Christ Alone---The Uniqueness of Jesus as Savior: What the Reformers Taught...and Why It Still Matters
By (Author) Stephen Wellum
Series edited by Matthew Barrett
Foreword by Michael Reeves
Zondervan
Zondervan Academic
30th June 2017
18th April 2017
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Theology
232
Paperback
352
Width 140mm, Height 212mm, Spine 22mm
330g
Professor of theology Stephen Wellum considers Christ's singular uniqueness and significance biblically, historically, and today, in our pluralistic and postmodern age. Christ Alone is a much-needed study and defense of the doctrine that provides coherency to the Christian faith.
If the church is to proclaim the same Christ as the Reformers, we must understand and embrace solos Christus with the same clarity, conviction, urgency, and abundance of joy as the Reformers. To that end, Wellum:
Christ Alone seeks to recover a robust biblical and theological doctrine of Christ's person and workand a renewed understanding that apart from Christ there is no salvationin the face of today's challenges, unpacking why a fresh appraisal of the Reformation understanding of Christ alone is so important today.
THE FIVE SOLAS
Historians and theologians have long recognized that at the heart of the sixteenth-century Protestant Reformation were five declarations, often referred to as the "solas." These five statements summarize much of what the Reformation was about, and they distinguish Protestantism from other expressions of the Christian faith: that they place ultimate and final authority in the Scriptures, acknowledge the work of Christ alone as sufficient for redemption, recognize that salvation is by grace alone through faith alone, and seek to do all things for Gods glory.
The Five Solas Series is more than a simple rehashing of these statements, but instead expounds upon the biblical reasoning behind them, leading to a more profound theological vision of our lives and callings as Christians and churches.
Stephen Wellum is Professor of Christian Theology at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He is the author of Kingdom through Covenant (Crossway). He is also the author of a forthcoming volume on Christology in the Foundations of Evangelical Theology series (Crossway). He is also writing a systematic theology that will be published around 2017 (B&H Academic). Matthew Barrett is associate professor of Christian theology at Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, the executive editor of Credo Magazine, and director of The Center for Classical Theology. He is the author of Simply Trinity; None Greater; Canon, Covenant and Christology; and God's Word Alone. He is currently writing a systematic theology.