Price
BIOGRAPHIES & HISTORY
Andrew Bonar: Diary & Life
Archibald G. Brown
Brownlow North: His Life and Works
Calvinistic Methodist Fathers of Wales, 2 Vols.
D. L. Moody: The American Evangelist
David Livingstone
Day’s March Nearer Home
Ernest C. Reisinger
Great Awakening
History of English Calvinistic Baptists
In Their Own Words
John & Betty Stam – Missionary Martyrs
John Calvin (History Maker)
John E. Marshall, Life and Writings
John G. Paton – Missionary to the New Hebrides
John Knox and the Reformation
John Newton
Jonathan Edwards (Biography)
Just a Talker
Korean Pentecost
Let Christ Be Magnified
Letters of John Newton
John Newton converted slave-trader, preacher, and hymn-writer, was one of the most colourful figures in the Evangelical Awakening of the eighteenth century. ‘Once an infidel and libertine, a servant of slaves in Africa,’ he wrote for this epitaph, ‘by rich mercy of Jesus Christ, preserved, restored, pardoned, and appointed to preach the faith he had long laboured to destroy.’
It was through his prolific correspondence that Newton fulfilled his distinctive word as ‘the letter-writer parexcellence of the Evangelical Revival‘. His grasp of Scripture and deep personal experience of the ‘amazing grace’ of God, his many friends (among them, Whitefield, Cowper and Wilberforce), his manifold trials, his country pastorate, his strong, clear, idiomatic style- all these factors combined to prepare the author of How Sweet the Name of Jesus Sounds, for the exercise of his special gift.