Andrew Brown

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Essentially, many claimed Protestants were introducing new doctrines, unknown to prior church history. In response, the Reformers did not appeal to Scripture alone, ceding church history to their opponents. Rather, they argued from history, casting the Protestant effort as a retrieval of patristic practice and thereby a return to catholicity—that is, the doctrine and practice that is most representative of the fullness of the church.
What It Means to Be Protestant: The Case for an Always-Reforming Church
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