Conversion, Consecration, Christlike Service
A book written for and dedicated to youth, encouraging greater service and dedication to the Master, but is a beneficial message for any age. 93 pages; paper.
A book written for and dedicated to youth, encouraging greater service and dedication to the Master, but is a beneficial message for any age. 93 pages; paper.
Not a hastily written essay on how to be successful and popular, but a book of truth as the author found it when she took the Bible promises literally, applied them to her life, and found them as true as tested steel. 233 pages; paper.
The day of the end of the world has come, and we are on the wrong side. Others are being taken to heaven, while we are left behind. Based upon the Word of God, the author holds before us the awful certainty of the suffering of hell. He also describes the wonderful escape available now through salvation in Jesus and the bliss of heaven. 137 pages; paper.
Written in the mid-1800s, this allegory is based on John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress. But Hawthorne’s pilgrim takes the new Celestial Railroad, which is supposedly the easy, painless way to the Celestial City. Follow Hawthorne’s thoughts on liberal theology, easy-believeism, and Christianity with no cross, and note the telltale signs of the real end of that way. 33 pages; paper.
This little volume is a scrapbook of excerpts from historical writings of the Mennonites, from the Martyrs Mirror through the time of immigration to America. In the back is some family history of the David C Koehn and the Andrew Koehn families. Collected over many years by Merle Koehn, the purpose is to give posterity a glimpse into the history of the forefathers and the challenging times they lived through. 107 pages; coil-bound; paperback.
A story of three young men coming before a local draft board requesting conscientious objector status. This fictional book challenges young people, parents, and the ministry to examine whether we are ready to face a local draft board, and, more importantly, whether we are ready to stand before the King of Kings. 91 pages; paper.
Thirty-eight character-building stories from around the world. Many of these accounts relate answers to prayer and God’s miraculous help. Suitable for reading to lower and middle grade Sunday school classes. Paperback; 179 pages.
An allegory showing the deceitfulness of the enemy working through our own fallen passions to bring us into the bondage of sin. The light of the truth exposes the ways of the old man. Those who ignore the directions of the King invite to themselves not liberty and joy, but bondage, grief, and destruction. 47 pages; paper.
This is Maxeau’s story—his childhood in Haiti, coming to New York City, a near-death encounter with organized crime in Miami, drift ing in Las Vegas, and finally back to New York City where he found the church and was baptized upon the confession of his faith. This is not an average book! An excellent gift for any youth or adult. 319 pages; paperback.
The author, Ronald C. Jantz, is Librarian Emeritus at Rutger’s University with family ties to the Holdeman Mennonite group. Part 1 of this book reviews the Anabaptist faith since the sixteenth century. Part 2 focuses on the Holdeman Mennonite faith among Anabaptist churches and offers a frank assessment of the challenges facing the church in modern times. This book is a well-written historical account of the Holdeman faith and culture as it relates to the preservation of key Anabaptist doctrines. 196 pages; paperback.