What Does Your Christian Non-Fiction Library Look Like?

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StoneThrower

Guest
#41
Thanks :) There's a book sale that happens every couple of months or so here where they sell donated books for $0.50/lb. It's so great! So especially with them being that cheap, I try to pick up books not just books by authors I like, but books that might be outside of my own theological beliefs just to know what's out there and to get a different perspective on things. I don't read nearly as much as I should, though.
Wheres here, for that price it might be worth the trip?
We have a once a year friends of the library sale but it cost $15.00 bucks to get in the first day and the last few years its been poor when it comes to books I would buy, a lot of christian junk though. Up in York Pa the hospital has one every year its 5 bucks to get in but this year it wasnt all that I am almost to the point of having to buy online and paying the Ebay prices.
 

ChandlerFan

Senior Member
Jan 8, 2013
1,148
102
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#42
Wheres here, for that price it might be worth the trip?
We have a once a year friends of the library sale but it cost $15.00 bucks to get in the first day and the last few years its been poor when it comes to books I would buy, a lot of christian junk though. Up in York Pa the hospital has one every year its 5 bucks to get in but this year it wasnt all that I am almost to the point of having to buy online and paying the Ebay prices.
This is a Friends of the Library sale here too :) Yeah, you never know if there are going to be some good finds or if they're all going to be duds, but it seems like I can usually find something good. The last time I went, I found Packer's Knowing God. I didn't own that one, so that was a gem of a find.
 
W

wwjd_kilden

Guest
#43
20140727_222016.jpg
My "Scottish" christian library
 
C

cgirl

Guest
#44
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Maybe I should get back to reading...
nah, I have youtube now.
 

garet82

Senior Member
Jan 20, 2011
679
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#45
i dont hv one lol oh some romance novels there n activity books for kids crafting n ice breakers :)
 

Tinkerbell725

Senior Member
Jul 19, 2014
4,216
1,179
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Philippines Age 40
#46
Wide awake
Its not about me
Spirit controlled temperament
On the anvil
A gentle and quiet spirit
Purpose driven life
What women dont know
Beautiful outlaw
waking the dead
chasing daylight
radical
the bible jesus read
no one like him
how to read the bible
finding God in unexpected places
after the storm
whose money is it anyway
Uprising: A Revolution of the Soul
Soul Cravings
The Barbarian Way: Unleash the Untamed Faith Within
Your best life now
 
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Descyple

Senior Member
Jun 7, 2010
3,023
48
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#47
Regarding the Bibles I have in my Library, the one I treasure most is my William Tyndale New Testament. It is a facsimile copy of one of only two remaining original copies from 1526 left in the world.

I took two photos below - the cover, as well as a photo of the beginning of the Gospel of John, so you can see how very different the English language was 500 years ago (but if read with patience, it is still actually readable and can be used as a daily study Bible.


Tyndale Cover.jpg


Tyndale Gospel of John.jpg
 
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cgirl

Guest
#48
Regarding the Bibles I have in my Library, the one I treasure most is my William Tyndale New Testament. It is a facsimile copy of one of only two remaining original copies from 1526 left in the world.

I took two photos below - the cover, as well as a photo of the beginning of the Gospel of John, so you can see how very different the English language was 500 years ago (but if read with patience, it is still actually readable and can be used as a daily study Bible.


View attachment 85585


View attachment 85586

So vintage! O.O <3
 
K

Kaycie

Guest
#49
Mine is about the same.
 

Descyple

Senior Member
Jun 7, 2010
3,023
48
48
#50
In my personal library, I also have a shelf that consists purely of books from Rob Bell, Joel Olsteen, Benny Hinn, and Kenneth Copeland.

I call that shelf the "What Would Jesus Not Teach?" section!!!
 

Nick01

Senior Member
Jul 15, 2013
1,272
26
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#51
I have a couple of shelves worth of stuff.

lib1.jpg
lib3.jpg
lib2.jpg
lib4.jpg

Plus, I have the two volume Craig Keener set 'Miracles', the truly excellent 'Jesus and the Eyewitnesses' by Richard Bauckham, RT Kendall's three book 'Understanding Theology', and Calvin's Institutes. I have other bits and pieces floating around as well, which I haven't bothered to go find :)

Before anyone points it out, I'm not entirely sure why I have Dragonlance in that part of the shelf. I have a feeling someone else found it lying around, and just put it in the first available spot in my shelf :p
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,218
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#52
Dragonlance... lol. There's a guy at work who takes his Dragonlance book every day for lunch break. He won't read anything else - ONLY reads Dragonlance books, and when he gets done with the series he starts over again. Fortunately for him it takes him a good two months of work break times to get through one book.
 

Nick01

Senior Member
Jul 15, 2013
1,272
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#53
Dragonlance... lol. There's a guy at work who takes his Dragonlance book every day for lunch break. He won't read anything else - ONLY reads Dragonlance books, and when he gets done with the series he starts over again. Fortunately for him it takes him a good two months of work break times to get through one book.
I bought it mostly because I'd heard other people talk about it. It's good, in that "poster boy for mostly generic D&D derivative fiction" kind of way :p
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,218
9,289
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#54
Yeah, I looked through random parts of his books at random break times and got the same impression. Or rather, for me it was more like "Gee, this is the plot of just about every RPG video game I've ever played."