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Reforming Apologetics: Retrieving the Classic Reformed Approach to Defending the Faith is unavailable, but you can change that!

Challenging the dominant Van Tillian approach in Reformed apologetics, this book by a leading expert in contemporary Reformed theology sets forth the principles that undergird a classic Reformed approach. J. V. Fesko’s detailed exegetical, theological, and historical argument takes as its starting point the classical Reformed understanding of the “two books” of God’s revelation: nature and...

they claimed, engaged in synthesizing thought, which these critics understood as an effort to combine pagan Greek philosophy with scriptural teaching.9 Alvin Plantinga summarizes the overall negative assessment of natural theology, which ranges from indifference, suspicion, and hostility to accusations of blasphemy.10 In Plantinga’s examination of John Calvin’s (1509–64) attitudes toward natural theology, he concludes: “The Christian doesn’t need natural theology, either as the source of his confidence
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