
Through New Eyes by James B. Jordan
Read by Wesley Hurd
Chapter 12: Eden: The World of Transformation
Through New Eyes by James B. Jordan
Read by Wesley Hurd
Chapter 12: Eden: The World of Transformation
The Covenant Enforced: Sermons on Deuteronomy 27 and 28 by John Calvin
Edited by James B. Jordan
Published 1990 by Institute for Christian Economics, Tyler Texas
Available online to read online free on Gary North’s Free Books websites
Chapter 12
Sermon 160: Signs and Wonders of Wrath
Preached Wednesday, 25 March 1556 on Deuteronomy 28:46-50
Through New Eyes by James B. Jordan
Read by Wesley Hurd
Chapter 16: The World of the Temple
The Covenant Enforced: Sermons on Deuteronomy 27 and 28 by John Calvin
Edited by James B. Jordan
Published 1990 by Institute for Christian Economics, Tyler Texas
Available online to read online free on Gary North’s Free Books websites
Chapter 11
Sermon 159: The Peril of Apostasy
Preached Tuesday, 24 March 1556 on Deuteronomy 28:36-45
Through New Eyes by James B. Jordan
Read by Wesley Hurd
Chapter 17: The Worlds of Exile and Restoration
The Covenant Enforced: Sermons on Deuteronomy 27 and 28 by John Calvin
Edited by James B. Jordan
Published 1990 by Institute for Christian Economics, Tyler Texas
Available online to read online free on Gary North’s Free Books websites
Chapter 10
Sermon 158: God’s Anger
Preached Monday, 23 March 1556 on Deuteronomy 28:29b-35
Through New Eyes by James B. Jordan
Read by Wesley Hurd
Chapter 18: The New World
The Covenant Enforced: Sermons on Deuteronomy 27 and 28 by John Calvin
Edited by James B. Jordan
Published 1990 by Institute for Christian Economics, Tyler Texas
Available online to read online free on Gary North’s Free Books websites
Chapter 9
Sermon 157: God’s Plagues
Preached Wednesday, 18 March 1556 on Deuteronomy 28:25-29
“The day of Marathon….broke forever the spell of Persian invincibility, which had paralyzed men’s minds. It generated among the Greeks the spirit which beat back Xerxes and afterwards led on Xenephon, Agesilaus and Alexander in terrible retaliation through their Asiatic campaigns. It secured for mankind the intellectual treasures of Athens, the growth of free institutions, the liberal enlightenment of the western wold and the gradual ascendancy for many ages of the great principles of European civilization.” – Creasy