Please click on the link to read Justus Hunter’s review of the Wesley One Volume Commentary (Kenneth Collins and Robert Wall, ed.), available online from Good News: Justus Hunter, “John Wesley For Our Day”

, posted by AndrewH
Please click on the link to read Justus Hunter’s review of the Wesley One Volume Commentary (Kenneth Collins and Robert Wall, ed.), available online from Good News: Justus Hunter, “John Wesley For Our Day”
, posted by Remonstrance
If you cannot see the player above follow this link: Systematic (Part 1) If you cannot see the player above follow this link: Systematic (Part 2) This is a lecture by Dr. Kenneth J. Collins…
, posted by SEA
Please click on the link to access Kenneth Collins’ Sermon: “Roman Catholicism and Protestantism: What’s Still at Stake 500 Years After the Reformation”. The message was given at the Chapel at Estes on Wednesday, November 1,…
, posted by SEA
Please click on the link to view Fred Sanders, “Who Is Truly Catholic?” (A Book Review of Kenneth Collins and Jerry Walls, Roman but Not Catholic: What Remains at Stake 500 Years after the Reformation).
, posted by Remonstrance
There have been quite a few articles written recently concerning Next Methodism and what it might look like. As I have read through these articles and reflected on them the burning conviction I bring to…
, posted by Remonstrance
As the 500th Anniversary of the Protestant Reformation approaches there is still a need for reform in many traditions of Protestantism. But perhaps there is no Protestant tradition that is in greater need of reform than…
, posted by Remonstrance
If you can’t see the player above follow this link to the episode: Remonstrance Minisode 10 This episode is a call to study Wesleyan Theology in a systematic way. As Fred Sanders points out, the Wesleyan-Arminian…
, posted by Kevin Jackson
A HERMENEUTICAL MODEL FOR THE WESLEYAN ORDO SALUTIS
From the Wesleyan Theological Journal
Kenneth Collins
I. Introduction
It comes as a surprise to learn that in this age of ecumenism, John Wesley’s theology has rarely been explored beyond Methodist circles. Indeed, while significant dialogue has occurred among Lutheran, Calvinist and Roman Catholic traditions,1 Wesley’s voice has seldom been heard in such settings. Why has this been so?
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