Roger
Nicole’s name is no stranger to those of us who read and study
theology. He is a teacher, preacher, and writer par excellence.
Those who have heard or read Nicole agree that God has gifted him
with amazing communication skills. Now is the opportunity to
benefit from his unusual ability to communicate biblical truth
clearly. He can take the great doctrines of grace and bless your
life as you read. We commend Christian Focus for making this book
available.
I am frequently asked to recommend a book on the Reformed
faith, either for personal study or for group study. The Apostle
Paul encouraged the young pastor Titus to “teach what is in
accord with sound doctrine.” This book will help with that
discipline process.
As you read through the book, you will have a hard time
putting it down until you are finished. Afterwards, you will refer
back to some of the nuggets you starred or underlined. Titles such
as: the Meaning of the Trinity, Predestination and the Great
Commission, Calvinism: The Five Points, Reconciliation and
Propitiation, Justification, Sanctification, Prayer: the Prelude
to Revival, and the Final Judgment reflect the content of the 14
chapters.
In the chapter dealing with the five points of Calvinism,
(known by the acronym TULIP-- total depravity, unconditional
election, limited design of the atonement, irresistible grace, and
perseverance of the saints) Nicole suggests that they would be
better cast as GOSPEL—grace, obligatory, sovereign,
provision-making, effectual, and lasting. In Nicole’s excellent
summary on prayer and the sovereignty of God, he brings out
God’s intention for prayer as a means of grace.
Nicole writes in a winsome way to make his point. For
instance, in the chapter on prayer and revival, he refers to the
motto that “You
ought to pray like a Calvinist and preach like an Arminian. That
is, pray as if everything depended upon God and preach as if
everything depended on men. I would like to suggest a change in
this formula which will improve it by fifty percent: ‘You ought
to pray like a Calvinist and preach like a Calvinist.’ Do not
pray as if everything depended on God. Pray because everything
depends on God.”
I have heard the questions raised “why evangelize?” or
“why send missionaries if God is sovereign and has predestined
some to eternal life? If he has done that, they will not be
lost.” Nicole’s chapter on Predestination and the Great
Commission reminds us that God ordains both the means and the end
of one’s salvation. Those two must be kept together.
One reader called this book “popular theology at its
best.” The author’s ability to set forth what we call the
doctrines of grace within our Calvinistic framework make it a
valuable book for study personally and corporately. Buy it! Read
it! Study it! Teach and preach it! It will help you and others
become better disciples of Jesus Christ.
-Charles Dunahoo
Back
to Equip Page
|