Through 40 daily meditations, best-selling author Paul David Tripp reminds readers that God, in his infinite mercy, can radically transform even the weakest people by the life-changing power of his grace.
This book explores the doctrine of the incarnation—the central fact of history and the greatest mystery of the Christian faith—highlighting implications for all of Christian theology, including the atonement and the church’s worship.
ESV Scripture Journal: Hebrews is designed to facilitate in-depth study of Hebrews, providing all the guidance, tools, and space needed to dig deep into the biblical text.
Melissa Kruger offers a springboard for mentoring discussions between mature believers and newer Christians, setting the biblical basis for mentoring from Titus 2 before outlining 11 lessons that guide their time as they grow together.
This practical theology of the emotions explores what the Bible teaches about our emotions and their relationship to our walk of faith.
Written for those who want to understand the book of Revelation, this 12-week study helps Christians see that Jesus has already defeated his enemies and freed Christians from their bondage to Satan, sin, and death.
Through 40 daily meditations, Paul David Tripp reminds readers that God’s love is always available to them, even through the darkest and loneliest circumstances.
Through 40 daily meditations, Paul David Tripp reminds readers that hope is not a feeling, object, or place, but a person—Jesus Christ.
In this redesigned edition of Death in the City, Schaeffer looks at the example of the prophet Jeremiah and offers a simple response to the rejection of biblical principles by modern culture—commitment to God’s word as truth.
This resource, written by late counselor David Powlison, seeks to gracefully and humbly encourage pastors to think of counseling as a relational and pastoral task focused on the care and cure of the souls of God’s people.
Writing in the form of a letter to his college-age daughter, Michael Kruger’s Surviving Religion 101 takes a topical approach to examining some of the toughest questions Christian students encounter at secular universities.
In Man of Sorrows, King of Glory, Jonty Rhodes uses the traditional categories of Jesus as prophet, priest, and king to enhance the Christian understanding of his life, death, burial, resurrection, and ascension.