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  • Popes and Feminists: How the Reformation Frees Women from Feminism (Elise Crapuchettes)

    Part history and part contemporary reflection, Popes and Feminists argues that women today have some of the same choices facing them as women in the sixteenth century. In this fascinating book, published on the five hundredth anniversary of the Protestant Reformation, Elise Crapuchettes shows how the Reformation changed the lives of Christian women as it turned them away from trying to earn their salvation in the convent towards a joyful, liberating view of vocation and work. And that changed their families and the world.

    $14.50$16.00
  • The Right Use of the Fathers (John Daille)

    To the faithful Roman Catholic, as to the dissenting Protestant, authority is an important issue.  From whence may our duties in doctrine and practice be in infallibly drawn?  The Protestant answers, “From Scripture alone.”  The Romanist, on the other hand, answers, “From Scripture as it is interpreted by the infallible testimony of the Church, from the time of the Apostles to the present.”

    To the defense of this latter position, the writings of the ante-Nicene, Nicene, and post-Nicene fathers are recruited, with the assumption that they all held to a harmonious system of doctrine and that an appeal to such a system should put to rest all controversies.

    The truth of the matter is, however, that the fathers often contradicted one another, while many changed their opinions as they judgment matured with study or age.  Some of the extant writings are also of doubtful origin, the traditionally accepted authorship at times a matter of dispute. The author of this volume discusses these and other problems that arise from substituting the unreliable testimony of the fathers for the sure word of the enscripturated Word of God.

    $14.75$19.95
  • A Journey in Roman Catholicism (Richard Belcher)

    What does a professor at a Baptist seminary do when he finds himself charged with holding a Roman Catholic position on important doctrines? What will he do when his own writings point to the conclusion that he is arguing in favor of a Roman Catholic view of theology and conversion? He’s going to be dismissed from his position!

    Without even being given an opportunity to prove himself innocent of these charges, follow the dilemma Professor Ira Pointer finds himself in as he faces, “Who framed me?” and “How can I prove what I really believe?”

    $9.95$12.95