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The Heart of Revelation (J. Scott Duvall)
“Let anyone who has ears to hear listen to what the Spirit says to the churches.”
$24.99 -
The Normal Christian Life (Watchman Nee)
The Normal Christian Life is Watchman Nee’s great Christian classic unfolding the central theme of “Christ our Life.” Nee reveals the secret of spiritual strength and vitality that should be the normal experience of every Christian.
Starting from certain key passages in Romans, he defines clearly and vividly the essential steps in the personal faith and walk of the believer. His emphasis on the cross and resurrection of Jesus Christ contains fresh spiritual insights that have proven a blessing to many.
$13.99 -
The Overcoming Life (D.L. Moody)
Now with a new foreword by Mark Jobe.
D. L. Moody writes, “It is like this. When a man enters the army, he is a member of the army the moment he enlists; he is just as much a member as a man who has been in the army ten or twenty years. But enlisting is one thing, and participating in a battle another.”
$8.99 -
The Saint’s Advantage by Christ’s Ascension and Coming Again from Heaven (Christopher Love)
We often think of Christ’s death and resurrection as important to the Christian life. But is there any benefit from Jesus’s ascension? Christopher Love reminds us of the great advantages of Christ going into heaven—not only that He prepares a place for us, but also that He will return and receive us to Himself, and we will be with Him evermore. The book touches on key end time teachings regarding the second coming of Christ, the millennial reign, the bodily resurrection, and the elects’ everlasting communion with the Lord. It also presents believers great comfort while they await Christ’s return.
$23.00 -
Warfield on the Christian Life: Living in Light of the Gospel (Fred G. Zaspel)
B. B. Warfield is well known as one of America’s leading theologians, perhaps second only to Jonathan Edwards. But until now the character of his own Christian experience and his understanding of the Christian life have remained unexplored. Fred Zaspel unpacks these for us here, and what we find is that Warfield’s profound theological mind is matched only by his passionate heart for Christ. From Warfield we learn truly what it is to live in light of the gospel.
$19.99 -
Wesley on the Christian Life: The Heart Renewed in Love (Fred Sanders)
John Wesley was one of the most important figures behind the founding of modern evangelicalism. From his crucial role in the Great Awakening to his inspiring a renewal movement within the Church of England, Wesley’s historical significance is undeniable and his legacy still challenges us today, regardless of our denominational affiliation or theological perspective. Offering an approachable introduction to Wesley’s life and writings, Fred Sanders invites us to learn from Wesley’s reliance on the Spirit, passion for holiness, and zeal for the gospel in this winsome portrait of an extraordinary Christian leader.
$19.99 -
Where the River Begins (Patricia St. John)
A confused and misguided youngster stays with a Christian family while his mother is institutionalized. The family helps him discover the source of the nearby river and the source of the Christian life.
$8.99 -
Spiritual Disciplines For the Christian Life (Don Whitney)
A major work on sanctification in the Christian life for the past 20 years, revised and updated. For over two decades now, this has become the standard book to guide followers of Christ through a personal study of the essential spiritual disciplines. Each one involves your personal growth in the Lord.
Twenty years ago, Don Whitney shed fresh light on how Christians approach Christian growth with the original release of this book. Drawing from a rich heritage of godly believers from Christian history, he guides readers through the disciplines of Bible study, prayer, evangelism, fasting, service, worship, meditation, stewardship, silence, solitude, journaling, and more.
$15.99 -
A Guide to Christian Living (John Calvin)
Originally entitled by Calvin, On The Christian Life.Â
When John Calvin first began writing his Institutes of the Christian Religion, he had in mind a short handbook or manual which would set out the essentials of the Christian faith. Although the persecution of Protestants in France led him in time to accentuate the apologetic nature of the book, the Institutes, as first published in 1536, remained a work of Christian instruction, intended, as Calvin says, for those who were ‘touched with some zeal for religion’, and principally for those among his French compatriots who ‘were hungering and thirsting for Christ’, and who ‘might be shaped to true godliness’.
$14.00
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