Digital Logos Edition
The Western philosophical tradition is diverse and tumultuous, but how did we get to where we are now? Arguing that all philosophical and theological claims must be evaluated by Scripture, John Frame leads readers through a detailed account of how our thought has progressed from Socractes to Jesus, from Jesus to Luther, and from Luther to the postmodern malaise. Providing detailed analysis of the West's best thinkers and their most important ideas, Frame tests each one against the Bible's testimony to Jesus Christ and helps Christians understand their faith in the context of the intellectual unfolding of the West.
Interested in more of John Frame’s works? Check out his Theology of Lordship series.
“I define theology as ‘the application of the Word of God, by persons, to every aspect of human life.’8” (Page 4)
“Epistemology is theory of knowledge. It asks: ‘What is knowledge?’ ‘How is knowledge possible?’ ‘How should we go about knowing?’ ‘How do we distinguish truth from falsity, reality from appearance?’” (Page 11)
“The chief benefit in studying Greek thought is to better understand the philosophical and cultural consequences of rejecting biblical theism.” (Page 46)
“My whole idea is to expose the fact that the history of philosophy and theology is nothing less than spiritual warfare in the life of the mind.” (Page xxvi)
“What distinguishes the Greek philosophers from the Greek religions and from other ancient wisdom teachers is their insistence on the supremacy of human reason, what I will call rational autonomy.” (Page 51)
John Frame has done it again! In the lucid and comprehensive style of his Theology of Lordship volumes, he here presents a full overview of Western thought about knowledge of God as it must appear to all who receive Holy Scripture, as he does, as the record, product, and present reality of God speaking. And the solid brilliance of the narrative makes it a most effective advocacy for the Kuyper-Van Til perspective that in a well-digested form it represents. It is a further outstanding achievement by John Frame.
—J.I. Packer, Board of Governors’ Professor of Theology, Regent College, Vancouver, British Columbia
Few in our day champion a vision of God that is as massive, magnificent, and biblical as John Frame’s. For decades, he has given himself to the church, to his students, and to meticulous thinking and the rigorous study of the Bible. He has winsomely, patiently, and persuasively contended for the gospel in the secular philosophical arena, as well as in the thick of the church worship wars and wrestlings with feminism and open theism. He brings together a rare blend of big-picture thinking, levelheaded reflection, biblical fidelity, a love for the gospel and the church, and the ability to write with care and clarity.
—John Piper, chancellor, Bethlehem College and Seminary, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Professor Frame unabashedly tries to think through sources and movements out of the framework (bad pun intended) of deep-seated Christian commitments, and invites his readers to do the same. These commitments, combined with the format of a seminary or college textbook, will make this work invaluable to students and pastors who tire of ostensible neutrality that is no more neutral than the next volume. Agree or disagree with some of his arguments, but John Frame will teach you how to think in theological and philosophical categories.
—D.A. Carson, research professor of New Testament, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
John M. Frame holds the J.D. Trimble Chair of Systematic Theology and Philosophy at Reformed Theological Seminary in Orlando, Floria. He is the author of many books, including Salvation Belongs to the Lord: An Introduction to Systematic Theology, The Doctrine of the Knowledge of God, and the four-volume A Theology of Lordship (4 vols.) series.
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Jim Cobb
9/16/2023
Jesame von Tronchin
9/14/2020
Rick Rhodes
5/8/2017