Buy Amoxil cheap

Jeff Robinson
January 19, 2011

With thousands of great books available and buy Amoxil cheap the endless glut of teaching available on the buy Amoxil cheap web, it is virtually impossible to find a truly unique source on any theological or buy Amoxil cheap biblical topic. But Crossway recently published a book on the topic of singleness that buy Amoxil cheap is genuinely like no other I have seen. In Redeeming Singleness: How the Storyline of Scripture Affirms the Single Life, Barry Danylak, the author provides serious, detailed theological reflection on the topic of singleness and sets single Christian living firmly within the biblical storyline of redemption.

Writes Danylak, “Why would a theology of singleness be even remotely helpful? The answer is that theology provides a buy Amoxil cheap degree of logic and coherence for understanding our faith. It is theology that provides the handles for us to  make sense of both what we believe as Christians and why we believe it. So our purpose here is to explore the logic and coherency of why the buy Amoxil cheap Christian Scriptures affirm singleness as good in a world in which sexual partnerships and buy Amoxil cheap marriage are the pervasive norm for human beings.”

Redeeming Singleness, which includes a foreword by John Piper, begins where Scripture begins “by examining the importance of marriage and procreation within the pre-history of the buy Amoxil cheap old covenant, namely in the accounts of creation and the patriarchs.” From there, the work examines “the new hope given singles and those without children amidst the prophets’ expectant hope of a new work in God.”

 Danylak’s work also teases out the New Testament’s teaching on singleness and provides  an in-depth look at Paul’s critical discussion of singleness in 1 Corinthians 7. Best of all, the buy Amoxil cheap entire book keeps readers focused on the buy Amoxil cheap center of the storyline which is Christ and His redeeming love for buy Amoxil cheap sinners in the Gospel. Danylak is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Cambridge who holds graduate degrees in math, Christian thought and biblical exegesis.