Gregg R. Allison

Machen on The Church: An Explanation and Application of Christianity and Liberalism, Chapter 7

The Prospects for a “Mere Ecclesiology”

Four Theses Concerning Human Embodiment

Roman Catholic Theology and Practice of the Priesthood Contrasted with Protestant Theology and Practice of the Priesthood

Faculty Books

The SBJT Forum: Global Christianity

Toward a Theology of Human Embodiment

The Communication of Properties: A Post-Reformation Divergence between Lutheran and Reformed Theologies

Introduction The church has historically believed that Jesus Christ is both fully God and fully man, possessing two natures—the one divine, the other human—united in one person. The church has also historically affirmed that these two natures remain distinct in the God-man: the divine nature, characterized by omnipresence, omnipotence, omniscience, eternality, and the like, remains…

Theological Interpretation of Scripture:An Introduction and Preliminary Evaluation

Baptism with and Filling of the Holy Spirit

Denials of Orthodoxy: Heretical Views of the Doctrine of the Trinity

Ashes, Ashes, We All Fall Down