Theological Journals
Westminster
Theological Journal (Nov 2021, 251-266): “A Brief Rejoinder to Kevin DeYoung,”
Dr. Shannon continues to debate Dr. DeYoung curiously and unconvincingly. ??.
Mid-America
Journal of Theology (Fall 2021, 7-34): in “Mea Culpa: An Apology for Original
Sin,” Dr. Hans Madueme comments on the whole-Bible warrants from Augustine,
calling one a drop in the sea of warrants from Augustine’s corpus, concerning
original sin and infant damnation without baptism.
Anglican
& Episcopal History (Sept 2014), in “Ecclesiology of Prayer Book Illustrations,”
Posey Krakowski—lex orandi, lex credenda.
Churchman
(Winter 2018): “Editorial:” Dr. Gerald Bray notes that progressives must be
dismissed, exposed and denounced. They think the Bible should be interpreted
according to a trajectory that has more or less been invented. Biblical
commands, according to them, are products of their time and need to be updated.
Plato in the Symposium, like progressives, advocated homosexuality as a higher
form of life than the plebian heterosexuals. Progressives fail to see if
Biblical commands are wrong, so is salvation. For them, Jesus is a misfit.
Protestant Reformed Theological
Journal 55,1 (Fall, 2021, pages 44-79): “’Committing the Truth to Faith Men’:
Centennial History of the Protestant Reformed Theological Seminary,” Douglas
Kuiper discusses the beginnings of the seminary.
Reformed Theological Journal (Sept
2021), a book review of David Bauer’s “The Book of Acts as a Story: A Narrative
Study.” Bauer of Asbury uses narrative discourse versus form, source or
redaction criticism.
Southwestern
Theological Journal (Fall 2021), in “Use of the OT in the Synoptics,” Craig
Evans wonderfully moves into Luke’s exquisite use of the OT.
The Biblical Repertory/Princeton
Review (Volume 9, Issue
1, 1837, pages 29ff.). James Waddel Archibald review Paul Henry’s
“The Life of John Calvin, the Great Reformer” (Vol. 1, 1835). Rev. Archibald comments
on Calvin’s late-year observations on his Institutes.
Concordia
Theological Journal (Winter 2020), “Luther and Bonhoeffer on the Sermon on the
Mount: Similar Tasks, Different Tools,” Dr. Theodore Hopkins talks about Luther’s
use of the Sermon against Papists, jurists, canonists, and Anabaptists.
Princeton Theological Review
(Vol.22, No.1, Spring 2019), in the “Evangelicos y Argentina: A Case Study of
Evangelicals in the Political Sphere in Argentina 1990-2018,” Stephen DiTrolio
Coakley sets the context for the study and the definition of evangelicals in
Argentina.
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