Discover the story behind the divine favoritism of Jacob over Esau. Uncover why the God of love might show such animosity, and explore the intense rivalry between the twins.
Discover how God responds to sin in this enlightening book. Explore divine justice and mercy, find hope for restoration, and understand how to navigate your faith journey despite challenges and shortcomings.
This book offers a practical guide to holistic health—body, mind, and spirit. Inspired by the Daniel Fast, it empowers you to reject unhealthy diets, embrace a lifestyle that aligns with your divine purpose, and enhance your well-being with spiritual and nutritional insights.
Ever wondered why the Bible says some go to heaven and others to hell? Curious about how God makes these decisions or how a loving God could allow eternal punishment?
This book explores these profound questions, offering a deep dive into biblical answers about divine justice and mercy.
Ross has a wry sense of humor. If humor is funny because it contrasts odd things in unexpected ways, then the best humor isn’t all that funny. The best humor is ridiculously weird.
This book is not about a mountaintop experience nor is it from a mountaintop perspective. Rather, it is from the "street," down in the valley where people actually live.
The ineffectiveness of the church in our world is tied to our own regurgitation of old answers. It is not that we need new Christian answers, but that we need renewed hearts and minds to engage God’s answers through regeneration.
A biblical perspective that issues out of the wholeness of the Bible and shows the Bible’s sustainable depth and breadth for the twenty-first century
There is much confusion in and out of the church about Christianity—Jesus' life, Jesus' teachings, Jesus' death, and Jesus' resurrection. Is confusion about the gospel of Jesus Christ new to the contemporary world? When did the confusion begin? What is the confusion about? How have people dealt with it? These are the questions that have guided this commentary on Mark.
The end that Peter was talking about in Second Peter was the purpose of God for Jesus Christ. God was using Jesus Christ to bring the gospel of salvation to the Gentiles, to humanity, to the world. Consequently, Peter was not suggesting that God’s purpose was the destruction of the world. Rather, God was working to save the world. God’s message was and is a message of hope not hate, of love not loathes, of construction not destruction, of peace not war, and of suffering not fulfillment.