The RFPA, the CPRC, and the spread of the truth (1)
Stewart contrasts the doctrinal deficiencies of modern evangelicalism with the confessional Reformed faith embodied in the Three Forms of Unity, critiquing evangelical weaknesses in soteriology, ecclesiology, covenant understanding, and worship practice. The article serves as a polemical defense of classical Protestant Reformed theology against the diluted doctrinal positions prevalent in contemporary evangelical Christianity.
Default position The typical professing evangelical Christian in our day, sadly, is a long way from being able to confess the Reformed faith as summed in our "Three Forms of Unity" and become a member in one of our Reformed churches. In all likelihood, he (or she) holds some Arminian ideas. Even if he calls himself a Calvinist, he probably thinks that God loves everybody, that Christ died for all men head for head (at least in some sense), and that God earnestly desires to save everybody....
Full article available on sb.rfpa.org