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Welcome to our shop! This shop utilizes PayPal cart buttons. While a PayPal account (free) is recommended, you do not need an account to purchase. Major credit/debit cards are accepted and your transaction is completed on PayPal’s highly secure SSL connection. Also, i have had issues with WP store plugins not delivering files automatically, so i now do this manually. Please allow a max. of 24 hours for delivery. The quickest response will probably be at evening hours during the week. Thanks and hope you enjoy these works! We will gradually be adding more books and Mp3s soon.

ebook: Misplaced Hope ~ 2nd Ed.

hopeSub-titled, “The Origins of First and Second Century Eschatology.” Historically the Christian faith has believed that Jesus will return again one day, visibly in the sky. However, several centuries of Bible scholarship have been pointing out glaring problems with this premise. Casting caution aside, entire movements have been founded upon millenarian expectation, and dates keep being set. Could the confessing Church be wrong? Could it have misread its roots? How did the church understand its eschatology after the fall of Jerusalem? Misplaced Hope takes you back to the first two centuries of church history (A.D. 70 – 200) to find the answers.

PDF ~ 252 pages by Samuel Frost ~ $5.oo


ebook: Exegetical Essays on the Resurrection of the Dead ~ 2nd Ed.

essaysThere is a shift in theology that is focusing more on Jerusalem’s demise in the Jewish War of 66-73 A.D. Was this a divine judgment? Today, hands down, most Evangelical scholars would say yes. In fact, what were once viewed as “second coming” passages are now, by and large, seen as Jerusalem’s demise passages, understanding that destruction as a “coming of the Lord” in some sense. However, A.D. 70 was not the coming of the Lord spoken about in the creeds and confessions of the church. That coming has yet to happen. It is here that the resurrection of the dead is said to reach final fulfillment. But, there is a massive problem with this thesis. It’s trying to have its cake and eat it, too.

PDF ~ 90 pages by Samuel Frost ~ $5.oo


ebook: House Divided: Bridging the Gap in Reformed Eschatology

houseThis book is a Reformed response to Keith Mathison’s multi-authored book When Shall These Things Be?, which was a critique and condemnation of “hyper-preterism.” The authors demonstrate that the advent of full preterism is the result of “organic development” from within the historic, Reformed church, and that it represents the uniting of the divided house of Reformed eschatology. As the authors navigate through the confusing maze of the Mathison volume, they overturn the arguments that the authors of that book levied against the truth that Jesus Himself taught in no uncertain terms.

PDF ~ 240+ pages by Samuel Frost, David Green, Michael Sullivan, Edward Hassertt ~ $1o.99