeon, Francis Schaeffer, and Gordon Clark), a Premillennial eschatology cannot be supported by the teaching of Scripture. He writes: "All of the New Testament writings project the same eschatological vision; none of them teaches that a millennial age should be inserted between Jesus’ ‘this age’ and ‘the age to come’ (Matthew 12:32) (1064).

Dr. Reymond calls himself an Amillennialist, but some might say that he sounds more like a Postmillennialist. The reason: Although he sees no "golden age" prior to the final state, he appears to be very optimistic about the spread of the Gospel during the present kingdom ("this age") reign of Christ.

Robert Reymond has done the church a great service. In a day when Reformed theology has fallen on hard times, even within our allegedly Reformed and Calvinistic seminaries, Dr. Reymond has given us a Biblically based, Confessionally sound systematic theology. In it he calls the church to a Scripturally grounded theology, a rational theology, a God-centered theology, and a theologically articulate ministry.10 It is the hope of the present reviewer that the Reformed church will pay heed to this four-fold call. Thank you, Dr. Reymond, for your contribution to the advancement of Christ’s kingdom.



[/size]1 Robert L. Reymond, A New Systematic Theology of the Christian Faith (Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1998). The pagination found in this review is from Reymond’s book.

2 For more on this subject and Gordon Clark’s refutation of Reymond’s position, see Gordon H. Clark, Clark Speaks from the Grave (The Trinity Foundation, 1986), 19-30.

3 Robert L. Reymond, The Justification of Knowledge (Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company, 1976).

4 Westminster Confession of Faith I: 1, 2, 6.

5 Robert L. Reymond, What About Continuing Revelations and Miracles in the Presbyterian Church Today? (Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company, 1977).

6 Westminster Confession of Faith V: 4.

7 Gordon H. Clark, God’s Hammer: The Bible and Its Critics (The Trinity Foundation, 1982), 175-190.

8Gordon H. Clark, The Incarnation (The Trinity Foundation, 1988).

9 The Westminster Confession of Faith (XXI: 1) defines the regulative principle as follows: "The acceptable way of worshipping the true God is instituted by himself, and so limited by his own revealed will, that he may not be worshipped according to the imaginations and devices of men, or the
suggestions of Satan, under any visible representations, or any other way not prescribed in the Holy Scripture."

10 For more on this four-fold call, see Robert L. Reymond, Preach the Word: A Teaching Ministry Approved unto God (Edinburgh: Rutherford House Books, 1988).



*
Dr. Crampton is a free-lance writer living in Montpelier, Virginia.

 
  • Like
Reactions: rmwilliamsll
Upvote 0