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Conversion and Regeneration addresses one of the most persistent and pastorally damaging confusions in modern Christianity: the collapse of spiritual regeneration into religious experience.
Across churches, testimonies, revivals, and personal narratives, conversion is often treated as self-interpreting proof of salvation. Intensity is mistaken for grace. Memory becomes assurance. Experience becomes the court of judgment. The result is a church filled with false peace on the one hand and wounded consciences on the other.
This book argues that Scripture teaches a sharper, safer distinction.
Conversion is a real and morally serious human experience.
Regeneration is a sovereign, life-giving act of God.
They are related-but they are not the same.
Two Parts, One Governing Distinction
Part I examines conversion as a psychological and experiential phenomenon. Drawing carefully from William James, Jonathan Edwards' narrative accounts, and historical testimony, it describes how conversion commonly appears: sudden or gradual, crisis-driven or quietly unfolding, emotionally intense or almost imperceptible. These experiences are treated seriously-but never allowed to judge salvation. Psychology is permitted to describe, not to decide.
Part II turns decisively to Scripture and classic Reformed theology to define regeneration itself. Here regeneration is presented as what Scripture says it is: an immediate, sovereign act of the Holy Spirit, imparting new life where there was death, renewing the will without coercion, and uniting the sinner to Christ. Faith, repentance, and obedience are shown to be the fruits of this life-not its cause.
Throughout, the book insists that assurance must be grounded outside the self: in the promise and action of God, not in memory, intensity, or narrative coherence.
Pastoral Clarity Without Introspective Tyranny
This is not a polemical book, nor a psychological manual, nor a revivalist tract. It is a pastoral and theological work written for those who have been harmed by experiential absolutism and for those who quietly fear they have "missed" salvation because their story lacks drama.
It speaks to:
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