1829-Archibald Mason.-A excellent presentation of the doctrine and practice of saving faith. Mason presents a classic Protestant exposition with several notes that remind the reader he was a Covenanter.
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1522-Martin Luther.-Two sermons which discuss the relation of faith to temporal and spiritual blessings.
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1836-Gilbert McMaster.-In this review of Charles Hodge’s commentary on Romans, McMaster expresses his deep agreement and gratitude to Professor Hodge for his defense of numerous points of orthodoxy regarding the Person of Christ and the Protestant doctrine of justification. All of this is presented in the form of a general Calvinist concord. Where McMaster expresses some disappointment is when Hodge discusses civil magistracy and church fellowship. This is interesting considering that McMaster himself had strayed form those very principles when he acceded to the New Light position, in 1832 and 1833. Still the production is helpful and instructive.
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1741-Jonathan Dickinson (1688-1747).-Dickinson, the first president of Princeton College, gives an accurate and succinct exposition of the doctrine of justification by faith alone. He carefully locates the doctrine within the sovereignty of God in the great matter of salvation.
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1692-Walter Marshall (1628-80).-A sermon on the topic of justification by a Puritan best known for his seminal treatment of the doctrine of sanctification.
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1821-Samuel Brown Wylie.-In this series of articles, Wylie explains why there is no injustice in God for punishing what seem to be finite sins with an infinite duration. He reminds his readers that all sin is against an infinite God and His infinite majesty. There is, in this discussion, an excellent discuss of what makes the same physical action in one case virtuous and in another vice. Wylie moves from related topic to related topic, discussing particular redemption in some detail, including examining texts usually asserted to teach universal redemption. He ends with an instructive discussion of the nature of the Mediatorial reign of Christ and a philological assault on Universalism.
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1860-David Steele.-An article from the Reformed Presbyterian magazine discussing the kinds of faith and their various purposes and uses.
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