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Tag: Intervarsity Press


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Vote Now (You Choose The Sale)

Gospel e-books is working together with Christian publishers to allow you to choose what e-books you’d like to have discounted. Cast your vote below and the book with the most votes in each poll will be placed on sale soon after. If there are less than 100 total votes in a particular poll, the winning book will not be discounted.



Book details:

Kregel: When There Is No Miracle by Robert L. Wise vs. A Pair of Miracles by Karla Akins

Intervarsity Press: An Impossible Marriage: What Our Mixed-Orientation Marriage Has Taught Us About Love and the Gospel by Laurie Krieg & Matt Krieg vs. Blessed Are the Nones: Mixed-Faith Marriage and My Search for Spiritual Community by Stina Kielsmeier-Cook

New Leaf: Life of Sir Isaac Newton vs. The Life of John Newton

Good Book Company: Rock Solid: 12 Gospel Truths to Live By vs. Delighting in the Trinity: Why Father, Son, and Spirit are Good News by Tim Chester

Crossway: Discovering the Good Life: The Surprising Riches Available in Christ by Tim Savage vs. Don’t Waste Your Life by John Piper

Christian Focus: The Grand Design: Male and Female He Made Them by Owen Strachan & Gavin Peacock vs. What Does the Bible Teach about Homosexuality?: A Short Book on Biblical Sexuality by Gavin Peacock & Owen Strachan

David C. Cook: Come and See: Everything You Ever Wanted in the One Place You Would Never Look by Todd Wagner vs. Poets and Saints: Eternal Insight. Extravagant Love. Ordinary People. by Jamie George


Author(s): Derek W. Taylor
Publisher: Intervarsity Press
Price: $2.99       (May 10-11)
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The Bible is meant to be read in the church, by the church, as the church.
Although the practice of reading Scripture has often become separated from its ecclesial context, theologian Derek Taylor argues that it rightly belongs to the disciplines of the community of faith. He finds a leading example of this approach in the theology of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who regarded the reading of Scripture as an inherently communal exercise of discipleship.
In conversation with other theologians, including John Webster, Robert Jenson, and Stanley Hauerwas, Taylor contends that Bonhoeffer’s approach to Scripture can engender the practices and habits of a faithful hermeneutical community. Today, as in Bonhoeffer’s time, the church is called to take up and read.


Author(s): Jonathan K. Dodson
Publisher: Intervarsity Press
Price: $2.99       (Ends May 19)
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We live in an age of crisis.
Financial crisis, political crisis, environmental crisis―the list goes on. We’re confronted with calamity every time we read the headlines. But behind each of these lurks another kind of crisis, one we find harder to define: a moral crisis―a crisis of goodness. Behind financial crisis is unrestrained greed; behind political crisis is the lust for power.
To properly address the crises that plague our world, we must be formed as people of moral goodness. We must cultivate virtue. But the cultural headwinds are strong: outrage and fragility, persecution and affluence, injustice and impurity.
In this wise and practical book, Pastor Jonathan Dodson takes us back to the Beatitudes, the centerpiece of Jesus’ famous Sermon on the Mount. Dodson examines each of the Beatitudes in the context of the new morality that buffets our society today, presenting a compelling portrait of the truly good life, both personal and social.
Jesus’ vision of the good is stunning: heaven meets earth, mercy triumphs over judgment, peace transcends outrage, grace upends self-righteousness. Here is an account, not of dos and don’ts, but of genuine moral flourishing.



Vote Now (You Choose The Sale)

Gospel e-books is working together with Christian publishers to allow you to choose what e-books you’d like to have discounted. Cast your vote below and the book with the most votes in each poll will be placed on sale soon after. If there are less than 100 total votes in a particular poll, the winning book will not be discounted.



Book details:

Kregel: Dying to Preach: Embracing the Cross in the Pulpit by Steven Smith vs. Preaching Old Testament Narratives (Preaching with Excellence) by Benjamin H. Walton

Intervarsity Press: Reading While Black: African American Biblical Interpretation as an Exercise in Hope by Esau McCaulley vs. The Colors of Culture: The Beauty of Diverse Friendships by Melinda Joy Mingo

New Leaf: Echoes of Ararat: A Collection of Over 300 Flood Legends from North and South America by Nick Liguori vs. Don’t Miss the Boat by Paul Taylor

Good Book Company: Engaging with Mormons: Understanding their world; sharing good news by Corey Miller vs. Engaging with Hindus: Understanding their World; Sharing good news by Robin Thomson

Crossway: Flourish: How the Love of Christ Frees Us from Self-Focus by Lydia Brownback vs. Enough about Me: Find Lasting Joy in the Age of Self by Jen Oshman

Christian Focus: What Does the Bible Teach about Lust?: A Short Book on Desire by Gavin Peacock & Owen Strachan vs. And Then He Knew Her: A Biblical View of Sex by Adrian Reynolds & Celia Reynolds

David C. Cook: Favor with Kings: God’s Purpose, Your Passion, and the Process of Doing Great Things by Caleb Anderson vs. Move Toward the Mess: The Ultimate Fix for a Boring Christian Life by John Hambrick


Author(s): Os Guinness
Publisher: Intervarsity Press
Price: $2.99       (May 5-6)
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In 1968, at the climax of the sixties, Os Guinness visited the United States for the first time. There he was struck by an impression he’d already felt in England and elsewhere: beneath all the idealism and struggle for freedom was a growing disillusionment and loss of meaning. “Underneath the efforts of a generation,” he wrote, “lay dust.” Even more troubling, Christians seemed uninformed about the cultural shifts and ill-equipped to respond. Guinness took on these concerns by writing his first book, The Dust of Death.
In this milestone work, leading social critic Guinness provides a wide-ranging, farsighted analysis of one of the most pivotal decades in Western history, the 1960s. He examines the twentieth-century developments of secular humanism, the technological society, and the alternatives offered by the counterculture, including radical politics, Eastern religions, and psychedelic drugs. As all of these options have increasingly failed to deliver on their promises, Guinness argues, Westerners desperately need another alternative―a Third Way. This way “holds the promise of realism without despair, involvement without frustration, hope without romanticism.” It offers a stronger humanism, one with a solid basis for its ideals, combining truth and beauty. And this Third Way can be found only in the rediscovery and revival of the historic Christian faith.

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