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Arminianism
The Death of Death in the Death of Christ, by John Owen.
John Owen was a seventeenth century English Puritan pastor. This book was written as a defense of the doctrines of the Reformed churches on the gospel, the biblical plan of salvation. During Owen's lifetime, certain teachings concerning the nature of the gospel became widespread in Europe that contradicted both the Bible and the doctrines of the Reformed churches. These doctrines were commonly called Arminianism (after Jacob Hermann (1560-1609), also known according to the Latin form of his last name as Jacob Arminius, a Dutch theological professor who rejected the doctrines of the Reformed churches on the gospel). The adherents of Arminianism were called Arminians or Remonstrants. The doctrines of the Arminians were rejected by the Reformed churches at the Synod of Dort which met in 1618 and 1619, in the famous Canons of Dort. Owen's The Death of Death in the Death of Christ focuses on one aspect of Arminian teaching, namely, for whom did Christ die? This work by Owen is widely considered to be a classic refutation of Arminian teaching.
John Owen was a seventeenth century English Puritan pastor. This book was written as a defense of the doctrines of the Reformed churches on the gospel, the biblical plan of salvation. During Owen's lifetime, certain teachings concerning the nature of the gospel became widespread in Europe that contradicted both the Bible and the doctrines of the Reformed churches. These doctrines were commonly called Arminianism (after Jacob Hermann (1560-1609), also known according to the Latin form of his last name as Jacob Arminius, a Dutch theological professor who rejected the doctrines of the Reformed churches on the gospel). The adherents of Arminianism were called Arminians or Remonstrants. The doctrines of the Arminians were rejected by the Reformed churches at the Synod of Dort which met in 1618 and 1619, in the famous Canons of Dort. Owen's The Death of Death in the Death of Christ focuses on one aspect of Arminian teaching, namely, for whom did Christ die? This work by Owen is widely considered to be a classic refutation of Arminian teaching.
The Reformed Faith and Arminianism Part 1 by John Murray
From a series published in the Presbyterian Guardian(1935-1936)
From a series published in the Presbyterian Guardian(1935-1936)