Primitive Theology
Theological Book Reviews
No this is not about old theology,
but theology that was "from the beginning" otherwise known as
"orthodoxy!"
Primitive Theology
by John Gerstner
Soli Deo Gloria Publications, Morgan, PA: 1996.
483 Pages, Hardback
What is Primitive
Theology? Does that mean
antiquated? Or does it mean “lowly and base?”
No. Primitive
Theology is certainly an older term, but it refers to theology which was
“of the beginning.” It
would be characterized as the “doctrines of the apostles and of
Christ;” i.e. primitive in that it is very old but true.
In this work, Soli Deo Gloria has arranged in one volume the
collected “primers” of Dr. John Gerstner.
Gerstner had written a variety of booklets on various subjects
and published them through the years.
This work is the collection of those primers in one handy volume.
The theology in this
book is not necessarily that deep, as with some of Gerstner’s other works like
“Repent and Perish.” However, the range of information and the varied angles which
Gerstner attacks these doctrinal issue is worth the price of the book.
His primers include “A Primer on: Apologetics, Bible Inerrancy,
the Deity of Christ, Predestination, Free Will, Justification, Roman
Catholicism, the Atonement, Reconciliation, the Problem of Pleasure, and
Dispensationalism.”
I personally enjoyed
the Primer on the Problem of Pleasure the most.
Here Gerstner uses the old “Problem of Evil” term in a
reversed manner – it is not that we have a problem of evil, but
rather, we have a problem of pleasure. God’s infinite holiness should cause us to see that wicked
men deserve the evils and pain and disheartenings of life and of hell.
But why are there good things in life for the wicked?
There is a problem of pleasure here, not a problem of pain.
(Though I enjoyed that
Primer, I think Gerstner has not considered some more important issues
which link to it, like 1 Thess 2:16 which tells us that the wicked are
always “filling up the measure of their sins.”
Though there is an appearance of pleasure, it still works towards
God intended purpose of fashioning vessels of wrath.)
Some Quotes:
“1) Inerrancy teaches that the Bible authors could not err.
2) But humans can err (unless the omnipotent God preserves them
from error without destroying their humanity.)
3) Therefore inerrancy implicitly teaches that the authors of the
Bible were human (but w3e deny merely that their sinful erring
tendencies were in operation during the writing of Holy Scripture.)”
“Evil is not the
absence of good. It is the presence of good or God, which is the same
thing.”
“Liberalism, as I am
using the word here, refers to persons who trust in themselves, and who,
because they do, feel no need for special salvation.”
“One scholar has
shown that for every single statement in Scripture concerning the mercy
and grace of God there are three referring to His wrath and judgment.” |