The Making of Evangelical Spirituality

Author:   Jason Cherry
Publisher:   Wipf & Stock Publishers
ISBN:  

9781666753820


Pages:   186
Publication Date:   05 January 2023
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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The Making of Evangelical Spirituality


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Author:   Jason Cherry
Publisher:   Wipf & Stock Publishers
Imprint:   Wipf & Stock Publishers
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.259kg
ISBN:  

9781666753820


ISBN 10:   1666753823
Pages:   186
Publication Date:   05 January 2023
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Thomas Chalmers once asserted, 'The Spirit guides us unto all truth and all truth is to be found in the Bible; the Spirit therefore guides us unto the Bible.' This once widely understood principle has been obscured and all but forgotten by the peculiarities of evangelical mysterialism. In this brilliant book, Jason Cherry not only shows us why this is, he shows us the sure pathway back to biblical orthodoxy. --George Grant, pastor, Parish Presbyterian Church Have there ever been people who can generate heresies with the insouciance of American evangelicals? Perhaps it has something to do with our 'spiritual populism' and 'mysterialism.' Those are terms that Jason Cherry employs in this helpful book as he examines the inversion of authority in evangelical Protestantism--once the basis for authority was Scripture, now for many people it is some form of personal revelation. How did it happen, and what can be done? Jason can help answer those questions. --C. R. Wiley, author of In the House of Tom Bombadil As Jason Cherry shows, the biblical portrait of the Spirit's work has been distorted by the lust for spontaneity, the elevation of the self, an unbiblical dualism between the head and the heart. Cherry has done the historical and theological spadework to help us distinguish genuine intimacy with the living Spirit from the distortions of 'esotericism' and 'mysterialism.' --Peter Leithart, Theopolis Institute Thomas Chalmers once asserted, 'The Spirit guides us unto all truth and all truth is to be found in the Bible; the Spirit therefore guides us unto the Bible.' This once widely understood principle has been obscured and all but forgotten by the peculiarities of evangelical mysterialism. In this brilliant book, Jason Cherry not only shows us why this is, he shows us the sure pathway back to biblical orthodoxy. --George Grant, pastor, Parish Presbyterian Church Have there ever been people who can generate heresies with the insouciance of American evangelicals? Perhaps it has something to do with our 'spiritual populism' and 'mysterialism.' Those are terms that Jason Cherry employs in this helpful book as he examines the inversion of authority in evangelical Protestantism--once the basis for authority was Scripture, now for many people it is some form of personal revelation. How did it happen, and what can be done? Jason can help answer those questions. --C. R. Wiley, author of In the House of Tom Bombadil As Jason Cherry shows, the biblical portrait of the Spirit's work has been distorted by the lust for spontaneity, the elevation of the self, an unbiblical dualism between the head and the heart. Cherry has done the historical and theological spadework to help us distinguish genuine intimacy with the living Spirit from the distortions of 'esotericism' and 'mysterialism.' --Peter Leithart, Theopolis Institute


Thomas Chalmers once asserted, 'The Spirit guides us unto all truth and all truth is to be found in the Bible; the Spirit therefore guides us unto the Bible.' This once widely understood principle has been obscured and all but forgotten by the peculiarities of evangelical mysterialism. In this brilliant book, Jason Cherry not only shows us why this is, he shows us the sure pathway back to biblical orthodoxy. --George Grant, pastor, Parish Presbyterian Church Have there ever been people who can generate heresies with the insouciance of American evangelicals? Perhaps it has something to do with our 'spiritual populism' and 'mysterialism.' Those are terms that Jason Cherry employs in this helpful book as he examines the inversion of authority in evangelical Protestantism--once the basis for authority was Scripture, now for many people it is some form of personal revelation. How did it happen, and what can be done? Jason can help answer those questions. --C. R. Wiley, author of In the House of Tom Bombadil As Jason Cherry shows, the biblical portrait of the Spirit's work has been distorted by the lust for spontaneity, the elevation of the self, an unbiblical dualism between the head and the heart. Cherry has done the historical and theological spadework to help us distinguish genuine intimacy with the living Spirit from the distortions of 'esotericism' and 'mysterialism.' --Peter Leithart, Theopolis Institute


Author Information

Jason Cherry is an elder at Trinity Reformed Church in Huntsville, Alabama, as well as a teacher and lecturer of literature, American history, and economics at Providence Classical School in Huntsville. He graduated from Reformed Theological Seminary with an MA in religion and is the author of the book The Culture of Conversionism and the History of the Altar Call.

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