Book Study Follow-Up
I have begun reading Will Willimon's book, Who Will Be Saved?, that I mentioned on a post back in April. The link to order the book is:
http://www.amazon.com/Who-Will-Saved-William-Willimon/dp/0687651190/ref=pd_bbs_sr_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1208256626&sr=1-2
I have read about half of the text, and have found it to be a helpful review of key themes of "soteriology" (the doctrine of salvation). Willimon relies heavily on his Wesleyan roots and draws liberally from the work of Reformed theologian, Karl Barth -- with the trademark Willimon stories and one-liners thrown in for good measure.
I'll look forward to discussing the book via blog with anyone who wishes.
I have begun reading Will Willimon's book, Who Will Be Saved?, that I mentioned on a post back in April. The link to order the book is:
http://www.amazon.com/Who-Will-Saved-William-Willimon/dp/0687651190/ref=pd_bbs_sr_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1208256626&sr=1-2
I have read about half of the text, and have found it to be a helpful review of key themes of "soteriology" (the doctrine of salvation). Willimon relies heavily on his Wesleyan roots and draws liberally from the work of Reformed theologian, Karl Barth -- with the trademark Willimon stories and one-liners thrown in for good measure.
I'll look forward to discussing the book via blog with anyone who wishes.
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