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16 authors

Herman C. Hanko1 article

Herman C. Hanko (b. 1930) is a Protestant Reformed theologian and minister who taught church history and New Testament at the Protestant Reformed Theological Seminary in Grand Rapids for many decades. He has written extensively on covenant theology, church history, and Protestant Reformed distinctive doctrines.

John D. Hannah1 article
S. Hayward2 articles
I. C. Herendeen1 article
Mark Herzer2 articles
Charles Hodge13 articles

Charles Hodge (1797–1878) was the dominant figure in American Reformed theology for over half a century, whose three-volume Systematic Theology and fifty-eight years of teaching at Princeton Seminary shaped American Presbyterianism more than any other individual.

A. A. Hodge8 articles

A. A. Hodge (1823–1886) was the son of Charles Hodge and his successor as professor of systematic theology at Princeton Theological Seminary. His Outlines of Theology provided a more accessible summary of Princeton Calvinism, and his collaboration with B. B. Warfield on biblical inerrancy helped define the conservative Reformed position for decades.

Anthony Hoekema3 articles

Anthony Hoekema (1913–1988) was a Dutch-born Reformed theologian who taught systematic theology at Calvin Theological Seminary for over twenty years. His books The Bible and the Future and Saved by Grace are widely used defenses of amillennialism and Reformed soteriology, drawing extensively on Dutch Reformed theological resources.

Homer C. Hoeksema1 article
Rev. Herman Hoeksema1 article

Herman Hoeksema (1886–1965) was a Dutch-born Reformed theologian and pastor who emigrated to the United States and co-founded the Protestant Reformed Churches in 1924. He served as professor of theology at the Protestant Reformed Seminary for forty years and authored Reformed Dogmatics, the most extensive systematic theology produced within the Protestant Reformed tradition.

Herman C. Hoeksema2 articles

Herman Hoeksema (1886–1965) was a Dutch-born Reformed theologian and pastor who emigrated to the United States and co-founded the Protestant Reformed Churches in 1924. He served as professor of theology at the Protestant Reformed Seminary for forty years and authored Reformed Dogmatics, the most extensive systematic theology produced within the Protestant Reformed tradition.

John Hooper1 article

John Hooper (c. 1495–1555) was an English Protestant reformer and Bishop of Gloucester and Worcester who was burned at the stake during the Marian persecutions, becoming one of the most prominent Protestant martyrs of the Reformation era. A strongly Reformed theologian, he resisted clerical vestments on conscientious grounds and his martyrdom made him a hero of subsequent Puritan and nonconformist tradition.

Michael S. Horton7 articles

Michael Horton is the J. Gresham Machen Professor of Systematic Theology and Apologetics at Westminster Seminary California and a co-founder of the White Horse Inn radio broadcast. His books — including The Christian Faith, Covenant and Salvation, and Ordinary — defend two-kingdoms theology, Word-and-sacrament ecclesiology, and classic Reformed confessionalism.

Steven Houck2 articles
John Howie1 article
Erroll Hulse5 articles

Erroll Hulse (1931–2017) was a South African-born Reformed Baptist pastor who ministered in England for more than four decades, serving churches in Cuckfield, Liverpool, and Leeds. He founded Reformation Today magazine in 1970 and served as its editor for over forty years, becoming a major figure in the twentieth-century Reformed Baptist revival.