What Does it Mean to Be Saved?: Broadening Evangelical Horizons of Salvation
English


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About The Book

Since the birth of evangelicalism in the eighteenth century it has defined itself as a movement keenly interested in salvation. What however has the evangelical understanding of salvation been? What is it today? What should it be? What Does It Mean to Be Saved? marshals leading evangelical scholars to probe these questions with the goal of encouraging a more holistic understanding of salvation. Each chapter introduces a distinctive point of view on an aspect of redemption. Issues addressed in the volume include individual and corporate salvation salvation with regard to women the poor the oppressed and the natural world. A dozen first-class essayists show us how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ and they do so to wonderful effect. Here at last salvation is much bigger than we are. --Cornelius Plantinga Jr. president Calvin Theological Seminary The essays in this volume helpfully suggest a broadening of the horizons of an evangelical doctrine of salvation. The book will help us not to trivialize the topic in merely private terms without a holistic vision but to give more attention to its this-worldly consequences. --Clark H. Pinnock emeritus McMaster Divinity College John G. Stackhouse Jr. (Ph.D. University of Chicago) is Sangwoo Youtong Chee Professor of Theology and Culture at Regent College. He is the editor of Evangelical Futures and No Other Gods Before Me?
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