Course Catalog Admissions

Primary Authors & Sources

DOCT-101 builds its reading list from required primary and classical sources in doctrinal developments and scriptural foundations. The authors below are read as teachers across the centuries, not as entries in a bibliography. Robert Forman Horton contributes The Trinity, offering firsthand access to the arguments, methods, and assumptions that shaped this period of study. Isaak August Dorner contributes History of the Development of the Doctrine of the Person… and History of the Development of the Doctrine of the Person…, offering firsthand access to the arguments, methods, and assumptions that shaped this period of study.

Taken together, these readings form a coherent conversation across centuries — students encounter real arguments, not flattened summaries. George Smeaton contributes The Doctrine of the Atonement as Taught By Christ Himself, offering firsthand access to the arguments, methods, and assumptions that shaped this period of study. William Cunningham contributes Historical Theology and Historical Theology, offering firsthand access to the arguments, methods, and assumptions that shaped this period of study. Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield defends the historic Christian doctrine of Scripture with learning and clarity, grounding faith in revelation rather than sentiment, notably in Biblical Doctrines.

What You Will Study

Students examine how major Christian doctrines developed historically while remaining rooted in biblical revelation, moving from creation and covenant through Christology, soteriology, ecclesiology, and eschatology. The course integrates biblical theology's redemptive-historical narrative with systematic formulation, drawing on patristic, medieval, Reformation, and post-Reformation sources within a confessional Reformed framework. Readings pair Scripture with selections from church fathers, Reformers, and modern Reformed theologians who model historically informed doctrinal reflection. Students analyze how doctrinal development responds to heresy, cultural pressure, and exegetical discovery without treating tradition as equal to the Word of God. Weekly assignments trace single doctrines across Testaments and centuries to show organic growth under the Spirit's guidance through the church.

Course Objectives

Objectives include describing the relationship between biblical theology and systematic theology, tracing doctrinal development on Trinity, Christ, grace, and church with historical accuracy, evaluating theological proposals against Scripture and confessional standards, and writing clear doctrinal summaries supported by exegesis. Students will identify how cultural context shaped doctrinal debates without reducing doctrine to mere historical construct. The course aims to produce teachers who can explain why Christians believe what they believe with both biblical and historical warrant. Students will compare Reformed articulations of justification, covenant, and sacraments with alternative traditions while maintaining charitable but firm confessional conviction.

Ministry & Life Application

Historical-biblical theology equips pastors and elders to teach doctrine as living truth grounded in God's Word and confirmed through the church's faithful struggle for clarity. Graduates can address contemporary errors by showing their historical precedents and the church's tested biblical responses. House church teachers gain confidence that Reformed doctrine is neither novelty nor mere intellectual tradition but Scripture's own testimony refined through centuries of faithful exposition. This foundation supports pastoral ministry across the Florida Keys, where believers need shepherds who can connect ancient faith to modern questions about salvation, church, and the Christian hope. Doctrinal depth sustains worship, discipleship, and evangelistic witness in every gathering.