Notes on Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel


Book Description

For the first time, Oswald Chambers’ studies of the Major Prophets are compiled into one volume. Chambers dialogues with other Bible commentators of his day as he examines the character of God in Isaiah, God’s relationship with His people in Jeremiah, and divine community in Ezekiel. This brief survey of three long Bible books features what one author has described as the "spontaneous and explosive quality" of Chambers' insights about God’s chosen spokesmen and their divine messages.




Evidence Unseen


Book Description

Evidence Unseen is the most accessible and careful though through response to most current attacks against the Christian worldview.




Los Profetas Mayores


Book Description

Los cinco libros de Los Profetas Mayores (Isaías, Jeremías, Lamentaciones, Ezequiel Y Daniel)cubren un período significativo y presentan una amplia serie de mensajes. Isaías habló a la nación de Judá alrededor de 150 años antes de su exilio a Babilonia y les hizo un llamado para ser fieles a Dios. Jeremías clamó a ese mismo pueblo cuando estaban al borde del exilio, implorándoles por su arrepentimiento. Lamentaciones, escrito por Jeremías, presenta un canto fúnebre al ir Judá al exilio. Los dos últimos profetas mayores, Ezequiel y Daniel, hablaron y escribie- ron para el pueblo en el exilio, animándolos a recordar que Dios seguía aún en control y que finalmente restauraría la fortuna espiritual de Su disciplinada nación.Tres de estos cinco libros son bastante extensos y a veces, todos ellos, pueden ser difíciles de entender. Sin embargo, la dedicación en tiempo y esfuerzo para tratar de entender estos escritos pagará grandes dividendos. Se ha dicho que ninguna otra sección en la Biblia ofrece una figura de Dios tan majestuosa y altamente exaltada. Su soberanía es increíble, Su gloria es impresionante, y leyendo estos libros, nuestra fe encuentra nuevos niveles más profundos de confianza.




The Psychology of Redemption


Book Description

“Christian psychology is not a knowledge of man, but a knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.” Oswald Chambers begins The Psychology of Redemption with these bold words, challenging us to take the perfect life of Jesus Christ as our model for holy character development. Jesus restored humanity to a right relationship with God, and He demonstrated the holy mind-set of a life set apart to the mission of God’s love. By drawing parallels between the life of Christ and the Christian’s life of faith, Chambers teaches us how to “have the mind of Christ.”




If You Will Ask


Book Description

This collection of teachings on prayer from the author of My Utmost for His Highest will help you better understand the purpose of prayer, from intercession to the Holy Spirit’s work in and through our petitions. Most importantly, you’ll learn how prayer aligns our hearts with God’s will.




Sperry Symposium Classics


Book Description




The Second Isaiah


Book Description

This all-purpose commentary is by the author of 'The Suffering Servant in Deutero-Isaiah'. It meets the needs of the specialist but most of it should be intelligible to preachers and teachers who know little or no Hebrew. The Introduction discusses the literary structure of the prophecy, the theology of Deutero-Isaiah (with some reference to current theological debate), and the problem of Salvation History. The exegetical notes are based on the author's own translation from the Hebrew text. The purpose of the book is to elucidate the message of the Prophet in the context of Scripture as a whole.




Discovering the Bible


Book Description

Discovering the Bible has everything you’re looking for in a survey of the Bible. It examines the Bible’s amazing message and story of faith in a way that will captivate readers and impel them to learn more. Thorough, sound biblical scholarship combined with an eye-catching format and easy-to-understand writing style make this textbook a must-have for every Christian’s library.In Discovering the Bible, you’ll find:Objectives defined for each lessonPersonal questions to help you relate the Bible to your lifeSidebars to explain theological pointsKeywords identified and defined on each pageStudy questions for review of the materialSummary statements at the end of each chapterListing of resources for further study at the end of each chapterColorful pages and images that make it attractive to readShort, well-organized chapters




How God Punishes


Book Description

Poetry. HOW GOD PUNISHES: Gives you the small prize. Mercifully you never learn of the big one. It is altogether fitting that these lines begin Katerina Stoykova's poetic meditation, for in 2014 the Bulgarian version of HOW GOD PUNISHES (published by ICU) won the Ivan Nikolov National Poetry Award, presented annually by the Bulgarian publishing house Zhanet 45 and recognized as that nation's premier poetry prize. So in the end she did receive a "small prize" indeed! But it is her readers who are treated to the "big one" in the form of the insights shared in these pages. And now at last comes this version for English-speaking readers, prepared by the author, who is equally at home in both languages and divides her time between her native Bulgaria and her adopted Kentucky. It is, in the author's words, a "self ironic" work, "a book about truth- telling, regret and ego," that walks the reader through several stages of personal development across its seven parts and epilogue. Along the way there is humor, of the kind that catches in the throat and the heart, along with hard-learned wisdom, and most of all deep and loving humaneness. The "God" that administers these "punishments" is not off in some distant celestial realm, but present in the process of living day by day, of trying and failing and trying again, perfecting us for all our imperfections. In this, there is surely grace.