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Restoration through Redemption: John Calvin Revisited

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Restoration through Redemption offers examples of three ways in which John Calvin’s theology can be revisited: by analysis, assessment, and reception. This volume contains analyses of Calvin’s posi...
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  • 09 January 2013
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Restoration through Redemption offers examples of three ways in which John Calvin’s theology can be revisited: by analysis, assessment, and reception. This volume contains analyses of Calvin’s position on the trinity and on politics, as well as assessments of his theology for evolutionary biology and comparative ecclesiology. It also discusses the reception of his heritage, for instance, in North America and South Africa. The central theme in this volume is Calvin’s approach to the renewal of creation that hinges on Christ the Redeemer. One of the golden threads is Calvin’s emphasis upon the meditatio on the future life, the turning of the believer towards the eschatological perspective.

Contributors include: J. Todd Billings, Johan Buitendag, Jaeseung Cha, Ernst M. Conradie, Roger Haight, I. John Hesselink, Rinse Reeling Brouwer, Philippe Theron, Henk van den Belt, Gijsbert van den Brink, Cornelis van der Kooi, J.H. (Amie) van Wyk, J.M. (Koos) Vorster, Nico Vorster, Robert Vosloo, and Paul Wells.
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Price: $235.00
Pages: 288
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Studies in Reformed Theology
Publication Date: 09 January 2013
ISBN: 9789004244665
Format: Hardcover
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This is a very stimulating volume to read, covering Calvin’s own thought as well as his relation to his predecessors, to his contemporaries and to today. I enjoyed reading it.
Anthony N S Lane, in Ecclesiology
Henk van den Belt, PhD (2006) Leiden University, is Professor of Reformed Theology at the University of Groningen. He has written several articles on Calvin and on neo-calvinism and is the author of The Authority of Scripture in Reformed Theology: Truth and Trust (Brill, 2008).