John Vissers is a Presbyterian minister and theologian associated with Knox College (Toronto), working within the Reformed tradition; his soteriology is likely Calvinist but is not definitively documented for this entry. The book's grounding in the threefold office of Christ (munus triplex) signals a classically Reformed Christological framework.
TheoScope Ratings
Age & Family Safety
Children
Safe and appropriate for children
8
Youth (13–18)
Suitable for teens and young adults
38
Adults
Written at a level adults can engage with
74
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Friendship has the capacity to elevate our lives and make us better people. It plays an important role in our moral development, spiritual growth, and personal flourishing. This is true of friendship between humans, and it is also true of friendship with God in Christ. What did friendship with Christ mean for Christians in ages past, and what can it mean for us today?
In Friendship with Christ, John Vissers offers a robust biblical, historical, and theological study of friendship with God in Christ. Rooted in the "friendship teaching" of John 15, this book draws on the threefold office of Christ as prophet, priest, and king to develop a theology of divine friendship against the backdrop of the biblical record and historical tradition. Friendship with Christ, Vissers argues, is a theological truth and experience that continues to provide consolation and hope in a secular age and a suffering world.
With a foreword by Hans Boersma, this book shows that friendship with Christ has been central to the experience of the providential love of God throughout the church's history and that it still matters today. Friendship with Christ will appeal to professors and students of theology, Christology, and spiritual formation, as well as to pastors and church leaders.