II. To consider THE WILL OF GOD , With regard to which we assert as follows: Position l. The Deity is possessed not only of infinite knowledge, but likewise of absolute liberty of will, so that whatever He does, or permits to be done, He does and permits freely and of His own good pleasure. [...]
The Absolute Freedom and Liberty of His Will (Observations on the Divine Attributes – Part II) by Jerome Zanchius
The Unchangeableness of Himself and His Decrees (Observations on the Divine Attributes – Part III) by Jerome Zanchius
Position l. God is essentially unchangeable in Himself. Were He otherwise, He would be confessedly imperfect, since whoever changes must change either for the better or for the worse; whatever alteration any being undergoes, that being must, ipso facto, either become more excellent than it was or lose some of the excellency which it had. [...]
The Wrath of God by W.J. Grier
One of the evidences of decay and departure in the professing Church is the large-scale rejection of the teaching of the Scriptures on the wrath of God. Dr Martyn Lloyd-Jones in his recently-issued Exposition of Romans draws attention to this and shows that it is not only among Modernists and Ritualists that this attitude prevails; [...]
The Rejection of the Classical Doctrine of God by David F. Wells
and What It Says About the State of the Evangelical Movement Post-War evangelicalism, which linked believers around the world through the Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization and the World Evangelical Fellowship, which produced the InterVarsity Fellowship, which saw the emergence of Billy Graham to international prominence, and spawned Christianity Today as its public, journalistic voice, [...]
God the Father by R.A. Finlayson
When we say that the First Person of the Trinity is the Father, we mean that He is the Fount of Deity [The phrase 'Fount of Deity' (often referred to by its Latin translation fons deitatis) is open to misunderstanding. It could be interpreted to mean that the other persons of the Trinity originate at [...]
God, His Nature And Relation To The Universe by A. A. Hodge
THREE questions obviously lie at the foundation, not only of all man’s religious knowledge, but of every possible form of knowledge: Is there a God? What is God? What is God’s relation to the universe? And if he does sustain a relation to the universe which is in any degree intelligible to us, a fourth [...]



