I found this good interview on the basic inquiries on Reformed theology. Read on.
Reformed Theology and the Church: An Interview With Dr. Timothy George
Dr. Timothy George is a widely respected theologian and church historian. He serves as the Dean of Beeson Divinity School of Samford University in Birmingham, Alabama. Among Dr. George's many published works are Theology of the Reformers and John Calvin and the Church: A Prism of Reform. I conducted this interview in May 2000 and am happy to be able to make it available again.
Reformed Theology and the Church: An Interview With Dr. Timothy George (An excerpt)
May 4, 2000 Beeson Divinity School of Samford University Birmingham, Alabama
1. How would you define the term "reformed theology" to someone who attends church, but maybe does not possess a great deal of knowledge concerning church history or the nuances of Christian theology?
Well, there's nothing magical about the word "reformed," and I think there's a lot of misunderstanding about it. It's closely related to the Reformation, of course, and, in the Reformation, there was a recovery of the Holy Scriptures. There was a return to the theology of the early church and the Bible, particularly as related to God's grace and salvation by faith alone in Christ alone, on the basis of the Scriptures alone. Those were some of the distinctives of Luther and Calvin and Cramner - a whole array of Reformers in the 16th century. So when we talk about "reformed theology," we're really talking about Biblical theology - Biblical theology that has been refracted through or seen in the prism of the great debates of the 16th century, hence the word "reformed." There's nothing magical about that word and we don't mean to say anything other than sound Biblical teaching related to God and His grace and salvation through faith in Jesus Christ, His Son. That's really what we mean by it.
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