Here is a book that I hesitate to
review. Why? Because in the limited space available I fear I
will not do justice to its importance. I have challenged the
author, William Edgar, to develop a leader’s guide that will
encourage local church teachers and preachers to use this book.
Truth In All Its Glory,
Commending the Reformed Faith is a fantastic book that really
does what the title communicates. I would like to go through the
book summarizing each chapter; however, I will forgo that desire
and simply tell you why I think this is an important and
strategic book.
For those of us who are Reformed
in our understanding of Christianity, we love to be known as
Reformed. However, for many who do not understand the Reformed
faith, it has received some bad press through the years, some of
which has been justified both by the way it was communicated and
by the way it has been applied.
The Reformed faith is a system
that is life-oriented. It is a system built upon the truth of
God’s revelation set forth in the Scriptures. It does not
embrace legalism or moralism. While believing strongly in total
depravity of man’s sinful nature, it also believes in God’s
ability to change peoples’ lives and to do so in a way that
impacts the world around us.
Edgar does an outstanding job of
showing the Reformed faith in its fullest and most glorious
expression of biblical Christianity. He tells of his
“conversion” to his movement into the Reformed faith, not too
different from mine, hence I easily identified with his
pilgrimage.
At first you think you are
reading the best history book on the development of the Reformed
faith as you read about the history and origins of Reformation
theology. As one good example, Edgar writes, “Depravity is total
in that every part of our being, from the body to the mind, is
sinful. We are saved neither by light of nature nor by the law
of God but only because of the “glad tidings concerning the
Messiah.” Edgar highlights the central doctrines and themes of
Reformed theology that communicates both to those in leadership
roles as well as the average person in the pew.
This book could be used to
prepare an officer in the church and to help us understand who
we are in the Reformed faith. It is effectively and winsomely
written. It is life-oriented because Edgar has a good grasp of
our world and age and how the truths of the Reformed faith touch
all areas of life. While definitely understanding and
appreciating things like the five points of Calvinism, known as
TULIP, Edgar is quick to point out that the Reformed faith is
far more comprehensive than those five doctrines. He gives
special attention to the doctrines relating to salvation and
their application throughout the three parts of the book.
Having spent a good part of his
life both in France and Switzerland, he demonstrates not only a
grasp of different cultures, but also how to communicate his
case from a worldview perspective while maintaining his
commitment to the Reformed faith and the Presbyterian form of
church government.
You will particularly be
challenged to see how the Reformed faith is to be played out in
our world. Part three is entitled “Living Reformed Theology” and
underscores the ultimate purpose of the Reformed faith is
spiritual and practical in nature, not merely academic in tone.
A much needed theme for today stresses the importance of the
church in the Reformed faith. “We have stressed that according
to the Reformed faith, walking with the Lord is not only
individual but also communal…Accordingly, the church is the
fellowship of all those who are called to live in covenant
communion with the Lord.”
You will appreciate his comments
on the church in a section called “Ardor and Order.” There he
deals with form and function of the church and he does not dodge
the difficult topic of leadership and gender. He explains the
church’s purpose is threefold—worship, edification, and
missions.
My favorite part of the book is
the final chapter, “All the Glory of God.” In this chapter Edgar
puts everything together starting with creation, the fall, and
then redemption. He writes about the church and kingdom and its
mandates culturally, preaching and teaching the doctrines, and
administering the sacraments. In this final chapter he gives a
neat and concise summary of God’s Ten Commandments.
Throughout the book and
especially at the conclusion, he makes it clear that while the
Reformed faith is God’s system of truth revealed in his Word,
there is more work to be done in the key areas of theology. He
mentions three areas in need of change: interpreting Scripture,
relating union with Christ to other doctrines, and developing
the doctrine of the Trinity. And those must not be done in
isolation from the non-western countries especially Africa,
Japan, and China. Nor must we do our theology in a cultural
vacuum. For, to paraphrase Abraham Kuyper, all of life is under
the sovereignty of God and that is the heart of the Reformed
faith. |