Antinomianism, Reformed Theology's Unwelcome Guest?
‘an·ti·no·mi·an (noun) — One who holds that under the gospel dispensation of grace the moral law is of no use or obligation because faith alone is necessary to salvation.’ Merriam-Webster's dictionary. Hotly debated since the sixteenth century in the Reformed theological tradition, and still a burning issue today, antinomianism has a long and complicated story. This book is the first to examine antinomianism from a historical, exegetical, and systematic perspective. More than that, in it Mark Jones offers a key—a robust Reformed Christology with a strong emphasis on the Holy Spirit—and chapter by chapter uses it to unlock nine questions raised by the debates.
Publisher: P & R
Type: Paperback
ISBN: 9781596388154
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Mark Jones (PhD, Leiden University) is senior minister at Faith Vancouver Presbyterian Church (PCA) and research associate at the University of the Free State in Bloemfontein, South Africa. He has written and edited several books and most recently coauthored A Puritan Theology: Doctrine for Life.
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“The problem of antinomianism is a hardy perennial for the church. A mischievous movement is afoot at the moment—its soaring rhetoric about grace is matched by an equally casual presumption on grace. Mark Jones’s book is thus to be welcomed: it is biblically grounded, historically sensitive, and above all timely.” Carl R. Trueman, Paul Woolley Professor of Church History, Westminster Theological Seminary