Reformation Zion Publishing
Theology with a backbone
“The modern conversation on biblical sexuality is dominated by either politically correct social justice warriors or over-the-top shock jocks. Clary’s plain spoken approach is refreshing and helpful. There are no cheap shots but neither are there any pulled punches.”
–Michael Foster, author of It’s Good to Be a Man
“Michael Clary has written a profound and important book. In it he addresses a subject that many powerful and influential people wish he hadn’t addressed. I wish those people were just outside the church, but unfortunately, they’re in it as well. He has had the temerity to speak clearly, and persuasively as an advocate for sexual sanity in an insane time. He’s joined a small resistance movement by doing so. I’m pleased that he’s quoted me—but he also quotes a number of my friends and acquaintances. That says something. There aren’t many of us. A few years ago, it seemed like there were many men and women who could be counted on to endorse sanity. I’m sad to say that has not proven to be the case. But you hold in your hands an invitation to join our intrepid band as we make an appeal for moral and biblical sense in a world of sexual nonsense."
–C. R. Wiley, author of The Household and the War for the Cosmos
“Harris tries to show that the social justice movement has created a parallel universe of thought to the Christianity it is working to replace. It has produced its own gospel, metaphysics, and epistemology by selectively blending Marxism, a radically understood notion of “redistributive justice,” and intergenerational social guilt… In his detailed response to [David] French’s war against “systemic white racism,” Harris points out that in the Bible “each person will answer for his own actions”… Harris also notes that since French has no problem defending Drag Queen Story Hours at local libraries, in violation of specific prohibitions in Mosaic Law against men dressing and behaving like women, he is clearly not consistently upholding Old Testament teachings… One wishes Harris’s refutation were made more widely available.”
–Paul Gottfried, editor-in-chief of Chronicles magazine
The Western church has become effeminate and weak. Pastors are afraid to teach important Bible passages on the roles and duties of men and women, and it is no surprise that young Christian women are trading babies for careers outside the home and that churches are regularly capitulating to subversions of biblical sexual ethics. What the church needs is to recover its masculine calling, where men embrace their God-given authority—and responsibility—in the home, church, and society. This book affirms the historic Christian teaching on men and women, critiques feminist scholarship, and urges complementarians to hold a more robust and consistent position. This is a call to return to the Bible’s teaching on men and women. This is a call to masculine Christianity.
“Pastor McGowan lays a biblical foundation for the church’s use of the imprecatory psalms. He clearly shows that the Old and New Testaments are not opposed to each other concerning the love of enemies and the seeking of God’s justice. With wisdom and humility, he answers the difficult question concerning how the church can use the imprecatory psalms today. I highly recommend this work.”
–Dr. Richard P. Belcher, Jr., Professor of Old Testament and Academic Dean at Reformed Theological Seminary, Charlotte
“In this very helpful introduction to the imprecatory psalms, Sean McGowan has achieved the all too rare virtues of both brevity and substantiveness, of both popular accessibility and scholarly precision, of both pastoral winsomeness and prophetic urgency. I highly commend it to you.”
–George Grant, pastor of Parish PCA in Franklin, TN
“As an Afrikaans-speaking American who lived through the South African neo-Marxian revolution and saw firsthand the comprehensive subversion of the once much-Christianized culture of the Afrikaner there, I can recommend this volume by Dr. Schlebusch. That period from 1980 to 1994 was almost an exact parallel to what is occurring in the USA in the last three decades since the election of Nelson Mandela as President of the Republic of South Africa. Schlebusch brings broad reading, insight from key Reformed Protestant thinkers, and a broad stroke analysis to demonstrate the direction that the culture, especially of the USA, is heading. It is similar to but even more radically and consistently leftist than the revolution in the RSA.”
–Mark R. Kreitzer, DMiss, PhD, Associate Professor, Grand Canyon University, College of Theology