
B. B. Warfield Collection, Volume 6
These thirty-one essays represent one of American evangelicalism's most formidable minds at work. Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield, the last great Princeton theologian before the seminary's modernist controversy, wrote with a precision and polemical edge that made him feared by critics and revered by defenders of orthodox Christianity. This volume gathers his most substantial treatments of biblical inspiration, Christ's divinity, and the intellectual defense of the faith against the rising tide of modern criticism. Warfield's book reviews, included here in number, reveal a scholar who engaged his opponents on their own terms before dismantling their arguments with devastating logic. These pieces were written during one of the most consequential theological wars in American history, and they shaped the intellectual vocabulary of evangelicalism for a century. For readers interested in the foundations of modern evangelical thought, or in the intellectual defense of biblical authority and Christ's deity, this collection offers a masterclass in rigorous, unflinching scholarship.















