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Calvin and the Reformed Tradition: On the Work of Christ and the Order of Salvation is unavailable, but you can change that!

Richard Muller, a world-class Reformation scholar, examines the relationship of Calvin’s theology to the Reformed tradition, indicating Calvin’s place in that tradition as one of several significant second-generation formulators. Muller argues that the Reformed tradition is a diverse and variegated movement not suitably described either as founded solely on the thought of John Calvin or as a...

the traditional sufficiency-efficiency formula, it also becomes clear that his polemic against Amyraut was not directed against hypothetical universalism per se. Du Moulin himself clearly advocated a form of hypothetical universalism—what he saw as problematic and dangerous in Amyraut’s teaching was not its assumption that the sacrifice of Christ was sufficient to save all who would believe but that Amyraut had rested his own version of this doctrine on a speculative doctrine of the divine decrees.
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