No Other Standard (e-Book)
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SKU: EBK-1037
Publisher: Inst. For Christian Economics
ISBN: 0930464567
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E-Book (PDF format), 345 pages
Subtitle: Theonomy and its Critics
About the Title: In 1959, Rousas John Rushdoony's first book appeared, By What Standard?,
a study of the philosophy of Cornelius Van Til. Van Til made it clear
that the truth of the Bible must be man's presupposition, the standard
of his reasoning, and the final court of appeal in history. He rejected
the natural law philosophy in any form. Rushdoony believed Van Til, so
he wrote Institutes of Biblical Law (1973) to demonstrate that the only standard that God provides is biblical law.
That same year, 1973, Van Til's student Greg L. Bahnsen
completed his Th.M degree at Westminster seminary, submitting a thesis
on "The Theonomic Responsibility of the Civil Magistrate." After a
delay of four years, an expanded version of his thesis appeared, Theonomy in Christian Ethics. This book was an apologetic for biblical law. So was his subsequent introductory book, By This Standard (1985).
Theonomy in Christian Ethics
received only sporadic opposition in print but continual and growing
opposition within the faculty at Westminster Seminary. In fact,
Bahnsen's book can be said to have split the faculty into three camps:
(1) the "natural law in spite of Van Til's philosophy" camp, (2) the
"not natural law, but we're not sure what to substitute" camp; and (3)
the "Proverbs 12:23" camp. The first group retains the upper hand. The
faculty (past and present) published an attempted refutation of Bahnsen
in 1990: Theonomy: A Reformed Critique, which led within a few months to responses by the theonomists: Westminster's Confession, by Gary North; Theonomy: An Informed Response, edited by Gary North; and No Other Standard.
No Other Standard is
Bahnsen's response not only to the Westminster faculty's book, but also
to the two other brief critical books against him, and to the various
published articles and typewritten, photocopied responses that have
circulated over the years. One by one, Bahnsen takes his critics'
arguments apart, showing that they have either misrepresented his
position or misrepresented the Bible. Line by line, point by point, he
shows that they have not understood his arguments and have also not
understood the vulnerability of their own logical and theological
positions.
What we have see, year after year, is that his published
critics subsequently refuse to debate him in public. Example: Meredith
Kline's sweetheart deal with the editor of the Westminster Theological Journal (W. Robert Godfrey) that Bahnsen would not be allowed to respond in the WTJ to Kline's hostile 1978 essay. Example: the refusal in 1989 of H. Wayne House (co-author of Dominion Theology: Blessing or Curse?)
to allow Bahnsen to cross-examine him during a scheduled public debate,
after House had issued a public challenge for Bahnsen to debate.
Bahnsen insisted, so House canceled the debate. Example: Norman
Geisler's refusal in 1991 to debate Bahnsen at Liberty University, and
then Geisler's appearance at an anti-theonomy symposium two days after
Bahnsen had left the campus. They all know what the result of such a
debate will be; thus, they launch hit-and-run attacks when they think
their readers and listeners will never read Bahnsen's response. Joe
Louis once said of an ill-fated scheduled opponent in the ring. "He can
run, but he can't hide." Likewise, Bahnsen's critics. No Other Standard corners them all, and one by one, floors them.
Copyright: 1991
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