What Does the Bible Say About Demons? — Augustine on the Adversary
What does the Bible say about demons? Augustine’s sober ancient reading of the adversary — read slowly through three passages from Confessions. Not theatre.
What does the Bible say about demons? Augustine’s sober ancient reading of the adversary — read slowly through three passages from Confessions. Not theatre.
How to fight spiritual warfare — Andrew Murray’s slow Reformed reading of standing firm. Not effort. The quiet abiding the older saints actually taught.
What is the armor of God? Owen’s slow Puritan reading of Ephesians 6 — not a checklist of pieces, but the daily inhabiting of communion with the Father.
What is spiritual warfare? Bunyan’s older, sober answer — read slowly through three passages from Pilgrim’s Progress. Daily vigilance, not deliverance theatre.
What does the Bible say about resurrection — John Owen’s slow vocabulary of the risen Christ, read for the soul carrying loss or recovering the doctrine quietly.
What does the Bible say about heaven — Augustine’s slow vocabulary of the eternal city, read for the soul carrying loss or homesick for a home it has not yet seen.
What does the Bible say about death — read through three Spurgeon passages on dying well, written for the grieving woman who needs the doctrine quiet and.
What happens when you die as a Christian — Richard Baxter’s slow vocabulary of the saints’ everlasting rest, read for the soul holding loss or facing its own.
What is heaven like — Jonathan Edwards’s slow sermon on the world of love, read for the woman who is carrying a loss the calendar has not caught up to.
What to do when you doubt God — Andrew Murray’s slow, honest answer for the soul in crisis. The surrender that comes before the answer, not after.