A Journey in Grace by Richard P. Belcher
This book was a whole lot better than expected. It is an exposition of the five points of Calvinism is the form of a novel. The narrator is a seminary student who is introduced to Calvinism while starting to pastor a church and also courting a girl. The book is intentionally didactic, but a lot less cheesy than one might fear. In fact, it is one of the most readable introductions to Calvinism I have come across.
Of course, there is much more to Calvinism than just the five points, but the book does touch, albeit tangentially, on the doctrines of Scripture and the Church. Besides, this is just the first volume in a series of more than a dozen books. I should also point out that the book is written in a decidedly Baptist context - by a Baptist and for Baptists.
Anyway, if any reader is wondering what the five points of Calvinism actually are, I will quote a post I wrote on the subject on my old blog:
T stands for Total Depravity which says that before I got saved I
was a helpless sinner who couldn't lift a finger for his own salvation.
U
stands for Unconditional Election, which says that God chose me before
the creation of the world, not because of any inherent goodness I had,
not because he foresaw that I would believe, but simply because he loved
me.
L stands for Limited Atonement which says that Christ died
to pay for my sins, and he really did pay for them fully and completely.
He didn't just make it possible for me to be saved, he actually saved
me.
I stands for Irresistible Grace which says that the Holy
Spirit is completely powerful and that he was strong enough to overcome
my sin and my unbelief.
P stands for Perseverance of the Saints,
which says that I can't lose my salvation because God will protect me
and prevent me from denying him.
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