The Identity and Attributes of God

Category

Weight 0.62 kg
Dimensions 22.3 × 14.5 × 2.9 cm
ISBN 9781848718548
The Author

Johnson, Terry

Binding

Cloth-bound, eBook (ePub & Kindle), Cloth-bound & eBook (ePub & Kindle)

format

Book

page-count

424

Original Pub Date

2019

Banner Pub Date

2019

Endorsements

‘This book is both profound in its theology, lucid in its exposition, and deeply pastoral and practical in its tone and intention. Anyone wanting to dive into the doctrine of God who wants to see how classical theism connects to everyday Christian life – and what is therefore practically at stake when such theology is abandoned – should read this book.’ — CARL TRUEMAN

Book Description

The problem identified by the prophet Hosea in his day is still with us today — ‘There is no. . .knowledge of God in the land’ (Hos. 4:1). We were made to know God. We were saved to know God. Jesus said, ‘This is eternal life that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent’ (John 17:3).

Our chief end and purpose is to know God and thereby to honour and enjoy him. These pages explore God’s identity. The God who is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is also Creator, Governor, and Redeemer. This one true God is infinitely and unchangingly holy, just, good, and loving. This work is offered with the hope that it might promote the true knowledge of the true God. As Matthew Henry said, ‘To know the perfections of the divine nature, the unsearchable riches of divine grace, to be led into the mystery of our redemption and reconciliation by Christ, this is food; such knowledge as this is a feast to the soul.’

‘It has been said by someone that “the proper study of mankind is man”. I will not oppose the idea, but I believe it is equally true that the proper study of God’s elect is God; the proper study of a Christian is the Godhead. The highest science, the loftiest speculation, the mightiest philosophy, which can ever engage the attention of a child of God, is the name, the nature, the person, the work, the doings, and the existence of the great God whom he calls his Father… I know nothing which can so comfort the soul; so calm the swelling billows of sorrow and grief; so speak peace to the winds of trial, as a devout musing upon the subject of the Godhead.’

— C. H. Spurgeon

Table of Contents Expand ↓

Preface ix
Introduction xi
1 The Study of God 1
2 ‘Our Triune God’ 25
3 ‘The Badges of Divinity’: The Incommunicable Attributes of God (1) 47
4 ‘The Badges of Divinity’: The Incommunicable Attributes of God (2) 61
5 ‘Our Creator God’ 87
6 ‘Our Governor and Preserver’: The Providence of God 113
7 ‘The Attribute of Attributes’: The Holiness of God 143
8 God’s Holiness and Ours 165
9 ‘The Engines of Divine Dignity’: The Justice and Righteousness of God 185
10 Just and Justifier: Righteousness Satisfied and Conferred 213
11 ‘The Captain Attribute’: The Goodness of God 237
12 God’s Victorious Goodness 257
13 The Love of God 283
14 God’s Transforming Love 313
15 God’s Love and Ours 333
Bibliography 355
Index of Scripture References 369
General Index 395

Review

1 testimonial for The Identity and Attributes of God

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  1. Ben House

    Every pastor, teacher, and serious Christian should have a healthy dose of Puritan theology. Over and over again, I have heard it: Read the Puritans. Whole volumes have been written on the value of the Puritans.
    But there is a problem. It is not as though someone said to read the works of this author or that one. But the call is to read “the Puritans.” The Puritans of England, along with some of their heirs who paddled over the pond to New England, were among the more prolific, and sometimes wordy, writers that ever lived. Sometimes their styles are dense, archaic, and too formal for easy reading. But sometimes they are clear, crisp, and as pointed as a sharp knife. But still there is the immensity of the task of even plodding through particular volumes, much less through whole sets, of Puritan works.
    I suspect that there are more Puritan writings available today than at any time in history. One of the main publishers of Puritan works has been the Banner of Truth Trust.

    The relentless accumulation of Puritan tomes doesn’t really solve the problem, however, of the immensity of the task of reading the Puritans. For that reason, I want to strongly recommend The Identity and Attributes of God by Terry L. Johnson. Yes, this is a Banner of Truth book.
    Terry L. Johnson has read, gleaned, and cherry picked the Puritans with great skill. This book of nearly 400 pages would be cut in half if all of his fine quotes from Puritans and their fellow travelers were cut out. This book is a primer on what Puritans to read, which volumes to peruse, and what method to use to get the Puritans’ thoughts into your own heart and mind first and then into your preaching and teaching. Names like Charnock, Sibbes, Trapp, Henry, Owen, Edwards, Poole, Bunyan, Watson, Gurnall, and Baxter become household names after just going a few chapters into the book. Add to that, you get a number of other great Christian writers such as Charles Hodge, Benjamin Warfield, A. W. Pink, James Henley Thornwell, and more. Learning begins with lists and recognition skills. I promise that if someone were to read this book and then pick a book every month by almost any of the authors quoted, he would have years of good reading choices.
    All this being said, Johnson did not write primarily to introduce us to Puritans and other theological writers. They are only eligible for being the supporting cast for this book. The key theme, purpose, goal, and objective for the reader is to know God.

    It might seem like God is the Big E on the eye vision chart. We might think that the pressing need in the church is to focus on family, marriage, the current cultural challenges, witnessing and evangelism, and many more practical things. Of what practical use is hearing about the incommunicable attributes of God? This entire book seeks to answer that question. A case can be made that all of the practical needs in the church, all of the cultural problems, and all of the defects in our theology stem from inaccurate, inadequate, and unbiblical views of God.
    Pastor Johnson, who ministers in the Independent Presbyterian Church in Savannah, Georgia, originally set out to preach ten sermons on the attributes of God. It didn’t turn out that way, for he ended up preaching 82 sermons in that series. This book is the distillation of that series. Whether one reads for devotional purposes, or desires to delve into theology, or seeks to find material for preaching and teaching, this book is a gem.
    On the cover of a 1971 album, the rock group Jethro Tull described modern folks saying, “In the beginning man created God in his own image.” This is not too far from a statement by Karl Barth: “I said concerning critical reflection that it cannot be good to reverse the order and turn ‘Thus says the Lord’ into ‘Thus hears man’….” I have been convicted in paragraph after paragraph of this book that I may know God and be known of God, but I have taken the name, identity, and attributes of God far too lightly.
    I highly recommend this book. Thanks to Banner of Truth for publishing it and to Pastor Terry Johnson for laboring to write and share it.

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