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The Belgic Confession, Vol. 2
£20.00
A Commentary on Belgic Confession Articles 22-37
David J. Engelsma (400 pp. Hardback, £20.00)
A superb theological exposition of articles 22-37 of the Belgic Confession (1561), a great Reformation creed penned by a pastor later martyred for his faithful witness.
With the publication of volume 2 is completed a full-scale, Reformed commentary on the Belgic Confession, of which there are only a few in English today. This book is not a summary of the Confession, nor a compilation of sermons loosely based on the Confession, but a commentary. It explains the Confession, article by article, doctrine by doctrine. Volume 2 begins with the Confession’s opening article on the doctrine of salvation, continues with the Confession’s lengthy treatment of the doctrine of the church and concludes with the Confession’s explanation of the doctrine of the last things—eschatology. Volume 2 covers Articles 22-37 of the Belgic Confession and includes indexes for both volumes.
A profound commentary on the last three books of the Old Testament: Haggai on “the desire of the nations,” Zechariah on “the priest upon the throne” and Malachi on “the messenger of the covenant.”
Prof. Hanko’s superb commentary on I Peter is full of comfort, instruction and hope for every believer on his difficult pilgrimage to the celestial city.
Ronald Cammenga, editor (320 pp. Softback, £13.00)
This powerful book defends and promotes the Bible’s teachings on God’s sovereign grace as systematized in the Canons of Dordt (1618-1619) with a special focus on the gospel call, the covenant, reprobation and assurance. It also covers the significance, polemics, sessions and church polity of Dordt.
The Belgic Confession, Vol. 2
£20.00
A Commentary on Belgic Confession Articles 22-37
David J. Engelsma (400 pp. Hardback, £20.00)
A superb theological exposition of articles 22-37 of the Belgic Confession (1561), a great Reformation creed penned by a pastor later martyred for his faithful witness.
With the publication of volume 2 is completed a full-scale, Reformed commentary on the Belgic Confession, of which there are only a few in English today. This book is not a summary of the Confession, nor a compilation of sermons loosely based on the Confession, but a commentary. It explains the Confession, article by article, doctrine by doctrine. Volume 2 begins with the Confession’s opening article on the doctrine of salvation, continues with the Confession’s lengthy treatment of the doctrine of the church and concludes with the Confession’s explanation of the doctrine of the last things—eschatology. Volume 2 covers Articles 22-37 of the Belgic Confession and includes indexes for both volumes.
Listen to an interview of Prof. Engelsma about the Belgic Confession and his commentary.
An excerpt of this book has been translated into Hungarian.
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