Authors — D
17 authors
J. H. Merle d'Aubigné (1794–1872) was a Swiss Reformed church historian and theologian who taught at the Evangelical Society of Geneva. His multi-volume History of the Reformation of the Sixteenth Century was a bestseller in both Europe and America and remains one of the most vivid and widely read popular accounts of the Protestant Reformation.
J. H. Merle d'Aubigné (1794–1872) was a Swiss Reformed church historian and theologian who taught at the Evangelical Society of Geneva. His multi-volume History of the Reformation of the Sixteenth Century was a bestseller in both Europe and America and remains one of the most vivid and widely read popular accounts of the Protestant Reformation.
Robert Lewis Dabney (1820–1898) was the most rigorous systematic theologian the Southern Presbyterian tradition produced, whose Systematic Theology and Discussions remain standard works of Reformed scholarship.
Gary DeMar is an American Reformed author and lecturer who served as president of American Vision for many years. A proponent of postmillennialism and biblical worldview thinking, he has written extensively on eschatology, politics, and the application of Scripture to culture, including Last Days Madness, a critique of modern prophetic speculation.
David Dickson (1583–1663) was a Church of Scotland minister and theologian who served as Professor of Divinity at Glasgow and Edinburgh. He is known for his biblical commentaries on the Psalms and Pauline epistles, his co-authorship of The Sum of Saving Knowledge, and his prominent role in the Covenanting movement.
Albert Baldwin Dod (1805–1845) was a professor of mathematics at Princeton College and a lay theologian closely associated with the Princeton Seminary tradition. A brilliant and versatile scholar, he contributed important apologetic articles to the Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review defending Calvinism and the Westminster standards.
Philip Doddridge (1702–1751) was a prominent English Nonconformist minister and educator at Northampton whose academy trained ministers across denominational lines. His Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul (1745) was one of the most widely read devotional works of the eighteenth century and was instrumental in the conversions of William Wilberforce and many others.
J. Ligon Duncan III (b. 1960) is a Presbyterian Church in America minister and theologian who served as senior pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Jackson, Mississippi, before becoming Chancellor of Reformed Theological Seminary. He earned his PhD from the University of Edinburgh and has written and lectured widely on Reformed worship and systematic theology.
James Durham (1622–1658) was a Scottish Covenanting minister who served the Inner Kirk in Glasgow and briefly as chaplain to King Charles II. Despite dying at thirty-five, he left lasting works including a celebrated commentary on the Song of Solomon and a treatise on church unity, A Treatise Concerning Scandal.
