Horatius Bonar never gained a reputation for being a controversialist, but he recognized his calling as a minister of Christ to stand for the truth when it was under attack. His chief concern was the Gospel message and his desire that no compromise of that message be the price of any agreement. During his years in Edinburgh, beginning in 1866, he became involved in several controversies, the most prominent of which was his defense of the evangelistic campaigns of Moody and Sankey against the charges of some Scottish Presbyterians that Moody was proclaiming "another gospel." Bonar did not defend every aspect of Moody's preaching, but he entered the controversy on the point of the free offer of Christ in the Gospel, and Bonar defended the view, first espoused by John Calvin, that the love of God does extend to all people, especially to those whom God has chosen in Christ to salvation.
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Rev. David Mook is the pioneer pastor of Phoenix Free Presbyterian Church, founded early in 1986. Following his graduation from Bob Jones University in 1974, he joined the faculty in the Division of Speech, continuing there until 1983 when he entered the Free Presbyterian...