Beloved Son: Joseph and Jesus


Book Description

Obedience to God’s plan can lead to truly unexpected places. In Beloved Son: Joseph and Jesus, the fifth book in Maura Roan McKeegan’s Old and New Series, see the unforgettable story of Joseph’s journey—from beloved son to slave and then to liberator of the brothers who betrayed him—alongside Jesus’s life, death, and Resurrection. Through Joseph and Jesus, we can learn to trust God, no matter where He leads. See biblical typology—the Old Testament people, symbols, and events that foreshadow the New Testament—come to life in Beloved Son. Ages 7 and up.




The Death and Resurrection of the Beloved Son


Book Description

"The near sacrifice and miraculous restoration of a beloved son is a central but largely overlooked theme in both Judaism and Christianity. This book explores how this notion of child sacrifice constitutes an overlooked bond between the two religions."--




Joseph


Book Description

From F.B. Meyer’s outstanding Biblical biographies series of the great men of faith, here is the inspiring story of Joseph. Meyer shows the readers that Joseph’s life serves not only as a compelling example of faith, but also as a striking parallel to the truth revealed in Jesus.







100 Days of Favor


Book Description

Prince invites readers to embark on a purposeful and powerful journey in discovering and experiencing the unmerited favor of God.




Meet Jesus


Book Description

Meet Jesus is a picture book that introduces young children (ages 4-8) to Jesus and his lessons of love, kindness, forgiveness and peace. Meet Jesus emphasizes the humanity rather than the divinity of Jesus, giving the story broad appeal for liberal or progressive Christians and non-Christians alike. The text includes Bible references with corresponding Bible passages in the back of the book.




Covenants Made Simple


Book Description

"What do the various covenants given throughout the Bible mean to us? Are they relevant to our lives? A rainbow now and then may remind us of God's promise to Noah and we've memorized the part about the new covenant in Jesus' blood at Communion--but do we dig any deeper? Do we need to?"--Publisher description.




Who Was Jesus?


Book Description

This fascinating addition to the best-selling Who Was...? series does not settle questions of theology. Instead, it presents young readers with a biography that covers what is known historically about Jesus and places in his life in the context of his world when Jerusalem was part of the Roman Empire. In an even-handed and easy-to-read narrative, this title—illustrated with eighty black-and-white drawings—also explains the early origins of Christianity and how it became a major religion.




Joseph


Book Description

Joseph was a picture of Jesus Christ in these ways: He was a beloved son who became a servant; He was a well-pleasing servant; He was a tempted servant; He was a falsely accused servant, He was punished though innocent; He was respected by a government official; He was in company with sinful men; He told the future beforehand; He was delivered from prison; He was a revealer of secrets and counselor; He was promoted to the highest place; He saved the people.




The Beloved Son as Tantalizing Teacher


Book Description

The Beloved Son as Tantalizing Teacher is a contribution to the study of the "historical Jesus." It is meant for anyone interested in Jesus as a person as well as part of the academic project of discovering his humanity and his place in history. To truly uncover him in this way, the facts of his Jewish historical context are foundational. The context is in terms of six dynamics or factors: the history of late antiquity of the Mediterranean world from Alexander to the destruction of the temple and how people in the land of Israel interacted with that history; Israel's economic, social, religious, and political structures; and the ecology of the land of Jesus' time. In particular we understand Jesus and the movement he initiated as part of other renewal movements of his time and place that arose to confront what most of his contemporaries perceived as the corrosion of Jewish society. So the Jewish people of the first century, living in their patrimonial land of Israel, were embroiled in a crisis that threatened to overwhelm the nation. The Beloved Son as Tantalizing Teacher sums up the situation, with the pithy phrase borrowed from one scholar, as a people whose "backs were against the wall."