Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
John, I forgot one. I noticed you have a couple of books by Lutzer.
His book "How you can be sure you'll spend eternity with God" is phenomenal.
What other Lutzer books do you have? I have many of his....
I would read either John Stott or N. T. Wright because I would venture a guess that you have read neither of them. Not Wright's best work, but important as far as eschatology goes. And Stott's book that you have is a standard. After that, Sproul's book on holiness is a great one.Hey GreekTim these are the books I would like to read next (not including some I have on my iPad) which ones would you pick?
I know you didn't ask but I'll offer my advice regarding your stack of books.I would read either John Stott or N. T. Wright because I would venture a guess that you have read neither of them. Not Wright's best work, but important as far as eschatology goes. And Stott's book that you have is a standard. After that, Sproul's book on holiness is a great one.
I would read either John Stott or N. T. Wright because I would venture a guess that you have read neither of them. Not Wright's best work, but important as far as eschatology goes. And Stott's book that you have is a standard. After that, Sproul's book on holiness is a great one.
I know you didn't ask but I'll offer my advice regarding your stack of books.
The pictures a bit fuzzy and I can't read all the titlies but I can see enough
I think I'd start with the basics.
'Jesus Christ our Lord' by John Walvoord
And if that's his book on 'The Holy Spirit', I'd suggest reading that next.
Conservative, you'll recognise his dispensationalist theology.
Balance that with Sproul's, 'Everyones a Theologian' from a Reformed perspective, ...and Stott's worthwhile
Then of course, Free Grace Soteriology - it's a gem! :smilewinkgrin:
I'd leave Wright's books somewhere after those.
The 'Four Views of Revelation' looks good but end-times stuff doesn't really float my boat. Save it for after you read and intergrate the others books. Personally few of the other end-times books interest me.
I generally use commentaries as reference after the first read-through. Save them for when you study a particular book.
Not a fan of Mac.
Rob
.... after I get through my present stack of books I am reading. Just finished Hell on Trial however.
I'm curious how you read a book, John.
One time, straight thru from beginning to end?
Multiple times cover to cover?
Multiple times thru one chapter before moving on to the next?
Slow and methodical, or read it as quick as possible?
Are you more concerned with getting it done and getting a few nuggets, or understanding the whole work as intricately as possible?
That's the part I've read! Good stuff!!!Someone on this BB recommended the book Kingdom Come by Sam Storms. I got the book from Christianbook.com for $20 plus shipping. The first chapter alone is worth the price!
Fran Chan's Crazy Love from "robust" theologian... hmmmm :laugh:These may not be books of 2015 but I would go with John Piper's "Desiring God" and Francis Chan's "Crazy Love".
Fran Chan's Crazy Love from "robust" theologian... hmmmm :laugh:
Someone on this BB recommended the book Kingdom Come by Sam Storms. I got the book from Christianbook.com for $20 plus shipping. The first chapter alone is worth the price!
Someone on this BB recommended the book Kingdom Come by Sam Storms. I got the book from Christianbook.com for $20 plus shipping. The first chapter alone is worth the price!
Mneh?? ok...it's actually a good read. It's a break from religiously heady books to one that is hearty.
Me being a seminary grad with such a robust understanding of theology, it's a breath of fresh air.