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  • av Rich Lusk
    337,-

    Written as a guide for Christians seeking to understand the distinctives of a Bible-centered church, Measures of the Mission shows how the coming of the king affects our understanding of the kingdom story (the Bible), kingdom central (the church), and kingdom living (culture and vocation).The gospel of the kingdom is not just about how the story of your individual life can have a happy ending, it's about how God is bringing in a new heavens and a new earth, filled with His glory, so that the story of the whole cosmos has a happy ending.Measures of the Mission offers answers to the following questions:Bible: What is the gospel? How does six-day creation affect our lives? What happened at Pentecost? What happened in AD 70?Church: Why is the church necessary? What is the free exercise of religion? How do we disciple? How should we order our worship services?Christian Life: What is justification? What is a Christian view of singleness? Of marriage? How do we parent? How do we work as employees, or love our neighbor?¿In order to recover the kingdom, we must understand our own story. In order to live out the kingdom, we must see the church's place at the center of the kingdom. And if we are going to transform the kingdoms of this world into the kingdom of God, we must understand how to live out our kingdom citizenship in everyday life. Faithful kingdom living in our vocations brings us full circle, back to God's original purposes for creation and humanity.

  • av Bill Smith
    238,-

    For you to face any situation, you need someone to show you the way.We need God to explain to us who we are, why we are here, and where we are going. We need his wisdom. In Jesus the world finds its true and intended order. When we look at the life of Christ, we see how God governs his world and how he expects man to govern in his world.In this book, Bill Smith shows how the book of Proverbs molds you in the image of God's wisdom to understand how all things fit together for his good purposes, including our lives as spouses, parents, children, friends, and more.

  • av Duane Garner
    144,-

    The sky is not falling, though popular opinion seems to always suggest otherwise. While it appears as if everyone-from evangelical preachers to radical environmentalists-expects the end of the world to come very soon in a quite dreadful and dramatic fashion, the Scriptures give us a view of the future that is altogether hopeful and optimistic.In this book, a former Baptist minister and premillenial dispensationalist explores the origins of these modern doctrines of pessimism, and points the reader to find in the Bible a much happier outlook regarding the success of the gospel and the growth of Christ's kingdom.The "Answers in an Hour" series is a collection of short, easily digestible books written with the inquirer in mind. Covering a range of introductory topics, these little volumes give you a overview of the things you want to study in a brief study.

  • av Douglas Wilson
    165,-

    This small book has two main themes. The first is the argument that Scripture requires ministers in the church to be men-that is, they must be male. The second theme addresses the reason why this has become an issue at all (when the texts are so plain) and will argue that ministers in the Christian church must be more than male-that is, they must be vertebrates.The ministry calls for men in both senses of that word.The "Answers in an Hour" series is an ongoing collection of short and easily digestible books written with the inquirer in mind. These little books provide brief studies of various topics of interest to Christians who seek instruction that is grounded in biblical theology.

  • av Mark Horne
    157,-

    If Reformed and Presbyterian Churches claim to follow the Scriptures, why do they still baptize their infants? Isn't infant baptism just another bad idea held over from the Roman Church? Where do serious Bible-believing Christians find support for this practice?In this book, Mark Horne provides brief but thorough answers to these questions. If you are looking for a quick introduction to the Reformed view of baptism and covenant membership, here is the place to start.The "Answers in an Hour" series is an ongoing collection of short and easily digestible books written with the inquirer in mind. These little books provide brief studies of various topics of interest to Christians who seek instruction that is grounded in biblical theology.

  • av Peter J Leithart
    287,-

    Activist Christians tend to assume that, if the church is to be politically influential, her first task is to become more political. National political issues have, as a result, displaced theological and ecclesiastical concerns in the "agenda" and priorities of many churches. As a result, churches, especially those dominated by an activist model of the kingdom, fail to address the world in a distinctively Christian manner-that is, as the church.In his book, The Kingdom and the Power, Peter J. Leithart shows from Scripture that Christians must neither retreat from the world or idolize power and mammon to influence the world but engage the world-as the church. For wherever Christ is present, there is the kingdom. That means the kingdom of God is in the church, the body of Christ.

  • av Rich Lusk
    195,-

  • av Jeffrey J. Meyers
    337,-

  • - Jonah Through New Eyes
    av Rich Lusk & Uri Brito
    221,-

  • - An Examination of the Fatherhood of Yahweh in Deuteronomy
    av Smith Ralph Allan Smith
    158,-

    Ralph Smith's book shows us how to read the Book of Deuteronomy as a testament to Yahweh's loving fatherhood rather than a collection of laws.

  • - Job Through New Eyes
    av Sumpter Toby J. Sumpter
    207,-

    Toby J. Sumpter's commentary on the Book of Job seeks to view the book about Job, a Son of God, through new eyes, following in the hermeneutical footsteps of James B. Jordan and Biblical Horizons.

  • - The Epistles of John Through New Eyes
    av Leithart Peter J. Leithart
    207,-

    In his commentary on the Epistles of John, Peter J. Leithart explains how John seeks to teach the church that the New Covenant is not a softer, gentler covenant but one a covenant of judgment, where light comes so everyone can see.

  • - A Brief Reader's Guide to Revelation
    av Jordan James B. Jordan
    122,-

    Dr. James B. Jordan is an expert in Biblical symbolism, and this short reader's guide is the fruit of a five-year study in the book of Revelation.

  • - Hebrews Through New Eyes
    av Wilson Douglas Wilson
    207,-

    In his Through New Eyes commentary on Hebrews, Douglas Wilson reviews the epistle writer's use of typology in describing the new covenant under the new high priest, Jesus Christ.

  • av Leithart Peter J. Leithart
    250,-

    The Federal Vision communicates the importance of applying a more robust Covenant theology to our study of the relationship between obedience and faith, and to the role of the Church and Sacraments in our salvation.

  • av Peter J Leithart
    139,-

  • - Jesus as Israel
    av Peter J Leithart
    251,-

  • - The Bible Versus Mere Tradition in Worship
    av James B Jordan
    134,-

  • - A Table in the Mist
    av Jeffrey Meyers
    239,-

  • av Peter J Leithart
    149,-

    Peter Leithart shows in Theopolitan Reading that the whole Bible grows from seeds planted in the early chapters of Genesis. The events of Scripture take place in the three-story world created in Genesis 1. Adam is in the background of all the men of the Bible, and Eve in the background of all the women. The Scriptures are a story of Eden lost, regained, and glorified into a heavenly city.All the themes of Genesis come to their climax in Jesus, the Last Adam who delivers His new Eve, the church, so that together they can transform the wild waste of the world into an image of the new Jerusalem.Theopolitan Reading doesn''t lay out detailed rules for reading. Rules are of limited use. To be good readers, we need mentors who model good reading. Leithart serves as a mentor and invites readers to imitate him as he imitates Christ Jesus.The Theopolis Fundamentals Series introduces the Biblical Horizons / Theopolis outlook and agenda to a new generation. The early volumes of the series summarize our convictions about biblical interpretation, liturgical theology and practice, and the church''s cultural and political mission. The Fundamentals will be followed by a collection of Theopolis Explorations volumes that will examine Scripture, liturgy, and culture in more depth and detail.

  • av James B Jordan
    124,-

    In this study, James Jordan argues why the Persian kings named Darius, Ahasuerus, and Artaxerxes in the books of Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther are one and the same. This is not a new understanding. Many recent commentators are so certain that Ahasuerus is the king the Greeks called Xerxes and that Artaxerxes is Artaxerxes Longimanus. James Jordan, however, demonstrates that the common identifications of these kings is problematic and that understanding their common identity sheds considerable light on our understanding of redemptive history.Excerpt from Darius, Artaxerxes, and Ahasuerus in the Bible:“If my thesis is correct, then several things emerge. First, it becomes clear that there was no ‘decree to rebuild Jerusalem’ issued by Artaxerxes Longimanus, because that later Artaxerxes is not the Artaxerxes (Darius) of Nehemiah. Thus, the ‘word’ spoken of in Daniel 9:25 must be the decree of Cyrus. Second, it becomes clear that, just as Cyrus was a new David, so Darius is a new Solomon. It is Darius who builds the Temple, Darius-Artaxerxes who builds Jerusalem, and Darius-Ahasuerus who marries a Jewish bride and protects the Jewish people, which creates a broad analogy between the books of Esther and Song of Solomon. Third, assuming for a moment that Chronicles-Ezra-Nehemiah were designed as one book with one story, then the plan of that large book becomes clear: the progression from David to Solomon to his wayward successors is rehearsed as a typological foundation for the new historical progression from Cyrus to Darius to their wayward successors in both empire and land.”

  • - Jesus as Israel
    av Peter J Leithart
    290,-

    In the second volume of his commentary on the gospel of Matthew, Peter Leithart presents a close study of Matthew 13 through 28, underscoring Jesus' formation of a counter-kingdom that also retells the story of Israel. Jesus is the true Israel who takes on the roles of various Old Testament leaders: Moses the law-giver, Joshua the conqueror, Solomon the philosopher-king, Elisha the wonder-working prophet leading a company of prophets, as well as Jeremiah and Ezekiel warning of the temple's imminent destruction. Jesus' interactions with the leaders of Israel recapitulate Yahweh's tortured interactions with Israel in the Old Testament. In spite of Israel's repeated rejections, Yahweh never gave up on His beloved. His love is stronger than death, and He returns as the world-emperor to send His new Israel to disciple the nations.

  • - Under His Wings
    av Rich Lusk & Uri Brito
    220,-

    With references to Old Testament gleaning laws and to the concept of the kinsman-redeemer, the small book of Ruth contains numerous hints critical to understanding how Yahweh brings rest to the women in the story and ultimately to His bride, the Church, through Jesus Christ, the Greater Boaz and kinsman-redeemer. In this commentary, Pastors Uri Brito and Rich Lusk tease out the nuances of Old and New Testament typology and show how the book of Ruth fits in Yahweh's redemption of His people, the land and the world. Whether discussing levirate law or the place of grace and good works in relation to Yahweh's covenant faithfulness, this commentary is sure to bring renewed interest in the study of Ruth for pastors and parishioners alike.

  • - A Catechism for Covenant Children
    av Rich Lusk
    107,-

    The real heart of catechesis is to form in our children a covenantal identity, a sense of belonging to God and to the church. Our children need to be taught who they are in Christ so they can live faithfully in the church, family, and world. We must train our children in such a way that their whole lives will be a grand Amen to their baptisms.This handy little book is a great resource for the home, Sunday School, or Christian School.Topics Included in the catechism:The Triune GodCreationProvidenceCreation of ManMan’s Fall into SinThe Old CovenantThe New CovenantThe GospelEschatologyThe ChurchRevelationLiturgySacramentsAssurance 

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