Description
In this book, D. G. Hart investigates what was at stake in the sixteenth century and
why Protestantism still matters. Of note is the author’s recognition that the Reformers
addressed the most basic question that confronts all human beings: How can a sinner
be right with and worship in good conscience a righteous God who demands sinless
perfection? Protestants used to believe that this question, along with the kind of life
that followed from answers to it, was at the heart of their disagreement with Rome.
Still Protesting arises from the conviction that the Reformers’ answers to life’s most
important questions, based on their study of the Bible and theological reflection, are
as superior today as they were when they provided the grounds for Christians in the
West to abandon the bishop of Rome.