🎁 Final Month Special: 15% OFF + Free Shipping on Most Items! Don't Miss Out - Shop Now! ✨

Shopping Cart

Sub Total: $0.00
Total: $0.00
Checkout

Search Products

Divine Rule Maintained: Anthony Burgess, Covenant Theology, and the Place of the Law in Reformed Scholasticism Image 1
View Media Gallery
Divine Rule Maintained: Anthony Burgess, Covenant Theology, and the Place of the Law in Reformed Scholasticism Nav Image 1

Divine Rule Maintained: Anthony Burgess, Covenant Theology, and the Place of the Law in Reformed Scholasticism

$36.00 $40.00


Tags:

20-bs-interpretation-hermeneutics 20-ch-reformation-history 20-st-confessional-practice-and-history 90-parent-church-history 90-parent-commentaries 90-parent-creeds-and-confessions 90-parent-theology anthony antinomian burgess covenant dissertation england grace legalism w3-academic w3-authors w3-authors-trueman-carl-r w3-bible-proverbs w3-christian-life w3-christian-lifespiritual-growth w3-church-history w3-headbiography-history w3-promotion-2018 w3-spiritual-growthhead w3-trueman-endorsed w3-web2016-root-category wtsnewwtscoresensecom-root


Categories:

Biography & History
Estimated Delivery:
0 people are viewing this right now
Guaranteed Safe Checkout
Trust
Trust
  • Description

Publisher's Description

In Divine Rule Maintained, Stephen J. Casselli provides us with a window into the exegetical and theological underpinnings of the Westminster Confession’s chapter on the law by delivering an in-depth analysis of Anthony Burgess’s Vindiciae Legis. After a brief introduction to Burgess and his historical context, Casselli details the logical course of Burgess’s book considering the law as given to Adam, the law given to Moses, and finally the proper relation between law and gospel. Along the way, Casselli opens up such controverted points as natural law, the covenant of works, the continuing obligation to the moral law, and the diverse administrations of one unified covenant of grace. What we see is a pastoral theology developed in a richly complex environment where technical distinctions were warranted given the polemical context; where the broad history of the Western catholic tradition was deeply respected; where a covenantal hermeneutic was consistently applied to Scripture; and where all theological formulations grew out of detailed linguistic exegesis of particular texts of Scripture in the context of the broader ecclesiastical community.