Showing 21–40 of 47 results

  • Apostasy from the Gospel (John Owen) (#21)

    The subject of apostasy – that is, the study of what leads one who has professed faith in Christ to change his mind and return to living for the world of sin, is not on most people’s list of pleasant subjects to meditate upon.

    The idea that one who confesses Christ may in time prove not to be a true Christian is too gloomy a prospect for many in our “positive-thinking” age. But it is a Biblical truth that requires some consideration, if only for the sake of watching guard over our own souls. Owen’s work, as usual, is a masterpiece of penetrating discernment to the very roots of the matter.

    Now, in this updated English abridgement of John Owen’s Apostasy From the Gospel, Dr. R. J. K. Law makes its powerful teaching readily accessible to modern readers. Some will find its pages deeply soul-searching; others will be struck with the clarity of Owen’s insight; all will find a work which wounds in order to heal.

    $8.00$9.00
  • Prayer (John Bunyan) (#9)

    Two works on prayer are here brought together. In the first, Praying in the Spirit, Bunyan defines what it means to pray with the spirit and with the understanding, and deals with difficulties in prayer.

    In the second portion, The Throne of Grace, Bunyan explains how to approach God’s throne in prayer and opens up the blessings God’s people receive from the high priestly ministry of Jesus Christ.

    $7.00$8.00
  • The Sinfulness of Sin (Ralph Venning) (#8)

    We cannot understand the Christian gospel until we know what sin is. Yet modern secular counselors urge us both to ignore the term “sin” and what it implies about our rebellion against God and His law.

    Sadly, the church has succumbed to embracing much of this worldly wisdom rather than remain faithfully reliant on the Word of God to help us understand the truth about sin. Only when we accept our sinfulness, on God’s terms, can we ever rejoice in His forgiveness.

    “Works like Ralph Venning’s The Sinfulness of Sin have steered me into a greater understanding of God, his word, and indeed even my own heart. Few today would dare think so carefully and comprehensively about the Bible’s teaching on the stuff of sin. Fewer still would dare write it. Perhaps even fewer have sat to read Venning’s cogent study. But any who read this book will never think the same way about sin, evil, and God’s grace in Christ Jesus.” – David Garner

    First published in the aftermath of the Great Plague of London and entitled Sin, The Plague of Plagues, this book gives a crystal-clear explanation of what sin is, why it is so serious, and what we need to do about it. Here is reliable medicine for a fatal epidemic.

    $9.75$11.00
  • The Bruised Reed (Richard Sibbes) (#26)

    “I shall never cease to be grateful to Richard Sibbes, who was a balm to my soul at a period in my life when I was overworked and badly overtired, and therefore subject in an unusual manner to the onslaughts of the devil. I found at that time that Richard Sibbes who was known in London in the early 17th century as “the Heavenly Doctor Sibbes” was an unfailing remedy. The Bruised Reed quietened, soothed, comforted, encouraged and healed me.”   — Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones

     

    Richard Sibbes (1577-1635), one of the most influential figures in the Puritan movement during the earlier years of the seventeenth century, was renowned for the rich quality of his ministry. The Bruised Reed shows why he was known among his contemporaries as ‘the sweet dropper’.

    The Bruised Reed is now issued for the first time in a smaller format in the Puritan Paperbacks series. Some of the language and punctuation have been modernized to make the work more accessible.

     

    $8.95$10.00
  • The Holy Spirit (John Owen) (#25)

    Considered among the greatest of all Christian books ever penned, Owen on the Holy Spirit deals with the name, nature, personality, and operations of the Holy Spirit. Owen effectively shows the true holiness of life which the Spirit of God imparts as quite superior to merely human morality and will.

    In it, Owen deals with the name, nature, personality, and operations of the Holy Spirit, and urges the necessity of gospel holiness as distinct from mere morality operating under human will and power. As is always the case with Owen, the writing is both doctrinal and pastoral in character. The exhaustive length of the original book has deterred many in our day from reading it, so we hope that this abridged modern English version will make Owen’s teaching more accessible to today’s readers.

    $8.75$10.00
  • Glorious Freedom (Richard Sibbes) (2000 ed.)

    The original title of this study was The Excellency of the Gospel Above the Law, and was written to be a comparison of the greater and full revelation of God in the New Covenant.

    Always a doctor to the heart and soul, Puritan Richard Sibbes joyfully shows us how the Spirit of God produces likeness to Christ and consequent great liberty in those who are members of it. One of few Puritan treatises with much to say about the doctrine of adoption.

    $3.70$9.00
  • The Christian’s Great Interest (William Guthrie)

    Assurance of salvation is the subject of this highly readable, practical book, the only book the author ever wrote. With vast pastoral concern for believers struggling with uncertainty of heart about their assurance, and unbelievers living comfortably with a false assurance, Guthrie shows what a true interest in Christ is, and answers important and common questions that arise. John Owen, based on this one book, regarded Guthrie as one of the greatest ministers to have ever written.

    All of Guthrie’s teaching and pastoral experience were poured into The Christian’s Great Interest – his only book. The remarkable fact that is has gone through more than eighty editions and been translated into several languages testifies to its value. This book describes in a clear and attractive style what it means to be a Christian, and how to become one.

    This book is all about Christ: the Christian’s great interest should be Christ; the unbeliever needs to develop an interest in Christ. It describes in a simple, clear, and attractive style what it means to be a Christian, and how to become one.

    $7.20$9.00
  • The Secret Key to Heaven: The Vital Importance of Private Prayer (Thomas Brooks) (#38)

    “The power of religion and godliness lives, thrives, or dies, as closet prayer lives, thrives or dies.”

    This was the deeply held conviction of Thomas Brooks, author of this book. As a pastor who knew his people well, Brooks feared that many Christians failed to understand the importance of their private prayer life and that we live in great neglect of this indispensable habit. Focusing on our Lord’s words in Matthew 6, Brooks provides a masterful and practical treatment of this vital point.

    $8.75$10.00
  • Christian Love (Hugh Binning) (#33)

    “By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to another.” Based on these words of the Lord Jesus, the author movingly presents the need for Christians to demonstrate their love for Christ by their love for one another. Drawing heavily also from 1 Cor. 13, he shows the beautiful attributes which make up genuine Christian love.

    $6.40$8.00
  • Indwelling Sin in Believers (John Owen) (#42)

    John Owen’s Indwelling Sin in Believers is a guide to knowing our enemy, a field-manual for the lifelong war Christ’s soldiers must wage against the sin that remains in them after conversion. Like an experienced general, Owen sets out the strategy and tactics of indwelling sin with unrivaled insight and clarity.

    $7.95$9.00
  • Communion with God (John Owen) (#19)

    John Owen believed that communion with God lies at the heart of the Christian life. With Paul he recognized that through the Son we have access by the Spirit to the Father. He never lost the sense of amazement expressed by John: ‘Our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ’. In this outstanding book he explains the nature of this communion and describes the many privileges it brings.

    Communion with God was written in a day, like our own, when the doctrine of the Trinity was under attack and the Christian faith was being reduced either to rationalism on the one hand or mysticism on the other. His exposition shows that nothing is more vital to spiritual well-being than a practical knowledge of what this doctrine means.

    Until now, Communion With God has been read by only small numbers of Christians with access to the 275 closely-printed pages in The Works of John Owen. Now Dr. R. J. K. Law has produced a splendidly readable abridgement of one of the greatest Christian classics of all time, bringing Owen’s rich teaching to a much wider readership.

    $8.00$9.00
  • The Heart of Christ (Thomas Goodwin) (#45)

    The full original title of Goodwin’s book was, The Heart of Christ in Heaven towards Sinners on Earth and it was first published in 1651. Rapidly it became Thomas Goodwin’s (1600-1680) most popular work. It is a fine example of his Christ-centered preaching and his mix of theological rigor and pastoral concern. In it he aims to show from Scripture that, in all his heavenly majesty, Christ is not now aloof from believers and unconcerned, but has the strongest affections for them.

    Goodwin begins with the beautiful assurances given by Christ to his disciples, taking as an example of that love Christ’s washing of his disciples’ feet (John 13). The heart of his argument, however, lies in his exposition of Hebrews 4:15, in which Goodwin shows that in all his glorious holiness in heaven, Christ is not sour towards his people; if anything, his capacious heart beats more strongly than ever with tender love for them. And in particular, two things stir his compassion: our afflictions and—almost unbelievably—our sins.

    $8.00$9.00
  • Dying Thoughts (Richard Baxter) (#36)

    Written in the final weeks of his own life, Puritan Richard Baxter has written the most searching, personal examination of the soul, for any person who feels the tension the Apostle Paul spoke of when he wrote in Philippians that he felt very much pulled in two directions – having a desire to remain in this world and labor on, for others, or a desire to depart and be with Christ, which is far better (Phil. 1:23).

    Richard Baxter wrestles openly, before the reader, with his own doubts and fears, anxious to prepare his soul as he faces eternity.

    $7.95$9.00
  • The Lord’s Supper (Thomas Watson) (#31)

    To Thomas Watson, the Lord’s Supper was a visible sermon, a mirror in which to gaze on the sufferings and death of Christ. ‘God, to help our faith, does not only give us an audible Word, but a visible sign.’ But more than this, the Supper was a time in which to partake of the benefits of Christ’s death by faith, to be fed and cherished by the Lord in his own banqueting house, and to obtain a foretaste of the glory which will be fully realized only in heaven.

    Watson’s aim was to stimulate greater love to Christ in His people, and to enhance their appreciation of the Supper as a spiritual feast for all believers. His fine exposition shows the rich provision made in the Supper for all who love the Lord, while it also lays bare the emptiness of all mere sacramentalism.

    $7.25$8.00
  • The True Bounds of Christian Freedom (Samuel Bolton)

    From a Puritan master, this is one of the best explanations ever written of the place of God’s law in the Christian life. Bolton delves into those vital questions about what being “free from the Law” truly means and what it does not mean.

    His careful study is presented with such clarify, it’s easily understandable even to those not familiar with Puritan writings, in a very readable style – and most of all, practical and helpful to your study of the Word of God.

    $5.40$9.00
  • The Spirit and the Church (John Owen) (#30)

    In five sections, Owen again masterfully displays some of the Holy Spirit’s most valuable works in the lives of the Lord’s people:

    1: How We Believe Scripture to Be the Word of God
    2: Understanding the Mind of God
    3: The Holy Spirit in Prayer
    4: The Holy Spirit as Comforter
    5: The Gifts of the Holy Spirit

    $8.00$9.00
  • Josiah’s Reformation: Cultivating and Maintaining a Tender Heart (Richard Sibbes) (#46)

    This book is as relevant today as when first published in 1629. Our busyness and activism so easily degenerate into a hypocrisy in which we keep up all the appearance of holiness without the heart of it. Christians even use Christ as a package to pass on to others, instead of enjoying him first and foremost as their own Savior. But true reformation must begin in the heart, with love for Christ. And that can only come when the free grace of God in Christ Jesus is preached. Reading Sibbes is like sitting in the sunshine: he gets into your heart and warms it to Christ.

    $8.75$10.00
  • All Loves Excelling (John Bunyan) (#24)

    All Loves Excelling is John Bunyan’s sermon on Ephesians 3:17-18, ‘That ye may be able to comprehend with all saints, what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height; and to know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge.’

    It was first titled The Saints’ Knowledge of Christ’s Love’ and is worthy of being ranked alongside Sibbes and deals with a much neglected topic. 

    On the one hand, experiences of the Spirit are being claimed from which the glory of the redeemer and the wonder of his love are quite absent, while on the other, an almost total attention to the understanding and practicing of scripture truth is having the effect of marginalizing the experiential element in true, spiritual knowledge.

    $6.25$7.00
  • Heaven on Earth: A Treatise on Christian Assurance (Thomas Brooks) (#2)

    One of the most important books about the subject of Christian assurance ever put into print. Having a healthy and well-founded assurance of being “in Christ” is vital to strong Christian growth and experience. There is no higher privilege than to be a child of God and to *know* that you are! — for a strong assurance brings, along with it, joy and peace in believing, strength and boldness in our witness.

    This abundantly clear and valuable work, first published in 1654, still reads today like a pastor conversing with his friend.

    $9.75$11.00
  • The Crook in the Lot (Thomas Boston) (#49)

    What to Believe when our lot in life is not health, wealth, and happiness

    Thomas Boston (1676-1732) was a remarkable Scottish theologian and pastor. His Works run to 12 volumes and contain some lengthy theological treatises. But Boston also wrote brief, very accessible, and pastoral books, and chief among these is the quaintly titled, The Crook in the Lot: The Sovereignty and Wisdom of God, in the Afflictions of Men Displayed. This little book is a pastoral masterpiece, in which Boston reflects on the words of Ecclesiastes 7:13, ‘Consider the work of God: for who can make that straight which he hath made crooked?’

    By ‘lot’, Boston means our ‘lot in life’, the shape of our lives as they are styled by God’s many providences. By ‘crook’, he means those unforeseen troubles that afflict, unsettle, or disturb us in any way. Boston sets out to minister pastoral wisdom and help to God’s people experiencing what Paul calls ‘the sufferings of this present time’ (Rom. 8:18).

    $8.00$10.00