RamistThomist
Puritanboard Clerk
Questions like this come up from time to time but they are usually which preacher, which books, etc. I thought this was to tie both threads together:
1) John Calvin {1}
2) Cornelius Van Til {2}
3) R. J. Rushdoony*
4) Greg Bahnsen+
{1}It almost goes without saying that Calvin would be there. I like the way he systematized without arbitrarily forcing his categories onto scripture.
{2}Van Til applied Calvin to apologetics.
*I included him for reasons other than Christian Reconstructionism. Following in the footsteps of Van Til and Dooyeweerd, he showed me that neither man nor society can be neutral with respect to the claims of Christ. One must have an arche point to judge all other worldviews.
+Although I am a theonomist, that is not necessarily the reason I included him. I have found his sermons on Covenant Theology, The Reformed Faith, and his lectures on Presuppositionalism to be very helpful in evangelism and explaining the Reformed Faith to what I believe. See? Theology is practical.
1) John Calvin {1}
2) Cornelius Van Til {2}
3) R. J. Rushdoony*
4) Greg Bahnsen+
{1}It almost goes without saying that Calvin would be there. I like the way he systematized without arbitrarily forcing his categories onto scripture.
{2}Van Til applied Calvin to apologetics.
*I included him for reasons other than Christian Reconstructionism. Following in the footsteps of Van Til and Dooyeweerd, he showed me that neither man nor society can be neutral with respect to the claims of Christ. One must have an arche point to judge all other worldviews.
+Although I am a theonomist, that is not necessarily the reason I included him. I have found his sermons on Covenant Theology, The Reformed Faith, and his lectures on Presuppositionalism to be very helpful in evangelism and explaining the Reformed Faith to what I believe. See? Theology is practical.