John Arrowsmith 'Plans for Holy War'

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Stephen L Smith

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I was thinking of purchasing this book for my own spiritual edification. I recently saw this comment by Rich.

I've been listening to a recent translation into English of John Arrowsmith's Plans for Holy War
https://www.heritagebooks.org/products/plans-for-holy-war-arrowsmith.html He has to take on Roman Catholics, Enthusiasts, Socinians, and others. He defends Protestant and Presbyterian/Reformed convictions even as he demonstrates the folly of each school. This means that, for Roman Catholics, he has to use the matured doctrines on the nature of Scripture itself to bolster confidence in it as well as deal with the absurd ideas and superstitions that the Roman catholic Church surrounds itself with to merely assert its own authority to settle matters.
For those who have read it, what did you think of it. How does it compare to Gurnall's work?
 
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I imagine because it's new to the market no one has read it yet?

The ToC and the description of an "attempt to blend polemical and pastoral theology" make it look particularly interesting.

I'll get back to you when I finish Gurnall, then John Downame and William Gouge!
 
I don't suppose you have listened to any of the promotional interviews with Chad Van Dixhoorn and David Noe?
Reformed Forum did one, in which Van Dixhoorn suggest it might be the most interesting Puritan work he has ever read. They discuss the content more in the second half of the interview.
 
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I highly recommend it. Though I may be biased as the publisher, plus the translator is a dear friend and my pastor. lol.

To be transparent, I have just recently started to read it, so I can only relay minimal details from experience. Arrowsmith's style is unlike anything I have read form this era. I do know that David is very selective on translation work he takes it. He must feel like it is a special treatise that brings immense value to the modern church.
 
I don't suppose you have listened to any of the promotional interviews with Chad Van Dixhoorn and David Noe?
Reformed Forum did one, in which Van Dixhoorn suggest it might be the most interesting Puritan work he has ever read. They discuss the content more in the second half of the interview.
Yes I have. I really appreciated this interview.
 
Can you expand? Are you saying you prefer the approach taken by Gurnall.
Arrowsmith's Plans for Holy War is written to English Academics (as far as I understand from his own words). As a result, some of the concerns he will express concern for will be unique and historically particular (especially his "Three Orations against Weigelianism"). So far, he has some good observations and illustrations here and there but nothing that is in the same style or field of devotionally rich material as Gurnall and Gouge.
 
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