Showing all 9 results

  • Great for God (David Shibley)

    With bold faith, obedience to God, and love for others, missionaries attempt great things for God. Great for God: Missionaries Who Changed the World shares the biographies of twenty three missionaries. Each chapter highlights the amazing truths of God’s power at work through the lives of those willing to live for the applause of heaven. Their great accomplishments for God challenge believers to continue to “attempt great things for God. Expect great things from God,” as William Carey once stated. Author and Global Advance founder David Shibley offers Great for God to inspire every Christian, small group, and family devotion time.

    $8.95$10.99
  • Knowing Sin (Mark Jones)

    We don’t talk a lot about sin these days. But maybe we should. The Puritans sure did—because they understood sin’s deceptive power and wanted to root it out of their lives. Shouldn’t we want the same?

    Though many books have been written on the “doctrine of sin,” few are as practical and applicable as this one. In Knowing Sin, Mark Jones puts his expertise in the Puritans to work by distilling the vast wisdom of our Christian forebears into a single volume that summarizes their thought on this vital subject. The result isn’t a theological tome to sit on your shelf and gather dust, but a surprisingly relevant book to keep by your bedside and refer to again and again. You’ll come to understand topics like:

    • Sin’s Origin
    • Sin’s Grief
    • Sin’s Thoughts
    • Sin’s Temptations
    • Sin’s Misery
    • Sin’s Secrecy
    • and of course . . . Sin’s Defeat!

    None of us is free from the struggle with sin. The question isn’t whether we’re sinful, it’s what we’re doing about it. Thanks be to God, there is a path to overcoming sin, in Christ.

    $12.50$15.99
  • The Greatest Fight in the World (Charles Spurgeon)

    This sparkling and startling address is perhaps the most rousing call to gospel arms you will ever encounter. If you can read it without being profoundly stirred, I strongly suggest you seek urgent spiritual help.’ — Jonathan Stephen, Principal, Wales Evangelical School of Theology, Bridgend, Wales

    Spurgeon delivered The Greatest Fight in the World as final words, to impart to his followers in the faith his belief in the armory of the Scripture, the armor of the church, and the strength that God gives us to fight. Be encouraged and empowered to take up your sword and join the fray of the Christian life. This powerful advice to Christians is a battle charge for living the faithful life whether in Spurgeon’s day or in ours.

    $7.25$8.99
  • Strange New World (Carl Trueman)

    From Philosophy to Technology, Tracing the Origin of Identity Politics

    How did the world arrive at its current, disorienting state of identity politics, and how should the church respond? Historian Carl R. Trueman shows how influences ranging from traditional institutions to technology and pornography moved modern culture toward an era of “expressive individualism.”

    Investigating philosophies from the Romantics, Nietzsche, Marx, Wilde, Freud, and the New Left, he outlines the history of Western thought to the distinctly sexual direction of present-day identity politics and explains the modern implications of these ideas on religion, free speech, and personal identity.

    $14.39$17.99
  • Wanted: the World (Trevor Johnson)

    The Well-Meant Offer of the Gospel from a Missionary’s Perspective

    The Puritan evangelist Richard Alleine once wrote the following of the sincere love of God and His desire for the salvation of all who hear the invitation of the gospel:

    “I tell you again, I wish you well; and not only I, but the Lord God that hath sent me to you: The Lord Jesus wishes you well; he wishes and wooes, wooes and weeps, weeps and dies, that your Souls might live, and be blessed for ever: He hath once more sent me to you, even to the worst amongst you, to tell you from him, that he’s unwilling you should perish; that he hath a kindness for you in his heart, if you will accept it…”

    In this short volume, missionary Trevor Johnson defends this same view, that God desires the salvation, in some fashion, of all men, and that this gospel is a true and sincere appeal and invitation.

    Johnson writes as one who fully affirms the absolute sovereignty of God, the Five Points of Calvinism, and even the judicial hatred of God for unrepentant sinners, and yet is troubled by a growing trend among some Calvinists to deny the sincere and well-meant offer of the gospel.

    Johnson affirms that if someone asks you this query from a tortured soul, “Do you believe that God really wants to save even me?” that you can answer most assuredly, “Yes! God would have you to be saved and would rejoice over your salvation even now!”

    We mirror the very heart of God when we love souls and desire their salvation.

    $4.99$5.75
  • Reforming Journalism (Marvin Olasky)

    Is powerful, biblically principled journalism a lost art? In this three-part work on foundational concepts, practical techniques, and journalism’s agitated history, Marvin Olasky shows us how to become citizen-reporters and discerning consumers of news.  Reforming Journalism, if read by our youth and college-age students, could give us a whole different breed in the media.

    $16.50$19.99
  • How to Be a World-Class Christian (Paul Borthwick)

    Becoming Part of God’s Global Kingdom

    A book that opens the window to global Christianity for any person who desires to be part of what God is doing in the world. Building on the foundations of information, prayer, experience and investigation, How To Be A World-Class Christian shows the reader how to expand in understanding Scripture, increase in global praying and intensify cross-cultural outreach—beginning right at home.

    Using practical tools and observations from everyday life, this book invites every reader to stretch his or her knowledge of the purposes of God in the world and then to take the steps necessary to start responding to the opportunities we face. Patrick Johnstone said, “There is a YOU-shaped hole in God’s Kingdom—find it and fill it.”

    $9.50$17.00
  • How to Live in a Dangerous World: Biblical Pictures of Modern Perils (Roger Ellsworth)

    The author has put together a series of 34 biographies from Biblical characters, describing people in various states of danger in this world. Dangers from rejection and animosity, danger from love of this world, danger from self-deception, and dangers from perils suffered for standing for Christ. Ellsworth is skillful at showing us the exact nature of their true pitfalls and leads us to a fresh understanding of the grace of God which enabled them to overcome, and live in our dangerous world.

    $12.50$14.99
  • Changing World, Unchanging Mission (David Sills)

    Responding to Global Challenges

    Despite recent advances and innovations, countless people groups across the globe still lack access to the gospel of Jesus Christ. How should the church mobilize to reach the world?

    Now more than ever before, Christians need to be aware of the changing landscape before us. Missions expert David Sills explores the key global challenges confronting Christian mission in the 21st century, and in ten chapters he identifies ways we can be faithful to God’s call, conduct short-term missions responsibly, reach oral learners, engage in business as mission strategically and much more.

    While the world is fluid, God’s mission endures. Discover anew how the eternal gospel can make its way to every tribe and nation.

    $8.50$17.00