Digital Verbum Edition
God, Revelation and Authority by Carl Henry is one of the most important evangelical theological works of the twentieth century. Published between 1976 and 1983, it shaped the evangelical movement in countless ways and is still widely read, studied, and appreciated as a clear statement of evangelical beliefs contra liberalism and neo-orthodoxy.
What you need to know is that God, Revelation and Authority is a key resource for understanding, teaching and defending many doctrines central to evangelicalism, including biblical inerrancy. It's no accident that the list of endorsers for these books reads like a Who's Who of evangelical Christianity.
If you want to have a better grasp of evangelical theology and its formation, there's no better place to begin than God, Revelation and Authority.
Carl F. H. Henry was a central religious figure of the 20th century. In a 2004 article, Christianity Today stated that Carl Henry, along with Billy Graham and Boston pastor Harold John Ockenga, "practically invented what later became known as evangelicalism." He also helped found and served as the first editor for Christianity Today.
God, Revelation and Authority is Henry's magnum opus. It contains the developed ideas of this prominent thinker on topics that include infallibility and inerrancy, divine revelation in nature, historical criticism, the Holy Spirit, the Church, and biblical history. It also includes the "Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy" which for many years within evangelical circles has been an authoritative declaration regarding inerrancy.
Later in life, Carl Henry spent a great deal of time considering the related concepts of religious knowledge and the doctrine of God. He concluded that, "if we humans say anything authentic about God, we can do so only on the basis of divine self-revelation; all other God-talk is conjectural." This basic premise underlies the entirety of God, Revelation and Authority.
As you read God, Revelation and Authority you will see how many of the ideas in these six volumes have been enormously influential in shaping the beliefs and "distinctives" shared by evangelicals all over the world.
“Dietrich Bonhoeffer points to modern man’s relegation of God to irrelevance; God is ‘increasingly edged out of the world.’ Now that moderns have presumably ‘come of age,’ both ‘knowledge and life are thought to be perfectly possible without him’ (Letters and Papers from Prison, p. 114).” (Volume 4, Pages 8–9)
“2. Human reason is a divinely fashioned instrument for recognizing truth; it is not a creative source of truth.” (Volume 1, Page 225)
“To say that myth relates to what is not historically factual and not literally true assumes a category of representation that can be applied to the scriptural revelation only by destroying its essential claims.” (Volume 1, Page 46)
“4. The very fact of disclosure by the one living God assures the comprehensive unity of divine revelation.” (Volume 2, Page 9)
“Nineteenth-century romanticists—F. H. Jacobi (1743–1819), Friedrich von Schelling (1775–1854), and Friedrich Schleiermacher—contended that contact with ultimate reality is to be made not intellectually or conceptually but intuitionally, mystically, immediately. The Absolute is to be felt, not conceived. As a result, these men wrote not of God as the Religious Object, but of their own religious sentiments. Schleiermacher, founder of Protestant liberalism, in effect substituted the psychology of religious experience for theology, or the science of God.” (Volume 1, Page 72)
The most important work of evangelical theology in modern times.
—Kenneth Briggs, New York Times
Establishes Henry as the leading theologian of the nation's evangelical flank.
—Richard Ostling, Time Magazine
A must for every Christian leader.
—Reverend Billy Graham
This great six-volume work confronts the confusion of our age with a clear affirmation and brilliant defense of the Christian faith.
—R. Albert Mohler, Jr., President, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
Carl Henry's keen insights as expressed in God, Revelation and Authority are sorely needed.
—R.C. Sproul, Ligonier Ministries
These volumes are a landmark work, fully biblical, intellectually coherent, powerfully persuasive, and genuinely spiritual.
—David F. Wells, Academic Dean, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary—Charlotte
A sure-footed guide to a great many aspects of evangelical theology.
—D. A. Carson, Research Professor of New Testament, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
God, Revelation and Authority is a biblically faithful rock in the twentieth-century sea of theological experimentation.
—John Piper, Senior Pastor, Bethlehem Bapist Church, Minneapolis
Dr. Henry's God, Revelation and Authority should be on every evangelical pastor's shelf. I recommend it to the upcoming generation of serious, thinking Christians.
—James Montgomery Boice, Senior Minister, Tenth Presbyterian Church, Philadephia
Carl F. H. Henry brings an incredible marriage of scholarship, conviction, and application to the matter of spiritual authority. I am happy to commend this significant work.
—Adrian Rogers, Senior Pastor, Bellevue Baptist Church, Memphis
Henry's six-volume work, God, Revelation, and Authority (1976-1983), his magum opus, covers most of the topics of systematic theology and also delves deeply into philosophical theology, ethics, and contemporary culture. ...Reading the first four of these volumes in 1981 (the final two volumes were released in 1983) in preparation for an intensive summer class on contemporary theology with Carl Henry was one of the highlights of my education; and it has served as a significant foundation for my Christian worldview.
—Douglas Groothuis, Ph.D. (Read the full article in Denver Journal)
...God, Revelation, and Authority is a work of the first magnitude. Here is the most thorough exposition of evangelical orthodoxy in our time. As befits this tradition, questions are raised about theological adventurism that must be faced by all who affirm biblical authority and classical faith.
—read the entire review from Theology Today
"Carl Ferdinand Howard Henry was born on January 22, 1913, in New York City, the son of German immigrant parents. He died on December 7, 2003, in Watertown, Wisconsin, with Helga, his beloved wife of 63 years, at his side. In the 90 years that intervened between these two events, Henry cut a wide and deep swath across the landscape of American Christianity and the world evangelical movement. Indeed, along with his Wheaton College classmate, Billy Graham, and distinguished Boston pastor Harold John Ockenga, Henry practically invented what later became known as evangelicalism."
"The abiding validity of Henry's theology stems from the hope that is at the heart of true Christian faith. He knew that despite storms without and fears within, all of the biblical realities remain in place. God's promises have not been nullified, and a life transformed by the dynamic of the Gospel of Christ is as powerful as ever."
"Beyond all of his accomplishments, two things about Carl Henry stand out in my mind. On his last visit to Beeson Divinity School, he spoke in chapel about his conversion to Christ. He never got over the sheer wonder and joy of having been chosen and rescued by God's surprising grace. He knew what it meant to be born again. The other thing that stands out was his extraordinary humility and kindness toward others. His commitment to the orthodox Christian faith was solid as a rock, but I never heard him speak in a bitter or disparaging way about anybody, not even those with whom he disagreed."
7 ratings
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