Secrets Of The Heart - Book
A Study In Psalms 38-50
Christ's Prophetic Plans
By John MacArthur & Richard Mayhue
Christ’s Prophetic Plans offers the reader John MacArthur’s most explicit writing on eschatology and is perfect for pastors, bible professors, teachers, and students with a heart and mind for discovering Biblical truth. This primer takes you on a Biblical study of questions surrounding prophecy, Israel, the rapture, and the different millennial views. The fruit of such study is great as God specifically promises His blessing on those who know and obey the things of biblical prophecy (Revelation 1:3; 22:7).
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$16.95
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How To Work for Christ:
By R A Torrey
This book is a must for every serious bible student. Perfect for new christians, pastors and leaders who want to work for christ this practical handbook on how to serve the Lord and how to share the Lord has been inspiring people for over 100 years. Now available once again for a new generation of christian workers and soul winners.

$14.75$10.50

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OUT OF PRINT:
With Jesus After Sinners
Dr Tom Malone
Christ is always with us. Though we know this, it is sometimes hard to continually experience His presence. "With Jesus After Sinners" will not only challenge you to be a soul winner, but a soul winner with Jesus as your partner.
Now Out Of Print.
Only 7 left.
$9.95

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Secrets Of The Heart - Book
Secrets Of The Heart - Book
A Study In Psalms 38-50
A beautiful full-length Bible study book is published for each thirteen-week series. After reading and marking the Scripture passages which correspond to the lesson, the teacher will read the Bible lesson that corresponds with the lesson the Sunday School class is studying. As they read, students should mark key statements or paragraphs to review later. Class members may also desire to obtain this book for further reading.
The beauty of the Psalms still captivates readers today as it expresses our heartfelt desire to fellowship with God. Pastor Sexton examines each psalm and its direct effect on our individual relationship with God. He challenges each reader to have a deep and abiding relationship with the God of the Bible.
Table of Contents
1.Help
Me................................................................9
2.That I Sin Not With My Tongue.......................21
3.God Thinks of Me..........................................37
4.Integrity..............................................................51
5.Thisting For God..............................................65
6.The God of My Strength.....................................75
7.Secrets of the Heart.....................................87
8.Out of the Ivory Palaces..............................101
9.The Lord Is WIth Us.....................................119
10.The King of All the Earth...............................129
11.Great is the Lord.......................................143
12.God WIll Redeem My Soul......................155
13.The Mighty God.......................................169
Notable Quotes of Charles H. Spurgeon
Heaven A City
“Why is Heaven called a city? Because it is a place of fellowship where men meet one another!”—1893, Sermon #2291
“Men may change their churches and only change their refuge of lies. But if they come to Christ, whatever church they are in, if they have found Him and are trusting in Him and in Him, alone, their peace will be like a river and their righteousness as the waves of the sea!”—1892, Sermon #2271
“Dust we are and that dust hastens to dissolve—and so to return to the kindred dust of the earth. Under our feet are our graves and above us are the stars which will soon look down upon our silent tombs. The trees cast their leaves, but they grow green, again. We shed our life’s glories once and they return no more! Thus the trees outlive us and beneath their shade we are reminded that man is far more frail than the tree which he fells with the axe. Yes, the very grass which he mows outlives the mower! Man is a mere shadow—we have scarcely time to say that we are before we are not! Are we not foolish if we place our reliance upon such a feeble creature, so weak that his breath, his unsubstantial breath—is essential to his life? Who are you, O man, that trusts in man? If you have half a grain of wisdom left, how can you quit the ever-living God and put your reliance upon a poor creature who is as the grass—that today is and tomorrow is cast into the oven? Go, rest on a reed, or ride on a moth, or build on a bubble—but rely not on a man!”—1887, Sermon #1984

