Phone: (817) 793-3060
Phone: (817) 793-3060
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This is one of the very best resources available to the counselor
This book is a “must-read” for Christians who wish to counter unbiblical thinking. Review of The Bible Among The Myths by John N… Continue Reading
“Hermeneutics is not just the art and science of how to interpret, but is also reflection on how we already interpret. This is tacitly acknowledged on page 65 n.22 where there is a suggestion made to meditate on passages in the Psalms and Isaiah before interpreting. But they quickly go on to affirm the importance of “the literary and linguistic aspects of the biblical material” (66). This point is well taken, but it is in the employment of these aspects within a theological matrix that is often the problem.”
This new book by Meyer describes the hopeless disarray into which evolutionary explanations of the Cambrian Explosion have come. The author convincingly shows how the evidence does not comport with Neo-Darwinism, but in fact contradicts it at many crucial points.
A clear presentation of the so-called “Doctrines of Grace” Greg Forster… Continue Reading
This is a great book on the historicity of Jesus Craig SKeener-Jesus… Continue Reading
David Bentley Hart’s Atheist Delusions is a book that seeks to address the arrogant dismissals of the positive influence of Christianity upon the world. Atheist Delusions by David Bentley Hart… Continue Reading
“A reductionistic god belongs to a reductionistic world picture, just as much as a vitiated view of consciousness and intentionality results from an outlook which doesn’t care to explain such “directed” mysteries.”
G. K. Beale’s magnum opus recommends Christians interpret the Bible via subtle allusions (often in the Septuagint) and typologically. We all due respect, we say no!
A New Commentary on Exodus
“Kregel’s Exegetical Commentary series has already made a strong impact with works by Allen Ross on Psalms and Robert Chisholm on Judges/Ruth, and Garrett doesn’t let the side down. His Exodus Commentary is a fine work of scholarship, being nicely “weighted” towards the first part of the Book (to ch. 24) for preachers.”
… Continue Reading