
Puritan Reformed Journal – January 2010
2010/02/05The new issue of the Puritan Reformed Journal is now available – and it’s absolutely massive! There is a wide variety of topics covered and it looks excellent.
Check it out {HT: Meet the Puritans}:
Biblical Studies
The Jews’ View of the Old Testament—David Murray
An Everlasting House: An Exegesis of 2 Samuel 7—Maarten Kuivenhoven
Applying Christ’s Supremacy: Learning from Hebrews—Gerald M. Bilkes
Systematic and Historical Theology
“Hot Protestants”: A Taxonomy of English Puritanism—Ian Hugh Clary
John Bunyan and His Relevance for Today—Pieter Devries
Samuel Petto (c. 1624 –1711): A Portrait of a Puritan Pastor Theologian—Michael G.Brown
James Durham (1622–1658) and the Free Offer of the Gospel—Donald John MaClean
The Ceremonial or Moral Law: Jonathan Edwards’s Old Perspective on an Old Error—Craig Biehl
Experiential Theology
The Theological Foundation and Goal of Piety in Calvin and Erasmus—Timothy J.Gwin
Thomas Watson: The Necessity of Meditation Jennifer C.Neimeyer
Was Samuel Rutherford a Mystic?—Robert Arnold
The “Sense of the Heart”: Edwards’s Public Expression of His Pietistic Understanding of Religious Experience—Karin Spiecker Stetina
Pastoral Theology and Missions
John Owen and the Third Mark of the Church— Stephen Yuille
Jeremiah Burroughs on Worship—James Davison
Samuel Davies: One of America’s Greatest Revival Preachers—John E. Skidmore
A Pastor’s Analysis of Emphases in Preaching: Two False Dichotomies and Three Conclusions—Ryan M. McGraw
“For God’s Glory (and) for the Good of Precious Souls”: Calvinism and Missions in the Piety of Samuel Pearce (1766–1799)—Michael A. G. Haykin
Contemporary and Cultural Issues
Handling Error in the Church: Martin Downes Interviewing Joel R. Beeke
Interview with Geoff Thomas
Practical Lessons from the Life of Idelette Calvin— Joel R. Beeke
The “Little Church”: Raising a Spiritual Family with Jonathan Edwards—Peter Beck
Good to see your article here Ian. I have a review in it I think but haven’t gotten my copy yet.
Nice to see your name in print, man