Divine Emblems


Book Description

Divine Emblems, as the title implies, is a study of how people, places and events in the Old Testament represent the Trinity and symbolize various facets of the Christian life. This is vintage Simpson—no one is better at seeing Christ and the Holy Spirit in the Scriptures. Someone has said that Simpson saw Christ on every page.




Divine Emblems


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Emblemes


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Divine emblems, etc


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Divine Emblems in Genesis and Exodus; Tabernacle Sermons VI


Book Description

Beginning in 1886 A.B. Simpson began publishing a series of books called "Tabernacle Sermons." These books contained messages that he had preached in the Gospel Tabernacle, New York City, New York and subsequently published in eleven volumes.This book is a reprint of the original volume. The content has been kept as close to the original as possible. Spelling was modernized in a few places, and where there were obvious errors in the text (one or two), comparisons were made to later editions of his books to keep the author's intent.VOLUME 6Divine Emblems In Genesis And ExodusThis volume walks the reader through the wilderness journey with the Israelites revealing types and examples of the New Testament Christian life. (This book was originally printed as two separate volumes: Volume 6, and Volume 7, in the original Tabernacle Sermons.)










Divine Love


Book Description

In this book, visual and poetic emblems of God's love, created by Otto van Veen and Jeanne Guyon, symbolically represent spiritual meaning and, as such, offer a gift of revealed strength and purpose to the aware reader. In our age, when love seems almost forgotten, this emblem book uniting Guyon's poetry and D'Othon Vaenius's illustrations give us a faithful look into what might be. What if Divine love becomes part of the human endeavor and joins to human souls? Otto van Veen and Jeanne de la Mothe Guyon internalized this hope and here reveal to us their vision of the love of God bonding and becoming one with the human soul. Translated into English for the first time here, these emblems of divine love become available to postmodern readers.