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Learned Discourse on Justification, A: In Modern English (Library of Early English Protestantism)

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Learned Discourse on Justification, A: In Modern English (Library of Early English Protestantism)

The defining doctrine of Protestantism is justification by faith alone—what Martin Luther called ā€œthe article by which the church stands or falls.ā€ But does this mean that it is also the article by which salvation stands or falls? Are Roman Catholics heretics for rejecting that doctrine?

In this classic treatise, the great English theologian Richard Hooker tackles this question head-on, seeking to head off two opposite errors: insisting so rigidly on a right articulation of the doctrine that we neglect Christ himself, or minimizing differences over justification as unimportant. In the process, Hooker also offers an excellent blueprint for how to interpret and navigate doctrinal disagreement within the church on any issue.

Centuries on, this remains one of the classic statements of Reformational soteriology, presenting a clear account of what Protestants do and do not believe about the doctrine of justification, along with a careful summary of what their Catholic opponents held. Readers seeking a helmsman who can faithfully guide them through the fog that so often bedevils this crucial conversation need no further.

79 Pages

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction by Bradford Littlejohn

A Note on the Text

I -Ā The Real Disagreement Between Rome and Protestants

IIĀ -Ā Could Our Fathers Be Saved?

IIIĀ -Ā What is the Foundation of Faith?

IVĀ -Ā Can the Elect Deny the Foundation of Faith?

VĀ -Ā Does Rome Directly Deny the Foundation of Faith?

VIĀ -Ā Conclusion

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The defining doctrine of Protestantism is justification by faith alone—what Martin Luther called ā€œthe article by which the church stands or falls.ā€ But does this mean that it is also the article by which salvation stands or falls? Are Roman Catholics heretics for rejecting that doctrine?

In this classic treatise, the great English theologian Richard Hooker tackles this question head-on, seeking to head off two opposite errors: insisting so rigidly on a right articulation of the doctrine that we neglect Christ himself, or minimizing differences over justification as unimportant. In the process, Hooker also offers an excellent blueprint for how to interpret and navigate doctrinal disagreement within the church on any issue.

Centuries on, this remains one of the classic statements of Reformational soteriology, presenting a clear account of what Protestants do and do not believe about the doctrine of justification, along with a careful summary of what their Catholic opponents held. Readers seeking a helmsman who can faithfully guide them through the fog that so often bedevils this crucial conversation need no further.

79 Pages

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction by Bradford Littlejohn

A Note on the Text

I -Ā The Real Disagreement Between Rome and Protestants

IIĀ -Ā Could Our Fathers Be Saved?

IIIĀ -Ā What is the Foundation of Faith?

IVĀ -Ā Can the Elect Deny the Foundation of Faith?

VĀ -Ā Does Rome Directly Deny the Foundation of Faith?

VIĀ -Ā Conclusion

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