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| TITLE |
AUTHOR |
SUMMARY |
| Does Inerrancy Matter? |
Boice, James Montgomery |
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| Christianity on Trial |
Chapman, Colin |
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| Christianity and the World Religions |
Copeland, E. Luther |
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| God in Creation |
Devine, Bob |
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| The Search for Messiah |
Eastman, Mark |
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| How did it all begin? |
Hill, Harold |
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| The Collapse of Evolution |
Huse, Scott M |
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| 7 Myths about Christianity |
Larsen, Dale & Sandy |
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| Paul Little's Why & What Book |
Little, Paul |
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| Know why you Believe |
Little, Paul E |
This thin primer has become a "classic" of
contemporary evangelical Protestantism. Little was a
popular evangelist on college campuses before his death
in 1975. This book was read widely in the 1970s and now
has been revised by his wife and republished. There is a
stilted character to the reading. The choppiness may be
due in part to the way the text was written, but
McKeever still sounds like he's reading a manual. While
his voice is clear, it's not as rich as a professional
actor's. He generally sounds like an older
fundamentalist minister giving a theology lesson. |
| More then a Carpenter |
McDowell, Josh |
Josh McDowell's timeless examination of the true
nature of Christ and his impact on our lives is one of
the best-selling Christian books ever (more than eight
million copies in print worldwide!). Written by a former
skeptic of Christianity, it is a hard-hitting book for
those who doubt Jesus' deity and his purpose. |
| For Time and Forever |
Morrie, Henry M |
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| Scientific Creationism |
Morris, Henry M |
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
A Great Introduction For the "Well Educated", July 25,
2006
Reviewer: Don Boone (Calgary, AB Canada) - See all my
reviews
I read the newest edition of this book and found it
extremely compelling. The point that Morris makes is
very clear: Since there is no way that any of us could
be there to witness the origin of the universe, we have
to look at the evidence to see if our model is
consistent with the evidence. Creationism, by the
evidence presented in this book, is by far more
consistent with the evidence than is Evolutionism. But
you won't hear that in the public schools which daily
indoctrinate our children to accept the theories of
evolution simply because the teacher says so. And
somehow this is considered good science? This book says
to take a good honest look for yourself. |
| The Remarkable Birth of Planet Earth |
Morris, Henry M |
s a student of Creation vs Evolution, I have read
many books, documents, etc., about this subject. The
Remarkable Birth Of The Planet Earth by Henry Morris
demolishes Darwinism and proves it to be mathmatically
and scientifically IMPOSSIBLE!! Get this little book
before it's too late. Read it, read it again. You'll be
glad you did. Signed Dean Flowers |
| So What's the Difference |
Ridenour, Fritz |
So What's the Difference has been revised and
updated for the 21st Century to help Christians better
understand their own beliefs. A classic first released
in 1967, this revision takes a current look at the
answer to the question, "How does orthodox biblical
Christianity differ from other faiths?" In a
straightforward, non-critical comparison, Fritz Ridenour
explores and explains the basic tenets of 20 worldviews,
religions and faiths, including Judaism, Islam,
Hinduism, Buddhism, Jehovah's Witnesses, Christian
Science, New Age and Mormonism. |
| Refuting Evolution |
Safarti, Johathan |
A creationist response to the National Academy of
Science’s Teaching About Evolution and the Nature of
Science. The latter, distributed nationwide to thousands
of public school teachers, is an effort to saturate
students with evolutionary concepts. Refuting Evolution
is a cogent rebuttal, carefully examining the points
raised in the NAS booklet: science and religion; natural
selection; bird evolution; astronomy; the age of the
earth, etc. |
| Genesis in Time & Space |
Schaeffer, Francis |
his is an excellent book that gives the reader clear
picture of how God worked to accomplish his grand
Creation. It was my first glimpse of a God who created
everything that is - from nothing. No formless mass, no
promordial soup, no cosmic lava - but bothing. As FS
states so well, the earth was created from "nothing
nothing". Five stars because it is "Great food for
thought and presents a clear explanation of the roots
needed for a truly biblical worldview." |
| Thirty Years a Watchtower Slave |
Schnell, William J |
At first, the Watchtower Society seemed harmless to
William J. Schnell, even valuable as a way to develop
his faith in God and pass it on to others. This book is
Schnell¹s fascinating account of his involvement with
the cult, which effectively enticed him in the 1920s and
continues to lure countless individuals today. Readers
will learn, as Schnell did, that the Jehovah¹s Witness
religion he had joined was anything but innocent. For
thirty years he was enslaved by one of the most
totalitarian religions of our day, and his story of
finally becoming free is riveting. Readers will be
alerted to the inner machinations, methods, and
doctrines of the Watchtower Society, arming them to
forewarn others and witness to their Jehovah¹s Witness
friends, relatives, neighbors, and the stranger at the
door. With more than 300,000 copies sold, 30 Years a
Watchtower Slave is truly one of the classic testimonies
of freedom from a powerful cult. |
| The Case for the Creator |
Strobel, Lee |
Strobel, whose apologetics titles The Case for
Christ and The Case for Faith have enjoyed strong
popularity among evangelicals, approaches
creation/evolution issues in the same simple and
energetic style. The format will be familiar to readers
of previous Case books: Strobel visits with scholars and
researchers and works each interview into a topical
outline. Although Strobel does not interview any
"hostile" witnesses, he exposes readers to the work of
some major origins researchers (including Jonathan
Wells, Stephen Meyer and Michael Behe) and theistic
philosophers (including William Lane Craig and J. P.
Moreland). Strobel claims no expertise in science or
metaphysics, but as an interviewer he makes this an
asset, prodding his sources to translate jargon and
provide illustrations for their arguments. At times, the
interview format loses momentum as seams begin to show
between interview recordings, rewrites, research notes
and details imported from his subjects' CVs (here,
Strobel's efforts at buffing his subjects' smart-guy
credentials can become a little too intense). The most
curious feature of the book—not uncommon in the origins
literature but unusual in a work of Christian
apologetics—is that biblical narratives and images of
creation, and the significance of creation for Christian
theology, receive such brief mention. Still, this solid
introduction to the most important topics in origins
debates is highly accessible and packs a good
argumentative punch.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of
Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. |
| Genesis and Archaelogy |
Ves, Howard F |
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