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NEW TITLES—Basics of the Faith series

New booklets in the Basics of the Faith series.

Am I Called? by George W. Robertson

“Anyone considering seminary should read this little booklet first. In fact, it would be highly advisable for seasoned preachers to also renew their passion for their sacred calling by taking the time to read it too.”

—Michael A. Milton, Ph.D., Chancellor/CEO, The James M. Baird Jr. Chair of Pastoral Theology, Reformed Theological Seminary

Is Jesus in the Old Testament? by Iain Duguid

“This booklet will enrich your  appreciation of the events and words by which God forecasted Christ’s redemptive mission before his arrival, and will deepen your faith and wonder.”

—Dennis E. Johnson, Ph.D., Professor of Practical Theology, Westminster Seminary California

What Happens After Death? by Richard D. Phillips

“A thoroughly biblical tool for the thorny work of leading congregants through the dying process or encouraging those left behind.”

—Dr. Howard Eyrich, ThM, DMin, Pastor of Counseling Ministry, Briarwood Presbyterian Church; Director of the DMin in Counseling at Birmingham Theological Seminary; author of Grief: Learning to Live with Loss

What Is Mercy Ministry? by Philip Graham Ryken

“The best brief description of the church’s ministry of mercy that I know. The authors lay a concise but rich theological foundation for it, sketch some of its historic forms, and give good practical principles and examples to enable local congregations to get moving.”

—Tim Keller, Redeemer Presbyterian Church

 

Find the complete listing of the Basics of the Faith series on our website.

Come, Let Us Reason Together

Come Let Us Reason Together: The Unity of Jews and Gentiles in the Church by Baruch Maoz

“A supremely helpful analysis of Messianic Judaism . . . that will benefit people on all sides of the controversy. I greatly appreciate his relentlessly biblical approach.” —JOHN MacARTHUR, Pastor and Teacher, Grace Community Church, Sun Valley, California

“An excellent treatise . . . as well as an effective and appropriate critique of the current Messianic Movement.” —HARRY L. REEDER III, Senior Pastor, Briarwood Presbyterian Church, Birmingham, Alabama

How should Jewish Christians worship? Does Messianic Judaism let them blend faith in Jesus with Jewish practice? Baruch Maoz disagrees, offering a better way to retain Jewish cultural identity without losing fellowship with other Christians.

PRICE 19.99 PAGES 256 ISBN 9781596384064 BINDING Paperback KINDLE $9.99

SAMPLE CHAPTER

TABLE OF CONTENTS

EXCERPT—Lifted, Experiencing the Resurrection Life

An excerpt from Lifted, Experiencing the Resurrection Life by Sam Allberry

PRICE 9.99 PAGES 144 ISBN: 9781596384316 BINDING Paperback KINDLE $5.99

Chapter 1: Assurance

How to shop in your PJs

I’m not a fan of shopping. My tolerance threshold is approximately eighteen minutes. After that I’ll buy anything if it means I can go home, which explains some of the clothes I wear. And so I approach shopping trips in the same way an SAS team approaches covert missions: identify the target; know where it is; do not deviate to the left or the right; be out of the store before the next customer has even advanced to the counter.

The solution to all this, of course, is online shopping. It is wonderful, for four reasons:

  1. You don’t have to go outside. No need to face crowds, queues and tempers. You can do it in your pajamas in between Scrabble moves on Facebook.
  2. It means you get interesting post. Now that most personal communication is electronic, it tends to be just junk mail and bills that come through the door. There is nothing to look forward to in the post any more.
  3. By the time the package arrives you can’t quite remember what you’d bought. It’s like someone has sent you a surprise present. And because the ‘someone’ is you, there is no risk you won’t like it. It is me in the past sending gifts ahead to me in the future. It’s virtually time travel.
  4. You get to sign for stuff. I don’t know why this makes me feel significant – it just does. It’s something about someone in uniform presenting me with documents needing my signature.

When you think about it, this last point is quite important. If a company or person is sending something of particular value, then it is not enough for them to know that the parcel has been sent: they also need to know it has been received, that it’s all gone through and been completed.

Signing off on Salvation

The resurrection of Jesus Christ is God signing off on our salvation. It is the proof that sin has been paid for. The payment has been made – we know this because Jesus said his death was going to be a ransom for sin (see Mark 10:45). But we can now know that payment of his blood has been received and accepted: we have God’s signature. This is why the true symbol for the Christian faith is an empty cross. A crucifix speaks of death, of a payment made. But an empty cross speaks of payment received: ‘He was delivered over to death for our sins  and was raised to life for our justification’ (Romans 4:25, my emphasis).

The resurrection means that we can be assured of our salvation. It confirms two things: that Jesus is who he says he is, and that he’s done all that he said he would. The Saviour is vindicated in the face of all who rejected his claims. Salvation is assured in the face of all our doubts.

—End—

“Full of great images, clearly organized, encouraging, humorous, biblical, insightful—I could go on. Reading this little volume on this central but neglected topic will benefit your life.”

—MARK DEVER, Capitol Hill Baptist Church

“After Mark Dever recommended Lifted, the pastoral staff of Covenant Life Church all put aside time to read and discuss it—you should too.”

—JOSHUA HARRIS, Covenant LIfe Church

PRICE 9.99 PAGES 144 ISBN: 9781596384316 BINDING Paperback KINDLE $5.99

Read and learn more at prpbooks.com

 

Mark by the Book—New Release!

MARK BY THE BOOK

A New Multidirectional Method for Understanding the Synoptic Gospels

P. W. SMUTS

P. W. Smuts advocates a “multi-directional” hermeneutic to the Synoptic Gospels—downwards, sideways, backwards, and forwards—using the Gospel of Mark to illustrate this approach.* This model compels readers to interpret the gospels against the broader sweep of redemptive history.

 

“Dr. Smuts has clearly immersed himself in Mark not as an isolated text but as part of God’s whole Bible addressed to God’s whole people, and here is the fruit of his study: informed, accessible, enthusiastic, and pastoral.”

Dan McCartney, Professor of New Testament Interpretation, Redeemer Theological Seminary, Dallas

“A wise and full-orbed approach to interpreting the Synoptic Gospels.”

Dennis E. Johnson, Ph.D., Professor of Practical Theology, Westminster Seminary California

PRICE 17.99 PAGES 288 ISBN 9781596384408 BINDING Paperback

*The downwards direction focuses on the immediate literary context of the particular text. The sideways direction focuses on parallels to that text in the other Synoptic Gospels. The backwards direction focuses on the Old Testament background to the text. And the forwards direction focuses on relevant passages in the rest of the New Testament.

 

New Spring Titles—2013

What to look for this spring! If you would like to be notified when these titles are available please sign up for our mailing list and we will notify you by e-mail.

 

 

 

 

Bible Study by Jon Nielson MARCH

Christianity & World Religions by Derek Cooper AVAILABLE

Connected by Sam Allberry MARCH

LIving in the Light of Inextinguishable Hope by Iain Duguid and Matthew Harmon APRIL

Mark by the Book by Peter Smuts AVAILABLE

Psalms, Vol. 2 by Kathleen Nielson MARCH

Revelation by Sarah Ivill AVAILABLE

Basics of the Faith:

Gospel for Real Life: