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God
Of The Providence Of God - Thomas Boston
Our Lord in Matt. 10:29 is encouraging his disciples against all the troubles and distresses they might meet with in their way, and particularly against the fear of men, by the consideration of the providence of God, which reaches unto the meanest of things, sparrows and the hairs of our head. - More
An Unpublished Essay on the Trinity - Jonathan Edwards
IT IS COMMON when speaking of the Divine happiness to say that God is infinitely happy in the enjoyment of Himself, in perfectly beholding and infinitely loving, and rejoicing in, His own essence and perfection, and accordingly it must be supposed that God perpetually and eternally has a most perfect idea of Himself... - More
God the Father - R. A. Finlayson
When we say that the First Person of the Trinity is the Father, we mean that He is the Fount of Deity, the Source of all there is, who supremely represents the dignity, honour and glory of Deity. - More
God In Three Persons - R. A. Finlayson
God is, and God is knowable. These two affirmations of faith form the foundation and inspiration of all religion. Christianity is distinctive in that it claims that God is known only in His self-revelation. - More
The Biblical Doctrine of the Trinity - Benjamin B. Warfield
The term "Trinity" is not a Biblical term, and we are not using Biblical language when we define what is expressed by it as the doctrine that there is one only and true God, but in the unity of the Godhead there are three coeternal and coequal Persons, the same in substance but distinct in subsistence. - More
The Trinity - Michael Bremmer
Throughout the history of the Christian church numerous persons and groups have denied the Trinity. We will begin this study by examining these anti-Trinitarian views. - More
Observations on the Divine Attributes: The Unchangeableness of Himself and His Decrees - Jerome Zanchius
God is essentially unchangeable in Himself. Were He otherwise, He would be confessedly imperfect, since whoever changes must change either for the better or for the worse. - More
Observations on the Divine Attributes: The Absolute Freedom and Liberty of His Will - Jerome Zanchius
The Deity is possessed not only of infinite knowledge, but likewise of absolute liberty of will, so that whatever He does, or permits to be done, He does and permits freely and of His own good pleasure. - More
Observations on the Divine Attributes: His Eternal Wisdom and Foreknowledge - Jerome Zanchius
ALTHOUGH the great and ever blessed God is a being absolutely simple and infinitely remote from all shadow of composition, He is, nevertheless, in condescension to our weak and contracted faculties, represented in Scripture as possessed of divers Properties, or Attributes, which, though seemingly different from His Essence, are in reality essential to Him, and constitutive of His very Nature. - More
Four Aspects of Divine Righteousness: God's Justice in Dealing with Sinners - Fred G. Zaspel
Psalm 97:2 declares that God dwells in "righteousness and justice" (tsedek and mishpat). That is to say, He is Himself right and true. He is morally and ethically right, and He acts according to what is proper. This, the psalmist affirms, is God's very "habitation." - More
The Providence of God - Loraine Boettner
God's works of providence are His most holy, wise, and powerful preserving and governing all his creatures and all their actions." (Shorter Catechism, answer to Question 11.) The Scriptures very clearly teach that all things outside of God owe not merely their original creation, but their continued existence, with all their properties and Powers, to the will of God. - More
Divine Attributes: Part II (Lecture 5) - R.L. Dabney
When we enquire after God's power we mean here, not his potestas, or exousia, authority, but His potentia, or dunamis. When we say: He can do all things, we do not mean that He can suffer, or be changed, or be hurt; for the passive capacity of these things is not power, but weakness or defect. - More
Divine Attributes: Part I (Lecture 4) - R.L. Dabney
It is exceedingly hard for us to return an exact answer to the question, How much reason can infer of the attributes of God? - More
GOD -- His Nature And Relation To The Universe - A. A. Hodge
THREE questions obviously lie at the foundation, not only of all man's religious knowledge, but of every possible form of knowledge: 1. Is there a God? 2. What is God? 3. What is God's relation to the universe? - More
The Wrath of God - Arthur W. Pink
It is sad indeed to find so many professing Christians who appear to regard the wrath of God as something for which they need to make an apology, or who at least wish there were no such thing. - More
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