“HOW FIRM A FOUNDATION” AND THE WESTMINSTER CONFESSION OF FAITH

by K. Scott Oliphint in Vol. 5 No. 2 / Oct 2019

DOI: https://doi.org/10.35285/ucc5.2.2019.art5



The Protestant and Reformed view of Scripture over against the Roman Catholic view is that Scripture attests its own authority. This view does not, however, mean that there are no arguments available that point to Scripture’s self-attesting authority. The Westminster Confession of Faith affirms in chapter 1, section 4, that Scripture is its own foundation, then in the following section gives a helpful list of arguments that provide useful indications of Scripture’s divine authority. These arguments are reviewed and explained in the following presentation.

Download PDF Downloaded 282 times.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.


Back to Article List Download Journal

Other Articles in
Vol. 5 No. 2 / Oct 2019

Editorial: Christ’s Fourfold Declaration of Authority by Eric Kayayan
Interpersonal Forgiveness as a Gospel Standard by Douwe J. Steensma
Islam and Women by Christine Schirrmacher
Healing the Wounds of Trauma and Abuse by Diane Langberg
Women, Sex, and a Question of Double Standards by Kathleen Nielson
“How Firm a Foundation” and the Westminster Confession of Faith by K. Scott Oliphint
Beza’s Pastoral Calling: Combat, Encouragement, and Duty by Ottavio Palombaro
The Value of Marshall’s Gospel Mystery of Sanctification by T. Michael Christ
On Earth: Relational Anthropocentricism in Creation Care by Alessandro Piccirillo
The Relevance of Calvin’s View of Work and Calling to Christians in Newly Industrialized Countries by Matthew Ebenezer
Corruption, Bribery, African Concepts of God, and the Gospel by PHILLIPUS J. (FLIP) BUYS
Reformed Business Ethics—A New Approach to How Organizations Can Flourish by Christopher Steed
Interview with Christopher Yuan by Peter A. Lillback
Alan Jacobs. The Year of our Lord 1943: Christian Humanism in an Age of Crisis by William Edgar
Elizabeth Agnew Cochran. Protestant Virtue and Stoic Ethics by David Hunsicker
Frances Luttikuizen. Underground Protestantism in Sixteenth Century Spain: A Much Ignored Side of Spanish History by Daniel Vogel
Herman Bavinck. Reformed Ethics: Created, Fallen, and Converted Humanity by Cory C. Brock
John Murray’s Principles of Conduct—Some Personal Reflections by Sinclair Ferguson