Bellett, J.G. – The Profit of the Study of Dispensational Truth

The Profit of the Study of Dispensational Truth
By John Gifford Bellett

This is an eight chapter work on the value of studying dispensational truth by Bellett (Brethren).



.
Please help us keep this website up. We work hard to be a blessing to you. Donate to us. Even a $5 or $10 donation is greatly appreciated. All donations will go to pay hosting and domain fees.
https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/davidcoxmex is the link to get to PayPal.
You can use your PayPal account if you have one, or you can donate using any normal debit or credit card, pay through PayPal and chose just Debit or Credit Card.

CONTENTS
1. Profit of the Study of Dispensational Truth, The
2. Profit of the Study of Dispensational Truth, The: A Needed Condition of Soul
3. Profit of the Study of Dispensational Truth, The: The Ways of God
4. Profit of the Study of Dispensational Truth, The: Knowing the Times
5. Profit of the Study of Dispensational Truth, The: Moral Continuity
6. Profit of the Study of Dispensational Truth, The: The Progress of This Dispensation
7. Profit of the Study of Dispensational Truth, The: The End of a Dispensation
8. Profit of the Study of Dispensational Truth, The: Don’t Miss Eternal Truth

More works by John Gifford Bellet

More on Dispensationalism


fam42 The Foolish Child
explains what the Bible teaches on fools and foolishness, and also a parent's solution to a foolish child.
Excerpts: Ecclesiastes 4:13 Better is a poor and a wise child than an old and foolish king, who will no more be admonished. A fool is a person who rejects advice.
We can define the concept of foolishness as the lack of values and vision toward eternity, toward spiritual things. In other words, this person lives focusing on things that the person wants, and he does not pay attention to what God says as being important, or how God says we should live.
Proverbs 18:2 A fool hath no delight in understanding, but that his heart may discover itself.
The basis of being wise is that you do not limit yourself, to just what you think you know. A wise person opens his thinking to the wisdom and advice of others, and weighs others’ opinions to see if they are right or not. The foolish only considers what he himself thinks, or what other fools like him think.

View tract: fam42 The Foolish Child

Exit mobile version