Engage with the key debates on the Trinity through eight Oxford-era sermons.
This edition gathers the eight Divinity Lecture Sermons preached at the University of Oxford in 1837, part of the Bampton Lectures series, and presents a focused examination of core questions about the divine and human natures of Christ, the Holy Spirit, and the unity of God.
These sermons explore how Scripture supports the doctrine, address common objections, and compare scriptural language about Father, Son, and Spirit. The collection emphasizes careful interpretation of biblical texts and the logical coherence of the Trinity within Christian faith.
- Understand the claimed harmony between Jesus’s humanity and divinity, including how omniscience and human ignorance can be reconciled.
- See how the union of divine and human natures is explained, without collapsing either nature.
- Learn how the Fathers’ and creedal language is used to defend core Christian beliefs.
- Examine how objections to the Trinity are met with scriptural and historical argument.
Ideal for readers of church history, theological apologetics, and students seeking a clear, historical defense of Trinity doctrine.Ranked for readers who want a concise, sermon-based exploration of the Trinity and related biblical interpretation, this edition presents the material in a direct, accessible voice that respects the period’s scholarly approach.