"With an intended audience of Christian ministers (ordained or lay, and seminary students), this book seeks to serve the church in its 'mission of communicating the good news of Christ's atoning work to the world....[Sherman] has written a very clear and thoughtful exposition of a classically Reformed understanding of Christ's work and the Trinity. I strongly recommend this book for seminary, college, and adult education classes."-Louis Malcom, Theology Today, January 2006
“With an intended audience of Christian ministers (ordained or lay, and seminary students), this book seeks to serve the church in its 'mission of communicating the good news of Christ’s atoning work to the world.…[Sherman] has written a very clear and thoughtful exposition of a classically Reformed understanding of Christ’s work and the Trinity. I strongly recommend this book for seminary, college, and adult education classes.”-Louis Malcom, Theology Today, January 2006
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good book on the atonement,
This review is from: King, Priest, and Prophet: A Trinitarian Theology of Atonement (Theology For The 21St Century) (Paperback)
If you're a theological student wanting a pretty informative book on the atonement than this book should be very helpful. Though Sherman comes from the postliberal school of thought he is quite Reformed and traditional on how he approaches the atonement. Readers will also appreciate Sherman's heavy reliance on Scripture to defend his viewpoint rather than giving into modern ideaologies and fads. In fact, one can say that Sherman has a very high view of Scripture compared to others who belong in his school of thought.
Another positive aspect of the book is that it is not exclusively academic. It is meant to aid pastors on how to preach the atonement in a faithful manner to believers. It seems that preaching the atonement - whether in liberal or conservative churches - is not a high priority these days. Hopefully, this book will dismiss the ridiculous idea that atonement theology and the life of the church are not integrally related. Sherman's work revolves around the three offices of Christ: king, priest, and prophet. He devotes a chapter to each of these offices and explains why all the offices of Christ cannot be disconnected from each other. He also explains, related to the above point, that all the members of the Trinity are involved in Christ's work. This corrects the common belief among Christians that only Christ is involved in the atonement. As a result of this, the atonement, according to Sherman, cannot be tied down to one single view. In fact, due to the Trinitarian nature of the atonement, all the major views of the atonement in church history (Christus Victor, Abelardian, and Anselmian) are valid. In this sense, Christ's kingship involves the victory over the powers of sin and death, Christ's priestly role as involved in the penal satisfaction for humanity's sin, and Christ's prophetic role as involved in the transformation of believers from the old life to the new. One may not agree with Sherman's eclectic model of the atonement (as this reviewer does) but he does make an almost convincing case for it (traditionalists will also appreciate Sherman's defense of Anselm [pp. 188-192] considering that Anselm has been a target of ridicule among many modern Christians). Considering the amount of nonsense that is being published on the atonement these days it is refreshing to see a work like Sherman's. When one reads the pages one will recognize that Sherman's priorities lie with God's kingdom, the gospel, the church, and individual Christians. He is not some liberal, marxist, socialist, radical that wants to deconstruct the Christian tradition so that pagans, disgruntled immoralists, and anti-Christian philosophers will feel all nice and cuddly. This work makes no compromises with modern ideas and values. Though there are points where traditionalists will disagree with, it is still a work that is nonetheless useful for the church and academia.
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