-
The Way to True Peace and Rest (Robert Bruce)
Six Sermons on Hezekiah’s Sickness: Isaiah 38:1-22
It was said of Robert Bruce that ‘no man in his time spake with such evidence and power of the Spirit’. One is certainly left with that impression after reading The Way to True Peace and Rest, his six sermons on Isaiah 38, a chapter that records the illness that afflicted King Hezekiah of Judah and his reaction to it. Although various sicknesses are common to all humanity, yet people react in very different ways when such trials are visited upon them.
With a wonderful blend of faithful exposition, keen insight, and practical application, Bruce urges his hearers to ‘take heed to the various aspects of this account, that we may learn how to conduct ourselves in the event of our suffering some serious disease; thus, learning from King Hezekiah’s behaviour, we may come to obtain the same comfort he experienced.’
$9.00 -
Human Nature in its Fourfold State (Thomas Boston)
The famous work of this Puritan gives an exhaustive and full explanation of biblical teaching on the four different “states” of man’s relationship with God:
1) Man as Created: Innocent
2) Man as Corrupted: Sinful
3) Man as Redeemed: in Grace
4) Man in Heaven: Glorified$28.00 -
Daniel (Edward J. Young)
“The people that do know their God shall be strong,” wrote Daniel. It was not as a learned exegete, but as a humble pupil in the school of God that E. J. Young taught the Scriptures until his death in 1968. His commentary on Daniel is one of the most valuable portions of the legacy he has left to the church.
-
El Secreto de la Vida Cristiana (J. C. Ryle)
Su concepto de la vida cristiana respira un activismo netamente bÃblico. Para Ryle, el verdadero cristiano no puede armonizarse con una noción estática de la fe, sino que, por lo contrario, la vida espiritual que se recibe con el nuevo nacimiento es como una fuerza impulsadora que pone a todas las facultades de la persona salva en acción constante.
Asi como el movimiento es manifestación de un principio de vida, la actividad en los senderos de la santidad es evidencia de una genuina vida espiritual en Cristo.
El enfoque que tiene Juan Carlos Ryle en este libro es de presentar un reto y estÃmulo al creyente a vivir la vida abundante recibiba en el nuevo nacimiento. ¡Es un llamado vivir!
$13.99 -
Heaven: A World of Love: Pocket Puritan series (Jonathan Edwards)
According to Jonathan Edwards, heaven will be a world of holy love. God himself is the source of this love, and in heaven he will impart it perfectly to all his people. Edwards unfolds the nature, expression, effects, and enjoyment of this best of all the gifts God ever bestows on those who believe.
From Jonathan Edwards’ Charity and Its Fruits. A small, “pocket edition”, 3-1/2″ x 5-1/4″ volume.
$6.00 -
Knots Untied (J. C. Ryle)
In Knots Untied, J. C. Ryle explores numerous topics that are often embroiled in controversy: baptism, the Sabbath, idolatry, regeneration, the Lord’s Supper, Private Judgment, and over a dozen more. Scroll down to see the full table of contents.
-
Select Practical Writings (Robert Traill) (#56)
This Puritan paperback volume includes writings by Robert Traill on:
- The grace of God never frustrated (Galatians 2:21)
- By What Means Ministers may Best Win Souls
- Our God is a Consuming Fire (Hebrews 12:29)
- God’s Name from Everlasting (Isaiah 63:16)
- Enter at the Narrow Gate (Matthew 7:13-14)
- The Unsearchable Riches of Christ (Ephesians 3:8)
- Working Out Salvation in Fear & Trembling (Philippians 2:12-13)
- God Searches & Reveals All Things by the Spirit (1 Corinthians 2:10)
- Impossible to Renew the Apostate to Repentance (Hebrews 6:4-6)
$10.00 -
The Beatitudes (Thomas Watson)
A new, high quality hardcover edition of Watson’s classic on The Beatitudes.
First published in 1660, Thomas Watson’s fresh, illustration, pointed and beautiful style of communicating God’s truth emerges again in dealing with Matt 5:1-12. No one follows Christ’s teaching method more closely than Watson, in employing a wide variety of illustrations from common life, speaking with a simplicity and charm that always presents truth in unforgettable colors.
$28.00 -
The Glory of Christ (John Owen) (#22)
It is clear from these pages that Owen had already seen the glory of Christ from afar and pondered long on its significance. His teaching is well-suited to bring us to share in his longing to know Christ better, to see his glory more clearly and to serve him more faithfully.
Here is a book we hope that many readers will freshly discover as one of the hidden treasures of Christian literature and will return to it again and again for instruction and spiritual refreshment.
$9.00 -
Duties of Christian Fellowship (John Owen) (#53)
John Owen’s Duties of Christian Fellowship deals with a matter of perennial concern for every truly Christian church. In just a few pages it sets out in very concise terms the responsibilities all Christians have, first, to their pastors, and then second, to one another within the fellowship of the local church.
John Owen was a pastor as well as a theologian and therefore this is a most practical manual of church fellowship. It was likely intended to be read by individuals with self-examination, meditation and prayer, but it would also be very suitable for group Bible study or adult Sunday School classes. This edition is enhanced by a modernized text and the addition of questions which have been added to facilitate group discussion.
$8.00 -
Galatians: A Geneva Series Commentary (John Brown)
The expositions of John Brown (1784-1858) are unusually helpful to all kinds of readers. Spurgeon said in his Commenting and Commentaries, “Brown is a modern Puritan of the utmost value. The volume on Galatians is one of the scarcest books in the market.”
As a theological professor, Brown was strongly convinced that his students’ view should be ‘not only consistent with, but derived from a careful exegesis of the ‘words which the Holy Ghost teacheth’…it has been my sincere desire to bring out of the inspired words what is really in them, and to put nothing into them that is not really there.’  But as the pastor of a congregation, Brown was also anxious that his expositions should edify all Christians and not only instruct students. As a result his commentaries are unusually helpful to all kinds of readers.
-
From Grief to Glory: A Book of Comfort for Grieving Parents (James W. Bruce)
“There are few joys to match that which a child brings to a family. And even fewer sorrows that rival the pain of burying a child. James Bruce and his wife, Joni, knew that pain when their infant son died. They found comfort in the words of others who had known similar loss: fellow Christians such as Martin Luther, Charles Spurgeon, and John Bunyan, who also wept and yet were comforted by the Father of mercies.
Their intimate, emotional expressions of pain, peace, and hope and their prevailing faith , are shared throughout these pages in both the short accounts and the eloquent poetry gathered here. If you or a loved one is walking through the valley of weeping – especially at the loss of a son or daughter , know that you are not alone, and let those who have come before remind you of your heavenly Father’s sovereign grace and the mystery of joy in the midst of suffering.” — Joni Eareckson Tada
$12.00 -
John G. Paton: The Autobiography
The autobiography of John G. Paton contains everything necessary to make it a missionary classic. Born into a Christian family near Dumfries in 1824, Paton’s early years were marked by a struggle against poverty. He was self-educated, and the training ground for his life’s work was the slums of Glasgow where he laboured with success as a city missionary.
With ‘the wail of the perishing heathen in the South Seas’ continually sounding in his ears, he prepared himself to serve overseas and was ordained as a missionary to the New Hebrides in 1858. This group of thirty mountainous islands, so named by Captain Cook, with its unhealthy climate, was then inhabited by savages and cannibals.
The first attempt to introduce Christianity to them resulted in John Williams and James Harris being clubbed to death within a few minutes of landing in 1839. The difficulties that confronted Paton were accentuated by the sudden death of his wife and child within months of their arrival. Against the savagery and the superstition, despite the trials and the tragedies, Paton persevered and witnessed the triumph of the gospel in two of these South Sea islands. His life is almost without parallel in missionary annals and his account of it is moving and gripping.
$28.00 -
A Sure Guide to Heaven (Joseph Alleine) (#5
A book designed to revive believers in their concern for evangelism. Describes mistakes about conversion, the nature of true conversion, the necessity of conversion, the marks of the unconverted, their miseries, directives to them and motives to conversion.
$8.00 -
The Golden Treasury of Puritan Quotations (I. D. E. Thomas) (#15)
This book is no ordinary collection of quotations and anthologies, but is a masterful selection by an author who has given many years to his work. The 1500 quotations from a wide range of Puritans have been chosen with great care, and arranged under topical headings.
This collection of quotes form an ideal introduction to the writings of the great and godly men of the 17th century, and are devotional reading of the highest quality. Those who are already familiar with Puritan writings will find this Treasury to be a perfect stimulus to further reading.
$12.00 -
The Shorter Catechism Explained From Scripture (Thomas Vincent) (#16)
The shorter catechism has been used for centuries as a teaching basis for an introduction to the doctrines of the Christian faith. This London pastor of the 17th century made extensive use of it to train his young people, and his explanation of the catechism has been an invaluable, classic work, reprinted many times over the centuries.
In the opinion of B.B. Warfield, the Westminster divines left to posterity not only ‘the most thoroughly thought out statement ever penned of the elements of evangelical religion’ but also one which breathes ‘the finest fragrance of spiritual religion’. Their most influential work, ‘The Shorter Catechism’, was intended as a teaching basis for an introduction to the Christian Faith. No London pastor made more effective use of it than Thomas Vincent (1634-1678) and when this ‘explanation’ was first published in 1674, John Owen, Thomas Watson along with 38 other signatories to the Preface, declared their belief that it would ‘be greatly useful to all Christians in general’.
$10.00 -
Art of Prophesying (William Perkins) (#23)
First published in 1592, this book on the importance of preaching is vivid testimony to how clearly understandable Puritan writings remain, even 400 years later! One of the most damaging flaws of modern churches is the decline in importance of what is said from their pulpits.
Today, a style and delivery which grabs the attention has replaced life-changing content in many churches, and the church becomes an image of excitement concealing a valley of dry bones. True preaching, seen as prophesying forth the Word of God, is needed to breathe fresh life into the people of God.
Few things are more evident in contemporary churches than the decline in the importance attached to what is said from their pulpits. The deeper tragedy is that in many places the church has become a valley of dry bones. Something is needed to waken the dead and to breathe new life into the people of God. William Perkins (1558-1602) provides basic guidance to help all Christians to read and use the Bible intelligently. He has a particularly powerful message for those who lead God’s people and especially those who preach.
The Art of Prophesying carries sparks capable of igniting a preacher. It should be beside every minister’s desk as a book to turn to again and again.
$9.00 -
A History of the Work of Redemption (Jonathan Edwards)
The scope of Jonathan Edwards’ book, A History of the Work of Redemption, is vast. From a deep extensive knowledge of Scripture, Jonathan Edwards sets out to survey the whole of the redemptive work of God in history, from the Fall of man to the consummation of all things.
A thrilling conclusion emerges: Everything in human history from start to finish is subservient to Christ’s work of redemption. Not only can nothing thwart that work, but, in the wisdom of God, all that comes to pass actually serves to advance it.
$32.00 -
1 & 2 Corinthians (Charles Hodge)
“The more we use Hodge, the more we value him. This applies to all his commentaries.” — Charles Haddon Spurgeon
Charles Hodge’s work on 1 and 2 Corinthians, which is part of the Geneva Series of Commentaries, forms one of the most significant parts of the plan for a series of ‘popular commentaries’ on the New Testament. He projected to do this with J. A. Alexander in the 1850s.
When the early death of Alexander prevented the completion of the series, the individual volumes were quickly prized in their own right and went through many editions on both sides of the Atlantic.
-
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.
$9.00
FREE DELIVERY
When ordering from $500.