Herman Hoeksema (1886–1965)
Author of Behold He Cometh an Exposition of the Book of Revelation
About the Author
Disambiguation Notice:
Please note: the books on the Heidelberg Catechism were first published in 10 volumes and republished in 3. For sets they're identical, but please be careful combining individual volumes.
Series
Works by Herman Hoeksema
The Triple Knowledge: An Exposition of the Heidelberg Catechism (Volume 1) (1990) 36 copies, 1 review
The Lord of Glory: An Exposition of the Heidelberg Catechism (The Triple Knowledge Book 4) (2011) 20 copies
The Death of the Son of God: An Exposition of the Heidelberg Catechism (The Triple Knowledge Book 3) (2011) 19 copies
The Perfect Prayer: An Exposition of the Heidelberg Catechism (The Triple Knowledge Book 10) (2011) 16 copies
God's Way Out: An Exposition of the Heidelberg Catechism (The Triple Knowledge Book 2) (2011) 14 copies
Love Thy Neighbor for God's Sake: An Exposition of the Heidelberg Catechism (The Triple Knowledge Book 9) (2011) 13 copies
Baptized into Christ: An Exposition of the Heidelberg Catechism (The Triple Knowledge Book 6) (2015) 12 copies
Love the Lord Thy God: An Exposition of the Heidelberg Catechism (The Triple Knowledge Book 8) (2011) 11 copies
Eating and Drinking Christ: An Exposition of the Heidelberg Catechism (The Triple Knowledge Book 7) (2015) 10 copies
The Gospel 4 copies
The Christian and Culture 2 copies
Good news for the afflicted 2 copies
Sin and Grace 2 copies
The Mark of the Beast 1 copy
The Christian and Culture 1 copy
Why Protestant Reformed 1 copy
The Antichrist 1 copy
Believers and their Seed 1 copy
Dogmática Reformada 1 copy
The prayers of all saints 1 copy
The Mark of the Beast 1 copy
The Means of Grace 1 copy
The Heidelberg Catechism The Triple Knowledge God's Way Out; Vol. Two of Man's Redemption (1944) 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1886-03-12
- Date of death
- 1965-09
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Calvin Theological Seminary, Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA
- Occupations
- theologian
- Organizations
- Protestant Reformed Churches
Christian Reformed Church
Protestant Reformed Theological School - Nationality
- Netherlands
- Birthplace
- Hoogezand, Groningen, Netherlands
- Places of residence
- Hoogezand, The Netherlands
Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA
Grandville, Michigan, USA - Place of death
- Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA
- Disambiguation notice
- Please note: the books on the Heidelberg Catechism were first published in 10 volumes and republished in 3. For sets they're identical, but please be careful combining individual volumes.
- Associated Place (for map)
- Michigan, USA
Members
Reviews
I have somewhat of a mixed review here. Oddly enough, Hoeksema's writing here is fine. I would certainly disagree at some points, and I think he misunderstood at points as well, but he was exploring the issues of this controversy basically fairly. He published the original complaint against Gordon Clark and responded to it. Nothing wrong with that.
But this collection is far less fair. First of all, it is not at all what it suggests to be. The title is rather misleading, and there is no show more subtitle to clarify. This is a collection of editorials about the Clark-Van Til Controversy, but a history of it or back and forth on it. The publisher in his introduction and afterward is very clear -- he believes that Van Til and his students have committed a grievous crime against the church in raising these questions about Clark. But all that is in view here is one man's response to the Complaint that kicked off the controversy. Furthermore, he does not even publish the Complaint itself, as Hoeksema did. We are not even given the courtesy of having the other side fairly represented. This was not Hoeksema's fault. It is clear in the introduction and afterward that the publish has a personal ace to grind.
While reading this, I took it upon myself to find some representation of the other side, and found a discussion of the controversy at Reformed Forum (http://reformedforum.org/podcasts/ctc163/). The men here are clearly on Van Til's side, but I found their approach charitable and fair. Hoeksema's approach is much the same way, though I think he goes too far in places and misunderstands the original point at times. In summary, this book would have been a lot more helpful if the publisher had attempted to act more in that same Christian spirit and at very least publish the Complaint along with this response. show less
But this collection is far less fair. First of all, it is not at all what it suggests to be. The title is rather misleading, and there is no show more subtitle to clarify. This is a collection of editorials about the Clark-Van Til Controversy, but a history of it or back and forth on it. The publisher in his introduction and afterward is very clear -- he believes that Van Til and his students have committed a grievous crime against the church in raising these questions about Clark. But all that is in view here is one man's response to the Complaint that kicked off the controversy. Furthermore, he does not even publish the Complaint itself, as Hoeksema did. We are not even given the courtesy of having the other side fairly represented. This was not Hoeksema's fault. It is clear in the introduction and afterward that the publish has a personal ace to grind.
While reading this, I took it upon myself to find some representation of the other side, and found a discussion of the controversy at Reformed Forum (http://reformedforum.org/podcasts/ctc163/). The men here are clearly on Van Til's side, but I found their approach charitable and fair. Hoeksema's approach is much the same way, though I think he goes too far in places and misunderstands the original point at times. In summary, this book would have been a lot more helpful if the publisher had attempted to act more in that same Christian spirit and at very least publish the Complaint along with this response. show less
"This book is a series of editorials written at the time of the so-called Clark-Van Til controversy in the Orthodox Presbyterian Church in the mid-1940's. The essays are some of the best analyses of its meaning we have seen in print, written by the editor of the Standard Bearer. Far from being a sideshow, and far from being dead, the assault on the doctrines of Scripture by the faculty of Westminster Seminary determined the path that the Seminary, and to some extent, the Orthodox show more Presbyterian Church, would follow for the remainder of the century." The Trinity Foundation
Contents: Introduction: The Text of a Complaint; The Views of Gordon H. Clark; The Incomprehensibility of God; The Answer; The Primacy of Truth; The Primacy of Intellect; Rationalism; Sovereignty and Responsibility; The Sincere Offer of the Gospel; Arminianism; Saving the Reprobate; John Calvin; Calvin on Common Grace; Contradicting Scripture; An Arminian Gospel; Presbytery Minutes; The General Assembly's Decisions; Postscript; Index; Scripture Index show less
Contents: Introduction: The Text of a Complaint; The Views of Gordon H. Clark; The Incomprehensibility of God; The Answer; The Primacy of Truth; The Primacy of Intellect; Rationalism; Sovereignty and Responsibility; The Sincere Offer of the Gospel; Arminianism; Saving the Reprobate; John Calvin; Calvin on Common Grace; Contradicting Scripture; An Arminian Gospel; Presbytery Minutes; The General Assembly's Decisions; Postscript; Index; Scripture Index show less
"Credo, ergo confiteor"
"I believe, therefore I confess"
"I believe, therefore I confess"
Theology, Systematic Theology, Theology Proper
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Statistics
- Works
- 90
- Members
- 1,532
- Popularity
- #16,794
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
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