Book Reviews -- By: Anonymous

Journal: Journal of the Grace Evangelical Society
Volume: JOTGES 23:44 (Spring 2010)
Article: Book Reviews
Author: Anonymous


Book Reviews

Back to Faith: Reclaiming Gospel Clarity in an Age of Incongruence. By Fred R. Lybrand. NP: Xulon Press, 2009. 297 pp. Paper, $18.99.

Seven of the eight chapters have the words the cliché in them. The cliché in question, attributed to John Calvin, is stated in the preface and the start of Chap. 1 as well: “It is therefore faith alone which justifies, and yet the faith which justifies is not alone” (pp. ix, 3). Thus the question being considered in light of Calvin’s famous dictum is this: does faith guarantee works?

The word cliché might be seen by some to be a bit negative. Possibly a word like dictum would have been a better choice.

The chapter titles, as well as the title and subtitle of the entire book, fail to clarify what each is about and fail to draw the reader in.

The title would have been better if it incorporated the message of the cliché/dictum in some way. Here is one option: The Faith that Saves Is Indeed Alone: Good Works Are Neither a Proof Nor Condition of Eternal Life. Another possible title and subtitle would be: Faith Alone Saves in Spite of What Theologians Are Saying: Calvin’s Famous Dictum Reconsidered.

One of the most powerful chapters was Chap. 2: “The Cliché is Logically Invalid.” Lybrand shows how this seemingly sound saying is actually logically impossible. Salvation cannot be by faith alone and yet not by faith alone. It is either by faith alone or it is not by faith alone.

In this chapter the author introduces something called a “causal array.” It is a box with two potentially related items (like good parents and good children) and then a series of plusses and minuses. While some of these are fairly easy to figure out, I think it would have been more

reader friendly to simply state the point without the boxes and symbols (and in some cases shading too). Once these boxes arrived, the discussion seemed more esoteric.

The next chapter, Chap. 3, is entitled, “The Cliché is Theologically Invalid.” It is a bit brief, but helpful. The author does a good job of showing how Calvin and others end up contradicting themselves when discussing texts like James 2.

Chapter 4 shows how the dictum is exegetically flawed by examining Jas 2:14-26. The discussion is very good. Evidently Lybrand chose to limit his discussion to this one passage in this chapter so as to keep its length down. Yet in Chap. 6 he continues the discussion by looking at a number of other texts. It might have been wise to short...

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