Showing 661–680 of 1012 results

  • 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
  • Saints and Scoundrels in the Story of Jesus (Nancy Guthrie)

    Saints and Scoundrels in the Story of Jesus is convicting and comforting at once, reminding all true believers that God’s family is rough around the edges and held together by grace.”

    Rosaria Butterfield, Former Professor of English, Syracuse University; author, The Gospel Comes with a House Key

    The story of Jesus in the Gospels includes all kinds of interesting people—some who claimed to be saints but proved to be scoundrels, as well as scoundrels who were transformed into saints. In Saints and Scoundrels in the Story of Jesus, Nancy Guthrie provides a fresh look into what shaped and motivated people such as John the Baptist, Peter, the Pharisees, Zacchaeus, Judas, Caiaphas, Barabbas, Stephen, and Paul. Join her as she reintroduces us to these biblical characters, helping us to see more clearly the ways in which they reveal the generous grace of Jesus toward sinners.

    $13.50$16.99
  • The Mischief of Sin (Thomas Watson)

    “This book enriched and expanded my own understanding of sin and grace beyond anything I could have anticipated. You cannot read it and remain indifferent toward sin in your own life. Few books have moved me as this one did.” — John MacArthur

     

    $13.50$15.00
  • 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
  • None Other: Discovering the God of the Bible (John MacArthur)

    The Bible’s teaching on God’s love, holiness, and sovereignty is often met with questions about human responsibility, suffering, and evil. If God is in control of everything, can we make free choices? If God is good and all-powerful, how can we account for natural disasters and moral atrocities? Answers to these questions are often filled with technical jargon and personal assumptions that don’t take into account the full scope of biblical truth.

    In None Other: Discovering the God of the Bible, Dr. John MacArthur shows that the best way to discover the one true God is not through philosophical discourse but a careful study of Scripture-the primary place where God has chosen to reveal Himself.

    $13.50$15.00
  • 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
  • Biblical Doctrine: A Systematic Summary of Bible Truth (John MacArthur)

    Doctrine isn’t just for theologians—it’s important for every Christian because it shows us who God is and how we should live. Systematizing the robust theology that has undergirded Dr. John MacArthur’s well-known preaching ministry for decades, this overview of basic Christian doctrine covers topics such as God the Father, Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, the Bible, salvation, and more.

    Comprehensive in scope yet written to be accessible to the average reader—with non-technical vocabulary, minimal footnotes, and a helpful bibliography—this volume offers Christians a solid foundation for what they believe and why.

    $74.99
  • Justification Vindicated (Robert Traill)

    A spirited defense of the doctrine and truth of Justification by Faith Alone from a Puritan writing during “The Killing Times”, when Scottish Protestants were being slaughtered. Traill demonstrates how false the charges of Antinomianism and lawlessness are against this truth and showing that faith alone is the only door by which sinners may enter the presence of the holy God.

    Can sinners really be justified before God by faith alone? If so, can they go on to live as they please? Robert Traill suffered persecution, exile and prison for faithfulness to the gospel. He shows here, in Justification Vindicated, with rare clarity and grace, that only justification by faith alone, shows sinners the way to a holy God, makes them a holy and obedient people, gives them joyful assurance of acceptance with God.

    $6.25$7.00
  • Strange New World (Carl Trueman)

    From Philosophy to Technology, Tracing the Origin of Identity Politics

    How did the world arrive at its current, disorienting state of identity politics, and how should the church respond? Historian Carl R. Trueman shows how influences ranging from traditional institutions to technology and pornography moved modern culture toward an era of “expressive individualism.”

    Investigating philosophies from the Romantics, Nietzsche, Marx, Wilde, Freud, and the New Left, he outlines the history of Western thought to the distinctly sexual direction of present-day identity politics and explains the modern implications of these ideas on religion, free speech, and personal identity.

    $14.39$17.99
  • The Genius of Puritanism (Peter Lewis)

    One of our favorite books ever, and one of the most important books one can read about the Puritans. This introduction to the Puritans focuses on the thinking which drove their preaching, writing and counseling (pastoral work). The section on spiritual depression is immensely helpful and the bibliography in the back is worth the price of the book alone.

    “Lewis provides an excellent foretaste of the rich meal that readers of the works of the Puritans can enjoy. His arrangement of the matter–the brief biographical touches, the judicious selections threaded into a continuing theme, is brilliant.” — Dr. D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones

    $11.50$14.00
  • 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
  • Chosen by God (R. C. Sproul)

    With nearly 200,000 copies sold in the last 30 years, Chosen by God by Dr. R. C. Sproul is a contemporary classic on predestination, a doctrine that isn’t just for Calvinists, says Sproul – it’s a doctrine to comfort and encourage all biblical Christians.

    In this updated and expanded edition of Chosen by God, Sproul shows that the doctrine of predestination doesn’t create a whimsical or spiteful picture of God, but paints a portrait of a loving God who provides redemption for radically corrupt humans. We choose God because he has opened our eyes to see his beauty; we love him because he first loved us. There is mystery in God’s ways, but not contradiction.

    $13.95$17.99
  • Institutes of the Christian Religion (John Calvin)

    Long regarded as the central theologian of the Protestant Reformation, Calvin changed the course of church and world history. The influence of this book – his original and complete Systematic Theology of the Christian faith – cannot be underestimated. Now released in a readable, newly typeset edition with print large enough to go easy on the eyes, in an affordable single volume.

    This is an attractive, one-volume hardcover edition of one of Western Christianity’s foundational works. Re-typeset into a clean and modern typeface, this edition is easy on the eyes. Institutes of the Christian Religion is not only an introduction to all Biblical topics, but a vindication of Reformation principles by one of the Reformation’s finest scholars.

    $23.50$29.95
  • Wanted: the World (Trevor Johnson)

    The Well-Meant Offer of the Gospel from a Missionary’s Perspective

    The Puritan evangelist Richard Alleine once wrote the following of the sincere love of God and His desire for the salvation of all who hear the invitation of the gospel:

    “I tell you again, I wish you well; and not only I, but the Lord God that hath sent me to you: The Lord Jesus wishes you well; he wishes and wooes, wooes and weeps, weeps and dies, that your Souls might live, and be blessed for ever: He hath once more sent me to you, even to the worst amongst you, to tell you from him, that he’s unwilling you should perish; that he hath a kindness for you in his heart, if you will accept it…”

    In this short volume, missionary Trevor Johnson defends this same view, that God desires the salvation, in some fashion, of all men, and that this gospel is a true and sincere appeal and invitation.

    Johnson writes as one who fully affirms the absolute sovereignty of God, the Five Points of Calvinism, and even the judicial hatred of God for unrepentant sinners, and yet is troubled by a growing trend among some Calvinists to deny the sincere and well-meant offer of the gospel.

    Johnson affirms that if someone asks you this query from a tortured soul, “Do you believe that God really wants to save even me?” that you can answer most assuredly, “Yes! God would have you to be saved and would rejoice over your salvation even now!”

    We mirror the very heart of God when we love souls and desire their salvation.

    $4.99$5.75
  • 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
  • Born to Write: A Life of Arthur W. Pink (Richard Belcher)

    The first biography of A.W. Pink ever written. A peculiar man, but a faithful preacher, this biography, while showing that Pink had an eccentric and often hard personality, the author tries to understand his actions and reactions in the theologically desperate and dark times in which he lived, and how Pink sought earnestly to awaken the church to neglected truths.

    The result is not only a presentation of facts and events but an interpretive biography that reveals the man and his heart-beat for the eternal God and His glory.

    $6.99$7.99
  • Holiness: Its Nature, Hindrances, Difficulties and Roots – paperback (J. C. Ryle)

    “This book is simply the best of Ryle, the Puritan-type pastor. Real Christians will find it a gold mine, a feast, a spur and a heart-warmer, food, drink, medicine, and a course of vitamins, all in one.” — J. I. Packer

    Holiness: Its Nature, Hindrances, Difficulties, and Roots is perhaps J. C. Ryle’s best-known and best-loved book. Although many things have changed since 1877, when it was first published, one thing remains the same: ‘real practical holiness does not receive the attention it deserves.’  It was to remedy this and to counter false teaching on this most important subject, that Ryle took up his pen.

    The 21 chapters in this enlarged edition highlight:

    • the real nature of holiness
    • the temptations and difficulties which all must expect who pursue it
    • the life-transforming truth that union with Christ is the root of holiness
    • the immense encouragement Jesus Christ holds out to all who strive to be holy.

    Holiness, as with all of Ryle’s works, is clear and concise, penetrating and practical.

    Scroll down to see the list of chapter titles:

    $8.50$13.99
  • 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