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Essays on the Doctrine of Inspiration

Essays on the Doctrine of Inspiration

B.B. Warfield
5/5 ( ratings)
Thank you for choosing CrossReach Publications!




Our promises:



Our goal is to bring you high quality Christian publications at reasonable and affordable prices. Therefore all of our works are complete and unabridged unless specifically stated otherwise, which means that unlike some other independent publications you get what you see and pay for. No unpleasant surprises.

We endeavour to bring you updated editions of classic works. Therefore this work is not a scan, but is a completely digitized version of the original.

Unlike, many other independently published works, our publications are easy to read. Therefore you won't find illegible, faded, poor quality photocopies here. Neither will you find poorly done OCR versions of those faded scans either, with illegible “words” that contain all kinds of strange characters like £, %, &, etc. Our publications have all been looked over and corrected by the human eye.

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The word “inspire” and its derivatives seem to have come into Middle English from the French, and have been employed from the first in a considerable number of significations, physical and metaphorical, secular and religious. The derivatives have been multiplied and their applications extended during the procession of the years, until they have acquired a very wide and varied use. Underlying all their use, however, is the constant implication of an influence from without, producing in its object movements and effects beyond its native, or at least its ordinary powers. The noun “inspiration,” although already in use in the 14th century, seems not to occur in any but a theological sense until late in the 16th century. The specifically theological sense of all these terms is governed, of course, by their usage in Latin theology; and this rests ultimately on their employment in the Latin Bible. In the Vulgate Latin Bible the verb inspiro and the noun inspiratio both occur 4 or 5 times in somewhat diverse applications. In the development of a theological nomenclature, however, they have acquired a technical sense with reference to the Biblical writers or the Biblical books. The Biblical books are called inspired as the Divinely determined products of inspired men; the Biblical writers are called inspired as breathed into by the Holy Spirit, so that the product of their activities transcends human powers and becomes Divinely authoritative. Inspiration is, therefore, usually defined as a supernatural influence exerted on the sacred writers by the Spirit of God, by virtue of which their writings are given Divine trustworthiness.
Pages
106
Format
Kindle Edition
Publisher
CrossReach Publications
Release
January 23, 2018

Essays on the Doctrine of Inspiration

B.B. Warfield
5/5 ( ratings)
Thank you for choosing CrossReach Publications!




Our promises:



Our goal is to bring you high quality Christian publications at reasonable and affordable prices. Therefore all of our works are complete and unabridged unless specifically stated otherwise, which means that unlike some other independent publications you get what you see and pay for. No unpleasant surprises.

We endeavour to bring you updated editions of classic works. Therefore this work is not a scan, but is a completely digitized version of the original.

Unlike, many other independently published works, our publications are easy to read. Therefore you won't find illegible, faded, poor quality photocopies here. Neither will you find poorly done OCR versions of those faded scans either, with illegible “words” that contain all kinds of strange characters like £, %, &, etc. Our publications have all been looked over and corrected by the human eye.

We can't promise perfection, but we're sure gonna try!

If you have any problems or just want to get in touch then drop us an email: [email protected]
The word “inspire” and its derivatives seem to have come into Middle English from the French, and have been employed from the first in a considerable number of significations, physical and metaphorical, secular and religious. The derivatives have been multiplied and their applications extended during the procession of the years, until they have acquired a very wide and varied use. Underlying all their use, however, is the constant implication of an influence from without, producing in its object movements and effects beyond its native, or at least its ordinary powers. The noun “inspiration,” although already in use in the 14th century, seems not to occur in any but a theological sense until late in the 16th century. The specifically theological sense of all these terms is governed, of course, by their usage in Latin theology; and this rests ultimately on their employment in the Latin Bible. In the Vulgate Latin Bible the verb inspiro and the noun inspiratio both occur 4 or 5 times in somewhat diverse applications. In the development of a theological nomenclature, however, they have acquired a technical sense with reference to the Biblical writers or the Biblical books. The Biblical books are called inspired as the Divinely determined products of inspired men; the Biblical writers are called inspired as breathed into by the Holy Spirit, so that the product of their activities transcends human powers and becomes Divinely authoritative. Inspiration is, therefore, usually defined as a supernatural influence exerted on the sacred writers by the Spirit of God, by virtue of which their writings are given Divine trustworthiness.
Pages
106
Format
Kindle Edition
Publisher
CrossReach Publications
Release
January 23, 2018

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