The Salvation Controversy
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Average customer review:Product Description
Perhaps nothing splits apart Catholics and Protestants like the topic of salvation. The arguments rage over how we're saved, when we're saved, and whether we can be assured of salvation. And Protestants fight among themselves as much as they fight with Catholics. No one understands the various arguments better than Catholic Answers' Jimmy Akin--a former Protestant himself. For the last 15 years, Jimmy has studied the issue of salvation, taking into account Church teachings and the various Protestant interpretations, while focusing primarily on Scripture. And now he's taken his findings and put them into a noteworthy book, "The Salvation Controversy." If you want to understand both the Catholic and Protestant positions on salvation--and be equipped to defend the Church's teachings--there's no better guide than "The Salvation Controversy." It's a complete guide to salvation that no Catholic should be without.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #317984 in Books
- Published on: 2001-10
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 154 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Jimmy Akin was born in Texas and raised in Arkansas. He grew up nominally Protestant but at age 20 experienced a profound conversion to Christ. Planning on becoming a Protestant pastor or seminary professor, he began an intensive study of the Bible. But the more he immersed himself in Scripture, the more he found it to support the Catholic faith. Eventually, he was compelled in conscience to enter the Catholic Church, which he did in 1992. His conversion story, "A Triumph and a Tragedy," appeared in "Surprised By Truth." Akin is director of apologetics at Catholic Answers, a contributing editor to "This Rock" magazine, a weekly guest on the global radio program "Catholic Answers Live," and the author of several books, including "Mass Confusion: The Do's and Don'ts of Catholic Worship."
Customer Reviews
Charity and Clarity are Akin's 2 best points!
This is perhaps the most clear and most charitable explanation of the Catholic view on Salvation. It is easy enough for the layman, and even the veteran Catholic scholar will walk away with some new insight into the Church. Akin does a great job of highlighting the key distinctions between Catholics and Protesants, especially Calvinists (he was a Catholic convert from Calvinism), yet does not resort to religious indiffrentism as so many other scholars do today.
Although I might disagree with his views on Paul and the Law, just about everything else is a great explanation of the Catholic faith. Highly recommended!
An Advanced Study that Anyone can Read
This book jumped right into the topic at the get-go; when you read it, you're gonna hit the ground running. Yet, if you don't know much about the topics of salvation, justification, santification, redemption, and many related topics to salvation, the book won't be 'over your head', so to speak.
Akin's most powerful tool, other than the intense Bible studies he's done to write this book and his command of logic, is his ability to make analogies that make the topic easier to understand. His many analogies are always on-time, too, as in he always brought one up at about the time I thought he'd lost me.
And even with these methods for making it simple, it's still useful for advanced readers. He dives deep into salvation; first pointing out the controversy that comes from all the points of view, discussing all of them and their relation to the Bible (without being confrontational), their relation to each other, their relation to other facets of salvation, and, of course, making a strong case for the Catholic perspective.
Overall, this book is well worth reading. And, even though it can be read by anybody, it is hard to absorb after just reading once. There is much information in here, but, given the book's readability, it's not torture to read it more than once.
Concise and clarifying
How much different are Catholic and Protestant views on the doctrines concerning salvation? As Mr. Akin clearly points out well, it really depends on how we define the terms. Perhaps the greatest roadblock between the two has been the misunderstandings about the meanings that each side places in the words they speak with regard to these doctrines. Mr. Akin describes where we are alike, no easy task since many Protestants seem to differ with one another as much as they do with Catholics, and where we are not alike.
The first and overarching distinction is the distinction between temporal and eternal salvation and how that understanding can affect what we believe is taught in particular scriptures. Without that understanding that distinction, we are left to assumptions leading to all sorts of misunderstandings about other salvation-related topics.
Mr. Akin then gently guides us into the difficult subject of indulgences and shows us the scriptural and logical basis for indulgences. Contrary to popular belief, the reformers were not opposed to indulgences - they were opposed to the abuse associated with indulgences at the time. A proper understanding of indulgences (on the part of both Catholic and Protestant believers) will go a long way to heal that misunderstanding.
One chapter I found most helpful was his description of the Calvinist acronym, TULIP. Many Protestants and Catholics alike have misunderstood or misrepresented these "doctrines of grace" as they are often called by Calvinists. Mr. Akin seems to have a very clear and concise understanding of these doctrines. And, it is refreshing that he did not choose to throw it out in entirety but instead chose to compare it with the rich study of Thomas Aquinas' works touching on these doctrines. In the end, he does not offer a replacement for TULIP but instead only a refined form of "Thomist" TULIP. All of this is done in a gracious manner without attempts to belittle or humiliate Calvinists. If you are a Calvinist trying to decipher what the Catholic church really believes on these doctrines, you will want this book for this chapter alone. Many Catholics will find this chapter helpful as well. As Mr. Akin assets in the beginning of the chapter that since scripture uses the word predestination, all Christians must have a doctrine of what predestination is. As a former Calvinist, I found this chapter to be the best and most concise I have seen on this topic and I cannot recommend it highly enough.
Following the brief foray into Calvinist Protestantism, Mr. Akin takes us back to the more general topics of faith, good works, and boasting. This is, perhaps, the most difficult topic for most Protestants and Catholics to understand one another. Nowhere do they seem to suffer the symptoms of dueling-definitions worse than on these topics. Mr. Akin does a good job of making the Catholic views quite understandable and clear to the point where one wonders how any Protestant could argue with the Catholic once their definitions are understood. In one brief chapter Mr. Akin dispels one of the most difficult stumbling blocks caused by the reformation. I do not think I have read any description quite so concise and clear on the association between faith, good works, and boasting.
Finally, Mr. Akin draws to a close with an overview of the recent Lutheran-Catholic statement on justification. As is so often the case, outsiders such as the media, have misunderstood or misrepresented what the document contains. Worse, they have used those misunderstandings to make blanket statements about what the document accomplishes with reference to the reformation. Lutherans and Catholics are still at an impasse on many issues related to this topic - Mr. Akin clears up some of that confusion by indicating exactly where Lutherans and Catholics can agree. It may be surprising how much can be agreed upon.
For the concise and clear explanations concerning salvation doctrines, this book is a must have for anyone wanting to know more on this watershed topic of Catholic/Protestant contention. So much has been written from both sides with misunderstandings and misrepresentations of both sides. It is clearly time for all of us to seek out books such as this before we attempt to speak or write on this topic further. This is a wonderful start toward clarity in definitions allowing us to speak the same language at last.





