• Getting the Reformation Wrong: Correcting Some Misunderstandings, By James R. Payton Jr.
    paperback

    Getting the Reformation Wrong

    Correcting Some Misunderstandings

    by James R. Payton Jr.

    Most students of history know that Martin Luther nailed his ninety-five theses to the Wittenberg Church door and that John Calvin penned the Institutes of the Christian Religion. However, the Reformation did not unfold in the straightforward, monolithic fashion some may think. It was, in fact, quite a messy affair. Using the most current Reformation scholarship, James R. Payton exposes, challenges and corrects some common misrepresentations of the Reformation.

  • The Roots of the Reformation: Tradition, Emergence and Rupture, By G. R. Evans
    paperback

    The Roots of the Reformation

    Tradition, Emergence and Rupture

    by G. R. Evans

    G. R. Evans revisits the question of what happened at the Reformation. She argues that the controversies that roiled the era are part of a much longer history of discussion and disputation. By showing us just how old these debates really were, Evans brings into high relief their unprecedented outcomes at the moment of the Reformation.

  • Retrieving Doctrine: Essays in Reformed Theology, By Oliver D. Crisp
    paperback

    Retrieving Doctrine

    Essays in Reformed Theology

    by Oliver D. Crisp

    Oliver Crisp offers a set of essays that analyze the significance and contribution of several great thinkers in the Reformed tradition, ranging from John Calvin and Jonathan Edwards to Karl Barth. Crisp explains how these thinkers navigated pressing theological issues and how contemporary readers can draw relevant insights from the tradition.

  • Galatians, Ephesians, Edited by Gerald L. Bray
    hardcover

    Galatians, Ephesians

    New Testament Volume 10

    Reformation Commentary on Scripture

    Edited by Gerald L. Bray

    In this first volume of the Reformation Commentary on Scripture, you will encounter the reformers? fervor for the gospel of justification by faith as they retrieve it from these two letters of Paul. Spanning Latin, German, French, Dutch and English authors from a variety of streams within the Protestant movement, this commentary speaks with singular passion to a diverse contemporary church.

  • Philippians, Colossians, Edited by Graham Tomlin
    hardcover

    Philippians, Colossians

    New Tesstament Volume 11

    Reformation Commentary on Scripture

    Edited by Graham Tomlin

    In the latest volume in the Reformation Commentary on Scripture, editor Graham Tomlin pulls together insights from all over the reforming world--humanists, high Calvinists and Puritans alike--to deliver a commentary on Philippians and Colossians that reveals the heat and light of biblical engagement in the age of reform.

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