Through a Glass Darkly
What We Don't Know About What We Don't Know
What if everything we think we know about reality is just a tiny fraction of what actually exists? This book takes readers on a fascinating journey from the limitations of human perception to the infinite possibilities that lie beyond our five senses.
- 123 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889868485-3
What if Paul Wrote Today
A Theological Experiment
This book is a popular adaptation of the academic work "If Paul Wrote a Final Epistle: A Theological Experiment," presenting the same unique theological project in an accessible format for general readers. The original academic version was designed for seminary students, pastors, and scholars, featuring detailed textual analysis, extensive footnotes, and technical discussions. This popular edition retains the complete reconstructed epistle while focusing on practical application and contemporary relevance rather than scholarly apparatus.
The core concept remains unchanged: a reconstruction of what might have been Paul's final epistle to all believers, crafted entirely from the apostle's authentic words found in his canonical letters. Through careful synthesis of Paul's genuine teachings, this creative theological experiment presents a unified vision of Pauline theology that speaks across the centuries to contemporary Christian life and faith. The reconstructed epistle makes no claim to scriptural authority but serves as a lens through which to view the remarkable coherence and enduring relevance of Paul's theological message.
- 151 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890138136-6
Did God Create T-Rex?
For most of us, dinosaurs are a vibrant fantasy, a world of incredible creatures that once ruled our planet. But for me, this fascination began at age five, when my father took me to see "Legend of Dinosaurs." That day is forever etched in my memory as a moment of pure, unadulterated awe before these behemoths. It sparked my lifelong journey into the prehistoric world.
- 151 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890138137-3
Blessed Are Those Who Hunger for Truth
The Path of a Modern Martyr: Simple, Clear, Strong
This is not a political book, though it deals with political events. This is not a traditional biography, though it tells Navalny's story. This is a spiritual provocation, a prophetic challenge, a call to examine what we really believe and whether we're willing to pay the price for our convictions.
- 127 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890138138-0
My Dark Haven
Dark home. Quiet mind. And no monsters here.
You don’t need a brighter life. You may need a quieter one.
We live under constant illumination—literal and social. Everything is visible, measurable, commentable. Even at home, many of us remain “on,” managing surfaces and impressions, bracing for the next demand.
In The Dark Haven, Arthur Tiger tells the story of his black home—not as a style choice, but as a practical form of self-care. With lyrical clarity and psychological insight, he explores what darkness can offer when it is chosen with care: less glare, less performance, deeper rest, truer words.
Inside this book you’ll find:
Why brightness can feel like pressure—and why dimness can feel like permission
Night and sleep as the body’s built-in mercy and reset
The movie theater as a model of immersion: why we need the lights to go down
The darkroom as a metaphor for inner development: what needs time before it can be named
A closed room for conversation: how privacy protects honesty between people
The childhood tent: our earliest instinct for boundaries and shelter
Why darkness is not for everyone—and why restoration is the real goal
This is not a manifesto against light. It’s an invitation to reclaim balance: daylight and shade, clarity and privacy, action and rest.
If you’ve ever felt tired of being “fine,”
if you’ve ever wanted a place where nothing demands you,
The Dark Haven offers a simple, humane practice:
Lower the lights.
Let your eyes adjust.
Come home.
- 127 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890336147-2
The Trade
A Book About Life Choices, Regret, and What Comes After
Everyone trades their future for something.
You made a choice. You gave something up. You got something in return. Years later, you realized the trade was uneven. What you gave away was worth more than what you received. The door closed behind you. There is no going back.
This book is not about making better decisions. It is about seeing clearly the decisions you have already made.
Arthur A. Tiger examines the mechanics of uneven exchange — why we consistently agree to bad deals, why we cannot undo them, and how to live in the aftermath. With unflinching honesty, he explores:
Why your brain is wired to trade your future for your present
The hidden costs you never counted
What irreversibility actually means for your life
How to find meaning when the path you wanted is closed forever
But this is not just a book about careers and relationships. The logic of exchange applies to a larger question — one whose consequences extend beyond death.
THE TRADE begins as an examination of life choices and ends with the most important choice any person can make.
For readers who are tired of comfortable lies and ready for difficult truth.
- 130 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890336148-9
Hearing God
How to Recognize His Voice in a Noisy World
Does God still speak? And if He does, why is it so hard to hear Him?
You pray, but the heavens seem silent. You read the Bible, but it feels like words on a page. You watch others talk confidently about God's guidance while you wonder if you have ever truly heard His voice.
You are not alone.
We live in the noisiest era in human history. Our minds are fragmented by constant information, our attention scattered by endless notifications, our souls crowded with anxiety and distraction. The still, small voice of God gets drowned out before it ever reaches us.
But it doesn't have to be this way.
In Hearing God, Arthur Tiger offers an honest, biblically grounded guide to recognizing God's voice amid the chaos of modern life.
Drawing deeply from Scripture and writing with the vulnerability of someone who walked the path from skepticism to faith, Tiger explores:
How God speaks today—through Scripture, the Holy Spirit, circumstances, community, and conscience
Why external noise and internal barriers keep us from hearing
Practical disciplines that create space for God's voice
How to test what you think you hear and avoid self-deception
What to do when God seems completely silent
How to move from merely hearing to actually living out what God says
This is not a book of easy formulas or guaranteed methods. There are no three steps to instant clarity. Instead, you will find a realistic path toward genuine dialogue with the God who knows your name and longs to be known by you.
Each chapter includes reflection questions and practical exercises to help you apply what you learn immediately.
Whether you are a longtime believer hungry for deeper connection or someone struggling with doubts about whether God speaks at all, this book will meet you where you are—and invite you further into the conversation your heart has always longed for.
"He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out... My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me." — John 10:3, 27
- 185 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890336149-6
Never Good Enough
From Religious Perfectionism to Grace
Are you exhausted from trying to be the perfect Christian?
Do you lie awake replaying spiritual failures? Set impossible standards for your prayer life, Bible study, or ministry—then feel crushed when you fall short? Wonder if God is disappointed in you... again?
You're not alone. And you're not crazy. You're a religious perfectionist.
Never Good Enough is for every Christian who has turned faith into performance, grace into earning, and relationship with God into an exhausting treadmill of never measuring up.
Drawing from the Apostle Paul's radical transformation—from a Pharisee who was "blameless" by the law to a man who boasted in weakness—this book offers a path from striving to resting, from performing to receiving, from perfectionism to grace.
Inside you'll discover:
The five types of religious perfectionists (and which one you are)
Why Paul called his impressive spiritual résumé "garbage"
How to distinguish God's conviction from the enemy's condemnation
Practical strategies for rewriting your inner dialogue
Spiritual disciplines that heal rather than harm
The liberating truth about your guaranteed future perfection
This isn't another book telling you to try harder. It's an invitation to stop striving and start resting in the grace that was always enough.
Includes a 31-day Scripture reading plan, prayers for specific situations, small group discussion questions, and a quick reference card for perfectionist moments.
His grace is sufficient. His power is made perfect in weakness. It's time to believe it.
- 240 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890336150-2
Heresies in Christianity
A Textbook on Identifying False Teachings
Is your church doctrinally sound? Can you identify heresy when it appears in a sermon, book, or Bible study?
In an era when false teaching spreads faster than ever through social media, podcasts, and popular Christian books, the ability to discern truth from error is no longer optional—it's essential for every church leader, seminary student, and mature believer.
"Identifying and Understanding Heresy" is the comprehensive textbook you've been waiting for.
Written by an experienced theological educator, this 18-chapter guide equips you with the biblical, historical, and practical tools to recognize and respond to false doctrine in its ancient and modern forms.
WHAT YOU'LL LEARN:
✓ Biblical Foundations - Master the scriptural tests for orthodoxy and false teaching across both Testaments
✓ Historical Context - Discover how Gnosticism, Arianism, Pelagianism, and other ancient heresies emerged and were defeated
✓ Theological Framework - Understand WHY certain teachings are heretical and what they undermine in the gospel
✓ Contemporary Applications - Identify how Word-Faith theology, Progressive Christianity, New Apostolic Reformation, and other modern movements connect to ancient errors
✓ Practical Diagnostic Tools - Use questionnaires, comparison charts, and conversation guides to evaluate teaching in your context
✓ Pastoral Wisdom - Learn how to respond to heresy with both truth and love, counsel those attracted to false teaching, and when church discipline is necessary
COMPREHENSIVE COVERAGE INCLUDES:
Christological heresies (Docetism, Arianism, Nestorianism)
Trinitarian errors (Modalism, Tritheism, Subordinationism)
Soteriological deviations (Pelagianism, Antinomianism, Universalism)
Ecclesiological debates (Donatism, church authority issues)
Modern movements (Prosperity Gospel, Open Theism, Federal Vision)
The psychology, culture, and politics behind heresy
Hermeneutical methods that lead to error
UNIQUE FEATURES: → Each chapter includes real quotes from historical and modern teachers → Comparison charts contrast orthodox vs. heretical positions → Case studies bring concepts to life → Discussion questions for classroom or small group use → Annotated bibliography for further research → Practical diagnostic questionnaires you can use immediately
WHO THIS BOOK IS FOR:
Seminary students studying church history, theology, or apologetics
Pastors who need to protect their congregations from false teaching
Church elders and leaders responsible for doctrinal oversight
Small group leaders who want to go deeper
Mature Christians committed to doctrinal discernment
WHAT READERS ARE SAYING: "Finally, a textbook that combines academic rigor with pastoral wisdom. Every chapter is both intellectually satisfying and practically applicable."
"This book gave me language to articulate why certain popular teachings troubled my spirit. The diagnostic tools alone are worth the price."
Don't let false doctrine infiltrate your church. Equip yourself with the knowledge to guard the faith once delivered to the saints.
- 466 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890336152-6
The Creed
Path to Unity: A Textbook of Christian Confession
What do Christians actually believe?
In an age of theological confusion and ecclesiastical division, the ancient creeds offer both anchor and compass. But do these historic confessions faithfully reflect Scripture? Where did the church preserve apostolic truth, and where did it add human traditions?
THE CREED: PATH TO UNITY is a comprehensive textbook examining Christian confession from the New Testament to the present day. Theologian Arthur Tiger guides readers through the development of the great ecumenical creeds, evaluating each from a conservative biblical perspective.
INSIDE THIS BOOK YOU WILL FIND:
Complete texts of all four ecumenical creeds: Apostles', Nicene, Chalcedonian, and Athanasian
Biblical evaluation and critique of each historic creed
The Great Schism, the Reformation, and the multiplication of confessions
The Apostle Paul as the first Christian dogmatist
Critical analysis of 20th-century ecumenical movements
Confronting 21st-century challenges to historic Christianity
A proposed Biblical Creed with line-by-line scriptural commentary
Four creed formats: standard, expanded, short, and catechetical
12-week study guide available online for classroom and group use
IDEAL FOR:
Seminary and Bible college courses in historical theology
Pastors and church leaders seeking theological reference
Adult education and Sunday school classes
New member and confirmation instruction
Individual believers seeking deeper understanding
More than a historical survey, this textbook proposes a Biblical Creed designed to unite all who hold the apostolic faith—grounded in Scripture alone, centered on Christ alone, received by faith alone, to the glory of God alone.
"Contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints." —Jude 3
- 304 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890336153-3
Just Ken
The Unintended Philosophy of the Pink Apocalypse
What if the billion-dollar feminist phenomenon accidentally told truths about modern life that no one intended to tell?
When philosopher Arthur A. Tiger analyzed Barbie, he discovered something disturbing: The film meant to empower women had accidentally created the most devastating portrait of contemporary alienation ever filmed. The villain wasn't the villain. The hero wasn't heroic. And everyone was rooting for the wrong character.
Tiger's analysis uncovers a shadow narrative: while the film celebrates female empowerment, its unconscious reveals something darker about contemporary relationships, the failure of both feminism and masculinity, and why everyone seems so lonely despite having everything.
Through sharp cultural analysis and uncomfortable personal revelations, this book demonstrates:
How the film's unconscious defeats its conscious messaging
Why Ken's absurd patriarchy contains more genuine connection than Barbie's perfect paradise
How Barbieland's perfection is actually a vision of hell
Why Ken's ridiculous arc follows the classic hero's journey while Barbie's doesn't
What the film's failure to imagine alternatives says about our culture
How we're all performing happiness while dying inside
Part philosophical investigation, part cultural diagnosis, JUST KEN uses a movie about plastic dolls to expose the contradictions tearing modern life apart. Tiger writes with intellectual rigor, dark humor, and the unsettling realization that a comedy about toys might be the most honest document of our times.
"Art tells the truth despite itself. Barbie meant to empower. It accidentally revealed how empty empowerment without connection can be."
This isn't just film criticism—it's a philosophical excavation of why contemporary life feels like an endless performance where everyone knows their lines but no one remembers what the play is about.
For readers who sense something deeply wrong with how we live now, who appreciate philosophy without pretension, and anyone who watched Barbie and couldn't shake the feeling that something else was being said beneath the pink surface.
"The film succeeded by failing. Its truth defeated its thesis. And that accidental honesty might be the most important thing about it."
- 159 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890336155-7
The Ratcatcher
A Tale of the Pied Piper of Hamelin: Philosophical reflections
On June 26, 1284, one hundred and thirty children walked out of the German town of Hamelin and never returned. The town chronicles recorded the date. The church recorded the number. No one recorded why.
Somewhere in the centuries that followed, the dry fact of loss acquired a story: rats, a piper, a broken promise, a mountain that opened and closed. The legend of the Pied Piper was born.
The Ratcatcher is a book in two parts. The first is a literary retelling of the legend — dark, atmospheric, written for adults rather than children. The second is a series of philosophical essays examining what the story means: the ethics of broken promises, the economics of creative work, the mechanics of collective guilt, the nature of manipulation, and the problem of living with loss that offers no closure.
This is a book of questions, not answers. It does not redeem the tragedy or explain it away. It sits with the discomfort and asks what the legend — which has survived for seven centuries — might still have to teach us about promises, about strangers, about the debts we pass to our children.
- 100 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890336170-0
Time is Everything
Notes on Honest Living
What if the life you're supposed to want isn't the life you actually want?
After years of performing the role of the perfect partner, the accommodating friend, the responsible adult, Arthur A. Tiger watched his carefully constructed life collapse—and discovered something unexpected in the ruins: freedom.
Time is Everything is a philosophical memoir for men who are tired of social performance and ready for honest living. It's a book about what happens when you stop trying to be the right kind of man and start trying to be an authentic one.
THE CENTRAL INSIGHT:
Time is the only resource you can't replace, recover, or renew. Every minute spent living someone else's version of your life is gone forever. This single realization changes everything—how you approach relationships, work, possessions, and the fundamental question of what makes life worth living.
WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER:
→ Why saying "no" is the most important skill for protecting what matters
→ The difference between solitude and loneliness—and why one is essential for genuine connection
→ How working with your hands teaches lessons abstract knowledge can't provide
→ Why the wrong relationship is worse than no relationship—and how to recognize the difference
→ The art of living deliberately in a world designed for distraction
→ How to declutter not just possessions but commitments, relationships, and ways of spending time
→ Why getting older is about becoming more yourself, not less
THIS BOOK IS FOR YOU IF:
You're tired of managing other people's expectations
You've achieved what you were told to want and wonder why it feels hollow
You value depth over breadth, presence over productivity
You're ready to choose authenticity over approval
You understand that some wisdom only comes through experience
WHAT READERS ARE SAYING:
"Finally, a book that speaks honestly about male experience without toxic masculinity or self-help platitudes. Tiger writes with the wisdom of hard-earned experience."
"This isn't a guide to getting what you want—it's permission to stop wanting what you think you should want. That's far more valuable."
"Part memoir, part philosophy, entirely genuine. The chapters on solitude and time consciousness changed how I make every decision."
THE APPROACH:
Tiger combines personal narrative with philosophical insight, moving seamlessly from fixing water pumps to exploring Stoic wisdom, from video game experiences to relationship dynamics. His voice is conversational but profound—a man who has learned hard lessons speaking honestly to others navigating similar territory.
Each of the 16 chapters stands alone while building toward a comprehensive vision of what authentic living actually looks like: not perfect circumstances, but alignment between who you are and how you live.
NOT ANOTHER SELF-HELP BOOK:
This isn't a step-by-step program or a list of life hacks. It's a meditation on what matters when you realize your time is finite. It's philosophy made practical, memoir made universal, masculinity made honest.
THE INVITATION:
If you're standing in the ruins of the life you thought you were supposed to build, wondering what comes next—this book is your companion. If you're tired of performing and ready for presence, tired of accommodation and ready for authenticity, tired of other people's definitions of success and ready to define your own—start here.
Time is everything. Everything else can wait. But time won't.
- 143 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890336186-1
The Long Walk Down
Why We Run and How to Come Home: A Psychological Journey Through the Indie Game Firewatch
There is a moment when we all want to disappear. To board a bus heading anywhere but here. To climb a tower and watch our problems become distant specks on the horizon.
In The Long Walk Down, Arthur Tiger uses the acclaimed indie game Firewatch as a psychological map to explore why we escape, how we build elaborate systems of avoidance, and what it takes to finally come home.
Henry, the game's protagonist, runs to a Wyoming fire tower to escape his wife's early-onset dementia. For seventy-nine days, he maintains connection only through a walkie-talkie, building intimacy without vulnerability, relationship without presence. It's the perfect modern escape: close enough to feel connected, distant enough to stay safe.
But the forest burns. And eventually, we all must decide: take the helicopter to the next escape, or walk the trail back down.
This book is for anyone who has:
Built towers (literal or metaphorical) to watch life from safe distance
Maintained relationships through screens rather than risk real presence
Constructed elaborate meanings to avoid simple truths
Run from unbearable circumstances, only to find themselves in different unbearable circumstances
Wondered why understanding their patterns doesn't break them
Drawing on psychology, philosophy, and years of personal experience with escape, Tiger examines:
The architecture of avoidance and why protection becomes prison
How technology enables intimacy without vulnerability
Why we create conspiracies of meaning rather than face simple truths
The difference between healthy retreat and permanent flight
What it takes to attempt return when you're not ready but out of time
This is not a self-help book with easy answers. It's an honest examination of how humans construct distance, why we need it, and why it ultimately fails. It's about the moment when the exit sign reveals itself as another form of imprisonment. And the long, difficult walk back to presence.
Several years ago, Tiger wrote about Henry's forest in Time is Everything, understanding that escape costs irreplaceable time. This book goes deeper: understanding the cost doesn't stop us from paying it. Knowledge doesn't liberate. Awareness doesn't free.
The Long Walk Down is what happens when you realize the forest isn't just Henry's metaphor—it's universal. You're already in it. And the question isn't whether you understand escape, but whether you're ready to attempt return.
Not because you're strong. Not because you're ready. Not because you've figured it out.
But because the forest is burning. And you're tired of running. And home—whatever that means now—is the only direction left.
- 203 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890336191-5
The Physics of Faith
How Modern Cosmology Transforms Christian Understanding
The universe is 13.8 billion years old, contains two trillion galaxies, and is heading toward heat death. How can Christians maintain faith in divine purpose within such cosmic immensity and apparent indifference?
"The Physics of Faith" offers an honest, profound exploration of the dialogue between modern cosmology and Christian belief. Rather than forcing easy harmonization or accepting inevitable conflict, this book dwells thoughtfully in the creative tension between scientific discovery and religious faith.
Drawing on cutting-edge physics and classical theology, the author examines:
How spacetime and relativity complicate our understanding of prayer and divine eternity
Why quantum mechanics neither proves nor disproves God, despite popular claims
The genuine challenge that evolutionary suffering poses to belief in a good Creator
How fine-tuning might point to design—or to multiple universes
What dark matter and dark energy reveal about the limits of our knowledge
Why the heat death of the universe challenges Christian hope for new creation
Through lyrical prose that moves between scientific precision and spiritual reflection, this book speaks to three audiences: scientists who maintain faith despite professional pressures, young Christians encountering cosmology for the first time, and thoughtful believers seeking honest engagement with modern physics.
Unlike books that claim science proves God or that faith requires rejecting evolution, "The Physics of Faith" respects both domains while acknowledging real tensions. It includes candid testimonies from working scientists about their struggles to integrate research with faith, a survey of different approaches to science-religion dialogue, and resources for continued exploration.
This is not a book of easy answers but of profound questions: Can prayer make sense in a block universe? How does God act in nature without violating physical laws? What does human significance mean at cosmic scales? How do we maintain hope when physics predicts cosmic death?
Perfect for book clubs, adult education classes, and individual seekers, "The Physics of Faith" offers a mature, nuanced approach to one of our era's most important conversations. It will challenge believers to take science seriously and scientists to remain open to transcendence, while equipping both for honest dialogue.
Written for those who refuse to choose between telescope and scripture, between laboratory and sanctuary, this book models intellectual courage and spiritual depth in exploring how the God of faith might relate to the cosmos of modern science.
- 185 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890336199-1
A/theism
An Honest Comparison of Two Ways to Live
A friend once told me: "I think believing in God would make my life better. I just can't make myself believe something I think is false."
This book is for people like him.
Not for people who've already made up their minds. Not for the confidently religious or the confidently irreligious. For the ones in between — skeptics who are honest enough to wonder, believers who are honest enough to doubt, and everyone who's tired of being talked down to by both sides.
Here is what this book does. It takes two ways of living — one that says there is no God, and one that says there is — and compares them. Not as abstract philosophies, but as practical approaches to the problems every human being faces: finding meaning when life falls apart, knowing right from wrong when the stakes are real, building relationships that last, and facing suffering without looking away.
The starting point is deliberately secular. No sermons. No Bible verses thrown like grenades. The question isn't "which worldview is true?" — it's "which one actually works when you need it?"
The book begins on the skeptic's territory. It takes atheism seriously — its intellectual courage, its honest reckoning with a brutal world, its freedom from religious guilt. It presents the strongest arguments against faith without flinching. Then it asks a simple question: what happens when life gets hard?
Drawing on research from Harvard, Duke, and other major institutions, the book examines what the data actually says about meaning, mental health, community, and resilience — and where faith makes a measurable difference. Not miracle stories. Numbers.
But this is not a self-help book with a religious coat of paint. Somewhere past the data and the arguments, the book makes a turn. The reader discovers that the grace and unearned acceptance described in earlier chapters didn't come from a philosophy. They came from a person — and a specific event in history.
The final section presents the Christian message directly: who Jesus claimed to be, what happened on the cross, and what it means to respond. Not with pressure, but with the same honesty that guided every page before it.
a/theism is written for the reader the author used to be: skeptical, thoughtful, and tired of easy answers from both sides.
No caricatures. No pressure. No promises of an easy life. Just an honest comparison, a careful calculation, and an open door.
- 173 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890356022-6
I Am a Misanthrope
Faith, Pride, and the Throne That Doesn't Belong to You
I believe in God. I cannot stand His people.
For years, Arthur Tiger sat in the back row of church and judged. The shallow sermons. The performative worship. The gap between what believers professed and how they lived. He saw it all with devastating clarity and called it honesty.
Then he discovered it was pride — the most adaptive sin, the one that learns to speak the language of faith so fluently that even the person speaking it cannot hear the accent.
I Am a Misanthrope is a brutally honest exploration of what happens when a man who loves God realizes he has been using God's standards to do God's job. Drawing on Paul, Augustine, Bonhoeffer, Jung, Kierkegaard, and Dostoevsky, Tiger traces how contempt disguises itself as discernment, how isolation masquerades as integrity, and why the judge's seat doesn't belong to you.
This book does not promise transformation. It ends with a decision — made daily, without guarantee — to step off a throne that was never yours.
For believers who are tired of church but not of God.
- 149 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-890384071-7
If Paul Wrote a Final Epistle
A Theological Experiment
English | 705 pages | ISBN 9798898135638
This theological work explores a hypothetical final letter from the Apostle Paul to the church before his death. The author reconstructs such an epistle based on Paul's authentic writings, covering his ultimate reflections on faith, church, and Christian living.
Designed for theologians, pastors, students, and educated laypeople, it balances academic rigor with accessibility while exploring how Paul's theological legacy might have culminated in one final message to the church.
- 641 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889813563-8
If Paul Wrote a Final Epistle. Vol I
A Theological Experiment
This theological work explores a hypothetical final letter from the Apostle Paul to the church before his death. The author reconstructs such an epistle based on Paul's authentic writings, covering his ultimate reflections on faith, church, and Christian living.
Designed for theologians, pastors, students, and educated laypeople, it balances academic rigor with accessibility while exploring how Paul's theological legacy might have culminated in one final message to the church.
- 425 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889832463-6
If Paul Wrote a Final Epistle. Vol II
A Theological Experiment
This theological work explores a hypothetical final letter from the Apostle Paul to the church before his death. The author reconstructs such an epistle based on Paul's authentic writings, covering his ultimate reflections on faith, church, and Christian living.
Designed for theologians, pastors, students, and educated laypeople, it balances academic rigor with accessibility while exploring how Paul's theological legacy might have culminated in one final message to the church.
- 227 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889832464-3
The Lost Epistles of Paul
What Was Left Outside the New Testament
English | 243 pages | ISBN 9798898135645
This work explores what the Apostle Paul might have written if his complete correspondence had survived. It reconstructs lost letters, uncovers unexpressed theological dimensions, and imagines epistles to audiences he never addressed.
The book has three parts: reconstructing lost letters mentioned in the New Testament, exploring implicit theological themes in his thought, and creating hypothetical epistles to the Jerusalem church, Roman authorities, and future generations.
It presents a more complex Paul whose theological vision extends beyond his canonical letters, offering fresh insights for contemporary readers navigating theological and practical challenges.
- 247 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889813564-5
Death and Resurrection of Identity
A Theological-Psychological Portrait of Apostle Paul
English | 277 pages | ISBN 9798898138547
This interdisciplinary analysis examines one of history's most profound personality transformations – the conversion of Saul of Tarsus into the Apostle Paul. The author explores this metamorphosis through psychology, theology, anthropology, and leadership theory, showing how this radical transformation affected all levels of identity.
Addressed to theologians, psychologists, leaders, and anyone seeking to understand spiritual transformation and identity formation, the book offers particular value for those experiencing personal crisis and transformation, providing a model for integrating the past into new wholeness.
- 247 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889813854-7
Paul: The Man and His Letter
His Words to the Romans, His Story for Us
English | 169 pages | ISBN 978-9696192497
This book is a reflection on the Apostle Paul’s letter to the Romans and how his words can transform our lives. Inspired by personal experience and biblical teaching, the author shares insights on faith, grace, and unity—themes that weave like a common thread through Paul’s text. In addition to unpacking the letter, the author offers a fresh exposition of Romans, making it accessible and relatable to modern readers. More than a study of an ancient epistle, this work is an invitation to embark on a personal spiritual journey—one that deepens understanding of both Paul’s message and the self.
- 165 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889813567-6
God's Chosen Vessel
The Thirteenth Apostle
English | 107 pages | ISBN 978-9696192503
This is a literary interpretation of key events in the life of the Apostle Paul. Based on known historical and biblical facts, the author transports readers into a world where Paul undergoes his transformation: from zealous Pharisee Saul to the great preacher whose words changed the course of history.
The narrative does not claim full fidelity to historical sources but seeks to capture the spirit of the era and the depth of Paul’s inner journey...
- 111 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889813568-3
The Essential Paul
Theological Insights from the Minor Epistles
English | 113 pages | ISBN 978-9696192541
This study explores Paul's often-overlooked shorter letters—Thessalonians, Philippians, Colossians, Philemon, and Titus—revealing profound theological insights relevant for today's church.
Examining each epistle in historical context, the work shows how these concise letters address major questions of faith and community. Discover Philemon's revolutionary social implications, Colossians' cosmic Christology, Philippians' teaching on joy amid suffering, and Thessalonians' early eschatology.
Perfect for pastors, students, and believers seeking deeper Scripture understanding, this exploration of compact but profound texts enriches faith and appreciation of Paul's enduring wisdom.
- 105 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889813574-4
Hello, God
A Journal of First Prayers. Workbook
English | 135 pages | ISBN 9798898135751
This gentle, accessible guided prayer journal is designed for those starting their prayer journey or finding prayer challenging. The seven-day structured approach presents prayer as natural conversation with God rather than formal religious practice.
Through daily themes—Gratitude, Petition, Listening, Confession, Intercession, Praise, and Communal Prayer—readers explore different prayer types with practical guidance, examples, and exercises. The journal creates a judgment-free space to develop personal prayer voice while addressing common obstacles.
Perfect for spiritual seekers, new believers, or those wanting to deepen their prayer life, this resource establishes a sustainable practice that can transform your relationship with God.
- 135 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889813575-1
There Is No God
A Journey from Skepticism to...
English | 291 pages | ISBN 9798898135669
Starting with "There Is No God!" this book takes an unexpected journey beyond typical skeptical explorations. After examining challenges to religious beliefs through science and philosophy, the author finds pure materialism leaves too much unexplained: consciousness, meaning, and humanity's persistent spiritual yearning.
This isn't an argument for returning to naive faith, but an invitation to a nuanced understanding that integrates scientific knowledge with spiritual insight, acknowledges rational thought's power and limitations, and reimagines religious concepts for contemporary minds.
Whether you're a skeptic questioning materialism's adequacy, a disillusioned believer seeking reason-compatible faith, or simply curious about life's deeper dimensions, this book challenges the artificial choice between blind faith and empty skepticism.
- 293 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889813566-9
25 Uncomfortable Truths of Life
About what makes us mature and free
A philosophical manifesto about the fundamental laws of existence. The book presents 25 harsh rules that govern human life, destroying familiar illusions about justice, equality, love, and success.
- 267 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889832863-4
Alien Life
Christian Faith in the Age of Exoplanets and Astrobiology
With over 5,800 exoplanets discovered and the James Webb Space Telescope revealing new cosmic wonders daily, these questions have moved from science fiction to serious scientific inquiry. Yet many Christians remain uncertain about how these discoveries relate to their faith.
- 165 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889868001-5
Thinking Stardust
When Atoms Wonder
This work explores fundamental questions about human existence through the lens of modern physics and philosophy of science. Drawing from contemporary research in cosmology, neuroscience, and consciousness studies, it examines the paradoxes of human existence in the context of physical laws governing the Universe and the boundaries of scientific knowledge.
- 119 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889868000-8
Unrequited Love
When your heart says “yes” but theirs says “no”... Workbook
English | 139 pages | ISBN 9798898135782
This transformative workbook serves as your compassionate companion through unrequited love and rejection. Based on Emma and Aiden's stories of navigating heartbreak, it provides a structured path from pain to self-discovery.
Inside you'll find thoughtfully designed exercises to process emotions, guided journaling prompts, practical strategies to break unhealthy patterns, and evidence-based healing techniques. The workbook doesn't rush you to "get over" feelings but honors your experience while providing tools to transform heartache into growth.
Perfect for anyone experiencing rejection or struggling to move on from one-sided relationships, this guide offers solace and practical guidance for moving forward with dignity and self-respect. Your unrequited love story doesn't end with rejection—it's the beginning of your journey back to yourself.
- 139 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889813578-2
Cracks That Let the Light In
The Art of Becoming Whole
English | 337 pages | ISBN 9798898135768
Cracks That Let the Light In is a deeply heartfelt journey into the nature of healing, self-acceptance, and transformation.
Through the story of Alex Severin, a man whose meticulously organized life begins to unravel, readers are invited to explore the cracks in their own lives—the imperfections, losses, and unexpected turns that ultimately allow the light to enter.
Set against the evocative backdrop of a small coastal town, this debut novel by Elsa T. Heaven weaves introspection, emotional depth, and hope into a narrative that feels both intimate and universal.
An unforgettable meditation on the beauty of brokenness, this is a story for anyone learning to embrace their own humanity.
- 337 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889813576-8
Escapism
When We Run from Reality
"I just wanted to relax after work..."
That's how many stories of entertainment dependency begin. One episode becomes a series marathon. A quick phone check becomes hours of mindless scrolling. An innocent game becomes all-night sessions.
- 397 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889868260-6
The Feather Gatherer
A Dark Fairy Tale
English | 111 pages | ISBN 9798898135775
In secluded northern lands lies a village renowned for wondrous pillows filled with special feathers that bestow gentle dreams. Soren, a skilled feather gatherer who understands bird language and forest whispers, lives in harmony with nature.
When drought threatens his craft and the village's prosperity, Soren faces temptation that leads him down a dark path. He violates ancient natural laws, bringing irreversible consequences in a world where the boundary between human and beast blurs.
This dark fairy tale explores choice, guilt, and frightening transformation, showing how good intentions can lead to nightmarish results. Prepare for a story that will make you see forest shadows differently.
- 111 pages
- Paperback
- 5.5in × 8.5in
- Black & White
- 979-889813577-5