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  • No Shadow of Turning: Divine Immutability and the Economy of Redemption (Ronnie Kurtz)

    How does God’s unchanging nature impact the salvation of his people?

    While divine immutability enjoyed a broad affirmation through much of Christian theological antiquity, it has fallen on harder times in modernity. Seen as a holdover from overly philosophical theology, divine immutability has often been characterized as rendering God static and incapable of having meaningful relationships with his creation.

     

    This book aims to swim upstream from this claim and demonstrate that divine immutability does not handicap soteriology but is a necessary and vital component of God’s economy of redemption as triune changelessness protects and promotes the redemption of God’s creatures. By anchoring the economy of redemption in divine immutability, we see the benefit of rooting all of God’s economic work in the immanent life of God.

    This book aims to be a work of dogmatic theology and therefore will arrive at this thesis by way of exegetical, historical, and philosophical theology. In harmony, these fields will interact with varying deviations and denials of divine immutability and ultimately conclude that a classical articulation of God’s changelessness does most justice to the economy of redemption.

    $19.99
  • Reformed Systematic Theology 4-Volume Set (Joel R. Beeke, Paul Smalley)

    The church needs good theology that engages the head, heart, and hands.

    This four-volume work will combine rigorous historical and theological scholarship with application and practicality—characterized by an accessible, Reformed, and experiential approach.

    $127.50$255.00
  • Reformed Systematic Theology, Vol 1: Revelation and God (Joel R. Beeke, Paul Smalley)

    The church needs good theology that engages the head, heart, and hands.

    This four-volume work will combine rigorous historical and theological scholarship with application and practicality—characterized by an accessible, Reformed, and experiential approach. This is Volume 1.

    In this first volume, Joel R. Beeke and Paul M. Smalley explore the first two of eight central themes of theology: revelation and God.

    $36.00$60.00
  • Behold Your God: Rethinking God Biblically: 13-DVD Set

    This product comes with the 13 DVD Set and an integrally packaged Leader’s Guide. Each participant in the study will need their own copy of the Daily Devotional Workbook.

    ‘This is an excellent resource for churches and individuals who desire to “grow in the grace and knowledge of Christ”, and who desire to anchor their biblical faith in the history of the church.’ — Ian Hamilton

    ‘This course is perhaps the most significant resource I have encountered in 30 years of Christian ministry. At its core, it is pointing and forcing those leading and those taking part into encountering “The God who is there”.’ — Andy Christofides

    Behold Your God: Rethinking God Biblically is a 12-week multimedia Bible study for churches, small groups, families, or individuals containing 12 sessions that are reinforced by a 12-week daily workbook. Each week’s lesson is preceded by a brief historical profile of a notable man or woman of God such as George Muller, A. W. Tozer, Samuel Rutherford, Charles Spurgeon, Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Amy Carmichael, Robert Murray M”Cheyne, George Whitefield, Daniel Rowland and Jonathan Edwards.

    $149.00
  • The Person of Christ: Declaring a Glorious Mystery – God and Man (John Owen)

    John Owen sought to illustrate the mystery of divine grace in the Person of Christ. Regarded as one of the most important post–Reformation works, Owen’s Christology illustrates the mystery of divine grace in the Person of Christ.

    $17.50$19.99
  • Athanasius: Christian Biographies for Young Readers (Simonetta Carr)

    A complex and fascinating character, Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria, is best remembered as the Father of Orthodoxy, upholding the doctrine of the Trinity against the Arian heresy.

    In the newest addition to the Illustrated Christian Biographies for Young Readers series, author Simonetta Carr introduces children to the life and times of this important church father who tirelessly defended the Nicene Creed, which many of us today recite as a confession of our faith.

    Born during the Great Persecution, forced five times to leave his church and city, and constantly threatened by those who tried to ruin his reputation, Athanasius provides an example of godly faithfulness. Beautiful illustrations and a winsome, simply written narrative will bring the Nicene Creed to life for children of all ages, prompting relevant discussions on the divinity of Christ and the importance of creeds and confessions.

    $13.95$18.00
  • Atonement Hugh Martin book cover
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    The Atonement (Hugh Martin)

    Subtitled:
    In Its Relations to the Covenant, the Priesthood, the Intercession of our Lord.

    We enthusiastically welcome back Hugh Martin’s outstanding book on the atonement, one of the finest ever penned.

    The great distinctive feature of The Atonement is the emphasis it places on the importance of a covenant perspective, and its focus on the work of Christ as priest. Martin was adamant that these are essential to the right interpretation and proclamation of the doctrine of the atonement.

    For anyone who wants to learn what it is to think about Christ’s atonement these pages will open up new vistas and indeed whole panoramas that will, when gazed on with a loving and humble mind, fill the heart with love and praise.

    $22.50$26.00
  • All That Is in God (James E. Dolezal)

    Unknown to many, increasing numbers of conservative evangelicals are denying basic tenets of classical Christian teaching about God, with departures occurring even among those of the Calvinistic persuasion. James E. Dolezal’s All That Is in God provides an exposition of the historic Christian position while engaging with these contemporary deviations.

    His convincing critique of the newer position he styles “theistic mutualism” is philosophically robust, systematically nuanced, and biblically based. It demonstrates the need to maintain the traditional viewpoint, particularly on divine simplicity, and spotlights the unfortunate implications for other important Christian doctrines—such as divine eternality and the Trinity—if it were to be abandoned. Arguing carefully and cogently that “all that is in God is God Himself,” the work is sure to stimulate debate on the issue in years to come.

    $16.00$18.00
  • Communion With God: Fellowship with Father, Son and Holy Spirit (John Owen)

    In 1657, John Owen produced one of his finest devotional treatises: probably originating from the substance of a series of sermons.

    He examines the Christian’s communion with God as it relates to all three members of the trinity. He assures that every Christian does have communion with God, no one is excluded and that this communion takes place distinctly with Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Our relationship with…

    God the Father is primarily through love and faith.
    God the Son is through fellowship & grace.
    God the Holy Spirit is primarily through comfort and sanctification.

    This was a controversial work in ecclesiastical circles of the 17th century. Twenty years after its publication, the rational ecclesiastical elite were scoffing at its contents. Owen strongly defended the ideas within this book, and history has shown him to be right! It is a classic of Christian devotional thought that still influences the church today. This is the original text with a new layout and is fully subtitled which makes it more accessible to a new generation of readers.

    $16.50$19.99
  • Jesus the Son of God (D. A. Carson)

    Although it is a foundational confession for all Christians, much of the theological significance of Jesus’s identity as “the Son of God” is often overlooked or misunderstood. Moreover, this Christological concept stands at the center of today’s Bible translation debates and increased ministry efforts to Muslims.

    New Testament scholar D. A. Carson sheds light on this important issue with his usual exegetical clarity and theological insight, first by broadly surveying Jesus’s biblical name as “the Son of God,” and then by focusing on two key texts that speak of Christ’s sonship. The book concludes with the implications of Jesus’s divine sonship for how modern Christians think and speak about Christ, especially in relation to Bible translation and missionary engagement with Muslims across the globe.

    $12.50$15.99