NOTE: If you saw the email for this, you may notice books are missing here. The original bundle sold out, so it was modified so you can still get this bundle under the tree.

A House for My Name
The best stories subtly weave themes and characters and symbols into a stunning final tapestry. In this Canon Press bestseller, Leithart shows that the Bible is the best story.
For many Christians, sadly, the Old Testament is merely a jumble of moralistic stories and weird rituals, genealogies, and historical chronicles. What is the point of it all, and what does it have to do with Jesus?
In this short and readable book, Leithart gives a sweeping overview of the Bible, its stories, and the patterns and symbols that recur throughout it, highlighting the ways many of the little stories look forward to the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Himself.
Although the book is lots of fun, the lessons it teaches are far from trivial. The Gospels say again and again Jesus is the fulfillment of the Old Testament. Christians need to learn to read the Old Testament the way Jesus and the Apostles read it, so that we can delight in the word of God and encounter Him in its stories. This book can be read easily by high school students and includes review questions for anyone who wants to use it in their curriculum. However, it will also give anyone familiar with Scripture much to think about. “And beginning at Moses and all the Prophets, He expounded to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning Himself” (Lk 24:27).
Also includes the Question and Answer Book
A Son to Me: An Exposition of 1&2 Samuel
The books of Samuel—familiar stories like David and Goliath, Saul and Jonathan, Absalom and Joab—look forward to Jesus, the son of David.
In this book, Peter Leithart offers a typological reading of Samuel as a unified book. By giving careful attention to the book’s literary structures and patterns of types and antitypes, Leithart reveals the deeper meanings within the text. Not only does he show how the life of David not only has lessons for us in how to live our own lives, but he also shows how the books of Samuel look forward to the suffering and glorification of Jesus Himself.
The Modernized Geneva Bible: New Testament
The 1599 Geneva Bible is a remarkable Bible for many reasons: it was the first English Bible translated entirely from the Hebrew and the Greek, it was the first Bible with chapter and verse divisions, it was the first with a legible font, and the first with maps, notes, and chronologies and indices. Most importantly, it was intended not for displaying in churches, but for family reading.
But the MGB New Testament is not a facsimile edition intended for scholars of the Reformation. The thirteen thin volumes of the MGB New Testament are meant for one thing only: to be pulled off the shelf and read again and again; to be dog-eared and written in; to be consumed. We Christians learn to desire the pure milk of the Word as newborn infants (1 Pet. 2:2), for without feeding our souls we cannot grow spiritually.
Every design decision for this MGB New Testament was made to encourage daily Bible reading:
- Readers’ format makes the Bible easy to read compared to a typical two-columned Bible with economy-size font;
- Unlike most other readers’ editions, the MGB retains chapter and verse markings to allow you to keep track of Bible reading plans or sermon references;
- The thirteen thin volumes are easy to finish in a sitting or two (an average reader can complete the shortest volume in 30 minutes, the longest in just over 2 hours);
- Creamy text stock and flexible paperback bindings are easy to hold;
- Lined note pages and reading logs for each volume allow you to make the MGB New Testament your own;
- Beautiful, textured, and foil-stamped slipcase makes the MGB NT elegant and easy to store.
The Geneva’s original translators—Englishmen in exile from their homeland in Geneva—followed the work of William Tyndale, who famously vowed that he would help even the lowly farm boys to know more Scripture than the scholars of his time. Amen and amen!
The 27 books of the New Testament are separated into thirteen slim volumes for the MGB:
- Matthew (96 pgs)
- Mark (72 pgs)
- Luke (104 pgs)
- John (80 pgs)
- Acts (104 pgs)
- Romans (48 pgs)
- Corinthians (72 pgs)
- Galatians, Ephesians, and Philippians (48 pgs)
- Colossians, Philemon, and Thessalonians (48 pgs)
- Timothy and Titus (48 pgs)
- Hebrews (48 pgs)
- James, Peter, and Jude (48 pgs)
- Epistles of John & Revelation (80 pgs)
The Victory According to Mark: An Exposition of the Second Gospel
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