Showing all 18 results

  • Free to Be Holy: The Liberating Grace of Walking by Faith (Jerry Wragg)

    In this book, Jerry Wragg and Paul Shirley call us back to Scripture’s manifest blueprint for becoming conformed to the image of Christ. With balance and warm-hearted clarity, they demonstrate that God’s grace empowers us for every good deed. They show us that our justification doesn’t liberate us from being diligent in our efforts to trust and obey, but rather it gives us power to withstand temptation and walk with the Lord in victory.

    $11.99$14.99
  • Law and Liberty: A Biblical Look at Legalism (Don Kistler)

    There are two deadly extremes Christians must avoid—legalism and antinomianism. Both are antithetical to the gospel. One raises God’s standards and the other lowers them. This book addresses the first of those deadly traps, that of legalism. It is a term that is often thrown about, but is seldom defined.

    In this helpful book, several noted preachers and theologians show what legalism is and how destructive it can be to a right understanding of both justification and sanctification. Legalism is “a yoke that neither we nor our fathers could bear.” Fortunately, that “yoke” was borne by Christ at the cross, and He alone is able to bear it. He has “fulfilled all righteousness” for us, and that is a reason for rejoicing.

    $10.50$12.00
  • The Spirit and the Law: Defining and Escaping Legalism (Stan Choate)

    This book is unique in that it seeks to deal with the subject of legalism by defining it, rather than by name-calling.

    Perhaps one of the single, greatest reasons people find themselves in legalistic practices is because they simply don’t know how to rightly identify legalism.  In light of this, Stan Choate is seeking to address this issue among the people of God. Legalism is a very real danger, and the Scriptures deal with it directly, though the Bible never uses that specific term. Christians often use the phrase carelessly and usually in an accusatory manner, resulting in a shallow and sloppy understanding that doesn’t actually bring any clarity or help in our spiritual battles. The conviction of this book is that just like any other issue in the Christian life, we ought to remain confident that God has truly given to us all things pertaining to life and godliness in Christ, and that His Word is sufficient as a guide for us if we will pay attention to it. Therefore, by the guidance of Scripture and the Spirit of God, we ought to address this issue and learn first how to escape it ourselves, and second, how to help those around us to do the same.

    $14.95$16.00
  • Samuel Rutherford: The Law, the Prince, and the Scribe

    When Samuel Rutherford picked up his pen he changed lives, maybe even across continents. What he wrote influenced the American constitution but where his real power and passion was felt was in the letters that his warm pastor’s heart wrote to the people of his parish.

    $8.99
  • Peter Martyr Vermigli: Christian Biographies for Young Readers (Simonetta Carr)

    Born in Florence, Italy, in 1499, Peter Martyr Vermigli decided that he wanted to teach God’s Word when he grew up. After many years of study, he became a well-respected leader in the Roman Catholic Church, yet he questioned the church’s teachings because he believed they were contrary to the Bible.

    Eventually forced to flee Italy and the Roman Church, Vermigli joined the Reformers north of the Alps and devoted the rest of his life to teaching, preaching, and writing about the great truths of the Protestant Reformation. He lived in many parts of Europe, and he influenced many of the most important figures of his times.

    This volume in the Christian Biographies for Young Readers series retells the story of a servant of Christ who left behind a postion of prominence in the Roman Church to courageously join the cause of the Protestant Reformation. Enhanced by illustrious, photographs, and additional information about the Reformation era, this account shows young readers how God can use the piety and talents of one man to advance the cause of His truth.

    $13.95$18.00
  • The Ten Commandments (Kevin DeYoung)

    Are the 10 Commandments still relevant today? 

    Do they still apply? Which ones? What do they mean in light of God’s mercy revealed in Jesus?

    Highlighting the timelessness and goodness of God’s commands, pastor Kevin DeYoung delivers critical truth about the 10 Commandments as he makes clear what they are, why we should know them, and how to apply them. This book will help you understand, obey, and delight in God’s law—commandments that expose our sinfulness and reveal the glories of God’s grace to us in Christ.

    $15.00$17.99
  • The Tuttle Twins Learn about the Law (Connor Boyack)

    What are individual rights, and where do they come from? Should the government help people, or should we? Ethan and Emily explore these and more questions as they learn about the law and help your kids do the same.

    Full of bright, engaging illustrations, this unique book introduces your child to fundamental principles that schools no longer teach.

    $9.49$9.99
  • The Doctrine of the Lesser Magistrates (Matthew Trewhella)

    The Doctrine of the Lesser Magistrates places in your hands a hopeful blueprint for freedom. Appealing to history and the Word of God, Pastor Matthew Trewhella answers these questions and shows how Americans can successfully resist the Federal government’s attempts to trample our Constitution, assault our liberty, and impugn the law of God.

    The doctrine of the lesser magistrates declares that when the superior or higher civil authority makes an unjust/immoral law or decree, the lesser or lower ranking civil authority has both the right and duty to refuse obedience to that superior authority. If necessary, the lower authority may even actively resist the superior authority.

     

    $12.75$13.95
  • Hebrews (John Brown)

    Commentaries generally belong to one of two categories. Either they aim at a devotional thoroughness which lays no great emphasis on the exact meaning of individual words, or they concentrate on such a detailed examination of the text that the spirit and power of the book is largely lost. Among the few commentators who stand between these two positions is Dr. John Brown of Edinburgh (1784-1858).

    By seeking to develop a style of exposition that was both edifying to his congregation and valuable to his divinity students, he produced commentaries which, in the words of Dr. William Cunningham, ‘formed a marked era in the history of Scriptural Interpretation’. Not behind the foremost contemporary scholars in his emphasis on correct exegesis, he nevertheless sought not only that the minds of his readers might be brought ‘into immediate contact with the mind of the Spirit’ but that their whole being might be resigned to ‘the empire of the Word of God’.

    $29.00$32.00
  • By What Standard? God’s World – God’s Rules (Jared Longshore, editor)

    By What Standard? is collected writings on vital theological issues for the 21st century, from Tom Ascol, Voddie Baucham, Tom Nettles, Mark Coppenger, Jared Longshore, and Chad Vegas.

    $17.00$19.95
  • The True Bounds of Christian Freedom (Samuel Bolton)

    From a Puritan master, this is one of the best explanations ever written of the place of God’s law in the Christian life. Bolton delves into those vital questions about what being “free from the Law” truly means and what it does not mean.

    His careful study is presented with such clarify, it’s easily understandable even to those not familiar with Puritan writings, in a very readable style – and most of all, practical and helpful to your study of the Word of God.

    $8.00$9.00
  • The Law of Christ (Charles Leiter)

    A balanced and judicious treatment of frequently debated theological issues. Leiter show show the Scriptures put the Lord Jesus Christ at the center of everything in the believer’s life, fleshing out for the Christian how to approach issues such as ethics, law, Scripture reading, love, and many other things we encounter in our walk.

    Leiter has written a book that stirs the soul and encourages the saints with the joy, liberty, and responsibility of following the Lord Jesus Christ in both His selfless love for others and His complete devotion to the Father.

    $14.95$17.00
  • God’s Rules for Holiness: Unlocking the Ten Commandments (Peter Masters)

    Taken at face value the Ten Commandments are binding on all people, and will guard the way to Heaven, so that evil will never spoil its glory and purity. But the Commandments are far greater than their surface meaning, as this book shows.

    They challenge us as Christians on a still wider range of sinful deeds and attitudes. They provide positive virtues as goals. And they give immense help for staying close to the Lord in our walk and worship.

    The Commandments are vital for godly living and for greater blessing, but we need to enter into the panoramic view they provide of the standards and goals for redeemed people.

     

    $11.50$12.99
  • But I Say Unto You (John Reisinger)

    A study of the Sermon on the Mount which takes Jesus at His word. He is our authority and lawgiver. He is our standard in the Kingdom of God.

    Did Jesus change anything from the Law of Moses with His so-called Sermon on the Mount or was He correcting rabbinical errors that had crept in along the way?

    This book argues persuasively that Jesus was not simply rubber-stamping the great hero of the Old Covenant, but was actually presenting Himself as the new and superior lawgiver just as He is the new and superior priest to Aaron. Getting this right (or wrong) has significant implications for how one reads the Bible and, perhaps even more importantly, what standard one uses in his or her pursuit of righteousness. Jesus, not Moses, is our Lord. We must listen to Him.

    $9.50$11.95
  • Rethinking the Law Grace and Truth Books
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    Rethinking the Law (Eric Lane)

    One of the hardest questions Christians face about the Bible is, “What do I do with the Old Testament law?” This book answers that question in a way both biblically faithful and Christ-exalting. You will find yourself deeply motivated to serve Jesus out of love rather than guilt.

    Anyone who reads the Bible from cover to cover quickly realizes that a radical shift occurs between the Old Testament and the New Testament. Many things are different. One of the major differences has to do with the concept of law. It is clear that the Law given to Israel does not simply spill over into the Christian life. And yet, there are connections and overlaps between them. How do we make sense of this?

    $11.50$14.99
  • Tablets of Stone and the History of Redemption (John Reisinger)

    A study of the proper role of The Ten Commandments in the life of a Christian believer. As we read God’s plan of salvation unfolds in Scripture, the Law of God in the Old Testament must be correctly understood. Reisinger is masterful in his understanding of the relationship between law and grace.

    $9.25$10.95
  • Discovering Delight: 31 Meditations on Loving God’s Law (Glenda Mathes)

    Does the concept of loving law sound strange to you—like two things that just don’t go together? Christians today often don’t want to read about law because they would rather revel in gospel and grace. Yet the Bible clearly links law with love, a connection we see in Psalm 119.

    In these insightful meditations, author Glenda Mathes sheds light on this “long psalm that often gets short shrift.” A closer look at Psalm 119, in particular, and several other psalms and Old and New Testament passages encourages readers to discover the delight of God’s written Word and rejoice in loving His law.

    $7.50$10.00
  • The Law of Reward or Consequences (Ralph Bouma)

    Seven sermons of Ralph Bouma, all dealing with the theme of law, reward, and consequences. Scroll down to see all seven sermon titles, shown below, which are an exposition of Psalm 119:118-122.

    $2.95$5.95