Binding:
Sewn hardcovers
Page Count: --
Publisher: RHB
ISBN# :
1877611565
Availability: Usually ships the same business day.
Description : The full title of this fine work is
"The
Christian's Reasonable Service in which Divine Truths Concenting the Covenant of
Grace are Expounded, Defended against Opposing Parties, and their Practice
Advocated as well as the Administration of the Covenant in the Old and New
Testaments ." This edition is translated by Bartel Elshout and edited by
Joel R. Beeke.
Those acquainted with Dutch Reformed orthodoxy with know that the
name of Wilhelmus a Brakel is among the most venerated of the theologians
representing the Dutch Second Reformation period which is similar and coincides
with English Puritanism. This veneration is largely due to the profound
influence of his magnum opus
De Redelijke Godsdeinst , now being made
available in English for the first time as The Christian's Reasonable Service.
Monergism Review :
I have read all the
major Reformers from Augustine to Calvin to Luther, all the big name classics,
but I must admit, I have never read anything clearer than Brakel. When first
purchasing this set the man who sold it to me said that
“if he was forced to
live on a desert island and could only take one set this wd. be it”
. I
thought he was crazy, and very much under read. Then I read Brakel for myself.
The man’s rational was totally justified! I wd. take Brakel over Calvin. To many
Christians this sounds like a big leap, but Brakel is possibly the easiest work
I have ever read. Far easier than Calvin, and for myself, I take what I can
know. No point in reading a book if you will never understand it. For the
record, I do understand Calvin, Luther and friends, but I can understand Brakel
first and I can understand him better. Importantly, this work is not readable
because it contains shallow fragments and watered down doctrine suitable only
for beginners. Instead, the work is in-depth and easy to understand; in most
cases this is a rare combination. Contains no puritanical-wordiness, or John
Owen five page sentences, doctrine is sound, thoroughly Reformed, practical and
concise. If I only had one choice wd. I take this set to a desert Island? Well…
I wd. have to give it a bit more thought, but I assure you it wd. be on the very
top of my list and should be on every Christian’s shelf...
--B. K. Campbell