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Charts of Christian Theology & Doctrine

Charts of Christian Theology & Doctrine
By H. Wayne House

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Product Description

Charts of Christian Theology & Doctrine provides students of theology with precise and condensed summaries of the concepts and arguments from the fields of theology and doctrine.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #263156 in Books
  • Published on: 1992-08-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 160 pages

Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover
Charts of Christian Theology and Doctrine provides students of theology with precise and condensed summaries of the concepts and arguments from the fields of theology and doctrine. It does this by introducing readers to important terms and positions and their meanings. The value of this book lies mainly in its use as a handy reference that allows readers to organize and integrate the material learned from other textbooks and in the classroom.

About the Author
H. Wayne House (Th.D., Concordia Seminary; J.D., Regent University School of Law) is distinguished professor of biblical studies and apologetics at Faith Seminary, Tacoma, Washington, professor of law (Trinity Law School) and professor of theology and culture (Trinity Graduate School) of Trinity International University. He is formerly professor of theology at Michigan Theological Seminary and Dallas Theological Seminary. He is the author of numerous books, including Charts of Christian Theology and Doctrine and Chronological and Background Charts of the New Testament.


Customer Reviews

Great reference material5
I am looking at some of the other reviews, and 4 of the 5 people who have responded have criticisms of this book because they apparently felt that House did not accurately portray their pet doctrine or church. I'm guessing that in a chart book like this, the author will never be able to please every single reader. What I like about this is that the material is simple to understand, and in just a few pages, House adequately summarizes a doctrine and the views Christians have on it. For instance, if you wanted to better understand the issue of Calvinism vs. Arminianism, House gives views from both camps. He doesn't tell you what to believe. Certainly if you rest on one side, you might feel like he "missed" important points that could have been made. But this chart book was not meant to be an exhaustive resource that would relieve you of further research on your own. The author merely meant this to be a starting place, to better understand the various views. Maybe this will help a person better sort through an issue and to come to a conclusion about which view is the most biblical and therefore accurate. I have used these charts in explaining different doctrines (i.e. the Trinity). It's worthy of the investment.

Helpful and handy4
I use this book alot to help get the big picture and basic cases for various theological views. The author does a good job of presenting the views of various systems. Most of the charts have the well known related scriptures and short arguments for and against the view.

I think it could be a little better if it had a detailed subject index in the back, but the table of contents is sufficient. It helps if the reader is familiar with the structure and topics of a systematic theology (prolegomena through eschatology). However, this is not the book for an depth study of any particular doctrine. It just helps you get the overall structure quickly. This is a good reference for the intermediate or early theology student. It's probably too terse for a true newcomer to theological studies but could be helpful soon after a little systematic study. This is not a criticism just something to be aware of before you purchase. It's a book of charts not detailed explanations.

For more meat get the Moody Handbook of Theology, by Pentecost, it's an excellent theology summary/introduction. It originated and explains some of the best charts in this chart book. One other thing - this chart book does not describe various church denominational teachings/differences at all. For that see Handbook of Denominations in the United States, by Mead.

A good basic book of charts. . .3
. . .which, like the others in the series, will not please everyone, but provide a decent "starting point" for the interested student (primarily Protestant) in learning some of the most basic issues surrounding various theological topics.

It is also useful as a quick reference tool for explaining various theological positions in a "bare bones" or "introductory" fashion.

I own most of this seriee, and have found them helpful for what they are intended to be, but not without flaws.