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JBTM Book Reviews<br />

116<br />

This early church practice of infant baptism, which has been rejected for almost five centuries<br />

by those who affirm believer’s baptism, was practiced by the early church to forgive the<br />

inheritance from Adam. In chapter 5, Robert Kolb surveys the Lutheran doctrine of original<br />

sin, beginning with Martin Luther and including the contributions of Melanchthon, the<br />

Formula of Concord, Chemnitz, Hütter, Gerhard, and Spener.<br />

In chapter 6, “Original Sin in Reformed Theology,” Donald Macleod presents three key<br />

elements: Adam’s freedom to fall, the covenant of works, and the withholding of restraining<br />

grace. Macleod’s explanation of these elements, however, faces some challenges. Is<br />

it consistent to call the view that Adam and Eve were endowed with “freedom of moral<br />

choice” Pelagian then explain that the solution is found in Ames’ comment, “Man of his<br />

own will freely fell from God” (130–31)? Macleod’s clarification reveals a possible inconsistency<br />

in Reformed theology’s view, “Adam’s choice was foreordained as a free act, not<br />

‘caused’ by any prior event or circumstance within the causal nexus (and, of course, the<br />

divine decree itself is not part of the causal nexus)” (136). One wonders how an act can<br />

be simultaneously foreordained and decreed, but free and uncaused. Also, Macleod cites<br />

support for the covenant of works in the Westminster Confession, although he notes the<br />

doctrine is not explicitly affirmed by Calvin, Zwingli, and Bullinger (131–33). The covenant<br />

of works, of course, is a theological inference without explicit biblical support. In the chapter,<br />

Macleod also considers humanity’s relationship to Adam, two views of imputation, and<br />

the origin of the human soul.<br />

In chapter 7, Thomas McCall surveys views of original sin in the writings of John Wesley<br />

and a host of Wesleyan theologians. The eighteenth century saw in Wesley, Watson,<br />

and Wakefield interpretations of original sin which were largely identical to the Calvinist<br />

interpreters, except for the innovations of prevenient grace and unlimited atonement. In<br />

the nineteenth century, Pope advocated a federalist view, but Summers and Miley both<br />

advocated a mediate view of imputation, which affirms inherited corruption but denies<br />

inherited guilt. Their rejection of the imputed guilt is rooted in their affirmation of moral<br />

responsibility and freedom. McCall’s essay characterizes the continued movement among<br />

twentieth-century Wesleyans away from the “classic doctrine,” a phrase used in the book<br />

to refer to the Augustinian view which later becomes the branch of Reformed theology affirming<br />

inherited guilt (the immediate view). McCall’s chapter closes with the ominous<br />

mention of the rise among Methodists of process philosophy (163). If that is the case, then<br />

those Wesleyans are moving away from the Reformed/immediate view as well as Christian<br />

orthodoxy.<br />

<strong>Part</strong> 2 concludes with a chapter by Carl Trueman, who summarizes and critiques the<br />

views of original sin of the following six modern theologians: Schleiermacher, Rauschenbusch,<br />

Barth, Bultmann, Niebuhr, and Pannenberg. All of the thinkers reject both the relevance<br />

of a historical Adam and the doctrine of alien guilt. Trueman rightly observes that<br />

“one’s understanding of original sin is necessarily and decisively connected to the structure

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