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Standing With Grace (Mrs. A. K. Dunning)
“It is astonishing how much influence one person can have in raising or depressing the spirits of the whole company. Grace Avery’s consistent life of love and conviction has the effect of leaven among her wealthy, worldly friends. Every unselfish act or gentle word has a profound impact on even the most devious characters.
When the gospel is lived out in simplicity and power, none can resist, for indeed “When a grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it abides alone, but if it dies, it will bring much fruit.” — Mark Hamby, reflecting on Standing With Grace
$24.00 -
The Household and the War for the Cosmos (C. R. Wiley)
Your household is not just a shelter from a war zone; it is the command center from where you launch your attacks. It’s this vision of the world, with the Christian family at the heart, that modern parents desperately need to recover.
In this truly original book, C. R. Wiley shows that, although the family has become dislocated and pushed to the side by modern society, this wasn’t always the case. At one time, the world was not seen as a random assortment of time and matter, but as an ordered whole. All the signals are clear: it’s high time we resumed warfare.
$14.95 -
The Pleasantness of a Religious Life (Matthew Henry)
True piety has true pleasure in it.
In six chapters on Proverbs 3:17, Matthew Henry proves and illustrates the doctrine of religious pleasantness, saying the religious life is the only life worth living. “What was the fall and apostasy of man, and what is still his sin and misery, but the soul’s revolt from the divine life, and giving up itself wholly to the animal life?”
Henry’s work is a treasure, helping to demolish Satan’s insinuation that true religion is boring and burdensome. Read Henry’s Pleasantness of a Religious Life and see why Christians really are the happiest creatures on earth.
$16.00 -
The Foundation of Communion With God (John Owen)
Introduces readers to the Trinitarian piety of John Owen (1616–1683). Ryan McGraw’s sketches the major events of this important theologian’s life and shows how his circumstances shaped his thought on the themes of the Trinity and public worship.
The second part of the book presents 41 brief selections from Owen’s writings that trace his thoughts on knowing God as triune, on Scripture and worship, on heavenly-mindedness, and on covenant and the church. Appendixes provide readers with a chronological list of Owen’s writings and a guide to them for those who wish to delve deeper into this great theologian’s thoughts.
$10.00
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