The truth, inspiration, and authority of scripture /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Lexham Press,
Bellingham, WA : [2017]
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Colección: | Lexham Classics.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Part I: Evidences of Christianity
- The Right Use of Reason in Religion
- It Is Impossible to Banish All Religion from the World, and if it Were Possible, it Would Be the Greatest Calamity Which Could Befall the Human Race
- If Christianity Be Rejected, There Is No Other Religion Which Can Be Substituted in Its Place
- at Least No Other Which Will at All Answer the Purpose for Which Religion Is Desirable
- Revelation Necessary to Teach Us How to Worship God Acceptably-the Nature and Certainty of a Future State, and Especially the Method by Which Sinners May Obtain Salvation
- There Is Nothing Improbable or Unreasonable in the Idea of a Revelation from God, and Consequently Nothing Improbable or Unreasonable in Such a Manifest Divine Interposition, as May Be Necessary to Establish a Revelation
- Miracles Are Capable of Proof from Testimony
- Miracles of the Gospel Are Credible
- The Rapid and Extensive Progress of the Gospel, by Instruments So Few and Feeble, Is a Proof of Divine Interposition
- Prophecies Respecting the Jewish Nation Which Have Been Remarkably Fulfilled
- Prophecies Relating to Nineveh, Babylon, Tyre, andC.
- Prophecies Respecting Messiah-Predictions of Christ Respecting the Destruction Of Jerusalem
- No Other Religion Possesses the Same Kind and Degree of Evidence as Christianity
- and No Other Miracles Are as Well Attested as Those Recorded in the Bible
- The Bible Contains Internal Evidence That Its Origin Is Divine
- The Scriptures of the Old and New Testament Were Written by the Inspiration of God
- and This Inspiration, However It May Be Distinguished, Was Plenary
- That Is, the Writers Were under an Infallible Guidance, Both as to Ideas and Words: and yet the Acquired Knowledge, Habits, and Peculiar Dispositions of the Writers, Were Not Superseded
- The Inspiration of the Books of the New Testament
- Part II: Canonical Authority of the Books of Scripture
- The Importance of Ascertaining the True Canon of Holy Scripture
- The Care with Which the Books of the Old Testament Were Preserved-Their Canonical Authority-the Sanction Given to These Books by the Saviour and His Apostles-and the Method of Ascertaining What Books Were in the Canon at the Time of Christ's Advent
- The Books Denominated Apocryphal Have No Just Claim to a Place Among the Canonical Scriptures of the Old Testament
- Canon of the New Testament-Method of Settling It-Testimony of the Church-Constitution of the Canon-Whence These Books Derive Their Authority-Solicitude of Early Christians to Obtain These Books-Their Care to Distinguish Them from Others-Autographs, andC.
- Testimonies in Favour of the Canonical Authority of the Books of the New Testament
- Canonical Authority of Paul's Epistles
- The Canonical Authority of the Seven Catholic Epistles, and of the Book of Revelation
- Recapitulation of Evidence on the Canon of the New Testament.