It is a disturbing fact that the most vigorous form of
anti-trinitarianism currently on the market is to be found within the
sphere of conservative evangelicalism. In the nineteenth century, the
dominant variety of anti-trinitarianism was the old-world Unitarianism
which found fertile soil in America. (See Earl Morse Wilbur, A History of Unitarianism: Socinianism and its Antecedents (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1945); for the stream of American theology I am here calling liberal, see Gary Dorrien, The Making of American Liberal Theology: Imagining Progressive Religion 1805-1900 (Louisville: Westminster/John Knox, 2001) and The Making of American Liberal Theology: Idealism, Realism, and Modernity 1900-1950 (Westminster/John
Knox, 2003). For evangelical Christians of a conservative temperament,
Unitarianism as a theological movement was as easy to ignore as any
version of liberal theology. It offered a pervasively non-supernatural
interpretation of Christianity, and thereby rendered itself irrelevant
to churches which were committed to a range of traditional doctrines
such as incarnation, atonement, miracle, revelation, the inspiration of
scripture, and heaven and hell. Continue at Fred Sanders
Scriptures teach consistently that faith comes through the proclamation of the gospel, not through good works. Christ himself was not arrested and arraigned because he was trying to restore family values or feed the poor...The mounting ire of the religious leaders toward Jesus coalesced around him making himself equal with God and forgiving sins in his own person, directly, over against the temple and its sacrificial system. Michael Horton
The purpose of this Blog is to introduce men and women all over the World to the Doctrines of Grace; the 5 Solas; Reformation Theology and the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
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