Henry Orton Wiley

Henry Orton Wiley (11 November 1877 – 22 August 1961) was a Christian theologian primarily associated with the followers of John Wesley who are part of the Holiness movement.

[12] In his book Introduction to christian theology,[13] Wiley argues for the Arminian views of unlimited atonement, conditional election and prevenient grace in opposition to the main points of Calvinism.

[14] In Christian theology, he stresses that the prevenient grace, operates in a continuous way from "the first dawn of the moral life".

[15] This would allow a synergistic co-operation with the human will, that doesn't undermine the responsibility and the total depravity of man.

[16] Wayne Grudem considers this work to be the best Arminian systematic theology from the twentieth century, but not reaching to the level of John Miley’s.