
From the beginnings of the evangelical break from fundamentalism, evangelical scholarship has always had a strong element of Reformed theology. Much of this comes from the fact that pioneers Henry and Ockenga were both Calvinists, and Westminster and Fuller Seminaries were Reformed at the time of their founding.
This is a difficult category since I've studied under several of these men at Southern. My first choices here are Henry, Ladd, Nash, and Payne, with Nettles and Ware being the best I know personally. Cooper is also outstanding considering that he is somewhat obscure.
G. C. Berkouwer (1903-1996) - chair of dogmatics at Free University in Amsterdam. In his early years, he was an evangelical and a strong defender of Protestantism, Calvinism, and inerrancy. After World War II, he drifted into neo-orthodoxy. Berkouwer preferred practical, direct interaction to abstract philosophy. Titles: Conflict with Rome; A Half Century of Theology; The Second Vatican Council and the New Catholicism; The Triumph of Grace in the Theology of Karl Barth; and the 14-volume Studies in Dogmatics. Not to be confused with Catholic convert G. K. Chesterton.
Loraine Boettner (1901-1990) - Reformed evangelical student from Princeton, and theologian for the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. Boettner is remembered for his contemporary expression of Reformed doctrines and his answers to criticisms of Calvinism. Boettner was one of the 20th century's few postmillennialists. Titles: A Harmony of the Gospels; Immortality; The Millennium; The Reformed Doctrine of Predestination; Reformed Faith; Roman Catholicism; Studies in Theology.
Bryan Chapell - evangelical Presbyterian preacher and president of Covenant Theological Seminary. Chapell urges Christ-centered, biblical preaching and the recognition of human depravity through what he calls a "fallen condition focus." He also recently served on the Advisory Council for the ESV. Titles: Christ-Centered Preaching; Each for the Other; Holiness by Grace; I'll Love You Anyway and Always; In the Grip of Grace; The Promises of Grace; Standing Your Ground: Messages on Daniel; Using Illustrations to Preach with Power; The Wonder of It All.
Gordon H. Clark (1902-1985) - evangelical Presbyterian philosopher and presuppositional apologist* from Covenant College in Pennsylvania. Considered one of the greatest defenders of the faith among mid-20th-century evangelicals. His writing is insightful and convincing, though somewhat lacking in humility. Titles: Behaviorism and Christianity; Biblical Predestination; A Christian View of Men and Things; Faith and Saving Faith; God and Evil; God's Hammer: The Bible and Its Critics; Religion, Reason, and Revelation; Thales to Dewey; Trinity Papers; What Do Presbyterians Believe?; and commentaries on 1 Corinthians, 1-2 Peter, and the Letters of John.
John W. Cooper (b. 1947) - evangelical professor of philosophy and theology at Calvin Theological Seminary. He confronts worldviews that challenge Christianity and seeks biblical answers to controversies such as women in ministry and gender-neutral Bible translation. Cooper is a Presbyterian who strongly advocates covenant theology. Titles: Body, Soul, and Life Everlasting; A Cause for Division? Women in Office and the Unity of the Church; Our Father in Heaven: The Christian Faith and Inclusive Language for God; The Theology of Freedom.
David Dockery (b. 1952) - evangelical president of Union University in Jackson, Tennessee, and former dean of theology at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Dockery's membership in the Founders Conference testifies to the strength of his conservative convictions, but he has many friends among liberal and moderate Baptists. Titles: Beyond the Impasse? (Ed., w/ Robison James); The Challenge of Postmodernism; The Future of Christian Higher Education; The Holman Bible Handbook (Ed.); New Dimensions in Evangelical Thought (Ed.); Our Christian Hope; Shaping a Christian Worldview; Theologians of the Baptist Tradition (Ed., w/ Timothy George); and a commentary on Ephesians. He also edits the NT volumes of the New American Commentary.
Millard Erickson (b. 1932) - fairly conservative evangelical, only moderately Calvinistic, professor now at Truett Theological Seminary (formerly of Bethel). Accomodating of alternate views on a number of issues, but one of the most vocal opponents of the most liberal side of evangelicalism. As a member of Christians for Biblical Equality, he is an egalitarian. Erickson is also a prominent critic of open theism and postmodernism. His Christian Theology is required reading at most conservative seminaries. Other titles: A Basic Guide to Eschatology; The Concise Dictionary of Christian Theology; Does It Matter What I Believe?; Introducing Christian Doctrine; Evangelical Interpretation; The Evangelical Left; The Evangelical Mind and Heart; God the Father Almighty; Making Sense of the Trinity; Old Wine in New Wineskins; Postmodernizing the Faith; Truth or Consequences; What Does God Know and When Does He Know It?; The Word Became Flesh.
John Frame (b. 1939) - Reformed Presbyterian theology professor at Reformed Theological Seminary in Orlando (formerly at Westminster). His books contain in-depth explorations of biblical doctrine while remaining accessible and even engrossing for the average reader. Frame's two emphases are the Lordship of God in every aspect of Christian life and thought, and an allowance for innovation in Christian worship. Titles: Apologetics to the Glory of God; Contemporary Worship Music: A Biblical Defense; Cornelius Van Til; Covenantal Worship; No Other God: A Response to Open Theism; Perspectives on the Word of God; Worship in Spirit and Truth; and the Theology of Lordship series.
James Leo Garrett (b. 1925) - conservative professor at two Baptist seminaries (Southern and Southwestern), moderately Calvinistic. He stresses the importance of Baptist doctrinal distinctivies and upholds the evangelical doctrines of grace, biblical authority, and gospel proclamation. Titles: Are Southern Baptists Evangelicals?; Baptist Relations with Other Christians; Systematic Theology.
Kenneth Gentry - Reformed Presbyterian chancellor of Christ College in Lynchburg, Virginia. Gentry has written on a wide range of contentious issues besides the standard emphases of Reformed theology. Of particular note is his postmillennial view of end-time prophecy and his criticism of both the full preterist and dispensational views as extremes to be avoided. He has also defended the Lordship model of salvation, written in favor of capital punishment, and urged his denomination to take a strong stand in favor of young-earth creationism. Titles: The Beast of Revelation; Before Jerusalem Fell; The Charismatic Gift of Prophecy; God Gave Wine; The Great Tribulation: Past or Future? (w/ Thomas Ice); The Greatness of the Great Commission; He Shall Have Dominion: A Postmillennial Eschatology; Lord of the Saved; Thine Is the Kingdom (Ed.). Not to be confused with Old Testament scholar Peter Gentry.
Timothy George (b. 1950) - Reformed evangelical historian and dean at Beeson Divinity School and executive editor of Christianity Today. He has served on the Board of Directors for LifeWay and is active in the evangelical dialogue with Catholics. Titles: Amazing Grace: God's Initiative, Our Response; Baptist Confessoins, Covenants, and Catechisms; Is the Father of Jesus the God of Muhammad?; A Mighty Long Journey: Reflections on Racial Reconciliation; Theologians of the Baptist Tradition (w/ David Dockery); Theology of the Reformers; the Library of Christian Classics series (Ed.); and a collection of James P. Boyce's sermons.
Carl F. H. Henry (1915-2003) - the father of the new evangelicalism and founder of Christianity Today and Fuller Seminary. His magnum opus is the six-volume God, Revelation, and Authority, which is perhaps the fullest exposition of the doctrine of inerrancy. Henry also served on the Advisory Council for the ESV. Other titles: The Baker/Wycliffe Dictionary of Christian Ethics (Ed.); Basic Christian Doctrines; A Christian Mindset in a Secular Society; God of This Age or God of the Ages?; The Identity of Jesus of Nazareth; Toward a Recovery of Christian Belief; Twilight of a Great Civilization; The Uneasy Conscience of Modern Fundamentalism.
Anthony A. Hoekema (1913-1988) - Dutch Reformed professor of theology at Calvin Theological Seminary in Grand Rapids. One of the most convincing defenders of amillennialism and covenant theology. Hoekema was also an apologist critical of Mormonism, Jehovah's Witnesses, Christian Science, and Seventh-Day Adventists. Titles: The Bible and the Future; The Christian Looks at Himself; Created in God's Image; The Four Major Cults; Holy Spirit Baptism; Jehovah's Witnesses; Mormonism; Saved by Grace; What About Tongue Speaking?. Not to be confused with scholar Harold John Ockenga or Christian pediatrician Ronald Hoekstra.
Walter Kaiser (b. 1933) - evangelical president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. His primary concerns are responsible Bible interpretation and expository preaching of the entire biblical message. His key doctrinal emphasis is the continuing relevance of the Old Testament, and he is an active member of the egalitarian group Christians for Biblical Equality. Kaiser also helped produce the NIV and HCSB. Titles: Hard Sayings of the Bible; A History of Israel; An Introduction to Biblical Hermeneutics (Ed.); The Messiah in the Old Testament; Revive Us Again: Biblical Insights for Encouraging Spiritual Renewal; Toward an Exegetical Theology; Toward an Old Testament Theology; and commentaries on Psalms and Ecclesiastes. Not to be confused with liberal Old Testament scholar O. Kaiser.
Meredith Kline - Reformed retired professor at Westminster Seminary California. Kline is an Orthodox Presbyterian whose area of emphasis is the Old Testament. He holds to pretty much standard covenant theology and the framework view of old-earth creationism. Kline helped translate the NKJV and NIV. Titles: By Oath Consigned; Glory in Our Midst; Images of the Spirit; Kingdom Prologue; The Structure of Biblical Authority; Treaty of the Great King.
George Ladd (1911-1982) - evangelical theologian from the more conservative days of Fuller Theological Seminary, known for his powerful expository preaching and his defense of historic premillennialism. Ladd's exploration of the "already/not yet" concept of the kingdom of God forced both covenant theology and dispensationalism to rethink their systems. Titles: The Blessed Hope; Crucial Questions about the Kingdom of God; The Gospel and the Kingdom; I Believe in the Resurrection of Jesus; Jesus and the Kingdom; The Last Things: An Eschatology for Laymen; The Meaning of the Millennium; The New Testament and Criticism; The Presence of the Future; A Theology of the New Testament.
Ken Mathews - Reformed evangelical Old Testament professor at Beeson Divinity School and The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He defends the historicity of Genesis from an old-earth perspective and is an expert in the Dead Sea Scrolls, textual criticism, and Hebrew literature. Mathews urges Bible students to invest heavily in reading and reference tools. He helped produce the NLT and is the editor for the OT volumes of the New American Commentary series. Other titles: Foundations for Biblical Interpretation (Ed.); The Paleo-Hebrew Leviticus Scroll; and a commentary on Genesis.
Alister McGrath (b. 1953) - Reformed evangelical professor at Oxford University. This systematic theologian and apologist sees the evangelical church as healthy and moving forward, rather than in decline. Titles: Beyond the Quiet Time; A Brief History of Heaven; Christian Theology; The Future of Christianity; The Genesis of Doctrine; Historical Theology; I Believe; In the Beginning: The Story of the King James Bible; The Intellectual Origins of the European Reformation; Intellectuals Don't Need God and Other Modern Myths; Iustitia Dei; The Journey; Knowing Christ; A Life of John Calvin; Luther's Theology of the Cross; A Passion for Truth; Reformation Thought; T. F. Torrance: An Intellectual Biography; What Was God Doing on the Cross?; and the Scientific Theology series. He also produced the Thematic Reference Bible.
Robert Mounce (b. 1921) - Reformed evangelical Greek scholar and president emeritus of Whitworth College. Much of his writing has to do with end-time prophecy from an amillennial perspective. Titles: The Essential Nature of New Testament Preaching; A Living Hope; Themes from Romans; What Are We Waiting For?; and commentaries on Matthew, Romans, the Pastoral Letters, and Revelation. Mounce also helped produce the NIV, NIrV, NLT, ESV, and HCSB translations. Not to be confused with his son William D. Mounce, also a Greek scholar.
Iain H. Murray (b. 1931) - Reformed theological historian and co-founder of Banner of Truth Trust, which reprints many classic Christian materials. Murray has deep respect for the Puritans and seeks to distinguish true revival from the charismatic, emotional, and pragmatic views prevalent today. He is also a modern proponent of postmillennialism. Titles: Australian Christian Life from 1788; The Battle for Gospel Preaching; Evangelicalism Divided; The Forgotten Spurgeon; The Invitation System; Pentecost Today?; The Puritan Hope; Revival and Revivalism; Spurgeon vs. Hyper-Calvinism; Wesley and the Men Who Followed; and biographies of Jonathan Edwards, Martyn Lloyd-Jones, John Murray, and A. W. Pink.
Ronald Nash (1936-2006) - Reformed evangelical philosophy professor at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, and presuppositional apologist. Nash is most adept at defending Christianity from postmodern influences, and uses philosophical theology to resolve difficult doctrinal questions. Titles: The Closing of the American Heart; The Concept of God; Faith and Reason; Is Jesus the Only Savior?; Life's Ultimate Questions; The Light of the Mind; The Meaning of History; Poverty and Wealth: The Christian Debate over Capitalism; Social Justice and the Christian Church; When a Baby Dies; Why the Left Is Not Right; Worldviews in Conflict. Not to be confused with liberal Baptist Robert Nash.
Tom Nettles (b. 1946) - Reformed evangelical church history professor. By seeking to articulate precise doctrinal definitions and cogent biblical and logical arguments, Nettles has sparked revivals of Calvinism at three of the SBC's six seminaries, including Southern Seminary where he now teaches. He is also a leading figure in the Founders Conference, advocating a return to theological depth in preaching and religious education through the use of catechisms. With Russ Bush he co-wrote Baptists and the Bible, which helped the conservative resurgence. Other titles: By His Grace and For His Glory; A Foundation for the Future; Teaching Truth and Training Hearts; Why I Am a Baptist (Ed. w/ Russ Moore).
Mark Noll (b. 1946) - history professor at Wheaton College, and leading authority on the history of Christianity in North America. Like Murray and Nettles, Noll believes an objective look at history best supports the Reformed evangelical faith. Titles: America's God; A Documentary History of Religion in America (w/ Edwin S. Gaustad); God and Mammon (Ed.); A History of Christianity in the United States and Canada; The Old Religion in a New World; One Nation Under God; Religion and American Politics; The Rise of Evangelicalism; The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind; Seasons of Grace; Turning Points: Decisive Moments in the History of Christianity; Wonderful Words of Life.
Harold J. Ockenga (1905-1985) - Reformed co-founder and first president of Fuller Theological Seminary, highly influential in the rise of the new evangelicalism. A student at Princeton when Mächen broke from that institution, he supported the fundamentalist movement early in his ministry. He became critical of fundamentalist tendencies toward separatism and suspicion of outsiders, and believed a more engaging approach would be more successful in halting the spread of liberalism. Titles: Power Through Pentecost (w/ John Stott); Women Who Made Bible History.
J. Barton Payne (1922-1979) - Reformed evangelical apologist and brilliant preacher. As a covenant theology and historic premillennialist, he taught Old Testament at Covenant Theological Seminary and helped translate the New American Standard Bible and the New International Version. Titles: Bible Prophecy for Today; The Encyclopedia of Bible Prophecy; Hebrew Vocabularies; The Immanent Appearing of Christ; Theology of the Older Testament.
Tom Schreiner (b. 1954) - Reformed evangelical professor of New Testament at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, and preaching elder of Clifton Baptist Church in Louisville. Schreiner interacts much with Christian history and supports new covenant theology (with minor adjustments). He is highly critical of Catholicism, open theism, and charismatic excesses. Schreiner also did translation work for the NLT, ESV, and HCSB. Titles: Interpreting the Pauline Epistles; The Law and Its Fulfillment; Paul: Apostle of God's Glory in Christ; The Race Set Before Us (w/ Ardel Caneday); Still Sovereign (Ed. w/ Bruce Ware); and commentaries on Romans, 1-2 Peter, and Jude.
James Sire (b. 1933) - Reformed evangelical philosopher and expert on postmodernism and other worldviews. Sire is a frequent world traveler and former senior editor at InterVarsity Press. Titles: Chris Chrisman Goes to College; Discipleship of the Mind; Habits of the Mind; How to Read Slowly; Naming the Elephant; Scripture Twisting: 20 Ways the Cults Misread the Bible; The Universe Next Door; Vaclav Havel (a biography of the Czech Republic's former philosopher-president); Why Should Anyone Believe Anything at All?.
Bruce Ware (b. 1953) - Reformed dispensational dean at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, member of the Council for Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, and leading defender of conservative doctrine at the Evangelical Theological Society. Formerly of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Ware is critical of egalitarian views of both God and man, and also speaks out against open theism. He also urges holy living and a biblical (rather than philosophical) approach to understanding the Trinity. Titles: God's Greater Glory (forthcoming); God's Lesser Glory; Still Sovereign (Ed. w/ Tom Schreiner); Their God Is Too Small. Not to be confused with author A. Charles Ware or God and the Fairy Tale author Jim Ware.
David Wells (b. 1939) - Reformed Congregationalist theology professor at Gordon-Conwell who sees the church in decline and hopelessly compromised to modern society. Wells uses positive examples from history to back up urgent calls for reform in his books. Titles: The Bleeding of the Evangelical Church; God in the Wasteland; Losing Our Virtue; No Place for Truth, Or Whatever Happened to Evangelical Theology; The Person of Christ; Revolution in Rome; The Search for Salvation.There may be others in this database whose Reformed convictions I am not aware of. See also the section on the more specifically popular-level Reformed authors.
For a statement of my beliefs, see my Declaration of Faith.