*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.
₹498
All inclusive*
Qty:
1
About The Book
Description
Author
<p>The story of humanity is one of rebellion sin and of increasing alienation from God.&nbsp;The purpose of life is fellowship with God gazing on His insurpassable beauty and dwelling in his presence which is life.&nbsp;But humanity wanting to establish its own righteousness suppresses the truth about God to varying degrees by inventing its own ways of complete or partial self-salvation.&nbsp;In this book Warfield describes these various errors in detail and then ends by pointing to God's plan of salvation and what He has done to accomplish it</p><p><br></p><p>Dr. Michael J. Kruger wrote the following of this little book....</p><p><br></p><p>The critical question that every Christian must be able to answer is How are people saved?&nbsp;In the seminary context the doctrine of salvation (soteriology) is a central feature in the curriculum.&nbsp;Preachers can't preach a message of salvation if they don't understand it themselves.</p><p>Of course as an institution that bases its theology on the Reformation...is committed to the doctrines of grace-the idea that people are sinners who cannot save themselves but desperately need God to save them.&nbsp;On a popular level this is simply known as Calvinism.</p><p><br></p><p>But of course not all Christians agree with this Reformed perspective.&nbsp;Throughout the history of the church there are have been many different perspectives on how a person is saved.&nbsp;So what is the best way to help Christians understand these various approaches?&nbsp;And what is the most effective way to make the case for Calvinism?</p><p><br></p><p>There are many answers to these questions but there is one resource that I have found tremendously helpful. And it is a resource that is often overlooked and forgotten.&nbsp;And that resource is the five lectures delivered by B.B. Warfield in 1914 at Princeton Theological Seminary.</p><p><br></p><p>What makes Warfield's approach so helpful is that he takes the reader through a series of choices about how God saves-starting with very broad concepts and moving towards more specific concepts. At each point along the way he eliminates the options that just don't work.&nbsp;Thus the reader is able to see how theologians have arrived at a belief in Calvinism in a gradual step by step fashion.</p>