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Ploductivity: A Practical Theology of Work & Wealth (Douglas Wilson)
Ploductivity: (noun),
- the practice of plodding away at a pile of work, instead of frantically trying to sprint through it all
- being stable and graceful, like a buffalo upon the plains, not frantic, like a prairie dog or roadrunner
Here’s a book that provides a theology for technology, work, and mission that helps you be thoughtfully productive in the digital age.
The key is biblically-rooted wisdom and the ability to create the right habits and the regular discipline to use what we have been given.
$14.95 -
You Who? Why You Matter and How to Deal With It (Rachel Jankovic)
If “Who am I?” is the question you’re asking, Rachel Jankovic doesn’t want you to “find yourself” or “follow your heart.” She wants you to learn the real meaning of identity, and it’s not about your feelings or wishful thinking.
$14.95 -
Fit to Burst: Abundance, Mayhem, and the Joys of Motherhood (Rachel Jankovic)
Rachel Jankovic pushes her parenting “field notes” out onto the skinny branches of motherhood. Fit to Burst is chock-full of humorous examples and fresh advice covering issues familiar to every mom such as guilt cycles, temptations to be ungrateful or bitter, and learning how to honor Jesus in the mundane things.
But this book also addresses less familiar topics, including the impact that moms have on the relationships between dads and kids, the importance of knowing when to laugh at kid-sized sin, and more.
$14.00 -
The Amazing Dr. Ransom’s Bestiary of Adorable Fallacies
Stymied and stumped by arguments that wrap around you like a web of mystification? The Amazing Dr. Ransom’s Bestiary of Adorable Fallacies is here to help!
This Field Guide for Clear Thinkers is filled with illustrations, descriptions, exercises, and analysis to help you identify and avoid fallacies you might encounter in everyday life. Describing fifty informal fallacies organized by context— fallacies of distraction, ambiguity, form, and “millennial fallacies”— each is described as a (adorable yet venomous) creature one might encounter in the wild, complete with illustration and fantastical description.
This book is perfect for supplementing any high school or college logic curriculum . . . or as an independent read for adults who want to learn more about logic! Each fallacy is followed by discussion questions and exercises; a line-listed answer key and both one and two-semester schedules are included in the back of the book.
$24.99 -
Reforming Marriage: Gospel Living for Couples (Douglas Wilson)
How would you describe the spiritual aroma of your home?
The source of this aroma is the relationship between husband and wife. Many can fake an attempt at keeping God’s standards in some external way. What we cannot fake is the resulting, distinctive aroma of pleasure to God.
$15.95 -
Empires of Dirt: Secularism, Radical Islam, and the Mere Christendom Alternative (Douglas Wilson)
As it self-destructs, the strategy of secularism (the idea that nations can be religiously neutral) is splitting between American exceptionalism and radical Islam. American exceptionalism, the belief that “America” is more than a nation, is folly. Radical Islam is obviously wrong as well, but Muslims at least own the nature of the current cultural conflict. You must follow somebody, whether its Allah, the State, or Jesus Christ.
$16.00 -
Future Men: Raising Boys to Fight Giants (Douglas Wilson)
When Theodore Roosevelt taught Sunday school for a time, a boy showed up one Sunday with a black eye. He admitted he had been fighting and on the Lord’s Day, too. He told the future president that a bigger boy had been pinching his sister, and so he fought him. TR told him that he had done perfectly right and gave him a dollar. The stodgy vestrymen thought this was a bit much, and so they let their exuberant Sunday school teacher go. What a loss.
In this book, Douglas Wilson discusses how parents can help their sons cultivate true masculinity and become men who are strong and self-sacrificial, just as Christ was. This book is a part of Douglas Wilson’s series of books on the family, which has helped many people trying to deal with the everyday messes that come with sinners trying to live under the same roof. This book on raising sons covers issues such as laziness, Christian liberty, school, sports, girls, and proper contempt for the cool.
$15.95 -
Easy Chairs, Hard Words: Conversations on the Liberty of God (Douglas Wilson)
“Therefore He has mercy on whom He wills, and whom He wills He hardens. You will say to me then, ‘Why still find fault, For who resisted His will?’ But indeed, O man, who are you to reply against God?” (Romans 9:18-20a).
Easy Chairs, Hard Words offers an honest look at many such difficult passages in Scripture. Presented as a series of fictional conversations between a curious young Christian and a seasoned pastor, these dialogues speak with clarity to those new to the Reformed faith.
They begin with the question, “Can salvation be lost?” and from there wrestle with other hard-to-swallow doctrines, including the freedom of the will, election, and original sin. Hard words, and yet the understanding given these passages is thoughtful and gentle. For our God—the God of hard words—is a merciful and loving Father, slow to wrath and quick to pardon, a triune God who graciously rescues men from death and brings them into everlasting life.
$12.00
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