The Role of the Bible in Reformed Tradition (original) (raw)
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In the field of theology and theological reflexion a lot of things are moving for the moment. It is characteristic of Reformed theology to be in constant search for Reformed identity and to define this identity time and again. Article III of the constitution and the By-laws of the WCRC Europe starts with this question of identity. This article speaks twice about witness. It speaks about interpreting Reformed theology, spirituality, mission empowerment. These points do not only define our identity, but also question it. But here we are confronted immediately with a typical Reformed paradox: We are all for progress, if it does not bring change! Why should we change? and what is the final goal?
The Diversity of Contemporary Reformed Theology: A New Encyclopedic Introduction with a Case Study
Canadian American Theological Review, 2019
Evangelical Protestantism in North America has undergone considerable evolution in the last century. One of the most notable movements is a resurgence of “reformed theology” and, along with it, the use of countless labels, such as “new Calvinism,” "Neocalvinism,” “Continental Calvinism,” “the Young, Restless, and Reformed” (YRR), “Four-Point Calvinists,” “Reformed Baptists,” “Confessionally Reformed,” "1689ers,” “Reformational,” “presuppositionalists,” etc. Internal debate rages about who is “truly reformed” and what makes this the case. This article develops an original, encyclopedic introduction to contemporary reformed thought in four streams: (1) Confessional Reformed, (2) Calvinist Baptist, (3) Neocalvinist, and (4) Progressive Reformed, identifying the basic ideas, schools, figures, and systematic theologies within each group. It also identifies substantial differences between them, using bibliology as a case study.
D.K.Dhanushka Dilshan, 2021
The church has never found it easy to balance gratitude with critical judgment. Gratitude can easily become nostalgia for the past, and critical judgment slips into contempt. The need for an openness to the new demands of the present and the future is always present. The Reformed tradition has been one of the authentic and powerful ways in which Christian people have lived out their faith. It has much to offer contemporary human beings as they attempt to be Christian in the grand and awful days in which we are living, but only if it is appropriated by living in a community that unites appreciation with critical acumen.