Saved by Grace: The Holy Spirit's Work in Calling and Regeneration

Bavinck, Herman


$18.18 $20.00
This product will ship directly from the publisher and you may not receive tracking. Learn More
cover_type
Pack Option
pack

Publisher's Description

In the late nineteenth century, two distinct reform movements coming out of the Dutch State Reformed Church (the Afscheiding of 1834 and the Doleantie of 1886) merged to form The Reformed Churches of the Netherlands (De Geereformeerde Kerken in Nederland). While both groups had much in common, there remained fundamental points of disagreement, which erupted into controversies over such doctrines as immediate regeneration and presumptive regeneration.In Saved by Grace, Herman Bavinck discusses God’s gracious work in bringing fallen sinners to new life and salvation. He gives a careful historical analysis that shows how Reformed theologians have wrestled to understand and express the Holy Spirit’s work in calling and regeneration since the seventeenth century. Bavinck also brings exegetical precision and theological clarity to the discussion, carefully avoiding the errors of undervaluing and overvaluing the use of means in work of salvation. This book, therefore, takes up questions with which every new generation of Reformed writers must grapple.

Translated by Nelson D. Kloosterman. Edited and Introduced by J. Mark Beach.


Specifications
  • Cover Type
    Paperback
  • ISBN
    9781601782816
  • Page Count
    230
  • Publisher
    Reformation Heritage Books
  • Publication Date
    August 2013

Endorsements (1)

About the Author

Herman Bavinck (1854–1921) succeeded Abraham Kuyper as professor of systematic theology at the Free University in Amsterdam in 1902. His Reformed Dogmatics is a standard text for modern Reformed theology.

Reformation Heritage Books

Saved by Grace: The Holy Spirit's Work in Calling and Regeneration

From $15.00 $20.00

Publisher's Description

In the late nineteenth century, two distinct reform movements coming out of the Dutch State Reformed Church (the Afscheiding of 1834 and the Doleantie of 1886) merged to form The Reformed Churches of the Netherlands (De Geereformeerde Kerken in Nederland). While both groups had much in common, there remained fundamental points of disagreement, which erupted into controversies over such doctrines as immediate regeneration and presumptive regeneration.In Saved by Grace, Herman Bavinck discusses God’s gracious work in bringing fallen sinners to new life and salvation. He gives a careful historical analysis that shows how Reformed theologians have wrestled to understand and express the Holy Spirit’s work in calling and regeneration since the seventeenth century. Bavinck also brings exegetical precision and theological clarity to the discussion, carefully avoiding the errors of undervaluing and overvaluing the use of means in work of salvation. This book, therefore, takes up questions with which every new generation of Reformed writers must grapple.

Translated by Nelson D. Kloosterman. Edited and Introduced by J. Mark Beach.

cover_type

  • Paperback

pack

  • Single
  • Imperfect
View product