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Evangelical Dictionary of Theology
 
 

Evangelical Dictionary of Theology [Hardcover]

Walter A. Elwell
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Book Description

Fifteen years after its original publication comes a thoroughly revised edition of the Evangelical Dictionary of Theology. Every article from the original edition has been revisited. With some articles being removed, others revised, and many new articles added, the result is a completely new dictionary covering systematic, historical, and philosophical theology as well as theological ethics.

From the Back Cover

A PROVEN REFERENCE TOOL

Theologians, pastors, lay readers, and students have relied on the Evangelical Dictionary of Theology as a valued resource for over fifteen years. Now, thoroughly updated, this leading reference work continues to provide comprehensive, useful, and accurate information in systematic, historical, and philosophical theology as well as theological ethics.

Reviews of the first edition:

"Provides for the first time a full and balanced overview of evangelical theology." -Library Journal

"EDT is a work of responsible evangelical scholarship, judicious, and generally fair to all sides. It has no ax to grind, though it does have a position to present. And happily, this it does with an acceptable confidence." -Christianity Today

"A first-class piece of evangelical scholarship . . . [it] deserves a place in the library of every evangelical pastor, scholar, and local church." - Trinity Journal

"The definitive theological dictionary from an evangelical standpoint. . . . Here is a reference tool that ought without question to be on the shelf of every university student, seminarian, and Christian worker." -Themelios

"This is a book that all who are concerned about Christian ministry, whether on a professional or a lay level, would do well to have." -Robert H. Culpepper, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary

"A prodigious and significant work." -Review and Expositor

Walter A. Elwell (Ph.D., University of Edinburgh) is professor of Bible and theology at Wheaton College Graduate School. He is the editor of numerous reference works and the coauthor of Encountering the New Testament.


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5.0 out of 5 stars A Standard Primer for Theology, May 8 2003
By 
Jacob Aitken (Pineville, LA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Evangelical Dictionary of Theology (Hardcover)
I found this to be a useful, standard, objective primer for theological studies. The contributors, all brilliant scholars, were very fair to the opposing view, adequatley describing thier position and only rarely critiquing it.

I found this to be a fresh evangelical approach to the Neo-Orthodoxy that I am exposed to daily. I recommend the second edition which has been updated to include modern scholars as Packer and Lloyd-Jones.

Final Analysis
The qualities of this work are its objectivity, freshness (without being preachy), and its broad expanse of topics. The downside would be its tendency for being wordy and laborious on some issues. Do not let this prevent you from buying it, just be forewarned. All in all, a handy tool.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.6 out of 5 stars (25 customer reviews)

23 of 23 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Monumental Work!, Aug 3 1999
By Rev. Cory L. Seibel - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Evangelical Dictionary of Theology (Hardcover)
Here is a book that should be found in the library of every evangelical theologian, theology student, and pastor today. Without question, this is one of the most thorough and complete one-volume dictionaries of theology presently available--all of this from an evangelical perspective!! The international cast of contributors (predominantly from North America, Australia, and the UK), under the editorial supervision of Dr. Elwell of Wheaton College, have assembled a remarkable wealth of information. The theologically-inquisitive will find within this volume a fairly substantial summary of almost any theological issue that one might wish to investigate (and several that one might never even think to investigate). Multitudinous articles, appearing in alphabetical order, provide summaries of events, movements, issues and concepts, personalities, terminology, etc. that have in some way contributed to the shape of Christian theology. Even the "insignificant" things are included. In addition, the brief bibliographies that appear at the end of each article provide the reader with some idea of where to turn for further inquiry. One of the greatest strengths of this volume is that, while decidedly evangelical in perspective, its content is not narrowly dogmatic in orientation. Its contributors reflect a diversity of theological persuasions and convictions. However, in this day in which "globalization" has become a very real and important influence on the scope of evangelical theology, one criticism of this text is that it is largely Western in its orientation. There are few contributors from non-Western nations. While this is not a surprising feature in a book published in 1984, a time when the theological voices of evangelicals in Africa, Asia, and Latin America had yet to be heard as valid and equal, a revision of this text would certainly be strengthened if it were to be more balanced in its cultural orientation. Perhaps this dictionary's greatest attribute is the roster of renowned contemporary scholars who are numbered among its contributors. There are few places where men such as Donald Bloesch, Colin Brown, Geoffrey Bromiley, F.F. Bruce, D. A. Carson, Millard Erickson, Carl F.H. Henry, George Ladd, Mark Noll, J.I. Packer, Charles Ryrie, and Peter Toon gather together to provide theological instruction. Between the hard-back covers of this dictionary is found one such place. The Evangelical Dictionary of Theology--A Uniuqie Experience, A Monumental Work!

15 of 15 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars My most used reference book in graduate seminary and in research for teaching/counseling, Jun 11 2006
By David C. Leaumont "Dave" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Evangelical Dictionary of Theology (Hardcover)
Other than Scripture, this is the book most often pulled off my shelf and referred to in my studies. This is not to be confused with the Baker Theological Dictionary, which is a slightly condensed version of EDT.

Dr Elwell is a respectable conservative evangelical scholar who has produced many scholarly and lay writings centering on dictionary/encyclopedic collections of theological/Scriptural information. He is a professor of biblical studies and theology at Wheaton College Graduate School.

The book covers a plethora of topics from orthodox Scriptural ideas set forth by theologians, synopses of Scripture's teachings on topics, heresies and author/theologian biographies. The writings span from 1/2 page to 4 pages with most articles dealing very well with topics from a conservative Scriptural standpoint. A leader of that field's specialist writes each article, with well over 300 different authors providing insights on topics. Each article gives a brief bibliography, and cross-reference to related topics. Most of the longer topics spanning multiple pages offer a summary at the end, for those not interested in in-depth study of all aspects of a topic.

Some topics of interest mentioned under "A" (2 columns per page):

Abortion (7 columns of writing)

Altar (3 1/2 columns)

Anabaptism (5 columns)

Angel of the Lord (1 column)

Annihilationism (1 3/4 columns)

Antichrist (3 1/2 columns)

Antinomianism (2 1/2 columns)

Apocalyptic (7 columns)

Apocrypha (OT and NT) (3 1/2 columns)

Apologetics (6 columns)

Apostasy (1 column)

Aristotle (6 columns)

Arius/Arianism (3 columns)

Arminianism (4 columns)

Ash Wednesday (1/2 column)

Atonement, Theories of (6 columns)

Augustine of Hippo (5 columns)

As you can see from the above, there are practical theologies discussed as well as scholarly topics. Overall, the book does a superb job of providing easily accessible information, but a negative of the book is that it lacks consistency in quality since there are so many contributors. Some topics are weaker in writing. For instance, biblical theology is never defined, but talked around in the discussion by G. Hasel, which takes up 6 columns of writing.

Overall, as I said, this is the most often used source in my ever-growing theological library. Regardless of the topic I am studying or writing about, I can find significant and helpful information in this text. It was a superb addition, and required text for my systematic theology course in graduate seminary.

14 of 15 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Standard Primer for Theology, May 8 2003
By Jacob Aitken - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Evangelical Dictionary of Theology (Hardcover)
I found this to be a useful, standard, objective primer for theological studies. The contributors, all brilliant scholars, were very fair to the opposing view, adequatley describing thier position and only rarely critiquing it.

I found this to be a fresh evangelical approach to the Neo-Orthodoxy that I am exposed to daily. I recommend the second edition which has been updated to include modern scholars as Packer and Lloyd-Jones.

Final Analysis
The qualities of this work are its objectivity, freshness (without being preachy), and its broad expanse of topics. The downside would be its tendency for being wordy and laborious on some issues. Do not let this prevent you from buying it, just be forewarned. All in all, a handy tool.

 Go to Amazon.com to see all 25 reviews  4.6 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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