Bernardinus de Moor (1709-1780) studied at the great Dutch University of Leiden, under some of the great Reformed theologians of the age. He was especially attached to Johannes ˆ Marck, and ˆ Marck, shortly before his death, asked De Moor to continue his work, and perpetuate the tradition of orthodox Reformed Scholasticism.
Ò[Bernardinus de Moor] wrote a commentary on ˆ MarckÕs dogmatic compendiumÉwhich represents the most comprehensive dogmatic text that was ever produced in the Netherlands. In this work of seven volumes (1761-1778), de Moor classified and combined material from the Reformed dogmatics produced by his predecessors at Utrecht and Leiden into a whole.Ó --van Asselt, Introduction to Reformed Scholasticism
This first chapter is devoted to issues of theological prolegomena, a point of significant scholarly interest currently.
New material from the ongoing translation of De Moor's Didactico-Elenctic Theology is being published almost daily at www.bernardinusdemoor.com.