Who Will Be Saved?: Defending the Biblical Understanding of God, Salvation, and Evangelism

Edited by Paul R. House, Gregory Alan Thornbury, Introduction by Paul R. House, Preface by Paul R. House, Gregory Alan Thornbury, Contributions by Carl F. H. Henry, R. Albert Mohler Jr., Daniel L. Akin, Timothy K. Beougher, R. Douglas Geivett, Clark Pinnock, Winfried Corduan, Timothy George, D. A. Carson, Scott J. Hafemann, C. Ben Mitchell, Timothy A. McCoy, George Martin, Thom S. Rainer, Gregory Alan Thornbury, Afterword by Paul R. House

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Format: Paperback

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Who Will Be Saved?: Defending the Biblical Understanding of God, Salvation, and Evangelism

Edited by Paul R. House, Gregory Alan Thornbury, Introduction by Paul R. House, Preface by Paul R. House, Gregory Alan Thornbury, Contributions by Carl F. H. Henry, R. Albert Mohler Jr., Daniel L. Akin, Timothy K. Beougher, R. Douglas Geivett, Clark Pinnock, Winfried Corduan, Timothy George, D. A. Carson, Scott J. Hafemann, C. Ben Mitchell, Timothy A. McCoy, George Martin, Thom S. Rainer, Gregory Alan Thornbury, Afterword by Paul R. House

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Of the many doctrinal challenges facing the church today, the most critical may be opposition to the traditional, biblical view of God and the doctrine of salvation. For centuries Christians agreed that God is sovereign, that He does not change, that He is both kind and all-powerful. Yet in recent decades process theologians have regularly depicted God as a constantly evolving deity, and postmodernists have defined Him in diverse, even contradictory ways. A number of scholars--some with evangelical roots or affiliations--have even gone so far as to claim that salvation may come through other religions and not exclusively through a conscious personal relationship with Jesus Christ.

Given these internal and external challenges, evangelical Christianity must reassert the inerrant, biblical definition of God and the doctrine of salvation, and do so in a way that is convincing in our postmodern setting. That is the goal of Who Will Be Saved?

Some of the most significant figures in evangelical theology--including Carl F.H. Henry, D. A. Carson, and R. Albert Mohler--explore the traditional view of salvation through a contemporary lens, beginning with the doctrine of God as the author of salvation. They then move on to the pressing matters confronting Christians today--the exclusivity of Christianity, the work of the church, our evangelism strategies--that are driven by one's conclusions about the doctrine of God. The biblical response to inclusivist perspectives presented here will empower Christians to faithfully and convincingly continue declaring the gospel message in these postmodern times.


Editors:

Paul R. House

Paul R. House (PhD, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary) serves as professor of divinity at Beeson Divinity School in Birmingham, Alabama. He has been a pastor or teacher in churches, Christian colleges, and seminaries for over thirty years. He is a past president of the Evangelical Theological Society and an active member of the Society of Biblical Literature. House is the author of numerous books, including Bonhoeffer’s Seminary Vision.

Gregory Alan Thornbury

Gregory Alan Thornbury (PhD, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary) is the Vice President at the New York Academy of Art. He served as the sixth president of the King's College in New York City. He is also a visiting professor at the Values and Capitalism Initiative of the American Enterprise Institute, a senior fellow for The Kairos Journal, a columnist for Townhall.com, and a member of the editorial board of the Salem Media Group. A popular campus speaker and lecturer, he is also a member of the Society of Christian Philosophers. Thornbury and his wife, Kimberly, have two daughters and reside in Manhattan.

Product Details

Format: Paperback
Weight: 10.2 ounces
ISBN-13: 978-1-58134-143-0
ISBN-UPC: 9781581341430
Case Quantity: 52
Published: January 03, 2000