The Christian Researcher
  • Home
  • My Book
  • Podcast
  • Store
  • Articles
  • Contact
  • Book Reviews
  • Book Recommendations
  • Preacher's Study Videos
  • Matthew Study Material
  • Gospel Meetings Video/Audio
  • Quotes For Contemplation
  • Free Downloads
    • Jehovah's Witnesses, Mormons, and Seventh Day Adventists Renounced
  • Bible Correspondence Course
  • Online Tools
  • Audio Books, Debates, and Sermons
    • The Battey - Kniffen Discussion on Marriage, Divorce, and Remarriage
    • The Holy Spirit by George Battey
    • Premillennialism
    • Sermon on the Mt. by George Battey
    • Teacher Training Material
    • Open Bible Studies Audio/Video
  • Links
  • The Hutto - Cutter Debate
  • Store
  • >
  • Biographies / Restoration History
  • >
  • The Unquenchable Flame by Michael Reeves

The Unquenchable Flame by Michael Reeves

SKU:
$8.95
$8.95
Unavailable
per item
The Unquenchable Flame, a remarkably accessible introduction to the historic era, brings to life the movement's most colorful characters - Luther, Zwingli, John Calvin, the Puritans - and examines their ideas.  The author is from a Reformed background and has obviously bought into the "Faith Alone" concept of the Reformers.  Though there are parts of Reformed doctrine evident within this work, it is impossible to write of men such as Luther, Zwingli, and Calvin without speaking of the doctrines which they affirm.  The recanting of the history of the Reformation is enlightening and enjoyable to say the least; yet it also paints the picture of incompleteness that ultimately lead to the  Restoration movement a few centuries later.  

I recommend this book from a historical standpoint and  would caution readers to be aware of its Reformed Theology.

Brand New paperback copies.  207 pages.
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Google+
Add to Cart
Picture
"The man who never reads will never be read; he who never quotes will never be quoted. He who will not use the thoughts of other men's brains proves that he has no brains of his own."  
                                                            - C. H. Spurgeon