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Next to the Bible...

Jedi Knight

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
What has been you favorite book for inspiration other than the Bible? Mine was Experiencing God by Henry Blackaby
 

Rippon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
What has been you favorite book for inspiration other than the Bible? Mine was Experiencing God by Henry Blackaby

At least you didn't say a favorite book of inspiration.

On the non-God-breathed side of things -- Pilgrim's Progress, Knowing God, just about anything from the pen of Charles Spurgeon, A.W.Pink, Boice, and Herman Hoeksema.

Once I get going on this kind of stuff it's hard to stop.
 

OldRegular

Well-Known Member
At least you didn't say a favorite book of inspiration.

On the non-God-breathed side of things -- Pilgrim's Progress, Knowing God, just about anything from the pen of Charles Spurgeon, A.W.Pink, Boice, and Herman Hoeksema.

Once I get going on this kind of stuff it's hard to stop.

I study mostly Bible. I have read Pilgrims Progress, some John Gill, some Spurgeon, Hoeksema's Behold He Cometh, which I considered excellent. My tastes run a little more toward the likes of John Dagg, Hoekema, Martyn Lloyd-Jones, and Thomas Nettles. I even like John MacArthur except for his dispensationalism.

My understanding is that Hoeksema is a supralapsarian. I could never get too excited about supra vs sub, perhaps out of ignorance. Is there any reason I should, get excited that is, or just remain ignorant considering my age? The argument seemed to me equivalent to the so-called discussion about how many angels could dance on the head of a pin. I say all this given that while I was still on milk I was semi-Arminian!
 

webdog

Active Member
Site Supporter
Heaven by Randy Alcorn.

How many people prior to going on their dream vacation would not study up on their dream destination first...yet most Christians do just this with our eternal dream destination.
 

Thinkingstuff

Active Member
Philip Keller's a Shepards look at Psalm 23.
AW Tozer's Attributes of God
RC Sproul Myth of Chance
CS Lewis the Problem of Pain, Mere Christianity, the abolition of Man
Deitrick Bonnhoffer Cost of Discipleship
John Foxe's Book of Martyrs.
Elizabeth Elliots Keep a quiet heart
Jesse Miller's A prisoner of hope
Oswald Chambers (for devotional purposes) My Utmost for his Highest
David Wilkerson Cross and the Switchblade
Most recently
ECF actually very inspirational. But generally I like biographies of Christian missionaries and preachers.
 

Jedi Knight

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
==A favorite of mine is "The Assurance of Salvation" by Martin Lloyd-Jones. It is a study of John 17. I have others.

Been studying John 17 recently and Dr. J. Vernon McGee preach about it on the radio last night.....gonna look it up.:jesus:
 

Bob Alkire

New Member
Authentic Christianity by Ray C. Stedman
The Way to Wholeness by Ray C. Stedman
The Attributes of God by A. W. Tozer
The Greatness of The Kingdom by Alva J. Mc Clain
Our God Breathed Book by John R. Rice
The Genesis Record by Henry Morris
Genesis to Deuteronomy by C. H. Mackintosh
 

Jim1999

<img src =/Jim1999.jpg>
The single book that had the greatest impact on my spiritual life was Through Gates of Splendor by Elizabeth Elliot. The story of Jim Elliot and the other four missionaries killed by the Auca indians in South America. Jim Elliot, the one whose quote has inspired more missionaries than any other incident: "He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose."

Betty Elliot and Rachel Saint returned to tell the gospel to those same people who killed her husband and Rachel's brother. Amazing story; amazing lives!

Cheers,

Jim
 

Annie5

New Member
Pilgrim's Progress, John Bunyan
The Abolition of Man, C.S. Lewis (and several others by Lewis!)
How Should We Then Live? Francis Schaeffer
David Wells has written some very insightful books on modern culture: No Place for Truth, God in the Wasteland, Losing Our Virtue, and...what's the other one in the series?
 
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