After a year and a half, I made it. Gill is so relevant for modern Baptists. Here you have a scholastic style systematic theology full (I mean full!) of Scripture and quotes from the Fathers, Medieval theologians, and philosophers. He retrieves Classical Trinitarianism clearly.
Gill was the first Baptist to write an exhaustive systematic theology and a verse-by-verse commentary on the Bible. You can find both his Doctrinal Divinity and Practical Divinity for free for download at CCEL.org. Every Christian (especially Baptists) should have it as a reference.
Favorite quotes:
“though indeed no man, be he ever so vile, is out of the reach of powerful and efficacious grace; and therefore it cannot be absolutely said that he is rejected of God" (2.2.2b)
On God's Simplicity: “In his nature and essence, being simple and devoid of all composition, as has been proved: the more simple and free from mixture and composition anything is, the less subject to change" (5.1).
“Should it be said, to what purpose then is prayer? it is answered, this is the way and means God has
appointed, for the communication of the blessings of his goodness to his people..." (5.4).
“God never hates his elect in any sense; they are always loved by him; to which hatred is opposite: he may be angry with them, and chastise them for their sins; yea, he may, as he says, and as they apprehend, in a little wrath hide his 'face' from them; but he never hates them; though he hates their
sins, and shows his resentment at them, he still loves them freely; renews, and raises them up by repentance, when fallen into sin, and manifests and applies his
pardoning grace to them, and never bears any hatred to their persons" (18.2).