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Creator Redeemer Consummator: A Festschrift for Meredith G. Kline is unavailable, but you can change that!

This festschrift honors Meredith G. Kline and his distinguished 50-year career with contributions from scholars as well as some former students. Explore essays from Tremper Longman III, J. Robert Vannoy, F. Charles Fensham, Mark W. Karlberg, Raymond B. Dillard, and more. Essays discussed include “Calvin on the Four Last Books of Moses,” “The Structure and Plan of John’s Apocalypse,” “Baptism,...

A few medieval theologians rejected altogether the possibility of human merit, arguing that such a notion was inherently inconsistent with the principle that God is debtor to no one. Their opinion was that “only Christ may be said to merit anything in the strict sense.”8 But by and large the majority of medieval schoolmen insisted on the concept of human merit. Of course, this insistence is directly related to the medieval perversion of the Augustinian gospel of grace,
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