| Dutch Reformed Translation Society | p. 7 |
| Preface | p. 8 |
| Acknowledgments | p. 9 |
| Editor's Introduction | p. 11 |
| Introduction to Dogmatics | |
| The Science of Dogmatic Theology | p. 25 |
| Terminology | |
| Dogma, Dogmatics, and Theology | |
| The Content of Theology | |
| Is Theology a Science? | |
| Theology and Faith | |
| The Science of God | |
| The Encyclopedic Place of Dogmatic Theology | |
| The Method and Organization of Dogmatic Theology | p. 59 |
| Apostles, Bishops, and the Return to Scripture | |
| The Turn to the Subject | |
| The Search for a Scientific, Objective Theology | |
| The Certainty of Theological Knowledge | |
| Biblical Theology and the Church | |
| The Role of Faith | |
| The Problem of Order | |
| Order in Reformation Dogmatics | |
| The Impact of Philosophy | |
| The Foundation and Task of Prolegomena | |
| The History and Literature of Dogmatic Theology | |
| The Formation of Dogma: East and West | p. 115 |
| The Definition and Character of Dogma | |
| Dogma in the Early Church | |
| Dogma and Theology in the East | |
| Dogma and Theology in the West | |
| Roman Catholic Dogmatics | p. 143 |
| Scholasticism | |
| Protest and Response | |
| Counter-Reformation and Neoscholasticism | |
| Roman Catholicism and Modernity | |
| Lutheran Dogmatics | p. 159 |
| The Beginning of Lutheran Theology | |
| Pietism and Rationalism | |
| The Triumph of Philosophy | |
| Resistance and Revision of Lutheran Orthodoxy | |
| Reformed Dogmatics | p. 175 |
| Lutherans and Calvinists | |
| The Beginnings of Reformed Theology | |
| Reformed Scholasticism | |
| Challenges: Rationalism and Mysticism | |
| Decline of Reformed Theology | |
| Nineteenth-Century Streams | |
| Reformed Theology in North America | |
| Foundations of Dogmatic Theology (Principia) | |
| Scientific Foundations | p. 207 |
| Theological Prolegomena | |
| Foundations of Thought | |
| Rationalism | |
| Empiricism | |
| Realism | |
| Religious Foundations | p. 235 |
| The Essence of Religion | |
| The Seat of Religion: Intellect, Will, or Heart? | |
| The Origin of Religion | |
| Revelation (Principium Externum) | |
| The Idea of Revelation | p. 283 |
| No Religion without Revelation | |
| Revelation in Theology and Philosophy | |
| Nineteenth-Century "Recovery" of Revelation | |
| Mediating Theology | |
| Nineteenth-Century Philosophies of Revelation | |
| Naturalist Confusion about Revelation | |
| Impossibility of Scientific Neutrality | |
| General Revelation | p. 301 |
| "Natural" and "Supernatural" Revelation | |
| All Revelation Is Supernatural | |
| General Revelation Is Insufficient | |
| General Revelation and the Universality of Religion | |
| General Revelation and Christian Discipleship | |
| Special Revelation | p. 323 |
| Modes of Revelation | |
| Revelation as God's Self-Revelation | |
| Revelation and Religion | |
| Revelation in Nature and Holy Scripture | p. 353 |
| "Natural" and "Supernatural" | |
| Roman Catholic Supernaturalism | |
| The Reformational View | |
| Rationalistic Naturalism | |
| The Scriptural Difference | |
| Monism and Theism | |
| Miracles | |
| Revelation, Sacred Scriptures, and History | |
| Incarnation, Language, and the Bible | |
| Continuing Revelation | |
| The Inspiration of Scripture | p. 387 |
| The Witness of the Old Testament | |
| The Witness of the New Testament | |
| The Testimony of the Church | |
| The Rise of Critical Protestantism | |
| The Challenge to Inspiration Doctrine | |
| Differing Views of Inspiration | |
| Organic Inspiration | |
| A Defense of Organic Inspiration | |
| The Attributes of Scripture | p. 449 |
| Attributes in General | |
| The Authority of Scripture | |
| The Necessity of Scripture | |
| Scripture and the Church | |
| Beyond Scripture? | |
| The Clarity of Scripture | |
| The Sufficiency of Scripture | |
| Faith (Principium Internum) | |
| Faith and Theological Method | p. 497 |
| Internal Reception of Revelation | |
| The Historical-Apologetic Method | |
| The Speculative Method | |
| The Religious-Empirical Method | |
| The Ethical-Psychological Method | |
| Faith and Its Ground | p. 561 |
| Appropriating Revelation by Faith | |
| Two Kinds of Faith | |
| Faith as Intellectual Assent | |
| The Certainty of Faith | |
| The Ground of Faith | |
| Scripture Is Self-Authenticating | |
| Divine and Human Logos | |
| Demonstrating the Truth of Faith | |
| The Testimony of the Spirit | |
| Faith and Theology | p. 601 |
| Aversion to Theology | |
| Faith's Knowledge | |
| Dogma and Greek Philosophy | |
| How Much Knowledge? | |
| The Grace of Faith | |
| Reason Serving Faith | |
| Bibliography | p. 623 |
| Select Scripture Index | p. 673 |
| Name Index | p. 675 |
| Subject Index | p. 679 |
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