Category: History
Baptist History, From the Foundation of the Christian Church to the Close of the Eighteenth Century. 2nd Edition. Complete and Unabridged. by J. M. Cramp, maroon cloth
In review of this work, C. H. Spurgeon wrote,
“Dr. Cramp has long been a laborious, painstaking student of ecclesiastical history, and his works have been distinguished by some of the higher qualities of a historian. His book on Baptist History is not intended fo...
By James Seaton Reid, D.D., M.R.I.A., 3 volumes, 1600pp total, dark blue cloth
In 1837, the celebrated Dr. J. S. Reid, Presbyterian minister of Carrickfergus, was appointed to lecture in Church History at Belfast. His appointment was to prove of great benefit to the Church as he authoured a 3-volume work on the history of Irish Presbyterianism. This has been described by Rev. A. C. Anderson in his work on Irish Presbyterian History as "the great mine of informati...
from the Revolution (1688) to the year 1838
By David Bogue DD and James Bennett DD, 3 volumes, 400pp each, brown cloth
This previously rare three volume work covers the period from the later Puritan age through the Great Awakening and on to the early years of the modern missionary movement in which both authors played a significant part. It gives the reasons and history of dissent, details of the churches, training colleges and biogr...
By J B Marsden, 442pp £18.95 each, blue cloth with d/w
Several volumes have been devoted to the description and history of the Puritan movement, and many of them have become quite scarce. Generally, the best works on the subject are the hardest to find, and this is the case with J.B. Marsden’s two-volume magnum opus. Born in Liverpool, John Buxton Marsden (1803-1870) was a noted historical writer and pastor in the nineteenth century. ...
Several volumes have been devoted to the description and history of the Puritan movement, and many of them have become quite scarce. Generally, the best works on the subject are the hardest to find, and this is the case with J.B. Marsden’s two-volume magnum opus.
Born in Liverpool, John Buxton Marsden (1803-1870) was a noted historical writer and pastor in the nineteenth century. ...
By Daniel Neal, 3 volumes, 682, 704 & 636pp, cream cloth with d/w
Daniel Neal (1678-1743) was an English historian, born in London on December 14, 1678. He was educated at the Merchant Taylors’ School and at the universities of Utrecht and Leiden. In 1704 he became assistant minister, and in 1706 sole minister, of an Independent congregation in Aldersgate Street, and afterwards in Jewin Street, London, where he remained until his death on April 4, 1743. He married Eliz...
Or Reminiscences of the Preachers and People of Wales.
By Rev. David Davies, dark green cloth with d/w
Mr. Davies, whose sermons we well remember, has produced a remarkable book, full of fine specimens of Welsh oratory. One is made by these ‘Echoes’ to fall in love with Welsh piety and to long for its like in our English villages… We shall not be surprised to hear that Mr. David Davies’s book...
Mr. Davies, whose sermons we well remember, has produced a remarkable book, full of fine specimens of Welsh oratory.
One is made by these ‘Echoes’ to fall in love with Welsh piety and to long for its like in our English villages… We shall not be surprised to hear that Mr. David Davies’s book...
or More Echoes from the Welsh Hills
By Rev. David Davies, 300pp, brown cloth with d/w
This volume continues the theme begun in Echoes from the Welsh Hills. David Davies aimed at presenting a picture of rural Welsh life as it existed for generations in the heart of Wales. In the latter half of the 19th century villages were gradually, but effectively, depleted of their inhabitants in favour of the large towns and busy commercial centres. Here...
(History of Methodism in Ireland 1747–1859)
By C.H.Crookshank, 3 Volumes, 1300pp, hardback
This is a new edition in hardcover.
Over 100 years ago a Methodist minister by the name of C. H. Crookshank wrote an account of the history of Methodism in Ireland from its beginnings in 1747 when John Wesley visited for the first time, until 1859, the year of the great revival. It has never been reprinted this century until now, despite its being viewed as a classic by those who had the privilege to own a copy. The original three volume hardback work has been completely re-typeset. It has also been given a new title, "Days of Revival", and is complete with a new index. We originally produced it as a six-volume, stitch-bound, paperback set (1350 pages in all) but have now re-issued it in as three hardbacks in cloth binding.
What does "Days of Revival" have in store for today’s reader? The first thing is that if you want history to thrill your heart and challenge your faith, then "Days of Revival" is a good place to discover it. The second thing it gives is an unprecedented insight into evangelicalism in Ireland over the one hundred and sixty year period leading up to 1859. These were far from being days of barrenness and many exciting events took place. This helps us to see our day in a wider context of history. Finally, you will be introduced to some amazing preachers who once travelled throughout the length and breadth of this land. Men such as Thomas Walsh of Limerick, Gideon Ouseley from Galway and Charles Graham. Accounts of their open-air preaching as well as stories of the remarkable conversions seen under their ministries are all drawn together in this easy to read set.
These volumes are the affectionate story of the spread of the gospel by Wesley and his men, written in a Methodist manse in Antrim over a hundred years ago by a preacher who ransacked all the original materials and lets the story of the mighty works of God live. What extraordinary times they were. These men were early Wesleyan Methodists and so opposed the divine decrees of God’s sovereignty in predestination. But they had no thought of giving a person assurance of salvation by two or three easy steps and repeating ‘the salvation prayer’. They no more believed that they could make people Christians than raise the dead. So one frequently comes across Wesley writing such comments as this in his diary, that in Aughrim he found a few and left more striving to enter in at the strait gate (Volume 1, p. 124). One other feature of this scan of 100 years of Irish Methodism is the way it charts the rise of revivalism, that is, in the growing willingness to accept physical phenomena as of the Holy Spirit, altar calls or penitents being asked to kneel publicly, protracted meetings etc, all considered to be the marks of a work of God.
These volumes are the affectionate story of the spread of the gospel by Wesley and his men, written in a Methodist manse in Antrim over a hundred years ago by a preacher who ransacked all the original materials and lets the story of the mighty works of God live. What extraordinary times they were. These men were early Wesleyan Methodists and so opposed the divine decrees of God’s sovereignty in predestination. But they had no thought of giving a person assurance of salvation by two or three easy steps and repeating ‘the salvation prayer’. They no more believed that they could make people Christians than raise the dead. So one frequently comes across Wesley writing such comments as this in his diary, that in Aughrim he found a few and left more striving to enter in at the strait gate (Volume 1, p. 124).
One other feature of this scan of 100 years of Irish Methodism is the way it charts the rise of revivalism, that is, in the growing willingness to accept physical phenomena as of the Holy Spirit, altar calls or penitents being asked to kneel publicly, protracted meetings etc, all considered to be the marks of a work of God.
Whenever I am feeling discouraged I take Crookshank down from my shelves and read a few pages. This restores my vision and passion for souls.
By Richard Webster, 720pp, dark blue cloth with d/w
Richard Webster’s work traces Presbyterianism in America from its inception until the year 1760. The first part of begins with a narrative account of the displacement of Scottish and Irish Presbyterians to America and follows the development and growth of these churches. He gives careful attention to decisions of synods and presbyteries, personal correspondence, and disputes of the day. In the second p...
A series of original Biographical Sketches of eminent Ministers and Members of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland
Edited by The Rev. Thomas Hamilton, M.A., limited edition, dark blue cloth
All lovers of Bible Protestantism in general, and orthodox Presbyterianism in particular, will rejoice in the republication of Irish Worthies. Thomas Hamilton followed his father in York Street congregation as its...
By William Blair Neatby, M.A., 320pp, blue cloth
W. Blair Neatby’s classic study of the Brethren first appeared in 1901. Despite the lapse of a century it remains an invaluable guide to the first seventy years of the Brethren movement, and is likely to appeal to general students of church history, as well as to those with a particular interest in the Brethren. As the author states:
The Brethren sought to effect a fresh sta...
By J B Marsden, 480pp £18.95, blue cloth with d/w
Volume 1 of this set is under the title The Early Puritans"
Several volumes have been devoted to the description and history of the Puritan movement, and many of them have become quite scarce. Generally, the best works on the subject are the hardest to find, and this is the case with J.B. Marsden’s two-volume magnum opus. Born in Liverpool, John Buxton Mars...
Born in Liverpool, John Buxton Mars...
By F W Bourne, pp.501, dark green cloth, with d/w.
“Though the story in this book started in 1815 and has long since been forgotten, it is a story that needs to be told again. It’s the story of the Bible Christian Methodists founded in Devon and Cornwall. “The spiritual and moral state of these counties in the early part of the nineteenth century was very sad indeed. The Church of England, generally speaking, was without a living ministry. It was de...
Thomas Coleman.
218pp, brown cloth with d/w
This is rare volume was originally published in 1860. The author reviews the events, details the principles upon which the ministers acted, the oppressive measures under which they suffered, and the influence they have had on succeeding times. The book is complete with biographical sketches and facts and anecdotes characteristic of the times in which they lived. It is an eminently accessible introduction to this vital period in English church history.
This remarkable account describes in detail the suffering of this remarkable section of the church of Christ. It traces their history over many centuries, details their beliefs and their fervent stand for the truth which pre-dated the Reformation.
Extracts from a series of letters by the Earl of Roden, pp104, dark blue cloth with d/w
“The book is a collection of letters written to a friend by the Earl of Roden during a visit to the West of Ireland in 1851. He travelled there to witness firsthand the great moving of God in the conversion of many Roman Catholics. You will read in this publication amazing reports of the dramatic advance of the gospel such as that in one diocese 10,000 adults and children had ...
by D Geraint Jones
112pp, spiral bound booklet
Within these fifty years there have been five or six very great awakenings: a land of darkness and of the shadow of death hath seen great light: but oh, may we live to see still greater things! . . . I am persuaded, that unless we are favoured with frequent revivals, and a strong, powerful work of the Spirit of God, we shall, in a great degree, degenerate, and only have a 'name to live': religion will soon lose its vigour; the ministry will hardly retain its lustre and glory; and iniquity will, of consequence, abound.
Thomas Charles, 1792
7 volumes, pp xviii+489, 495, 505, 468, 383, 348, 349, with d/w
Compiled from source documents by Rev. Stanley Barnes for the Whitefield College of the Bible, N.Ireland
Revival has always been the lifeline of the church. In english the idea in the word is the resurgence of life. When we look for indications of its etymological history in the Bible, the Old Testament use of the word signifies the giving of life which brings benefit to the work of the Lord among men. Revival is God breathing a new life, as it were, into the Church. This impartation of life is in itself the preservation of the Church's ministry, as well as its impetus in the field of missionary and evangelisitic endeavour. The Whitefield College, as part of the Free Presbyterian Church, is interested in revival. Many have prayed for revival, some have talked about it, but there are few who look for it. The prophets certainly prayed for revival. Burdened saints have often meditated upon the words,"0 Lord, I have heard thy speech, and was afraid: 0 Lord, revive thy work in the midst of the years, in the midst of the years make known; in wrath remember mercy." Hab 3:2. Different parts of the world have had the privilege of experiencing revival in the past, and whether one thinks of the great Reformation or the inspiring preaching of a Jonathan Edwards or a George Whitefield, revival has been God's work. Revival has been like the river, "the streams whereof have made glad the city of God, the holy place of the tabernacle of the Most High." Revival has put the Church on its feet. These papers focus attention mainly on the Ulster Revival of 1859. It is the express wish of the writer that the study of these seven volumes may inspire like-minded brethren everywhere to pray for the restoration of the candlestick to its place. For the candlestick to leave Ephesus meant the extinction of the church. For its burning flame to be there meant the extension of the church. As will no doubt be clear, the College stands indebted to the Rev. Stanley Barnes whose consuming interest in revival moved him to collect these papers from a variety of sources and over a considerable period of time. We assume this collection to be unique. We are delighted to be able to offer this depository of stimulating reading to all our students and our friends. Dr John Douglas, Principal, Whitefield College of the Bible VOLUME 1 Accounts of the Revival across Ulster Rev. D. Adams, Ahoghill — The Revival at Ahoghill: Its Narrative and Nature, with suitable reflections William Arthur, A.M. — The Revival in Ulster: Ahoghill and Ballymena & The Revival in Ballymena and Coleraine Rev. S.M. Dill — The Revival at Ballymena in 1859 Rev. Samuel J. Moore, Ballymena — The History and Prominent Characteristics of the present Revival in Ballymena and its Neighbourhood Rev. William Richey (formerly of Coleraine) — Connor and Coleraine; or, Scenes and Sketches of the Last Ulster Awakening Rev. William J. Patton, Minister of Second Presbyterian Church, Dromara — The Revival at Dromara in 1859 Rev. Andrew Wilson, Dungannon — The Revival at Dungannon in 1859 Rev. Thomas B. Bell, Leswalt — Notes on the Revival at Newton-ards Presbytery of Limavady — The 1859 Revival VOLUME 2 Personal Assessments of the Revival James William Massie, D.D., LL.D. — Revivals in Ireland. Facts, Documents, and Correspondence — A Visit to the Scenes of Revival in Ireland. The Origin, Progress, and Characteristics of the Work of 1859. Parts II and III of Revivals in Ireland — The Revivals Reviewed; Their Progress and Results. Original correspondence from Ministers and other Friends in Ireland. Part IV of Revivals in Ireland Rev. R. T. Simpson, M.A., Q.U.I. — Recollections of and Reflections on the Revival of 1859 Rev. John Baillie — The Revival: or What I saw in Ireland; with thoughts suggested by the same. The Result of Two Personal Visits VOLUME 3 The Legacy of the Revival Benjamin Scott — The Revival in Ulster: Its Moral and Social Results Ministers and Medical Men in Ulster — The Revival in Ireland. Letters on the Revival of Religion in the North of Ireland, addressed to the Rev. H. Grattan Guinness Rev. W. M. Craig, B.A., B.D. — Significance of the 1859 Revival – A Movement that swept Ulster, written for the “Portadown News” Rev. Matthew Kerr — The Ulster Revival of the Seventeenth Century: An Instructive Chapter in the Early History of Presbyterianism in Ireland Rev. Professor Gibson, Belfast — Present Aspects of The Irish Revival Arthur W. Edwards, A.M. — A Letter on the Religious Revival Rev. E. J. Poole-Connor — Visitations of Grace VOLUME 4 The Controversies and Debates of the Revival Isaac Nelson — An Answer to the Rev. Professor Killen’s Defence of Revivalism, Assurance, and the Witness of the Spirit — An Answer to the Rev. John Macnaughtan’s Defence of Revivalism, Assurance, and the Witness of the Spirit Rev. T. S. Woods — The Delusion of the Rev. I. Nelson: A Lecture Edward A. Stopford — The Work and the Counterwork; or, The Religious Revival in Belfast. With an explanation of the physical phenomena Rev. Edward Hincks, D.D. — God’s Work and Satan’s Counter-Works, as now carried on in the North of Ireland Rev. Alexander McCreery — Satan’s Devices and Dr. Hincks’s Fancies Rev. F. J. Porter, A.M. — The Spirit Resisted: A Revival Address, with a Letter on Helps to the Ministry — The Prophet Deceived: Lay Teaching not Lay Preaching Rev. J. A. Chancellor — The Prophet Un-deceived VOLUME 5 The Theology of Revivals Rev. Hugh Hanna — Revivals Vindicated against the False Philosophy of the World Rev. John Montgomery — The Holy Spirit: Its Nature and Work Rev. Charles Seaver, Rev. J.A. Canning, and the Rev. James M’Cosh, LL.D. — The Ulster Revival, in its Religious Features and Physiological Accidents W. M. Wilkinson — The Revival in its Physical, Psychical, and Religious Aspects Rev. James Morgan, D.D. — Thoughts on The Revival of 1859 Rev. J. Oswald Dykes, A.M. — Apostolic Times Revived Rev. W. Mc’Ilwaine, A.M. — Ulster Revivalism Revivalism: Is it of God, or of the Devil? Considered with reference to the “Awakenings” in America, at Belfast and Ballymena Thomas Macneece, D.D. — Words of Caution and Counsel on the present Religious Revival, addressed to his Parishioners VOLUME 6 Tracts and Pamphlets of the Revival Rev. Samuel Prenter, M.A. — The Late Rev. Thomas Toye – a Lecture on his Life and Times Rev. Principal J.M. Barkley, M.A., B.D., Ph.D., D.D. — Tommy Toye: Revivalist Preacher Of Irish Worthies – The Rev. Thomas Toye of Belfast Reminiscences of the Rev. Isaac Nelson, Minister of Donegall Street Presbyterian Church, Belfast George Salmon, D.D. — The Evidences of the Work of the Holy Spirit Rev. S.J. Moore — The Ministerial Office Magnified: Why? and How? Rev. James Denham — Revivals of Religion and Means of Obtaining Them Rev. C. Seaver — Religious Revivals John Brown, D.D. — Address on the Revival of Religion Rev. J. M. Killen, M.A. — Religion in Everything Rev. Robert Knox, A.M. — The Ulster Revival VOLUME 7 The Effect of the Revival Outside Ulster Revival in the Old and New Worlds Religious Movement in the United States Rev. John Venn, M.A. — The Revival in Wales Rev. Hamilton M. Macgill — On the Present Revival of Religion in Scotland J. Edwin Orr, Ed.D., Th.D., D.Phil. (Oxford) — The Re- Study of Revival and Revivalism N.D. Emerson, LL.B., Ph.D. — The Church of Ireland and The 1859 Revival Robert Haire — The Story of The ’59 Revival with some Methodist Sidelights The English Press on the Irish Revivals Rev. David Hunter — Plymouthists and Their Principles Rev. John Smyth, M.A. — Plymouth Brethrenism: Its Creed and Character. A Dialogue
Dr John Douglas, Principal, Whitefield College of the Bible
VOLUME 1
Accounts of the Revival across Ulster
Rev. D. Adams, Ahoghill — The Revival at Ahoghill: Its Narrative and Nature, with suitable reflections
William Arthur, A.M. — The Revival in Ulster: Ahoghill and Ballymena & The Revival in Ballymena and Coleraine
Rev. S.M. Dill — The Revival at Ballymena in 1859
Rev. Samuel J. Moore, Ballymena — The History and Prominent Characteristics of the present Revival in Ballymena and its Neighbourhood
Rev. William Richey (formerly of Coleraine) — Connor and Coleraine; or, Scenes and Sketches of the Last Ulster Awakening
Rev. William J. Patton, Minister of Second Presbyterian Church, Dromara — The Revival at Dromara in 1859
Rev. Andrew Wilson, Dungannon — The Revival at Dungannon in 1859
Rev. Thomas B. Bell, Leswalt — Notes on the Revival at Newton-ards
Presbytery of Limavady — The 1859 Revival
VOLUME 2
Personal Assessments of the Revival
James William Massie, D.D., LL.D. — Revivals in Ireland. Facts, Documents, and Correspondence
— A Visit to the Scenes of Revival in Ireland. The Origin, Progress, and Characteristics of the Work of 1859. Parts II and III of Revivals in Ireland
— The Revivals Reviewed; Their Progress and Results. Original correspondence from Ministers and other Friends in Ireland. Part IV of Revivals in Ireland
Rev. R. T. Simpson, M.A., Q.U.I. — Recollections of and Reflections on the Revival of 1859
Rev. John Baillie — The Revival: or What I saw in Ireland; with thoughts suggested by the same. The Result of Two Personal Visits
VOLUME 3
The Legacy of the Revival
Benjamin Scott — The Revival in Ulster: Its Moral and Social Results
Ministers and Medical Men in Ulster — The Revival in Ireland. Letters on the Revival of Religion in the North of Ireland, addressed to the Rev. H. Grattan Guinness
Rev. W. M. Craig, B.A., B.D. — Significance of the 1859 Revival – A Movement that swept Ulster, written for the “Portadown News”
Rev. Matthew Kerr — The Ulster Revival of the Seventeenth Century: An Instructive Chapter in the Early History of Presbyterianism in Ireland
Rev. Professor Gibson, Belfast — Present Aspects of The Irish Revival
Arthur W. Edwards, A.M. — A Letter on the Religious Revival
Rev. E. J. Poole-Connor — Visitations of Grace
VOLUME 4
The Controversies and Debates of the Revival
Isaac Nelson — An Answer to the Rev. Professor Killen’s Defence of Revivalism, Assurance, and the Witness of the Spirit
— An Answer to the Rev. John Macnaughtan’s Defence of Revivalism, Assurance, and the Witness of the Spirit
Rev. T. S. Woods — The Delusion of the Rev. I. Nelson: A Lecture
Edward A. Stopford — The Work and the Counterwork; or, The Religious Revival in Belfast. With an explanation of the physical phenomena
Rev. Edward Hincks, D.D. — God’s Work and Satan’s Counter-Works, as now carried on in the North of Ireland
Rev. Alexander McCreery — Satan’s Devices and Dr. Hincks’s Fancies
Rev. F. J. Porter, A.M. — The Spirit Resisted: A Revival Address, with a Letter on Helps to the Ministry
— The Prophet Deceived: Lay Teaching not Lay Preaching
Rev. J. A. Chancellor — The Prophet Un-deceived
VOLUME 5
The Theology of Revivals
Rev. Hugh Hanna — Revivals Vindicated against the False Philosophy of the World
Rev. John Montgomery — The Holy Spirit: Its Nature and Work
Rev. Charles Seaver, Rev. J.A. Canning, and the Rev. James M’Cosh, LL.D. — The Ulster Revival, in its Religious Features and Physiological Accidents
W. M. Wilkinson — The Revival in its Physical, Psychical, and Religious Aspects
Rev. James Morgan, D.D. — Thoughts on The Revival of 1859
Rev. J. Oswald Dykes, A.M. — Apostolic Times Revived
Rev. W. Mc’Ilwaine, A.M. — Ulster Revivalism Revivalism: Is it of God, or of the Devil? Considered with reference to the “Awakenings” in America, at Belfast and Ballymena
Thomas Macneece, D.D. — Words of Caution and Counsel on the present Religious Revival, addressed to his Parishioners
VOLUME 6
Tracts and Pamphlets of the Revival
Rev. Samuel Prenter, M.A. — The Late Rev. Thomas Toye – a Lecture on his Life and Times
Rev. Principal J.M. Barkley, M.A., B.D., Ph.D., D.D. — Tommy Toye: Revivalist Preacher
Of Irish Worthies – The Rev. Thomas Toye of Belfast
Reminiscences of the Rev. Isaac Nelson, Minister of Donegall Street Presbyterian Church, Belfast
George Salmon, D.D. — The Evidences of the Work of the Holy Spirit
Rev. S.J. Moore — The Ministerial Office Magnified: Why? and How?
Rev. James Denham — Revivals of Religion and Means of Obtaining Them
Rev. C. Seaver — Religious Revivals
John Brown, D.D. — Address on the Revival of Religion
Rev. J. M. Killen, M.A. — Religion in Everything
Rev. Robert Knox, A.M. — The Ulster Revival
VOLUME 7
The Effect of the Revival Outside Ulster
Revival in the Old and New Worlds
Religious Movement in the United States
Rev. John Venn, M.A. — The Revival in Wales
Rev. Hamilton M. Macgill — On the Present Revival of Religion in Scotland
J. Edwin Orr, Ed.D., Th.D., D.Phil. (Oxford) — The Re- Study of Revival and Revivalism
N.D. Emerson, LL.B., Ph.D. — The Church of Ireland and The 1859 Revival
Robert Haire — The Story of The ’59 Revival with some Methodist Sidelights
The English Press on the Irish Revivals
Rev. David Hunter — Plymouthists and Their Principles
Rev. John Smyth, M.A. — Plymouth Brethrenism: Its Creed and Character. A Dialogue
2 volumes, xxviii + 577pp & xvi + 681pp, £44.95, green cloth with d/w
This two volume hardback set forms the first part of Baird's history of the Huguentos. His work, which appeared in three parts, entitled respectively History of the Rise of the Huguenots of France (2 vols, 1879), The Huguenots and Henry of Navarre (2 vols, 1886), and The Huguenots and the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes (2 vols, 1895), is described by the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica as being "characterized by painstaking thoroughness, by a judicial temper, and by scholarship of a high order".
Henry Martyn Baird (1832-1906), American historian and educationalist, was a son of Robert Baird (1798-1863), a Presbyterian preacher and author who worked both in the United States and in Europe for the cause of temperance, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on January 17 1832.
He spent eight years of his early youth with his father in Paris and Geneva, and in 1850 graduated at New York University. He then lived for two years in Italy and Greece, was a student in the Union Theological Seminary in New York City from 1853 to 1855, and in 1856 graduated at the Princeton Theological Seminary. He was a tutor for four years in the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University), and from 1859 until his death was professor of Greek language and literature in New York University.
by Hugh Ferrier, 265pp, dark green cloth with d/w. Published by the Free Church of Scotland (Continuing)
"Scotland is a small country with a population of about five million. It is a land of impressive beauty, but of few natural resources to make it wealthy. Yet, as a nation with a thirst for education, it has produced a disproportionately large number of people whose excellence in various fields of knowledge has brought great benefit to the world. However, what is particularly outstanding about Scotland, is her religious heritage, though, sadly, few Scots think so today. We owe an incalculable debt to those who hazarded their lives to bring the gospel to our shores, and to those who continued to proclaim and defend it down through the centuries, sometimes at the cost of life or livelihood.
"I have written these pages to try to express some of the glories of God's grace experienced by Scottish people in the past. I have also particularized with regard to the Free Church of Scotland, to note how easily and quickly a church can be diverted from her high and holy calling as happened in the 19th century. The Free Church was born in revival, yet within a generation or so, the seeds of doubt and unbelief were sown in that Church which had been evangelical to the core, and those seeds have produced a bitter harvest from which the Church in Scotland has never recovered." - from the Preface.
by Lewis Lupton, each volume maroon cloth with d/w
We are pleased to announce that we are making available individual volumes of most value set originally published in the 60s and 70s. What Wainwright did for the fell walker, Lewis Lupton did for the Bible historian. The books are each works of art and books to be treasured.
See the news items for details of the various volumes currently available. To order please email sales@tentmaker.org.uk stating which volumes you wish to buy. A reduction on multiple volume orders will be given and a Paypal invoice sent.