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In Defense of Doctrine: Evangelicalism, Theology, and Scripture

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Questions surrounding the relationship of Scripture and doctrine are legion within the Protestant tradition. How can doctrine develop over time and maintain fidelity to the sacred text, especially for communities who cling to the Reformation principle of sola scriptura ? Does not an appeal to contemporary, constructive theology belie commonly held Protestant and Evangelical convictions about the sufficiency of Scripture? Does admission and acceptance of doctrinal development result in a kind of reality-denying theological relativism? And in what way can a growing, postcanonical tradition maintain a sense of continuity with the faith of the New Testament?This study is an apologetic for the ongoing, constructive theological task in Protestant and Evangelical traditions. It suggests that doctrinal development can be explained as a hermeneutical phenomenon and that insights from hermeneutical philosophy and the philosophy of language can aid theologians in constructing explanatory theses for particular theological problems associated with the facts of doctrinal development, namely, questions related to textual authority, reality depiction, and theological identity. Joining the recent call to theological interpretation of Scripture, Putman provides a constructive model that forwards a descriptive and normative pattern for reading Scripture and theological tradition together.

256 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 2015

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Rhyne R. Putman

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
1 review3 followers
March 1, 2020
Great book on the importance of doctrinal development. We need this, but it is an extension of his doctrinal thesis so a bit technical. Probably written with he theology student in mind or pastor.
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132 reviews23 followers
August 17, 2015
A great defense of doctrine. I can see this book becoming the new staple book for Systematic Theology classes in seminaries everywhere.
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