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Some of My Favorite Books

December, 2006

by: Jack Hughes

We have been doing a series on church government which I am planning on getting back to, but for this Calvary Review I am going to tell you about my favorite books. My secretary, Ruth Fish suggested that this might be helpful for people as Christmas time approaches. Books make very good presents. But there is a catch. If I tell you very much about the books I like, then I won’t be able to tell you about very many books. If I tell you about many of the books I like, I won’t be able to tell you much about them. I have decided to choose the latter and you will just have to trust me that the books I like are good.

There are some suggestions and personal preferences I would also like to share:

  1. Hardback books are better than paper backs.
  2. Newer is better than older as the paper quality and type set is often better, brighter and easier to read. The newer editions are often updated and have typographical errors corrected. The exception is with books published a hundred years ago or more. In that instance, older is always better. There is nothing like the smell and look of an old book printed in the 16th to the 19th century. They have character.
  3. The less a book costs, the better. Why pay $60 for a book that you can purchase for $30? With a little searching on the internet you can often get books at a very good discount which will save you money so you can buy more books. At the end of this article I will give you some places where I often find books at a good discount.
  4. The more Scripture references, quotations, and biblical illusions in a book, the better. As Solomon rightly said in Eccl. 12:12, “But beyond this, my son, be warned: the writing of many books is endless, and excessive devotion to books is wearying to the body.” Life is too short to read bad books. Every book must at the very least be entertaining to read. Better is that books be spiritually edifying even though difficult to read. Best of all is that books be spiritually edifying, engaging, and fun to read.

To end the prolegomena (look it up in the dictionary), I would like to point out that many books are now being produced in the form of audio CD. Some can be downloaded from the internet in MP3 format and listened to with any MP3 player, computer, or car stereo that has MP3 playing capability. Some people have a hard time reading books but spend a lot of time traveling. Investing in some edifying audio books would be well worth the investment. They can be listened to with ease while commuting. There are also thousands of digital books available today that can be searched, scanned, copied, and pasted using Bible software like Logos, Libronix Bible software. I have over a thousand digital books and theological journals loaded on my computer which I use to prepare Bible studies and sermons. For the purpose of this article we will focus on the old fashioned paper books. To save space I will only give minimal information, usually the book title and author or publisher.

Devotional books

Historical/Biographical

Theology and Doctrine

Bible Survey, History, Background, and Introduction

Study Bibles

Bible Dictionaries and Encyclopedias

How to Study the Bible (Hermeneutics)

Personal Growth Issue Related books

Leadership

Places to purchase books

I would begin with the Calvary Bible Church book store. We sell books in our book store at a good discount. If we don’t have it, Alvin can order it. If you are desperate to get the book you want right away you might try Grace Books International located on the campus of Grace Community Church (1-800-472-2315). For good deals on books in general try www.amazon.com; www.christianbook.com; For new, used and rare books www.alibris.com; www.ebay.com; For rare ancient Bibles and less expensive facsimile reproductions or rare Bibles www.greatsite.com; For audio books www.christianaudio.com; For free downloadable books, articles, and sermons www.ccel.org; www.sermonaudio.com.

Study to show yourself approved!


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