The Gospel of Pandemonium


Book Description

From the Aeon of Set, through the Age of Satan and the Aeon of Horus, and on to the misty steppes of prehistory, The Gospel of Pandemonium takes a corresponding step forward for every step back, retrieving the keys to the future from the past and encircling all of Time in the coils of the Dragon. The Pandemonium Commentary on Liber AL vel Legis and the healing ritual of the Mass of Xaryomen draw new life and new power from the Left-Hand Path while charting the course to the Dominion of Eternal Night: PANDEMONIUM.







The Gospel According to Condo Don


Book Description

This is an account of the Second Coming as witnessed by a homeless alcoholic. While loosely modeled on the initial books of the New Testament (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John), it interjects humor into the classic story (as is needed to hold the attention of modern readers) and presents it in a more readily understood contemporary format. Thus, Mary becomes Marya, a poor 16 year-old girl from Central Los Angeles, an evil televangelist takes the place of the money changers at the temple, and our bureaucracy is substituted for that of Rome's.




The Book of Peace


Book Description




The Genius of the Gospel


Book Description

Reprint of the original, first published in 1873.







The Book of Peace


Book Description

Sixty four tracts, compiled and edited by George C. Beckwith, corresponding secretaty of the American Peace Society. Each tract is separately as well as consecutively paged.




Pandemonium


Book Description

The second book in Lauren Oliver’s New York Times bestselling trilogy about forbidden love, revolution, and the power to choose. In this electrifying follow-up to Delirium, Lena is on a dangerous course that takes her through the unregulated Wilds and into the heart of a growing resistance movement. This riveting, brilliant novel crackles with the fire of fierce defiance, romance, and the sparks of a revolution about to ignite.




The Gospel Commission


Book Description

Many churches in America today want to be powerful, relevant, and influential in personal and social transformation. But whose kingdom are we building? God's? Or our own? A plethora of programs for outreach, discipleship, and spiritual disciplines are available at any bookstore and on countless websites. Yet what we need most is a renewed understanding of and commitment to the Great Commission. We assume that we already know the nature of this commission and the appropriate methods of carrying it out. But Michael Horton contends that it too often becomes our mission instead of God's. At a time when churches are zealously engaged in writing up mission statements and strategic plans, he argues that we must ask ourselves anew whether we are ambassadors, following the script we've been given, or building our own kingdoms with our own blueprint. Pastors, church leaders, and readers of Horton's Christless Christianity and The Gospel-Driven Life will value this frank and hopeful exploration of the Great Commission as a call to understanding and good practice.