Knox, D. B. (David Broughton) (1916-1994). Doctrine of Grace (2nd Year Lecture). Moore Theological College. 1992. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://archives.moore.edu.au/documents/detail/225295.
APA citation style
Knox, D. (1992). Doctrine of grace (2nd year lecture). Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://archives.moore.edu.au/documents/detail/225295.
Chicago citation style
Knox, D. B. (David Broughton) (1916-1994).Doctrine of Grace (2nd Year Lecture). Moore Theological College. 1992. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://archives.moore.edu.au/documents/detail/225295.
Note:
These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Knox defines grace, and the history of the term. He answers questions from the students on grace. Knox uses Jacob and Esau as an illustration to stress that love is an action. Knox contrasts the biblical teaching of grace with catholic doctrine - of something that is freely given with something that is earned/come out of obligation. Knox explains the doctrine of common grace, and the relationship between grace and justification. He explores the flow-on effect of obedience. Cassette label reads: "DBK 9/1/92 Doctrine of grace" Static throughout.
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