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Daily Doctrine

Deacon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I began listening to a book on Audible recently and enjoyed it so much I purchased the book for my library.

Daily Doctrine, A One-Year Guide to Systematic Theology, by Kevin DeYoung [link]

The book arrived yesterday and the hardback is simply beautiful. It is designed the way books should be made.
Rich, dark green cloth covered boards have the title embossed in gold on the front board and spine. A gold colored bookmark is sewn into the stitched headband. The pages are thick paper without any bleedthrough.
It is organized to be read five days a week. Each weekly section is marked by a gold stripe with the week number. Daily readings are numbered as well.

(I can’t figure out why the Kindle version of the book is almost the same price as the hardback)

The author notes that this is not a textbook on Systematic Theology. …”I do not attempt to be comprehensive.” …
Yet as I was listening to the book earlier, the author was quite detailed in his selections.

The author, a Presbyterian, has put together a book that clarifies terms and explains the foundation of biblical theology from the Reformed tradition….but despite that handicap…:) the book should be useful to clarify terms and provide insight into aspects of doctrine that have been forgotten or passed over.

Rob
 

Deacon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Theology Proper
Day 21 The Existence of God
Day 22 The Knowability of God
Day 23 Words for God
Day 24 The Unity of God
Day 25 The Spirituality of God
Day 26 The Names of God
Day 27 The Attributes God
Day 28 Incommunicable and Communicable Attributes...

I'm really enjoying this book.
At least a few times a week I spend some time following the footnotes and digging deeper into theology.
Much of it I've heard before, ...in bits a pieces.
However, Kevin DeYoung puts the pieces into a context that expands my comprehension of the doctrine.

Rob
 
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