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The Man Christ Jesus (Bruce Ware)
Liberal attacks on the doctrine of the divinity of Christ have led evangelicals to rightly affirm the centrality of Jesus’s divine nature for his person and work. At times, however, this defense of orthodoxy has led some to neglect Christ’s full humanity.
$16.99 -
Jesus the Son of God (D. A. Carson)
Although it is a foundational confession for all Christians, much of the theological significance of Jesus’s identity as “the Son of God” is often overlooked or misunderstood. Moreover, this Christological concept stands at the center of today’s Bible translation debates and increased ministry efforts to Muslims.
New Testament scholar D. A. Carson sheds light on this important issue with his usual exegetical clarity and theological insight, first by broadly surveying Jesus’s biblical name as “the Son of God,” and then by focusing on two key texts that speak of Christ’s sonship. The book concludes with the implications of Jesus’s divine sonship for how modern Christians think and speak about Christ, especially in relation to Bible translation and missionary engagement with Muslims across the globe.
$15.99 -
A Journey in Dispensationalism (Richard Belcher)
Theology can sometimes be very difficult to study, but it becomes even harder when a student has a bad attitude about the subject! So what’s Ira Pointer to do, when he is assigned to lead a study with a young man who truly lacks a teachable spirit? The young man holds views of prophecy that he vigorously defends, and such is the problem Ira runs headlong into – a study with a recalcitrant, know-it-all student, about the problems with Dispensationalism.
$12.95 -
The Baptist Confession of Faith of 1689
C. H. Spurgeon said of this great Confession – “Here the youngest members of our church will have a body of Truth in small compass, and by means of the scriptural proofs, will be able to give a reason of the hope that is in them.”
This scholarly and brilliant summary of Biblical doctrine (in the same family as the Westminster Confession, but from a Baptist perspective) also includes Scriptural proof texts. Also includes a brief history of the Confession’s formation.
$3.95 -
Old Paths (J. C. Ryle)
Subtitled, “Being Plain Statements on some of the Weightier Matters of Christianity.” Some of Ryle’s most persuasive expositions on the great themes of the gospel.
It was the prophet Jeremiah who first used the expression ‘old paths’ and assured those who followed those paths would find ‘rest for (their) souls’ (Jeremiah 6:16). J.C. Ryle was of the same conviction and wrote:
“The longer I live the more I am convinced that the world needs no new Gospel, as some profess to think. I am thoroughly persuaded that the world needs nothing but bold, full, unflinching teaching of the ‘old paths’”.
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