John Carpenter
Puritan Board Freshman
There's no evidence that Driscoll doesn't fully hold to to the distinctions of the Persons in the Trinity or the full Divinity of each or the Unity of the Three. Personally, like you, I think he is wrong to reject the long-standing terminology of Nicea on "eternally begotten" and eternal procession. But since I'm Reformed and not Catholic (or Eastern Orthodox) what determines orthodoxy is not exactly repeating the formulas of the past but being faithful to the Biblical ideas. There are no grounds for suggesting that Driscoll's doctrine is not Biblically faithful, Trinitarian, historically orthodox, and Reformed.
Your statement sounds more Catholic than evangelical. Check that.
Your statement sounds more Catholic than evangelical. Check that.