Elizabeth Goudge’s first novel is set in the Channel Islands during the late 1800s. It’s a story of one family’s struggle to connect with one another, heal, and persevere.The year is 1888. Rachell and
"A compelling saga of an unlikely friendship threaded together by redemption and grace"The setting is a remote mid-nineteenth-century town in England and its grand cathedral. The cathedral Dean, Adam
Against the pomp and pageantry of turbulent seventeenth-century England, Elizabeth Goudge weaves the poignant tale of Lucy Walter, the proud and beautiful secret wife ofCharles II.Here is a subtle por
It started out as the Full Life Study Bible; then it became the Life in the Spirit Study Bible. Now we know it as the new and improved Fire Bible—a reference library in one volume.Originally conceived
A compendium of quotations culled from the ten volume Ante-Nicene Fathers and arranged by subject for quick reference. The quotes include comments on 700 theological, moral, and historical topics from
It’s not just grief that breaks a woman’s heart. After divorce, residual feelings about the man you loved and the life you lost can lurk undetected for years. A Women’s Guide to Healing the Heartbreak
Chamberlain has written several scholarly articles on Septuagint lexicography, and here provides a supplement to the Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature (BD
This classic work includes extensive essays on the Roman political system and its leaders, the political and religious parties of Judaism, messianic movements, and pertinent Greek and Jewish literatur