Description
A historical theological examination of the puritan Thomas Goodwin's doctrine of union with Christ within his grand project defending Reformed soteriology
About the Author
Jonathan M. Carter is an ordained minister in the Church of England and is currently minister at Christ Church Lowestoft, UK.
Reviews
Carter's exploration of real union with Christ in the theology of Thomas Goodwin is exemplary. His contribution not only properly attends to the historical circumstances and the various debates contained therein, but also to Goodwin's arguments and their relation to current scholarship. In this way, Carter's work is preparatory for further consideration of Goodwin and soteriology in seventeenth-century Puritanism. In my estimation, it is likely to precipitate further research and should be on the historian's and theologian's bookshelf. * International Journal of Systematic Theology *
Jonathan Carter has produced a deeply thoughtful and nuanced study of Thomas Goodwin's unconventional soteriology. In what is in many ways an exemplary examination of post-Reformation theology, Dr Carter's contextualised reading of this congregationalist giant offers a model for students and mature academics to imitate. Here is a book that offers balanced engagement with current scholarship, and with the writings of Goodwin's own mentors, colleagues, and opponents. Historians and theologians alike will find in Thomas Goodwin on Union with Christ a work that is enormously stimulating and enlightening. T&T Clark is to be commended for publishing a monograph that displays the fruits of wide reading and careful scholarship, and which will surely offer an essential reference point for studies of both Goodwin and puritan soteriology for years to come. -- Chad Van Dixhoorn, Westminster Theological Seminary, USA
Jonathan Carter's monograph, at the forefront of this research, moves Goodwin scholarship forward with great strides. * Scottish Journal of Theology *
Book Information
ISBN 9780567704900
Author Jonathan M. Carter
Format Paperback
Page Count 288
Imprint T.& T.Clark Ltd
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC