|
The Pilgrim Church
The Pilgrim Church covers the history of many Christians and Movements started by the Holy Spirit who have endeavoured to hold true to the words of the Lord Jesus and His servants as recorded in the Scripture and revealed by the Holy Spirit. Starting with the close of Luke's "Acts of the Apostles" and continuing forward, Mr Broadbent has attempted to focus on the story of those believers who were outside of the systemised Catholic and then Roman church, it's descendants, and other State or 'Official' but un-biblical edifices.
|
|
Through the Eye of a Needle

Many Christians who take Jesus’ commandments very seriously on nonresistance and divorce shrug off His teachings on laying up treasures on earth. In this challenging book, Hertzler challenges all of us to take Jesus’ teachings on wealth seriously.
|
|
A Change of Allegiance

In A Change of Allegiance, Dean Taylor takes the reader on a moving journey through the Scriptures, Christian history, and his own life’s story as he demonstrates the incompatibility of Christianity and war. Ultimately, Dean Taylor challenges his readers to consider where their allegiance truly lies.
|
|
Pagan Christianity
Many Christians take for granted that their church's practices are rooted in Scripture. Yet those practices look very different from those of the first-century church. The New Testament is not silent on how the early church freely expressed the reality of Christ's indwelling in ways that rocked the first-century world. Times have changed. Pagan Christianity leads us on a fascinating tour through church history, revealing this startling and unsettling truth: Many cherished church traditions embraced today originated not out of the New Testament, but out of pagan practices. One of the most troubling outcomes has been the effect on average believers: turning them from living expressions of Christ's glory and power to passive observers. If you want to see that trend reversed, turn to Pagan Christianity . . . a book that examines and challenges every aspect of our contemporary church experience.
|