Guide to Christian Living (Pocket Puritans)
A**R
A classic, beautifully rendered
I really like this translation published by the Banner of Truth Trust. It is very clear without being over-modernized, and does not make overuse of contractions to colloquialize the work. It has a soft, durable, imitation leather cover that is thick and durable, and the size makes it easy to carry. The paper is strong and the print is easily readable. A classic taken from The Institutes of the Christian Religion by John Calvin.
C**K
Five Stars
A great little book about Christian living. Makes you think.
C**E
Read it!
Any book by John Calvin is worth the read!
R**Y
Very nice edition
The cover is soft, the pages are of good quality, the binding is well made also. This book fits nicely in your pocket and it wears well. The print is easy to read. Should last for a long time!
S**X
A Review of, “A Guide to Christian Living” by the Protestant Reformer John Calvin, as Translated by Robert White for The Banner
A Review of, “A Guide to Christian Living” by the Protestant Reformer John Calvin, as Translated by Robert White for The Banner of Truth Trust.This book is an excerpt of the beginning of, “Book 3, Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion, 1560 French edition.” It is 140 pages long. It has a short introduction providing some background information about John Calvin and his, “Institutes.” It also explains Calvin’s purpose in writing, “Book 3” His purpose is also made clear in this book’s title. At the end of the book are, the endnotes, and indexes of scripture references, as well as subjects. This book is published by The Banner of Truth Trust. It is printed by Versa Press Inc., of East Peoria Illinois USA. The font is a very legible 10.5/13.5 Adobe Caslon Pro typeset. It is available in print, e-pub, and Kindle. I found the paper to be very thick and easy to highlight. It is covered in green faux leather. The cover is decorated with a perimeter channel, image of Calvin, and the title stamped in it to resemble tooling. The spine looks to be sewn and glued. It has the title stamped parallel to the spine, John Calvin under that, and The Banner of Truth’s logo at the foot. Overall I found the book to be well constructed and easy to read.If you are familiar with the works of Calvin, you’ll recognize this when you start reading it. Unlike many of his Latin works that were translated into English, this translation seems less formal and verbose. Due to that fact I t lends itself to devotional reading. It works well for daily devotional reading and gives you something to ponder for the day. I found myself nodding my head in agreement several times and wondering what other sections of Calvin’s works could be arranged as devotionals. It was very refreshing to read something scriptural in Modern English. As of late the choices have been dismal. Most devotionals in Modern English are full of extra-biblical revelations, or pseudo-self-help drivel. People have been feasting on cotton candy theology and starving. Reading something that makes you truly consider what is being communicated is stimulating. You have to engage your head and your heart, not just one or the other. People say that Calvin is to dry, but if you read his work you will see his passion for God come through.My copy of Spurgeon's, “Morning and Evening” is a bit too large to carry with me to work. This book is much smaller. I can fit it in my pocket. The paper is very thick and heavy, not like Bible paper at all. Highlighting and underlining works well. I was underlining and highlighting sections to quote on social media later on. This way you don't have to mark up your nicer complete volume of Calvin's Institutes. Since this little book is more durable it stands up to being carried about.I recommend this for personal devotions as well as a gift to the newly born again. I think it will aid them in getting their foundational notions in order.
D**T
Calvin at his Pastoral Best
The book is not leather bound, it is imitation leather but nevertheless it is a wonderful little book to own. It is compact, 3 3/4" x 5 1/'2" so you can take it anywhere and enjoy it. The type is not small but easy to read. The book is 150 pages with a subject and scripture index. This superb little spiritual guide is a distillation from Calvin's Institutes. Other versions of this same treatise have been called, "The Golden Booklet of the Christian Life", this is called, "A Guide to Christian Living". It is part of book 3 of the 1560 edition of "The Institutes". It is extremely practical and reminds us of why we are here (to live for God) and where we are headed and that this world is not our true home (if we are Christians). It offers spiritual guidance in day to day living and ranks as one of the most helpful and Biblical guides for living the Christian life ever penned.
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