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  • Mere Christianity (C.S. Lewis)

    The Beloved Classic on What All Christians Believe

    One of the most popular introductions to Christian faith ever written, Mere Christianity brings together Lewis’s legendary broadcast talks during World War Two. Here, Lewis provides an unequaled opportunity for believers and nonbelievers alike to hear a powerful, rational case for the Christian faith.

    A collection of scintillating brilliance, Mere Christianity remains strikingly fresh for the modern reader and at the same time confirms C.S. Lewis’s reputation as one of the leading writers and thinkers of our age.

    $14.39$17.99
  • Pauline Eschatology (Geerhardus J. Vos)

    The foreword describes this book as “a classic of unprecedented insight into the structure of Paul’s theology.” Vos’s basic thesis is that to unfold Paul’s eschatology is to set forth his theology as a whole, not just his teaching on Christ’s return. The author discusses the structure of Paul’s eschatology, the interaction between his eschatology and his soteriology, and the religious and ethical motivation of his eschatology. This volume also discusses the coming of the Lord and its precursors, the man of sin, the resurrection, chiliasm, the judgment, and the eternal state. The Pauline Eschatology, originally published in 1930, includes a bibliography and an appendix on the eschatology of the Psalter.

    $18.50$24.99
  • Essential Christian Doctrine book cover
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    Essential Christian Doctrine (John MacArthur)

    Doctrine not only equips you with more knowledge about God, it also shapes your affections toward him and directs your actions for him—but it can be difficult to know where to begin.

    This concise handbook, developed from John MacArthur’s larger work Biblical Doctrine, is an entry point for studying theological topics such as the Bible, the Holy Spirit, the church, and more. As MacArthur walks through the essentials of the Christian faith doctrine by doctrine, he’ll not only encourage your heart and mind, but also empower you to proclaim the faith that was “once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3).

    $31.99$39.99
  • Systematic Theology: Biblical and Historical (Robert Culver)

    Robert Culver wrote his Systematic Theology with the goal of creating a treasure trove for the student of the Bible. No previous knowledge of theology is required, for this volume is written in a highly readable way and is the perfect core to the library of anyone who loves to learn.

    “This wide-ranging, well-directed, sharp-sighted textbook is his magnum opus… This one stands high as a demonstration of the biblical rationality of the Reformed faith.” — J. I. Packer, Well known author of Knowing God and Board of Governors’ Professor of Theology, Regent College, Vancouver, Canada

    $47.50$54.99
  • Kingdom Come: The Amillennial Alternative (Sam Storms)

    The second coming of Christ is a matter of significant disagreement amongst Christians. Many hold to premillennialism: that Christ’s return will be followed by 1,000 years before the final judgement, a belief popularized in the popular Left Behind novels.

    However, premillennialism is not the only option for Christians. Sam Storms provides a biblical rationale for amillennialism, the belief that 1,000 years mentioned in the book of Revelation is symbolic with the emphasis being the King and his Kingdom.

    $24.50$29.99
  • A Journey in Matthew 24 (Richard Belcher)

    Ira Pointer, the main character of Dr. Belcher’s Journeys theological novels, along with his friend Dink, a fellow professor, is asked by a wealthy woman of a mountainous region of the southeast to come and teach her nephew, a young preacher who has never had any schooling. This young man, known as “Billy Hill, the Hillbilly Preacher”, is very gifted in his preaching, and he preaches in many of the mountain churches, though he is still quite young.

    There’s only one problem – his two uncles have been controlling him, since he began preaching as a twelve year old boy, and they are keeping most of his funds, and they will not let him get any schooling. He wants to be free from them and he also wants someone to teach him theology and further principles of Bible study.

    Ira Pointer and Dink take on the invitation of his aunt to teach him, but that brings all kinds of disturbance between them and the mountain people – the uncles and especially a man named “Mountain Man”, who challenges Dink to a boxing match, even though he outweighs Dink by more than a hundred pounds! The theology discussed, as Ira and Dink meet with Billy, is Matthew 24 – and the various views of that chapter of the Bible. Does it refer to the Second Coming of Christ or to the fall of Jerusalem – or to both?

    $9.95$12.95