Beth Ellen Nagle
Puritan Board Senior
Hmm...my 4th volume smells of cigar smoke...
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Hmm...my 4th volume smells of cigar smoke...
I'll request a "brown paper" "Gentlemen's edition" for Baptists next year after my house is built....I have only spent 50K trying to build a jungle bungaloo this year. Maybe next year.... then I'll get all my baptism and civil law issues worked out once I get this subscription (got any reduced rate for po'folks?).
I'll request a "brown paper" "Gentlemen's edition" for Baptists next year after my house is built....I have only spent 50K trying to build a jungle bungaloo this year. Maybe next year.... then I'll get all my baptism and civil law issues worked out once I get this subscription (got any reduced rate for po'folks?).
I'll request a "brown paper" "Gentlemen's edition" for Baptists next year after my house is built....I have only spent 50K trying to build a jungle bungaloo this year. Maybe next year.... then I'll get all my baptism and civil law issues worked out once I get this subscription (got any reduced rate for po'folks?).
Renewed subscription!
With the shifts I've made theologically over the past year, obviously I disagree with some of the emphases of the CPJ. But I don't know of any other publication right now (print or online) that does a better job of defending confessional Presbyterianism. It is a steal at $50 for all four volumes. Agree or disagree, if you want to know what Confessional Presbyterianism is all about, there's no better place to start.
Renewed subscription!
Steven Dilday is apparently going to be contributing.
Subscription activated!
Mine showed up today! Looking forward to reading it over the next couple of weeks...
Rich,
But, being a Baptist and all, I had to get mine in brown paper with no return address. Then, when being seen by old friends from my former denomination, I have to put it inside a copy of Walter Rauschenbusch's Christianity and the Social Crisis (1907) or some quasi-religious diatribe about "speaking truth to power" and endorsing abortion and gay marriage.
Maybe, if I hide it in a copy of one of Malone's books or Welty's article . . . hmmmmm . . . that's it . . . that's the ticket!