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Spurgeon Vs. Hyper-Calvinism: The Battle for Gospel Preaching (Iain Murray)
Iain Murray gives us the historical account of the labors of Charles Haddon Spurgeon against extreme Calvinists who saw no need to preach the gospel to all men, since only the elect would be saved, and that by God’s sovereign choice.
While Spurgeon agreed that God predestined men to salvation he also believed that the gospel was to be preached to all men, allowing the Holy Spirit to draw men to Christ, and that it was through the medium of preaching that men are saved (1 Cor. 1:18-25). Murray is a scholar who does his research well.
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Swift and Beautiful: Amazing Stories of Faithful Missionaries (David B. Calhoun)
“Take my feet, and let them be, swift and beautiful for Thee.” — from Frances Ridley Havergal’s hymn
Perhaps no other reading emboldens Christians more than that of Christian biography. In particular, the battle stories of those who have served well in the conflict to advance the gospel in the world. Swift and Beautiful tells the amazing stories of twelve men and women who at great cost gave their lives to take the gospel of God’s grace to those who had never heard.
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The Valley of Vision (paperback)
The most popular Puritan book in print, since its release in 1975, in an affordable paperback edition.
A selection of prayers and meditations in the Puritan tradition, widely valued since publication in 1975. In this classic volume, edited by Arthur Bennett, the prayers of the Puritans are brought to life.
Including prayers of Richard Baxter, John Bunyan, Isaac Watts, and others, The Valley of Vision is a selection of petitions and meditations in the Puritan tradition. This compilation of prayers is intended to teach and encourage Christians to be faithful in their private and family worship.
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Amy Carmichael: Beauty for Ashes (Iain Murray)
Amy Carmichael (1867-1951) was a missionary and author who spent over fifty years of her life — without returning home — serving mainly low caste girls and boys in South India. Iain Murray’s concise biography provides an enlightening and moving account of her remarkable life and love for her Saviour, as well as perceptively drawing lessons from it.
“This is a love story of the noblest kind. It is an enriching consideration of a woman’s relentless love for her Savior, her Bible, her friends, and most uniquely, her love for lost, suffering and desperate sinners – to whom she gave her life. Such devotion as hers seems so distant. Reading this brief history will confront and help to close that distance.”
— John MacArthur, Pastor, Grace Community Church, Sun Valley, CA“Iain Murray has written a superb account of this remarkable woman’s life . . . He has read her books and her poetry, and what he writes reveals a keen understanding of the motives and undertakings of an extraordinary woman. It warmed my heart and informed my mind . . . I cannot too enthusiastically recommend this book.”
— Ian Barter$13.00 -
What’s Wrong with Preaching Today? (Albert N. Martin)
The Christian church today needs a recovery of good preaching. But how is that to take place? In answering this vital question, the author draws on his own experience as a pastor and preacher and on the widespread opportunities he has had to teach and counsel other preachers.
From Albert Martin, one of the most gifted preachers of our century, What’s Wrong With Preaching Today? contains a searching message which will disturb complacency; but rather than create despair, it challenges all who preach (as well as those who hear) to rise to new levels of faithfulness and usefulness in the service of Christ.
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All Things Made New: John Flavel for the Christian Life (#51)
Numerous stories are told from John Flavel’s life of how people ‘happened to meet him’ and came away deeply thankful to God, full of resolve to walk with Christ as a result. The same is true of encounters made with Flavel’s writings, as in All Things Made New.
Flavel spent almost his entire ministry in a busy town serving working people. He believed that the gospel impacts and shapes every thought, every feeling, every ambition, emotion, desire, success, tragedy and joy. Christ makes all things new for the believer, and teaches us to follow him with confidence, until that day when he truly renews all things. To read Flavel is to catch and to be changed by the same vision.
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Precious Remedies Against Satan’s Devices (Thomas Brooks) (#11)
One of the greatest Puritan books ever written – even the vast table of contents is incredibly edifying, providing an 8-page outline categorizing the various methods by which Satan deceives and entices us.
Brooks treated the seductive influence and terrible power of Satan in a way greatly more full and suggestive than in the literature of the present day.
Brooks lists seven reasons for writing this book. The first reason is enough…Brooks says, “Satan hath a greater influence upon men, and higher advantages over them than they think he hath, and the knowledge of his high advantage is the highway to disappoint him, and to render the soul strong in resisting, and happy in conquering.
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The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment (Jeremiah Burroughs) (#7)
Without a doubt, the most readable and useful book ever written to promote a contented, thankful, uncomplaining and grateful walk with God. We live in a world of grumblers, discontent with God’s widespread goodness. It is all too easy for Christians to share in this spirit with the world.
This book, in typical Puritan form, “doctors” us by proposing remedies to our “spiritual disease” and helps us grow a spirit of thankfulness in its place.
The author focuses especially on helping to bring calm and contentment to the hearts of those in sad and discouraged times. He also aims to promote peace and harmony among believers with various differences of opinion.
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The Child’s Story Bible (Catherine Vos)
Catherine Vos’ Child’s Story Bible combines qualities which are not generally found together! Her writing appeals to the interest and imagination of children without sacrificing fidelity to the text of Scripture. Mrs. Vos uses the stories to impress great doctrinal truths, uniting the element of enjoyment with instruction. She also explains the somber, warning passages of the word of God, not only the pleasing ones.
Her book was written to call children to trust and serve our Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ!
$30.00 -
The Works of John Bunyan (in 3 volumes)
These three quality volumes constitute the only available printed edition of Bunyan’s works.
“This is one of my most treasured collection of books, as Bunyan’s writings bring the grace of the gospel alive, and the words go straight to my heart. There are so many classic books here, that after you start reading Bunyan, you will find yourself returning to him during often, in good times and tempting times, experiencing his powerful writings, knowing that your faith will be strengthened and encouraged through his words of comfort and love of Christ.” — Matthew Williams
$99.00 -
The Mystery of Providence (John Flavel) (#4)
Do we believe that everything in the world and in our own lives down to the minutest details is ordered by the providence of God? Believers can benefit immeasurably from taking the time to observe and meditate on the workings of God’s providence, and Flavel instructs us how to improve the effort.
John Flavel’s The Mystery of Providence has gained renown for over 300 years as the all-time classic work on the subject of the providence of God. He starts with Psalm 57:2: “I will cry unto God most high; unto God that performeth all things for me.”, and from there, leads his readers to reflect on this truth: “It is the duty of the saints, especially in times of straits, to reflect upon the performances of Providence for them in all the states and through all the stages of their lives.”
Far from a merely theoretical book, this was authored by a pastor with a huge heart, living in times of political upheaval and with the cities of England disease-ridden, which even dramatically impacted his own family.
$10.00 -
Ephesians (Charles Hodge)
The great virtue of Hodge on Ephesians is his ability constantly to communicate the sense and overall argument of a passage. A peerless teacher, his aim, with the pen as in the classroom, was ‘the simple exhibition of the truth which God had revealed’- his own description of Paul’s preaching.
One of the outstanding Geneva Series commentaries.
“Hodge is most valuable. With no writer do we more fully agree.” — Charles H. Spurgeon
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Thoughts for Young Men (J. C. Ryle)
Thoughts for Young Men is practical, spiritual, and lively. Abounding in advice and good sense, it is still as relevant and helpful in the 21st century as it was when first published in 1865.
$8.00 -
Free Grace and Dying Love: Morning Devotions by Susannah Spurgeon
24 devotions written by Susannah Spurgeon (wife of Charles Spurgeon) and also a 100 page section devoted to a biography of her by Charles Ray. Much is known of Charles but comparatively little about the woman who supported this great preacher behind the scenes of his ministry.
Now, her rich devotional collection of meditations on various texts of Scripture, formerly entitled A Carillon of Bells, is back in print. Also includes The Life of Susannah Spurgeon by Charles Ray, which overflows with her affectionate love for her husband and the fascinating record of the work of her famous “Book Fund.”
$11.00 -
The Godly Man’s Picture (Thomas Watson) (#20)
The ways in which Watson illustrates the traits of a godly man truly is like an artist painting pictures: the reader will feel as if he is with a master illustrator, as Watson was perhaps the most skilled Puritan writer and preacher of all, at drawing memorable illustrations with his words. His skillfulness at this reminds one of the way in which the Lord Jesus taught with parables.
$11.00 -
Light From Old Times (J. C. Ryle)
The 19th century was an age that witnessed great progress in many areas of exploration and learning. However, according to J.C. Ryle, it was an age of great ignorance too. ‘With all the stir made about education’, he wryly observed, ‘the ignorance of our own country’s history is something lamentable and appalling and depressing.’
What particularly distressed Ryle was the scant knowledge of the English Reformation evident amongst his contemporaries. In this lay a grace danger: one of the reasons so many congregations drift form their evangelical foundations is their sheer ignorance of Christian history, and their lack of understanding of the major doctrinal controversies and why they matter.
So Ryle taught that one of the best ways to stop Christians wavering ‘with every changing wind of doctrine’ (Eph. 4:14) is to instill in them a deep love for Reformation and Puritan teaching, and a willingness to suffer for those gospel truths. The Bible often calls us to remember the past, Ryle explained, but the devil tries to make us forget. If the church is to be strengthened, then Christians must be persuaded to read the saints of the past and to learn the lessons of church history.
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Genesis (John Calvin)
Because Calvin was a sound exegete, little of what he wrote is dated. In Genesis, although his treatment of the early chapters is thorough, it is not disproportionate, and the later narratives concerning Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and Joseph are not passed over hastily. Indeed, Calvin excels in bringing out the principles of God’s dealings with men, as individuals and in covenant, and in showing faithfully, yet tenderly, the human weakness and sin all too evident in Genesis.
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Romans (Robert Haldane)
‘Dr. Chalmers styled this “a well-built commentary”, and strongly recommended it to students of theology. In his “Sabbath Readings” he writes: “I am reading Haldane’s Exposition of the Epistle to the Romans, and find it solid and congenial food.”‘ — C. H. Spurgeon
Robert Haldane’s Exposition of Romans, both in its contents and in the power of its influence, stands among the foremost of the many treatments of the epistle. As a commentary, Thomas Chalmers ‘strongly recommended’ it; Spurgeon put it in the front rank, and more recently, Martyn Lloyd-Jones owed ‘much profit and pleasure’ to it, characterizing its contents as unsurpassed in ‘warmth of spirit’ and ‘practical application’.
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The Reformed Pastor (Richard Baxter) (#14)
The Reformed Pastor is the result of a lecture Baxter was to deliver to a group of pastors. As it turn out, his health prevented him from attending, but he sent his manuscript to be read to the men. The biblical basis for his call of reform is Acts 20:28. “Pay careful attention to yourselves and to all the flock, in which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to care for the church of God, which he obtained with his own blood.”
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The Christian in Complete Armour: 3 vol. set (William Gurnall)
The 3-volume paperback set of one of the most important Puritan works ever published! The classic work on the Christian warfare, sanctification, and the fight every Christian is engaged in, against the world, the flesh, and the devil – all the spiritual forces aligned against us. But Gurnall shows how the power of Christ equips us for the warfare.
The book is a vast collection of sermons on Ephesians 6:10-20, on being “strong in the Lord.” Without a doubt, some of the most edifying reading ever penned by any of the Puritans – and that’s saying a lot.
$32.00
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