You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
The heart is the most important biblical term for the person's nature and actions. Indeed, the heart is the control center of life. It is the very place where God works to change us. But how does this growth take place? How are Christians to discover the steadfast spirit of David's psalm? In Minding the Heart, Robert L. Saucy offers insightful instruction on what spiritual transformation is and how to achieve it. He shows how renewing one's mind through meditation, action, and community can begin the process of change, but ultimately the final change—the change that brings abundant life—can only come through a vital relationship with God. "The renewing of the heart is an inescapable human need," writes Saucy, "but the solution lies only within the realm of the divine." Drawing from inspiring Bible passages as well as selected scientific studies, Saucy demonstrates how to make lasting change so Christians can finally achieve the joys of becoming more like Christ.
The role of women in the church is a debate that has raged within the church for much of the twentieth century. On one side are those who say there is no difference between men and women. On the other side are those who severely limit women who want to offer ministry to the church. Judith TenElshof and Robert Saucy take the middle approach. Believing that the modern views have denied the distinctions between men and women, the authors adopt a view called complementarianism. TenElshof and Saucy argue that while men and women are equal, God has given different roles to each and that these roles rely on each other to be fully effective.
The Church in God's Program is a biblical study covering the entire scope of the church - its beginning, government, ministries, and the new covenant.
Neil Anderson, author of the bestselling Bondage Breaker, teams up with Robert Saucy to present an extraordinary book on how Christ transforms the life of a believer. At the moment of salvation, all our sins are forgiven--past, present and future. Christ's righteousness becomes ours. Here, the authors help resolve the confusion about our perfect identity in Christ and our imperfect living in the world.
Debate abounds on the future of Israel and Israel's relation to the church, not only between dispensationalists and non-dispensationalists, but among dispensationalists themselves. In the past that debate has sometimes been acrimonious, and proponents of the differing viewpoints have found little common ground. In recent years, however, views have been modified and developed so that the dialogue is increasingly by cooperation and a mutual exploration of diverse ideas. The Case for Progressive Dispensationalism is intended to enlighten the debate in that same irenic spirit. The book is solidly dispensational in perspective in affirming that the Old Testament prophecies are completely fulfille...
In a society saturated by the doctrine of tolerance and an air of post-modernism, one might wonder about the role and significance of the once almighty Scripture. Despite what some would consider a time of revival in the church, confidence in the Scripture is consistently being undermined by cynical attitudes and critical thinking. Saucy's commentary is relevant for the times and speaks to the questioning heart and mind. He confirms not only our need for Scripture, but also its authority, its inerrancy, and its impact.
It is one thing to be in Christ and quite another to become all he has created us to be. God's power is at work in you, transforming, developing and helping you to grow. In this text, Neil Anderson and Robert Saucy describe what this means and how it happens.
The social life and customs of 17th Century England are vividly portrayed in these extracts from the diary of Samuel Pepys.
When deal-making seasoned American turned British banker Christopher Coleman agrees to an open marriage with Lindsay Mitchell, a stunningly beautiful early forties member of morally troubled twenty-first century London society, he is ill-prepared to cope with the jealousies and often alternative sexual pleasures that inevitably envelope their fast moving transatlantic life. Leading a life of luxury in London, England and on the stunningly beautiful islands of Florida's Gulf Coast Keys, Christopher and Lindsay fall into each others arms after years of changing sexual partners, failed relationships and a near fatal divorce and form an enormously successful business and personal partnership cha...
The second of three volumes, which were originally published in one volume as: Legends.