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What It Means to Be Protestant

The Case for an Always-Reforming Church

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What It Means to Be Protestant

By: Gavin Ortlund
Narrated by: Mike Lenz
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About this listen

These days many evangelicals are exploring the more sacramental, liturgical, and historically conscious church traditions, including Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy. This hunger for historical rootedness is a welcome phenomenon—but unfortunately, many assume that this need can only be met outside of Protestant contexts.

In What it Means to Be Protestant, Gavin Ortlund draws from both his scholarly work in church history and his personal experience in ecumenical engagement to offer a powerful defense of the Protestant tradition. Retrieving classical Protestant texts and arguments, he exposes how many of the contemporary objections leveled against Protestants are rooted in caricature. Ultimately, he shows that historic Protestantism offers the best pathway to catholicity and historical rootedness for Christians today.

In his characteristically charitable and irenic style, Ortlund demonstrates that the 16th century Reformation represented a genuine renewal of the gospel. This does not entail that Protestantism is without faults. But because it is built upon the principle of semper reformanda (always reforming), Protestantism is capable of reforming itself according to Scripture as the ultimate authority. This scholarly and yet accessible book breaks new ground in ecumenical theology and will be a staple text in the field for many years to come.

©2024 Gavin Ortlund (P)2024 Zondervan
Christianity Tradition

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All stars
Most relevant  
Amazing resource from Gavin and done in such a fair way. I've recommended it already

Amazing Resource

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I appreciate Ortland’s direct and yet generous approach to pinpointing areas of agreement and departure between the traditions

Nuanced, expertly laid out discussion for the layman

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Gavin is a thoughtful and grace-filled voice in the Protestant-Catholic conversation. This book focuses on some of the key points of difference (but not all, so hopefully there will be a part 2 - in the meantime, his YouTube channel Truth Unites, provides in depth coverage of other topics not covered in this book). 4 stars for narration as the narrator didn’t seem familiar with the language and context, often mispronouncing names and documents but this shouldn’t put you off purchasing this title.

Protestant apologists

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With the multitude of Catholic apologists on the Internet, I understand the appeal of Catholicism. The historicity of it all, the supposed unity, the ancient liturgy, the Church Fathers. After all, to be steeped in history is to cease to be Protestant... right?

Not so fast! In this audiobook, Gavin Ortlund skilfully presents why Christians ought to be Protestant and why Protestantism is actually a continuation of catholicism with the small c.

Gavin discusses the two main doctrines of historic Protestantism (sola fide and sola scriptura), laying out the standard objections to them, then showing why those objections are false. He later talks about the consequences of denying those two solas i.e., the accretions of the Roman Catholic Church and why certain aspects of Catholicism such as the papacy and the Marian dogmas weren't actually taught by early Christians but were later added on.

Overall, Gavin did a great job at not just defending Protestantism against standard Catholic apologist arguments, but he makes one appreciate the beauty and truth to Protestantism. Totally recommend this (and if you're thinking about RCIA, then drop what you're doing and listen to this... quick... 😬)

Thinking about Catholicism? Then listen to this!

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