
Christian books
Items in this hypelist
Reading

The Letters of Samuel Rutherford (Puritan Paperbacks)
Samuel Rutherford · 1973

Every Good Endeavor
Timothy Keller · 2014

Lectures to My Students: Practical and Spiritual Guidance for Preachers (Volume 1)
Charles H. Spurgeon · 2020

Desiring God, Revised Edition: Meditations of a Christian Hedonist
John Piper · 2011
To Read

Knowing God (The IVP Signature Collection)
J. I. Packer · 2021

The Cost of Discipleship
Dietrich Bonhoeffer · 1995

Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life
Donald S. Whitney · 2014

The Glory of Christ
John Owen · 2021

The Death of Death in the Death of Christ: Modern, Updated English Translation
John Owen · 2023

The Essentials of Prayer (EM Bounds)
Edward E.M. Bounds · 2015

Busy for Self, Lazy for God: Meditations on Proverbs for Diligent Living
Nam Joon Kim · 2021

Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God
J. I. Packer · 2012

God's Passion for His Glory
John Piper · 2006

The Bruised Reed (Puritan Paperbacks)
Richard Sibbes · 2021
Finished

Freedom of Self Forgetfulness
Timothy J. Keller · 2012

The Prodigal God: Recovering the Heart of the Christian Faith
Timothy Keller · 2011

All Things Made New (Puritan Paperbacks)
John Flavel · 2017
Numerous stories are told from John Flavel's life of how people 'happened to meet him' and came away deeply thankful to God, full of resolve to walk with Christ as a result. The same is true of encounters made with Flavel's writings, as in All Things Made New. Flavel spent almost his entire ministry in a busy town serving working people. He believed that the gospel impacts and shapes every thought, every feeling, every ambition, emotion, desire, success, tragedy and joy. Christ makes all things new for the believer, and teaches us to follow him with confidence, until that day when he truly renews all things. To read Flavel is to catch and to be changed by the same vision. Selected and Edited by Lewis Allen.

The Mortification of Sin (Puritan Paperbacks)
John Owen · 2022
'This battle will last more or less all our days.' In this abridgement of a classic work, The Mortification of Sin, the famous Puritan John Owen shows the need for Christians to engage in a life-long battle against the sinful tendencies that remain in them, despite their having been brought to faith and new life in Christ. Owen is very insistent that believers cannot hope to succeed in this battle in their own strength. He sees clearly that the fight can be won only through faith in Christ, and in the power of the Spirit. Fighting sin with human strength will produce only self-righteousness, superstition and anxiety of conscience. But with faith in Christ, and with the power of the Spirit, victory is certain. The temptations in times like Owen's and ours are obvious on every side; the remedy to them is clearly pointed out in this practical and helpful book.






