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    The Pilgrim’s Progress

    250.00

    The Pilgrim’s Progress from This World, to That Which Is to Come is a 1678 Christian allegory written for John Bunyan. It is regarded as one of the most significant works of theological fiction in English literature and a progenitor of the narrative aspect of Christian media.

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    The Seed (Evolution: Fact or Fiction)

    185.00

    In this book, Dr. Job brings his extensive experience gained over many years of teaching at the university and overseeing research at the highest level and in biological sciences to bear upon this theory of ‘Evolution’. It would have been most natural to him with his liberal educational background, where he was taught and groomed by professors who did not accept the Bible account of creation, to adopt and adhere to his own variation of the “Big Bang Theory”.

    On the contrary, Dr. Job sets forth the careful, unbiased findings of a life-time. To those of us who are not as well read or knowledgeable in this subject, this book could serve as a beacon to guide us in the right direction. To those who are stubbornly critical of everything which savours of faith in the Living God, this book will give cause to tremors in their souls and could rouse in their beings some hunger for the Truth, which if earnestly pursued will doubtless profit them eternally.
    – Joshua Daniel

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    The Sinfulness of Sin

    195.00

    Sin is the transgression of a law, yea of a good law, yea of God’s law. Sin
    presupposes that there is a law in being, for where is no law there is no
    transgression (Romans 4.15). But where there is sin, there is a law, and a
    transgression of the law. Whosoever committeth sin transgresseth also the law, for
    sin is a transgression of the law (I John 3.4). That this is the sin intended in our
    text is apparent from Romans 7.7.
    Now the law not only forbids the doing of evil, whether by thought, word or deed,
    but also commands the doing of good. So to omit the good commanded is sin, as
    well (or ill) as is the doing of the evil that is forbidden. Against the fruit of the Spirit
    there is no law, but against the works of the flesh (for the antithesis holds) there is
    law, for they are all against the law, as the Apostle tells us (Galatians 5.19-24).
    Whatever, then, transgresses the law of God–in whole or in part (James 2.10)–is
    therefore and therein a sin, whether it break an affirmative or a negative precept
    i.e. whether it is the omission of good or the commission of evil.