theology

Holy Spirit


B.B. Warfield   B.B. Warfield (1851-1921), the famed Princeton professor has a well earned reputation as a scholar and teacher of the faith.

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• The Cessation of the Charismata


Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones   Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones a Welsh Presbyterian Church in Aberavon, South Wales. Known for his ministry at Westminster Chapel, numerous books, and expository sermons.

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• The Authority of the Holy Spirit


Edwin Palmer was an astute theologian and scholar as well as a master teacher and pastor. Since 1968 he had been directly involved in the preparation of the New International Version of the Holy Bible, serving as Executive Secretary, which was completed in 1979. Mr. Palmer was called hom to be with His Savior and God in 1980.

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• The Holy Spirit


George Smeaton "... was ordained to the ministry of the Church of Scotland at Falkland in the Presbytery of Cupar in 1839. He was among those hundreds of ministers who came out at the Disruption in 1843 to form the Free Church of Scotland. Later he was appointed by Church to be professor in her College at Aberdeen (1854) and in 1857 he became professor of Exegetics in the New College, Edinburgh. He died on the 14th April, 1889. He was one of the brilliant galaxy of men on the staff of the Free Church College in Edinburgh a century ago. Principal John Macleod describes Smeaton as ‘the most eminent scholar of the set of young men who with McCheyne and the Bonars sat at the feet of Chalmers’." W.J. Grier

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• The Personality and the Procession of the Holy Spirit


Hermn Bavinck   Herman Bavinck

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• The Divine Trinity


James Buchanan was born in 1804. He held several pastorates before becoming Professor Apologetics and later of Systematic Theology at the Free Church College in Edinburgh.

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• The Work of the Spirit in Enlightening the Mind


J. Ligon Duncan   J. Ligon Duncan Ligon Duncan III is Senior Minister of the First Presbyterian Church of Jackson, Mississippi, President of the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals the Convener of Twin Lakes Fellowship, Editorial Director of Reformed Academic Press Adjunct Professor of Theology at Reformed Theological Seminary, and Chairman of the Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood.

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• The Divinity of Christ


John Brown, studied at Edinburgh and the divinity hall of the Burgher Church at Selkirk; was licensed 1805 and ordained minister of the Burgher Church of Biggar, Lanarkshire, 1806. After serving several more pastorates he became professor of exegetical theology to the United Associate Synod after 1834. He was strongly in favor of the separation of church and state, and in 1845 was tried (and acquitted) before the synod on a charge of holding unsound views concerning the atonement.

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• The Resurrection


John Witmer

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• What Think Ye of Christ?


Michael Haykin

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• Sandemanianism


Ra McLaughlin   Ra McLaughlin, M.Div., Webmaster and Director of Curriculum, Third Millennium Ministries

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• Do Miracles Happen Today?


Richard Baxter   Richard Baxter (1615-1691), the Puritan evangelist of Kidderminster in the English midlands.

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• How to Spend the Day with God


Thomas Manton   Thomas Manton (1620-1677), was called to the parish of Stoke Newington in Middlesex in the winter of 1644-1645, and began to build a reputation as a forthright and popular defender of Reformed principles. This led to his participation in several key events, such as the Westminster Assembly and confession publication, and his being asked to preach before Parliament on several occasions.

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• Man and Sin


Thomas Watson   Thomas Watson was one of the non-conformists of the 1600s and was educated at Emanuel College, Cambridge, and in 1646 was appointed to preach at St. Stephen's, Walbrook. He acquired fame as a preacher, but in 1662 was ejected at the Restoration. He continued, however, to exercise his ministry privately. In 1672 after the declaration of indulgence he obtained a license for Crosby Hall, where he preached for several years until his retirement to Barnston upon the failure of his health.

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• The Trinity