Showing 10 results for “lois e. kregel”
This anecdotal memoir by Lois Kregel offers an intimate, personal portrait of Herman Hoeksema beyond his public role as a leading twentieth-century theologian and founding figure of the Protestant Reformed Churches in America. Through family stories, photographs, and personal letters from a 1929 Eur
Click to look inside This book is a critique of Abraham Kuyper’s cultural theory of a common grace of God and of the grandiose mission of this grace, and of those who confess the theory and evidently intend to promote it so that it accomplishes the end Kuyper claimed. The book exposes Kuyper’s bibl
April 2021 17 grace built into the creation. It is accessible only by a divine work of regeneration given in the form of particular, saving grace, which opens the spiritual eyes of a man to his suffering Savior and the re- demption of the cross. Luther’s paradigm in the Disputation correlates very c
April 2025 127 The Good Unbelievers Do lievers and non-believers in the public arena, a concept that continues to bear bad fruit both in the Netherlands and in the churches of Dutch descent in this country, because it has been used to blur the antithesis between believer and unbeliever, and between
This journal article by Dan VanUuffelen commemorates the life and ministry of Herman Hoeksema on the centennial of his 1915 ordination and fiftieth anniversary of his 1965 death, highlighting his role as principal founder and leader of the Protestant Reformed Churches. The article announces two biog
Doing Good to All Men that reveals God's glory, God works His purpose of saving His church-the body of His dear Son. Through this creation, which contains a multitude of signs of God's saving work in Christ, God teaches us how He works in His positive purpose in Christ as head of the church. Then, t
April 2017 27 with himself as prime minister. And this is today what contemporary Reformed theologians are advocating on the basis of common grace: cooperation between the churches and between the different religions, as men together fight the culture wars and seek to establish a culture that glorif
Protestant Reformed Theological Journal Vol. 47, No. 2 126 which the water of life flows to us from the depths of election’” (180; the quotation within the quotation is Kuyper’s own state- ment of the relation of covenant and election). Bratt takes note of Kuyper’s emphasis on predestination, al- th