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  • Charges and Addresses (J. C. Ryle)

    A man of good scholarship, sterling character, wide sympathies, and tremendous zeal, J. C. Ryle accounted it no light thing to be entrusted with the work of organizing and advancing the cause of God and truth in a diocese noted for its extensive industrial development and in a city of world fame. As a man of God he gave unfeigned allegiance to the plenary inspiration of Holy Scripture.

    Linked with this was his determination to strive for the maintenance of the Protestant character of the Church of England as by law established in the days of the sixteenth-century Reformation. Doctrine, experience, and practice based upon and shaped by the pure word of God were to him the essentials of the ongoing life of the Church.

    $29.00
  • 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
  • The Whole Christ (Sinclair Ferguson)

    Legalism, Antinomianism, and Gospel Assurance—Why the Marrow Controversy Still Matters

    Since the days of the early church, Christians have wrestled with the relationship between the law and gospel. If, as the apostle Paul says, salvation is by grace and the law cannot save, what relevance does the law have for Christians today?

    By revisiting The Marrow Controversy — a famous but largely forgotten 18th-century debate related to the proper relationship between God’s grace and our works—Sinclair B. Ferguson sheds light on this central issue and why it still matters today.

    In doing so, he explains how our understanding of the relationship between law and gospel determines our approach to evangelism, our pursuit of sanctification, and even our understanding of God himself.

    $21.50$24.99
  • Doctrines that Divide: A Fresh Look at the Historic Doctrines That Separate Christians (Erwin Lutzer)

    An amazingly useful book which has been invaluable to tens of thousands of Bible students, to study and work through the important differences on major, controversial topics which often arise between Christians. Most certainly, you will be challenged, you will learn, and most of all, you’ll learn to carry your disagreements with other friends in Christ with love.

    Today, many call for unity by merely glossing over major differences, calling them unimportant issues to settle. But the genuine Bible student knows better and wants to come to some resolution on these points, settling on a sound option.

    $15.50$17.99