A Private Commentary on the Bible (A Private Coommentary on the Bible, #6)
by James D Quiggle
Church Membership as a Catholic and Ecumenical Problem
by Avery Robert Dulles
Glory to God
"Glory to God" is the Presbyterian Church in Ireland's supplement to the Church Hymnary . It is specifically designed to meet the needs of today's church, containing 129 items that represent the best of recent hymnody. It aims to be accessible and relevant in idiom and language. The book is arranged in four main sections: Glory to God; Glory to God in Personal Experience; Glory to God in the Church; and Glory to God in the World. The selection reflects the diversity of God's people. There are a...
Hugh McKail and the Pentland Rising (Pocket Covenanter)
by James Dickson
Writings of Arthur W. Pink from Booklets and Pamphlets
by Arthur W Pink
Through engagement with the historical debate Incarnation and Inspiration offers a systematic exposition of the person of Jesus that brings together dissonant aspects of the tradition. It serves as an introduction to the theology to John Owen, the most able of the Puritan theologians and provides a way of understanding the theological dynamic underlying the Christology of the Fathers and the Definition of Chalcedon. Through its emphasis on coherence it seeks to illuminate the inner rationality...
Theology (Volume 4); Explained and Defended, in a Series of Sermons
by Timothy Dwight and Sereno Edwards Dwight
Elizabethan Non-Conformist Texts: The Writings of Henry Barrow 1587 1590, Volume III
The "evangelism" of the day is not only superficial to the last degree, but it is radically defective. It is utterly lacking a foundation on which to base an appeal for sinners to come to Christ. There is not only a lamentable lack of proportion (the mercy of God being made far more prominent than His holiness, His love than His wrath), but there is a fatal omission of that which God has given for the purpose of imparting a knowledge of sin.
Challenging the dominant Van Tillian approach in Reformed apologetics, this book by a leading expert in contemporary Reformed theology sets forth the principles that undergird a classic Reformed approach. J. V. Fesko's detailed exegetical, theological, and historical argument takes as its starting point the classical Reformed understanding of the "two books" of God's revelation: nature and Scripture. Believers should always rest on the authority of Scripture but also can and should appeal to the...